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After Dark (TV programme)

After Dark is a British late-night live television discussion programme that broadcast weekly on Channel 4 between 1987 and 1991, and which returned for specials between 1993 and 1997; it was later revived by the BBC for a single season broadcast on BBC Four in 2003.

After Dark
"South Africa" 11 June 1988
Created byOpen Media
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes90 (list of episodes)
Production
Running timeOpen-ended
Release
Original networkChannel 4 (1987–1991, 1993–1997)
BBC Four (2003)
Original release1 May 1987 (1987-05-01) –
29 March 2003 (2003-03-29)

Roly Keating of the BBC described it as "one of the great television talk formats of all time".[1] In 2010 the television trade magazine Broadcast wrote "After Dark defined the first 10 years of Channel 4, just as Big Brother did for the second"[2] and in 2018 the programme was cited in an editorial in The Times as an example of high-quality television.[3]

Broadcast live and with no scheduled end time, the series, inspired by an Austrian programme called Club 2,[4] was considered to be a groundbreaking reinvention of the discussion programme format. The programme was hosted by a variety of presenters, and each episode had around half a dozen guests, often including a member of the public.

Programme synopsis

The programme featured a different topic each week, with guests selected to provoke lively discussion; subject matter included "the treatment of children, of the mentally ill, of prisoners, and about class, cash and racial and sexual difference", as well as "matters of exceptional sensitivity to the then Thatcher government, such as state secrecy or the Troubles in Northern Ireland"; "places further afield...– Chile, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Nicaragua, South Africa and Russia – featured regularly" and "less apparently solemn subjects – sport, fashion, gambling and pop music – were in the mix from the start".[5]

A television historian wrote in 2011 that the programme "was not concerned to allow the revelation of celebrities' private lives or the promotion of their products, they were expected to converse seriously. Oliver Reed appeared drunk, groped Kate Millett and was removed; in contrast Bianca Jagger appeared in intellectual debate with several high-ranking American officials over the Contras in Nicaragua".[6]

Other memorable conversations included footballer Garth Crooks disputing the future of the game with politician Sir Rhodes Boyson and MP Teresa Gorman walking out of a discussion about unemployment with Billy Bragg. Other guests included "poets and pornographers, spies and solicitors, feminists and farmers, witches and whalers, judges and journalists".[7] The Daily Telegraph said "the discussion was open-ended. It would stop when the guests decided the debate was over, not when TV executives said so".[8] In 2014 an academic book summed up the series as: "After Dark created an unprecedented climate which encouraged spaces where the process of thinking could be brought to light".[9]

Specials and spin-offs

The show ended in 1991 but a number of one-off specials were broadcast from 1993 and 1997, with a subsequent reboot by the BBC in 2003. In 2004 After Dark was characterised as "legendary" by the Open University[10] and in 2014 as "the most uncensorable programme in the history of British television".[11] In 2016 The Herald wrote that "Unlike reality television live feeds today, After Dark was essential viewing, with some very serious talk enlivened even more by unexpected events."[12] In 2017 the Journal of British Cinema and Television called it "an excitingly different and politically adventurous kind of programme"[13] and in 2018 an academic history of independent television production in the UK judged it "as an 'experiment' that challenged the limitations of television as a medium of intensive and democratic deliberation and discussion it was very successful, and from the vantage of history still seems remarkably fresh to this day."[14]

From 2010 to 2020 individual programmes were available for online streaming at . In 2020 Simon Heffer wrote in The Daily Telegraph that "the time is surely ripe for the return of a programme such as After Dark"[15] and The Guardian listed After Dark as one of the "jewels" in the history of television - "it offered a thing that's now extinct: constructive debate".[16] In 2021 The Daily Telegraph wrote of the "curious brilliance" of the show: "It feels like the art of reasonable discussion has been lost in the modern world...increasingly sanitised and controlled since the freeform days of After Dark".[17]

Start on Channel 4

 
"Money", 13 August 1988

The media academic David Lee described the founding of the programme in his history of independent television production in the UK:

A topical talk show format that allowed quite unique forms of political and personal discussion evolve and take place on British television (...) After Dark was created as a counterpoint to the dominant (and rather conventional) talk show ecology of the time, which included the 'twin pillars' of broadcasting talk, Parkinson and Question Time...Participants were encouraged to discuss a topic intensively but also exhaustively, until there was no more to say. It also encouraged a more reflective kind of discussion, with guests often modifying their original position as a result of the interactions on the show...The format encouraged dissent, controversy and also reflective frankness...Its lack of a determined end point was critical, ensuring an open-ended, somewhat indeterminate quality to proceedings... Participants were often positioned as outside of the mainstream political and social agenda, and the programme relished its outsider status.[14]

Sir Jeremy Isaacs, the founding Chief Executive of Channel 4, wrote an account of the network's early years in his book Storm Over 4. In it he selects twenty-six programmes ('a very personal... choice'), including After Dark, which he describes as follows:

Open-ended talk. Lifted by an astute producer... from Austria's Club 2 [de], it began at midnight and went on till it finished. The aim, discussion between people with burning experience of the subject; e.g., the murderer and the judge. A participant might wait long to utter but in the end his turn came. Viewers could fall asleep in front of it, wake up and find the discussion just hotting up.[18]

The programme allowed Isaacs to realise one of his longest-held ambitions. "When I first started in television at Granada... Sidney Bernstein said to me that the worst words ever uttered on TV were, I'm sorry, that's all we have time for. Especially since they were always uttered just as someone was about to say something really interesting." After Dark would only end when its guests had nothing more to say.[19]

From late April in 1987, Channel 4 screened a Nighttime strand, a mixture of films and discussion programmes that ran until 3am on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.[20] Channel 4 launched After Dark as an open ended format broadcast on Friday nights (later Saturday nights) as an original piece of programming that would be inexpensive to produce. There was no 'chair', simply a 'host', and the discussion took place around a coffee table in a darkened studio. Due to its late-night scheduling the series was dubbed After Closing Time by the BBC1 comedy series Alas Smith and Jones.[21]

The series was made by production company Open Media. The series editor, Sebastian Cody, talking about the programme in an interview in 2003, said that "Reality TV is artificial. After Dark is real in the sense that what you see is what you get, which isn't the case with something that's been edited to give the illusion of being real. Other shows wind people up with booze beforehand, then when they're actually on the programme they give them glasses of water. We give our guests nothing until they arrive on set and then they can drink orange juice, or have a bottle of wine. And we let them go to the loo."[22]

