{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/695e5ac1adf9f2c53a665a53/6a42c2766c42755eb6a58abf?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Abigail's Party (1977): Britain's Most Awkward Dinner Party Ever?","description":"<p>Pour yourself a Gin and Tonic, grab the olives, and dust off your Demis Roussos LP', because this week we're stepping inside one of the most gloriously awkward evenings in British television history:&nbsp;<strong>Abigail's Party</strong>.</p><p>Originally broadcast as part of the BBC's&nbsp;<strong>Play for Today</strong>&nbsp;in 1977, Mike Leigh's masterpiece of social discomfort has become one of Britain's defining television dramas. But what makes a play about drinks, small talk and endless passive aggression so endlessly watchable nearly fifty years later?</p><p>We explore the remarkable improvisational process that created the production, the unforgettable performances—especially Alison Steadman's iconic Beverly—and the fascinating story behind the music, including why some of the original songs had to be replaced from the original stage production.</p><p>We revisit Beverly and Lawrence's disastrous drinks evening, where every refill of gin, every cigarette, and every painfully polite conversation nudges the guests closer to complete emotional collapse. Along the way we ask whether the play's attitudes to class, gender, race, smoking, drinking and marriage feel dated today—or whether Mike Leigh was cleverly exposing these behaviours rather than celebrating them.</p><p>As always, we also travel back to the year itself. Our&nbsp;<strong>Culture Corner</strong>&nbsp;revisits Britain in 1977, from the Silver Jubilee and the rise of punk to disco, Northern Soul, inflation, trade unions, televisions with three channels, and a time when having a telephone at home was still something of a luxury. We also look back at the biggest chart hits, the programmes everyone was watching, and the events shaping everyday British life.</p><p>It's funny, painfully recognisable, occasionally tragic, and proof that sometimes the most gripping drama comes from simply putting five people in a suburban living room and letting them slowly destroy one another with cheese and pineapple sticks.</p><p>Just don't mention Abigail... she's having a much better party than this one.</p><p><br></p><p>GAZER HOMEWORK: Next week we focus on the 1968 cult classic UK film 'The Killing Of Sister George' from 1968. <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jY-j51P9JRY\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Click here to watch on YouTube</a></p>","author_name":"David Moor and Lee Arnott"}