
Steptoe and Son
Photo courtesy of BBC
CAST
Albert
Steptoe .......................................Wilfrid Brambell
Harold Steptoe .....................................Harry
H. Corbett
PRODUCERS
Duncan Wood, John Howard Davies, David Craft, Graeme Muir, Douglas
Argent
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 55 30-minute episodes 2 45-minute specials
BBC
7 June 1962-12 July 1962
6 Episodes
3 January 1963-14 February 1963
7 Episodes
7 January 1964-14 February 1964 7
Episodes
4 October 1965-15 November 1965 7
Episodes
6 March 1970-17 April 1970 7
Episodes
2 November 1970-20 December 1970 8
Episodes
21 February 1972-3 April 1972 7
Episodes
24 December 1973 Christmas
Special
4 September 1974-10 October 1974 6
Episodes
26 December 1974 Christmas
Special
Steptoe
and Son was the most popular situation comedy in British television
history, and one of the most successful. At the height of its fame
in the early 1960s it regularly topped the ratings and commanded
audiences in excess of 20 million. In 1966, Labour Prime Minister
Harold Wilson asked the BBC to delay the transmission of a repeat
episode on election day until after the polls closed, because he
was worried that many of his party's supporters would stay in to
watch it rather than going out to vote.
Its
creators, Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, were already well known and
highly successful as the script writers for Tony Hancock. Indeed
it was Hancock's decision, the most disastrous of his career, to
sever his links with Galton and Simpson which brought about the
birth of Steptoe and Son. The BBC offered them a series of
ten separate half-hour comedies, to be cast and produced according
to their wishes, which they grabbed with alacrity, keen to produce
more diverse material after such a long time working with the same
star.
The
most successful of these, transmitted in January 1962 under the
banner title of Comedy Playhouse was "The Offer", featuring
a father and son firm of "totters", or rag-and-bone men. As soon
as he saw it, Head of Light Entertainment Tom Sloane knew it was
a natural for a whole series. Galton and Simpson resisted at first,
reluctant to commit themselves to another long-term venture, but
were worn down by Sloane's persistence and the fact that he was
clearly right.
The first series of Steptoe and Son was transmitted in June
and July 1962 and consisted of five episodes. A further three series
of seven episodes each followed in the next three years. The producer
of all four series was Duncan Wood.
The
basic plot line of Steptoe and Son is very simple and most
episodes are in some way a variation on it. Albert Steptoe is an
old-time, rag-and-bone man, a veteran of the Great War, who inherited
the family business of the title from his father. He is a widower
and lives with his son, Harold, and together they continue the business,
with Harold doing most of the work. Albert is settled in his life
and his lowly position in society, but Harold has dreams of betterment.
He wants to be sophisticated and to enjoy the "swinging sixties".
Above all he wants to escape from his father and make a life of
his own, something which Albert is prepared to go to any lengths
to prevent. The comedy thus comes from the conflict of the generation
gap and the interdependency of the characters. However hard he tries,
we know that Harold will never get away. So, in his heart, does
he and that is his tragedy. Apart from anything else, his father
is by far the smarter of the two.
The
success of this formula was partly the result of the universality
of the theme and partly of the casting of the two leads. Galton
and Simpson believed that they should cast straight actors rather
than comedians and so signed up Wilfrid Brambell to play Albert
and Harry H. Corbett as Harold. Between them the writers and actors
created two immortal characters and some extremely poignant drama,
as well as the hilarious comedy. The television correspondent of
The Times wrote in 1962: "Steptoe and Son virtually
obliterates the division between drama and comedy".
A
typical episode would see Albert ruining Harold's plans, whether
it be in love, business or cultural pursuits. In "The Bird", Harold
brings home a girl, only to find his father taking a bath in the
main room. In "Sunday for Seven Days" Albert ruins Harold's choice
of Fellini's 8 1/2 for an evening at the cinema. His father's
generally uncouth behaviour frequently provokes Harold to utter
the only catchphrase of the series: an exasperated "You dirty old
man!".
In 1965, Galton and Simpson decided to stop writing the show while
it was still an enormous success, although radio versions were produced
in the following two years and the format was introduced to American
television as Sanford and Son. However, with the arrival
of colour television in Britain in 1967 and increased competition
in comedy from the commercial network, the BBC decided in the early
1970s to bring back some of its top comedy successes of the middle
1960s. Steptoe and Son returned in 1970 for a further four
series, a total of thirty episodes, between then and 1974.
The
effectiveness of the show was in no way diminished. Indeed the familiarity
of the characters allowed the show to carry on where it had left
off and achieve the same quality as before. Two feature films were
also made of Steptoe and Son, though without the success
of the television shows.
No more shows were made after 1974 but there is a footnote to the
Steptoe story. Many programmes made on videotape were wiped by the
BBC for purposes of economy in the early 1970s, including virtually
all of the fifth and sixth series of Steptoe and Son. However,
Ray Galton had made copies from the masters on the very first domestic
video format, which became the only surviving copies. In 1990 he
handed them to the National Film and Television Archive which restored
them to a viewable form and publicised the find with a theatrical
showing. Although the technical quality was poor and they only played
in black and white, the BBC transmitted a few of them to enormous
success. The rest of the restored episodes were then transmitted,
followed by all the black and white episodes from the 1960s, breaking
the BBC's usual resistance to repeating black and white programmes.
Alas,
the two leads were not around to witness the revival. Brambell died
in 1985, following his screen son Corbett, who had died in 1983.
-Steve
Bryant
Burke,
Michael. "You Dirty Old Man!" The People (London), 9 January
1994.