Viewer response

In 1987, The Guardian wrote: "After Dark, the closest Britain gets to an unstructured talk show, is already finding that the more serious the chat, the smaller the audience... Channel 4's market research executive Sue Clench... says that around three million saw some of After Dark in its first slot."[23]

The audience survey conducted later by Channel 4 reported that After Dark was watched by 13% of all adults, rising to what the research company referred to as a "staggering figure" of 28% amongst young men.[24] One viewer is quoted in the academic study Talk on Television as follows:

After Dark is far better because it allows people to go over all sorts of stages in a discussion and they are not shut off. Well I suppose they are on for three or four hours, but I think that is a really good idea, that you can really work everything out for yourself.[25]

The programme is still fondly remembered by viewers. For example, in 2016, Gail Walker, the editor of the Belfast Telegraph, recalled After Dark programmes about nuclear issues[26] and in 2020 the Cardiff-based writer Joe Morgan wrote a tribute A Sword in the Darkness, saying the show "broke all existing rules and conventions. There has been nothing like it ever since".[27] In 2022 the Liberal Democrat Jonathan Calder published Remembering After Dark, the best TV discussion programme ever.[28]

Critical response

 

After Dark earned a remarkable spread of critical enthusiasm, from the Socialist Worker ("my favourite chat show") and The Guardian ("one of the most inspired and effective uses of airtime yet devised"), and The Daily Telegraph ("A shining example of late-night television"), to more media focussed journals such as the BFI's Sight & Sound ("often made The Late Show look like the Daily Mirror") and even the US showbiz bible Variety in its review of the year ("compulsive for late-night viewers").[5] The Listener magazine called it "The programme in which you can see the people think".[29]

Guest response

Author James Rusbridger wrote in The Listener magazine: "When I appeared on a Channel 4 After Dark programme recently my postman, milkman and more than two dozen strangers stopped me in the street and said how much they'd enjoyed it and quoted verbatim extracts from the discussion."[30]

In 2021 author David Hebditch wrote an article about appearing on After Dark to discuss pornography. It is available here.

Journalist Peter Hillmore described appearing on After Dark as follows:

In the age of the glib, packaged sound-bite, a discussion programme that is long and open-ended, lasting as long as the talk is remotely interesting, occasionally longer, seems a necessity. For all its faults, as when Oliver Reed appeared tired and emotional as a newt, the programme fulfilled its purpose and filled a gap. I appeared on it once. It was a strange feeling to realise that if you had failed to make your point properly, you had more time a short while later. So Channel 4's decision to axe it seems incomprehensible and wrong.... In his book on the channel, its founder Jeremy Isaacs gave a long list of programmes that he felt summed up its ethos. With the ending of After Dark, not a single programme from the list remains. That is not a coincidence.[31]

Notable guests and programmes

Series One

Peter Hain, Clive Ponting, Peter Utley, Colin Wallace and "Secrets"

The first ever After Dark programme (1 May 1987) was described in The Listener:

After Dark made a historic breakthrough by rediscovering the structure of adult conversation: the ingredients are intelligence, candour and courage, and the absence of impeding structures such as television time barriers. Seven people talked live, from midnight to the early hours of the morning, on a subject dear to our hearts – and at the moment costly to our nerves – secrets. Clive Ponting, ex MOD; Anne-Marie Sandler, French psychiatrist; Peter Hain, former anti-apartheid campaigner; Colin Wallace, former army "information officer" engaged in psychological warfare in Northern Ireland in the Seventies; Mrs Margaret Moore, widow of one of the computer scientists who have died recently in mysterious circumstances; Isaac Evans, a farmer who campaigns against bureaucratic secrecy, and T. E. Utley, Times political columnist, who still believes Section 2 of the Official Secrets Act "has a point" – all these discussed frankly their experiences and their perception of the consequences of excessive secrecy.[32]

Nancy Banks-Smith wrote in The Guardian:

A bit of fun, a bit of excitement, and, quite the best idea for a television programme since men sat around the camp fire talking while, in the darkness, watching eyes glowed red.... It will be many a midnight before Channel 4 comes up with the subject so on the ball as Secrets and such an enthralling group of guests. Who, you may reasonably ask, is Isaac Evans? He described himself as "a peasant up from the country".... In old age he has, with great simplicity, taken up the cause of small people ruined by secret files.... Peter Hain and Clive Ponting (were) referred to affectionately by the chairman, Tony Wilson, as "You two gaolbirds".... It was suggested that only half a dozen MI5 men were watching After Dark. "On double time," said (Colin) Wallace and gave them a wave.[33]

The programme finished with the Beatles singing "Do You Want to Know a Secret?"[34] The programme is available online here.

Simon Hughes

The second programme of the first series – transmitted on 8 May 1987 – centred on press ethics and featured, among others, Tony Blackburn, Peter Tatchell, Victoria Gillick, Johnny Edgecombe and a Private Eye journalist.[35] A week later After Dark broadcast the following correction in relation to the British Member of Parliament Simon Hughes: "Mr Hughes has asked us to say that he is not a homosexual, has never been a homosexual and has no intention of becoming a homosexual in the future."[36] He has, however, since declared that he is bisexual.[37]

"Do the British Love Their Children?"

As described by academic Nick Basannavar in 2021:

For its fourth week, journalist Chantal Cuer chaired..."Do the British Love Their Children?" The trigger for that particular topic was the case of four-year old Kimberley Carlile, starved and murdered by her stepfather Nigel Hall...Carlile's former foster father, Gordon Whiteley, participated in After Dark. He was joined, amongst others, by the critic Germaine Greer, Lambeth Council leader Linda Bellos and the former headmaster of Westminster School, John Rae. During the live show, Bellos stated her belief that British 'society' had neither demonstrated that it liked children, nor made any provision for children to live fully within it. Greer argued that mating couples who bore children ought not to be entrusted with raising them alone. Rae, meanwhile, felt that the thought of parenthood without at least some violence performed on the child, such as smacking, was 'unreal' - although as long as any violent act performed was carried out 'within love', it was containable.[38]

David Mellor, David Yallop and "The Mafia"

The Financial Times described the following week's discussion about the Mafia:

After Dark may well be cheap but is one of the most interesting innovations for years.... Two factors give the programme a special character: its length, which allows time for both personal reminiscence and discussion of theory or principle without that "I must stop you there" malarkey; and the camera arrangements with the participants set in a pool of light within a darkened studio, producing a peculiarly powerful sense of intimacy for late night.... The combination of Home Office minister David Mellor, former Cosa Nostra "bagman" Bob Dick, former Scotland Yard intelligence officer Frank Pulley (who made particularly astute political and social comments), New York undercover policeman Douglas le Vien and several journalists who write about organised crime, proved highly productive. After Dark bears out what has long been said: that ordinary discussion programmes have the time only to establish the participants' credentials before going off the air. This programme establishes credentials, moves on to discussion of the principles, and sometimes even manages some interesting conclusions. The points made in the final 15 minutes last Friday, about the differences between Britain and the US in attitudes towards wealth, and the way in which this might explain the puzzling (albeit pleasing) failure, so far, of organised crime in Britain, were the most interesting of the entire discussion. Do not switch on for a "taste" telling yourself that you will go to bed at 1.00. You will still be there at 3.00.[39]

During the programme it was claimed that Pope John Paul I was "eliminated...because he discovered that mafia profits from heroin had been laundered using the Vatican Bank".[40] "Spectacular corruption allegations from author David Yallop"[41] were described by The Observer as follows:

Perched in the gallery above, a Channel 4 lawyer nervously watches in case the stew bubbles over. His worst moment came at 1.30 yesterday morning when David Yallop... cut short some coy evasions about who heads PII, the Italian variety of freemasonry, by naming him. The lawyer was quietly told that Mr Yallop had just named a senior minister in the Italian Government. Mr Yallop had not gone so far in his book. He also suggested that a member of the British Cabinet was on the board of the same company as some members of PII. Since After Dark, unlike most radio phone-ins, boasts no tape delay, the alleged defamation could not be prevented.[42]

Chris Horrie and Peter Chippendale detail what followed: "the story had caused horror among the country's journalists, who waited breathlessly for a shower of writs to descend on the programme makers.... But although hacks who missed the show swapped videos and endlessly replayed extracts for snippets of information, nothing happened to the programme makers."[43] Some years later David Mellor and writer Gaia Servadio described how their friendship started on the programme.[44]

Teresa Gorman and "Is Britain Working?"

 
Billy Bragg appearing on After Dark on 12 June 1987

On 12 June 1987, the night after the British General Election, "the first day of the third term of Thatcherism – a show called Is Britain Working? brought together victorious Tory MP Teresa Gorman; 'Red Wedge' pop singer Billy Bragg; Helen from the Stonehenge Convoy; old colonialist Colonel Hilary Hook... and Adrian, one of the jobless. It was a perfect example of the chemistry you can get. There were unlikely alliances (Bragg and Hook) and Mrs Gorman"[45] "stormed off the set, claiming she had been misled about the nature of the programme"[46] "She told the leftist pop singer Billy Bragg: 'You and your kind are finished. We are the future now.'"[47] Bragg said "I sing in smokey rooms every night and I can keep talking for far longer than you can Teresa".[48] Bragg explained later: "She was so smug. And because she was Essex I took it personally. Then she accused me of being a fine example of Thatcherism."[49]

The Independent said:

... the wonderful open-ended discussion show mused through the early hours of Saturday... someone took umbrage.... It was Mrs Gorman, marching away beyond the table lamps into the outer darkness.... "Now we'll have a civilised discussion", said Billy Bragg.[50]

"Killing With Care?"

 
"Killing With Care?" on 26 June 1987

The programme the following week was described by ITN as "A discussion on euthanasia, with the controversial Dutch doctor Piet Admiraal [nl] who has performed euthanasia; British Socialist and Methodist preacher Lord Soper; the founder of the Cancer support charity 'Cancerbackup', Dr Vicky Clement-Jones (in an appearance from her death bed – she died shortly after the end of this programme), quadraplegic Maggie Davis, Catholic philosopher John Finnis, a gay man and the founder of a hospice."[51]

Edward Teller and "Peace in Our Time"

The programme on 3 July 1987 "saw the father of the H-bomb Edward Teller concede that he lobbied for the worst of all weapons because of what the Russians had done to his country".[52]

Jacques Vergès and "Klaus Barbie"

 
Jacques Vergès appearing on After Dark in July 1987

After Dark, "ending its ten-week trial run, has been a remarkable success" wrote The Independent in July 1987. "The series has brought to television the rare acts of listening, thinking and thorough and subtle discussion.... In the small hours of Saturday morning, Maitre Jacques Vergès, defence counsel to the Butcher of Lyons, leaned back on a sofa with a half-glass of something pale and put his case. A journalist and a canon and a Resistance fighter and a concentration camp survivor listened and put theirs."[53] Vergès said "the reason people were still prosecuted for massacring Jews was because the Jews were white; if they had not been, the crimes would have been swept under the carpet long ago."[54]

The Guardian described what happened:

[After Dark] had Maitre Vergès on a panel that discussed whether it was ever desirable, or even possible, to forgive [Klaus] Barbie 43 years after his crimes ... . Vergès attempted to indict French crimes in Africa, imperial crimes everywhere ... . It was canon Paul Oestreicher who isolated from the trial the real distinction between Barbie and the Nazi regime [and] the imperial brutality Vergès wanted to expose: the unique evil was that the Nazis built a system and a policy for the extermination of whole peoples.[55]

The Sunday Times:

Vergès is clearly a man who knows how not to lose an argument even when he cannot win it, but there was a moment when his mind-boggling calm was almost shattered. It came when a young American lawyer [ Eli Rosenbaum ] announced that he had flown in for the programme specifically to confront Vergès with evidence of his anti-Semitic, right-wing connections and general moral corruption. It was a moment of high drama, but it was the outraged American who cracked first. "You're losing your temper," the old maitre instructed him. "That is no way for a good lawyer to make his case." Game and set, if not match, to Vergès.[56]

Jewish Telegraphic Agency:

[Rosenbaum] angered Verges by asking why there was an anti-Zionist, anti-Israel element in so many of the cases he has defended in the last 30 years. He also questioned the Siam-born lawyer about his alleged connections with a wealthy Swiss neo-Nazi. Verges avoided direct answers but made remarks about Rosenbaum's Jewish affiliation. Another panelist, Auschwitz survivor Gena Turgel, said his remarks smacked of anti-Semitism.[57]

Series Two

"Freemasonry: Beyond The Law?"

At the start of the second series The Independent reported ("Masons pull out of TV debate with policeman") that "Chief Inspector Brian Woollard, the Metropolitan Police officer at the centre of the Freemasonry controversy, will go on national television tonight to state his case."[45] Woollard "completed 33 years in the force, earned seven commendations, and was responsible for tracking down the Angry Brigade."[58] The Listener magazine described the programme:

After Dark turned its attention, with some daring, to the issue of Masonic influence in the police force. Daring because a truly unfettered programme – live, under virtually no constraints of length – it chose to deal with matters both potentially libellous and believed by some to be bound by sub judice limitations. The central figure was a police officer who alleges he was suspended because his investigations into fraud came up against corrupt Masonic loyalties.... There were two ex-Masons, a clergyman who abandoned the brotherhood on religious grounds and a solicitor, Sir David Napley, who had briefly flirted with it in the old days.... Former Deputy Metropolitan police commissioner Sir Colin Woods spoke unofficially for the police. A journalist, Martin Short, gave a run-down of the history of the Masonic movement and T. Dan Smith told how in jail he got the Masonic knuckle squeeze from both wardens and prisoners... many an insight into the kind of society we inhabit, its anxieties and preoccupations.[59]

Shere Hite and "Marriage"

Mark Lawson wrote in The Independent:

...where else would James Dearden, screenwriter of Fatal Attraction, be required to sit while sexpert Shere Hite gave the ending of the film away and demolished his characterisation? In a discussion of what women really wanted, Dearden and Ms Hite were joined by Mary Whitehouse, Naim Attallah and proponents of career motherhood, lesbianism and open marriage... the advantage of the length is the opportunity to see positions crumbling and being constructed. We began with a rough consensus and Mary Whitehouse designated the runt of the discussion. People sighed and shifted their eyes when she spoke. A couple of hours on, we had the unlikely alliance of Dearden and Whitehouse against Hite.[60]

The Evening Standard described this as "totally compelling viewing":

It is not simply what is said that is important. Equally fascinating are small gestures and expressions, beautifully caught at significant moments by some astute camerawork; the group's physical and verbal interaction with each other; and above all, the ways in which we are able to see how and why an individual might have arrived at his/her set of ideas and beliefs.[61]

William "Spider" Wilson

 
"Spider" Wilson appearing on the same programme
 
John Heddle appearing on After Dark "No Place Like Home" in 1988

The Sunday Times said the programme on 4 March 1988 "certainly remains lodged in many minds. Spider... was 'discovered' by a programme researcher ferreting out characters at London's cardboard city. Spider duly came into the Channel 4 studios, cobweb tattooed on his forehead, to talk about drug addiction, being gay and living rough. (Host) Helena Kennedy recalls that homeless Spider, sitting on the plump sofas in the mock studio living room with fellow guests, did not take kindly to being lectured about fecklessness by John Heddle, a Tory MP".[62] She described the confrontation:

"Spider" Wilson's argument with John Heddle, who at that time was chairman of the Tory backbench housing committee, was a perfect example of what could happen. Heddle's tactic was to lecture the feckless Spider, and tell him to pull up his socks. The argument actually felt quite menacing. Ironically, Heddle later committed suicide, while Spider went into rehab, sobered up and now has both a home and a job.[63]

Bernadette McAliskey and "Licensed to Kill?"

The Financial Times wrote of the programme on 18 March 1988:

Bernadette McAliskey (formerly Devlin) was allowed to talk throughout as though the British Army were waging war against 'her' people. Those who remember the Army going in to protect 'her' people in 1968 will find this odd.[64]

Another guest, General Sir Anthony Farrer-Hockley suggested to Ms McAliskey that she owed her life to the skill of paratroop surgeons who cared for her after loyalist paramilitaries tried to kill her.[65]

"Horse Racing"

The Racing Post described the programme broadcast on the evening after the 1988 Grand National:

[Jockey Frankie] Dettori recalls: "Many years ago, when I was 17 or 18, there was a programme on Channel 4 at about midnight called After Dark, a discussion show for people who couldn't sleep! I came in from a night out and there was McCririck and a couple of others sitting there on the TV talking a load of rubbish. But there was this guy, sitting there quietly, who would chip in every now and again and say something which was quite outstanding. That was Barney Curley and I was drawn to him like a magnet.[66]

Among the other guests was the Duchess of Argyll, appearing "so she said, to put the point of view of the horse", who later walked out of the programme "because she was so very sleepy".[67]

"Bewitched, Bothered or Bewildered?"

On 30 April 1988 Tony Wilson hosted "a special Walpurgis Night edition...which featured representatives of several pagan, occult and Satanist groups. The general tone of the questioning was inquiring and non-judgmental, and the only hostility was expressed by the "token" Christian spokeswoman, ex-witch Audrey Harper. Before the mid-1980s, it would have appeared ludicrous to discuss British Satanists as a serious phenomenon, still less a social problem."[68]

"Derry '68"

Socialist Worker wrote "A recent discussion on the Irish civil rights struggle in 1968 provided one of the best nights' viewing in ages. Eamonn McCann dominated the whole discussion, destroying anyone who dared to cross him."[69] The television reviewer of the New Statesman wrote that "The After Dark discussion, "Derry 68: Look Back in Anger?", was simply the most enlightening programme on Northern Ireland I have ever seen."[70] In 2021 this programme was shown again during the Docs Ireland international documentary festival run by the Belfast Film Festival.[71]

"Israel: 40 Years On"

On 14 May 1988, The Daily Telegraph wrote:

Tonight's edition of After Dark... will mark the 40th anniversary of Israel. The programme is likely to cause controversy, as the Shadow Foreign Secretary Gerald Kaufman and a number of Israelis will appear alongside Faisal Aweidah, the hardline PLO representative in London. For Kaufman, the appearance will not be without a political risk, mainly of a backlash from British Jews who are unlikely to be happy about him appearing alongside Aweidah, a supporter of Yasser Arafat. However for the Israelis involved in the programme there are even greater dangers. They will brave the wrath of the government of their country - where it is illegal for citizens to share a platform with the PLO. One participant...has already backed out after being told she would face arrest when returning home after the broadcast.[72]

"What is Sex For?"

A week later "during a discussion about sex, the programme introduced the physically unappealing Anthony Burgess to the equally charming (and equally sex obsessed) Andrea Dworkin, in the observant presence of a third writer, transgender rights activist Roz Kaveney".[52]

"Winston Churchill"

 
David Irving on After Dark

The Socialist Worker described the 28 May 1988 edition of "my favourite chat show":

"Winston Churchill: Hero or Madman?".... Unfortunately the character arguing this was none other than the "historian" David Irving.... Here sat a man who was pro-Hitler, who was insulting the legendary Churchill. Facing him was a guy... who had been Churchill's private secretary for ten or so years. And there was Lord Hailsham, who as Quintin Hogg had been a Tory MP at the time. But it was not Irving they reserved their contempt and anger for. Occasionally they got a bit annoyed by him, but it was the left representative they despised... dear old respectable Jack Jones, former leader of the transport workers' union.[69]

As the Radio Times wrote later: "The most explosive argument was between Lord Hailsham and veteran trade unionist Jack Jones. There was... 50 years of hate between them."[73]

Harvey Proctor and "Open To Exposure?"

 
Harvey Proctor on After Dark in 1988

Milton Shulman in The Listener magazine wrote about the edition broadcast on 4 June 1988:

I never plan to watch After Dark and usually am surprised to see that it is on when I return from some social occasion on Saturday night and switch on the box at one o'clock.... My own favourite evening was involved with the subject of ethics and journalism. At first Harvey Proctor was the main focus of our concern as he claimed he was hounded out of public life, not because of his sexual predilections but because of his right-wing political views. But his complaints, as well as Christine Keeler's grievance... about her treatment during the Profumo affair, soon faded into insignificance compared to the weird admissions of the journalists about what they got up to to get a story. Nina Myskow admitted she had jumped into bed with a hunk of masculine beefcake after she had seen him in a male beauty contest she had been judging. Annette Witheridge of the News of the World told how she had sent a rent boy, wired for sound, around to the home of the late Russell Harty.[74]

And the Evening Standard described "riveting television":

Harvey Proctor – the Spanking MP of tabloid legend, now resigned from his Billericay constituency and running a shirt shop in Richmond – in debate round a studio table with a cross-section of his tormentors.... Proctor turned on (reporter Annette Witheridge). He drew from his pocket a story she'd written, headlined "Spank Row MP Urged to Take AIDS Test", linking him allegedly to "a former male lover believed to have the killer disease AIDS". Had she checked this out? Had she attempted to contact the 'former male lover'? No... Annette Witheridge's admission that she'd left this story to others to check out, hadn't discovered for four months that it was false, and hadn't apologised because nobody had asked her to, marked a turning point in the debate.[75]

Proctor himself reported in his 2016 memoir that:

It was the antithesis of today's sound bite culture...It took the format of an after-dinner conversation among friends, around a table with drinks, only we were no friends...The programme...(was) one of the most watched and most video requested: apparently one such request came from Buckingham Palace...and as a result of the programme I managed to get further investors (for a shirt shop).[76]

Harry Belafonte, Denis Worrall and "South Africa"

"After the Nelson Mandela concert last summer, (After Dark) ran a discussion programme including Harry Belafonte, Breyten Breytenbach, Denis Worrall and Ismail Ayob (Mandela's lawyer)."[77] The Guardian described this as "the most civilised and stimulating of current TV programmes"[78] (pictured here with a complete list of guests here) and later Victoria Brittain described the "extraordinary experience of debating with Worrall":

Every letter I received from viewers focussed on how the programme had changed their perception of him.... Harry Belafonte said how much he looked forward to meeting him because of his image in the US as "an enlightened voice"... After Dark was probably the first television programme accurately to reflect the real balance of forces on the South African political scene.... The significance of the programme... was how it shifted the debate from the white political agenda followed so assiduously by South Africa-based correspondents, and gave due weight to the real opponents of the regime.[79]

A year later it became public that there was "a revealing off-camera incident between Harry Belafonte and South Africa's ex-ambassador Denis Worrall. For the first three hours of the programme Worrall played Mr Nice Guy but in the closing 30 minutes the diplomatic layers peeled off. The noble Belafonte shook his head regretfully as Worrall's tone changed and he said he would pray for Worrall. Trying to regain lost ground after the programme, Worrall went up to Belafonte and, according to the production team, said: Well, Mr Belafonte, you're really quite intelligent, aren't you?"[80]

Patricia Highsmith

 
Patrica Highsmith on After Dark in June 1988

Following the programme broadcast on 18 June 1988 The Guardian wrote:

After Dark, a three-hour discussion on subjects which will not always bear the light of day, was about... murder. There was Patricia Highsmith, the thriller writer, inquisitive as a monkey, Georgina Lawton, Ruth Ellis's daughter... Lord Longford... the Rev James Nelson... (and) David Howden, the father of a girl who was murdered in her bedroom two years ago... "I don't know if you can imagine the scene of my daughter's bedroom. Friends and neighbours had to go and clean that bedroom up. The stains and fingerprints. They had to take the carpet up, sandpaper the floor and get rid of the marks, buy a new carpet and put it down". "What kind of marks?" asked Patricia Highsmith, who will be slaughtered herself some day.[81]

The Today newspaper wrote:

There have been some very peculiar people on After Dark.... There was the skinhead who left mid-show to look for fresh supplies of lager. And two weeks ago journalist Peter Hillmore sweated so much I thought I would have to throw him a rubber ring. But for sheer oddness, none has outmatched crime writer-cum-New York bag lady lookalike Patricia Highsmith... asking a series of staggeringly daft and insensitive questions to poor David Howden, whose daughter was strangled by a maniac as she slept.[82]

Andrew Wilson, in his biography of Highsmith, expanded:

Sitting next to Howden, Highsmith questioned the bereaved father in a near-clinical fashion. What kind of man was the murderer? Had he been watching the daughter? Was robbery part of the motive? Had she been raped?[83]

Bill Margold and "Pornography"

The Evening Standard reviewed the 25 June 1988 discussion:

In the business, they call him Poppa Bear (or is it Bare?)... Bill Margold, a large American with the vocabulary of a peanut, and one of the guests appearing on this week's After Dark. The subject was pornography and a well balanced mixture of perversion, puritanism and prurience combined to entertain and enlighten insomniacs.[84]

The Guardian added:

Margold's breezy definition of hard core – "up, in, out, off" – belies his ambition to give the public genuine artistic storylines.... I was waiting for someone, preferably a woman, to hang one on big, burly Poppa Bear, who is about the most arrogant, bullying, bulldozer loudmouth this sleep-cheating series has so far brought us."[85]

The background to the programme is detailed in an article by one of the guests, author David Hebditch, available here. All editions of After Dark ended with music, more or less related to the subject of the week. That week, the Evening Standard noted: "This intelligent (mostly), thought-provoking discussion was brought to an end by the song It's Illegal, It's Immoral, or It Makes You Fat."[84]

"British Intelligence"

 
After Dark on 16 July 1988: "British Intelligence"

In a discussion titled "British Intelligence", broadcast on 16 July 1988, the guests included Merlyn Rees, H. Montgomery Hyde and a man called Robert Harbinson, described by Francis Wheen in The Independent newspaper as follows:

Robin Bryans, a... travel writer and sometime music teacher who also goes under the names Robert Harbinson and Christopher Graham. (His opponent) is Kenneth de Courcy... who likes to be known as the Duc de Grantmesnil.... Though both are Irish by birth, both have intelligence connections (Bryans was a friend of Blunt), both are ex- jailbirds and both are – how shall we say? – quite eccentric... (Bryans) denounced de Courcy on the Channel 4 programme After Dark. His allegations are too confused (and too libellous) to be summarised here, but names such as Mountbatten, Shackleton, Churchill, Blunt seem to pop up often.[86]

Bryans himself wrote:

Before the cameras, we delighted to talk about Adeline de la Feld's family upsetting Mussolini with their writings. I was then asked by Robin Ramsay of the Lobster magazine about my own early writing which he knew about from his co-editor Stephen Dorril who had interviewed me for his book Honeytrap, the sad story of my friend Stephen Ward hounded by the Establishment to suicide in 1963. But the Channel Four masterminds wanted to know about my war activities and the following day Montgomery Hyde, a barrister, phoned me to warn me that a High Court writ was on its way.[87]

The journalist Paul Foot described it as "one magnificent edition of After Dark in which Robin Ramsay excelled himself."[88] During the discussion, another guest, retired GCHQ employee Jock Kane, claimed "that the new procedures recommended by the Security Commission regarding the removal of documents from GCHQ had not been implemented four years later."[89]

The following week The Guardian newspaper reported:

Thirty Labour MPs yesterday called for a judicial inquiry into claims that the Government has used private security companies to carry out undercover operations on its behalf. A motion, drawn up by Mr Ken Livingstone (Brent E), refers to statements made by Mr Gary Murray – a private investigator, who says he has been employed by the Government – on Channel 4's After Dark programme.[90]

"Save the Whale, Save the World?"

On 30 July 1988 "After Dark" turned its attention to the whale. One guest, Shigeko Misaki of the Institute of Cetacean Research, subsequently wrote:

 
Kieran Mulvaney on "Save the Whale, Save the World?"

It might have been the British sense of fair play that required the Japanese views for balance, they asked Mr. C. W. Nicol, the author of "Harpoon," to appear on the show to speak for the Japanese position. Responding to Mr. Nicol's call, I flew to London to appear on the show with him. Several distinguished persons appeared on the program, including Dr. Jim Lovelock, who coined the name Gaia for global environmental crisis; Heathcote Williams, poet and author of "The Whale Nation" enormously popular with young generation of the U.K.; Petra Kelly, then a German parliamentarian of the Green Party; Kieran Mulvaney, then a 17-year-old energetic anti-whaling activist (who later became the spokesman for Greenpeace); and Tony Ball who represented the British motor industry. During the course of the program, I happened to remark on the traditional use of whale baleen plates that is an important part of the respect paid to all parts of the whales caught, using them without waste. I explained that the whale baleen has been used inside the extremely delicate mechanism for the movements of puppets' heads in the traditional Japanese theatrical art called 'bunraku.' To this, poet Williams responded: "Using a whale product for a puppet show which Japanese call 'culture.' It's unforgivable. Japanese should use plastic." "Bunraku," one of the three most treasured traditional theatrical arts of Japan...apparently meant nothing to one whose life is dedicated to arts of the West.[91]

Bianca Jagger and "Nicaragua"

John Underwood wrote of the programme broadcast on 6 August 1988: "I recall hosting an edition of... After Dark in which (Bianca Jagger) intellectually crushed Dr John Silber, a senior adviser to Ronald Reagan, and Roberto Ferrey, an apologist for the Contras. Furthermore, she left Sir Alfred Sherman lost for words, a feat rarely achieved before or since."[92]

Jonathan Miller and "Alternative Medicine"

 
Jonathan Miller on After Dark

In the New Statesman the writer Sean French described "the best moment of my week" occurring at the end of the 3 September 1988 edition:

After Dark had been debating the problems of alternative medicine. After a few hours of acrimonious debate, each of the participants was asked to say a few words on what they hoped for the future of medicine. The last comment of all was made by Dr Jonathan Miller. Since he had been the evening's most vociferous opponent of fringe medicine I expected him to deliver a final diatribe. Instead of this, he said he wanted to speak of something which was more important than any kind of medicine delivered on a one-to-one basis:

The main welfare which was ever conferred on the human community was actually by social administration. They were the improvement of drainage, the rationalisation of diet and a humane society, administered by a just and equitable government which actually sees human welfare as being something which has to be honoured according to principles of distributive justice.

Therefore, he concluded, he thought the most pressing need was 'the ousting of this appalling government'.[93]

Gerry Adams

The following week Channel 4 dropped plans to invite the Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams "to appear on its late night talk show After Dark, after protests from other contributors. The Independent Broadcasting Authority said then that it would have banned Mr Adams on the grounds that his views were offensive to public feeling. Channel 4 avoided a dispute with the IBA by dropping the programme, saying it had only wanted Mr Adams to appear if a suitable context could be found and that, at such short notice, it had been impossible to achieve that."[94]

The Guardian wrote:

On Thursday 8 September, Channel 4 took a decision which has serious implications for freedom of speech on British television.... The arguments used – including what appears to be an unprecedented threat to use the 1981 Broadcasting Act – and the way the decision was taken, were as significant as the decision itself. The invitation to Adams was made public... by Paul Wilkinson, professor of international relations at Aberdeen University and chairman of the Research Foundation for the Study of Terrorism. The programme makers asked him for advice and contacts – they did not invite him to appear. Wilkinson publicly attacked the proposal to have Adams on the programme. Tory MPs, including Neil Hamilton, Mrs Thatcher's parliamentary private secretary, and Tony Marlow, joined what was likely to lead to a chorus of protest. C4 was under pressure to react. Initially, it said that Adams would only appear if a "suitable context" could be found. A second statement, announcing the decision that the programme had been abandoned, said that it was impossible, at such short notice, to achieve that "satisfactory context"... C4 thereby successfully avoided a dispute with the IBA... (which) announced later that day that, if necessary, it would have used Section 4 of the Broadcasting Act to stop Adams appearing.... After Dark in the past has included Roberto Ferrey, a member of the Contras seven-man directorate, Klaus Barbie's defence counsel, and a man who admitted having molested 200 schoolchildren.... The decision to drop the programme was taken as the programme makers – who often do not finalise the show until Friday midday – were trying to get a Tory spokesman from the mainland... Ian Gow, who left the government over its Irish policy, initially said he had no objection in principle to appearing, but then changed his mind.[95]

The Daily Telegraph wrote:

A spokesman for the IBA said: "... The fact that it is a live programme also means that there is no editorial control over remarks Mr Adams may make." The issue comes a month after an appeal from the Prime Minister to the British media... to withhold publicity from IRA sympathisers.[96]

Channel 4's former Chief Executive, Jeremy Isaacs, speaking at a public lecture that month, said he would have given the After Dark air-time to Adams: "Although I sympathise with what must have been a difficult decision, broadcasters are always going to be accused of self-censorship. Yasser Arafat was allowed on Channel 4 because he happened to represent a lot of people but I knew this would lead to criticism because he is one of many who believe it is right to use any means of obtaining power".[97] The row was later placed in context by the academic study The Media and Northern Ireland:

There were a few straws in the wind in the autumn of 1988 which, with hindsight, suggested what was on the way. In September Channel Four pulled an After Dark programme which was to feature Gerry Adams.... Most journalists though saw this as an isolated case of self-censorship brought on by the post-Ballygawley atmosphere.[98]

An alternative view is provided by Laura K. Donohue (writing in the Cardozo Law Review [99]), who summarises Professor Keith Ewing and Conor Gearty as follows:

... at the urging of the British Government, Channel 4 eliminated one of the After Dark programs, in which Gerry Adams was scheduled to appear.[100]

Following a debate in the House of Commons Liz Forgan of Channel 4 challenged this account in a letter to The Times:

After Dark considered inviting Gerry Adams on to the programme, not simply for him to express his views but to hold him to account for his apology for vile acts of terrorism against the vigorous challenge of five other participants. Michael Mates cites this as an example of the media failing to put its house in order. He omits to mention that in fact the invitation was never issued and programme was never made or transmitted because I... decided that we could not gather enough other participants on that date of sufficient authority to ensure that the programme did not turn into a free run for Mr Adams and flout the normal standards of due impartiality.[101]

The producer later commented in an article in Lobster magazine:

Adams had apparently agreed to what was at the time quite a coup: he would sit down with sworn political enemies.... Finally the C4 Director of Programmes Liz Forgan and I agreed a deal: if a former British prime minister would come on the programme, Adams could appear. Wilson had Alzheimers; Callaghan never liked us; and Edward Heath, who later appeared twice on After Dark, couldn't make it. So that was the end of it... I was subsequently told our (unmade) programme was the straw which broke Downing Street's back. I cannot confirm this, but the timing is eloquent: our programme with Adams was to be on 10 September. On 19 October, Douglas Hurd, then Home Secretary, introduced broadcasting restrictions (the "broadcasting ban") on organisations proscribed in Northern Ireland and Britain, including direct statements by members of Sinn Féin. From November 1988 to September 1994, the voices of Irish republican and Loyalist paramilitaries were barred by the government from British television and radio.[34]

Series Three

Tony Benn and "Out of Bounds"

The first programme of the third series was titled Out of Bounds: "1988 was the year of the tri-centenary of the Bill of Rights, yet in May 1989, in the shadowy studio of Channel 4's After Dark programme, a group of former British and US intelligence agents discussed the merits and evils of new legislation on official secrets. When this legislation completes its processes through Parliament such a gathering is likely to become illegal."[102]

The Financial Times wrote:

Channel 4's After Dark triumphantly broke all the rules from the beginning.... The first of the new series on Saturday proved that the formula is still working extremely well. The subject was official secrecy, and during the course of the night remarks included: "I was in Egypt at the time, plotting the assassination of Nasser" and "Wilson and Heath were destroyed in part by the action of intelligence agents" and (spoken with incredulity) "You mean we shouldn't have got rid of Allende?" The hostility between just two of the participants, which often brings most life to the programme, occurred this time between Tony Benn and ex-CIA man Miles Copeland, and it was the fundamental difference in political outlook between these two which informed the entire discussion. Anyone who regarded Benn as a dangerous "loony leftie" but watched right through until 2.00 may have been astonished at his thoroughly conservative British attitudes.[103]

Tony Benn wrote in his diary, later published as The End of an Era:

Saturday 13 May – In the evening I went to take part in this live television programme After Dark with John Underwood in the chair. It was an open-ended discussion which started at about midnight and went on till the early hours. The other participants were the historian Lord Dacre, Eddie Chapman, who had been a double agent during the war, Anthony Cavendish, who is a former MI6 and MI5 officer, Miles Copeland (an ex-CIA man), James Rusbridger, who has worked with MI5 at one stage, and Adela Gooch, a defence journalist from The Daily Telegraph. Every one of them made admissions or came out with most helpful information. I was terribly pleased with it.[104]

Asked during the course of the programme if the secret service should be democratically accountable Lord Dacre replied:

I would like to see it accountable indirectly by having the ultimate authority outside party politics, and if there was a body which consisted of respectable people, respected by all sides, then it wouldn't be dependent on the government of the day.[105]

The Listener magazine described the programme:

The new Official Secrets Act has just received the Queen's assent. This may be the last time for some years that any disclosures can be made on such matters.... After Dark exists for mysterious reasons, probably something to do with a necessary safety-valve in a climate of increasing pressure on the media.... Its strength is that it has rescued that endangered species, genuinely spontaneous conversation, and presented it absolutely without frills. It does not have to rely on a presenter or on the glamour of its guests, as other talk shows do. Its force is its unique lack of inhibition in dealing with very controversial issues without exhibitionism...an invaluable programme.[106]

Richard Norton-Taylor reported on guests who did not appear because of concerns about contempt of court: "Michael Randle and Pat Pottle, who admitted helping the spy, George Blake, escape from prison in 1966... have been dropped from the... programme... Mr Randle and Mr Pottle were arrested and released on police bail last week after admitting in a book that they had helped Blake escape."[107] Michael Randle eventually appeared on After Dark, fourteen years later, on 22 March 2003.

Hillsborough and "Football – The Final Whistle?"

On 20 May 1989, following the Hillsborough disaster and on the night after the FA Cup Final, After Dark invited bereaved parents to participate, one of whom said:[35]

... they didn't give the poor people who were killed any dignity...I bent down to kiss and talk to [my son] and as we stood up there was a policeman who came from behind me... trying to usher me and my husband out.... I had to scream at the police officer to allow us privacy... the total attitude was, you've identified number 33 so go![108]

A lengthy extract from what bereaved mother Eileen Delaney said can be read here.[109]

'Blue' and "Drugs"

A week later The Times wrote:

The sexiest show of the week by far is After Dark.... Saturday night's talking point was the demon drug crack, a subject which would normally leave this viewer in a state of lacquered composure. Again, however, one's hackles soon rose and one was up there, punching the air, taking sides. Unfortunately the debate was hijacked by a black musician called 'Blue', who shouted everyone down with non-sequiturs. Eventually he got up and left.[110]

Denis Healey and "Back in the USSR?"

 
Denis Healey on After Dark

The programme the following week was described by ITN as being "about the changes in Soviet Russia. Former communist (and later British Chancellor) Denis Healey; novelist Tatania Tolstoya and other Russians including journalist Vitali Vitaliev and dissident Vladimir Bukovsky."[62] The Communist journal Unity later wrote "The last time I saw Bukovsky was on a Channel 4 programme After Dark in which he slaughtered the drinks trolley and got up the nose of the former Labour leader [sic] Denis Healey who seemed to work out pretty early that this bloke was not the best of people."[111]

Edward Heath

 
Edward Heath on After Dark

On 10 June 1989 "in the course of a bad-tempered late-night television discussion programme during the European election campaign in June, (former Prime Minister) Edward Heath contemptuously rejected the possibility, posed by the former American Defence Secretary Richard Perle, that the political map of Europe was about to be transformed: 'Does anyone seriously believe that these satellite countries are going to become free democracies and does anyone really believe that Moscow is going to see the disintegration of the Soviet empire?'"[112]

This was the first time a former Prime Minister had appeared on After Dark. Edward Heath was a guest again, on 2 March 1991, discussing the Persian Gulf with Lord Weidenfeld and Adnan Khashoggi.

"Pride and Prejudice"

On 24 June 1989, in the run up to the 20th anniversary of the Stonewall riots in New York, After Dark asked what progress in terms of gay rights had been made since the 1960s. Guests included the playwright Martin Sherman and the psychiatrist Dr Ismond Rosen. The Wellcome Collection describes the programme in their catalogue:

Each participant, except Rosen, is asked to speak about their relevant personal experiences in the 1960s. The discussion moves on to examine some experiences with psychiatrists and the attitude of psychiatrists treating homosexual or lesbian child or adult patients. Rosen is asked about the strategies he would employ with a person seeing him in connection with their sexual identity...His job as a psychiatrist is to understand that process, not to deem whether something is normal or not. From here on the discussion develops and during it Rosen is challenged a number of times on his views or asked to explain them in more detail as a professional speaking to lay people. There is a certain amount of hostility from various participants towards Rosen's views.[113]

"Germany – 50 Years On"

In his book A Thread of Gold the Rabbi Albert Friedlander describes his participation in the After Dark discussion held on the 50th anniversary of the start of the Second World War:

I had a strange and almost traumatic encounter with some Germans of the type I had basically avoided.... I was asked to join Christof Wackernagel [de], a former Baader-Meinhof actor and poet... a Herr Spitzi from Austria who was a "revisionist" historian and questioned whether a Holocaust had in fact happened; a camp survivor; a Wall Street Journal writer; a psychiatrist; and Franz Schoenhuber, head of the new Republican party in Germany.... At least three times during the long night I excused myself and marched out of the TV studio, into the street, to breathe fresh air.[114]

"Body Beautiful"

Later in September 1989, the Evening Standard said "After Dark 'provided us with the best talk, entertainment and drama of the weekend, when a group sat down to discuss the Body Beautiful. On one seat sat Mandy Mudd, representing the London Fat Woman's Group.... Strategically seated next to her on the sofa was the exquisite Suzanne Younger, Miss United Kingdom.... The most impressive guests were Molly Parkin, who asked all the right questions; ex-body builder Zoe Warwick, whose perceptiveness and incisive comments kept opening up new areas of discussion; and Professor Arthur Marwick, who had to bear the brunt of everyone's criticism and abuse.... Ms Mudd and disabled actor Nabil Shaban shouted him down."[115] A columnist in The Times, Barbara Amiel, wrote "A very fat lady and a deformed man (told) a beauty queen that her looks were 'boring'. Any suggestion that she was beautiful, they explained, was simply a reflex of a conditioned and oppressed culture. My outrage at this nonsense was tempered by the inability of the beauty queen to do much more than squeak."[116]

"Death Penalty?"

A week later, on 7 October 1989, "a hangman (Syd Dernley) declared, in the presence of a judge yearning for the return of the death penalty (Michael Argyle), that if authorised he would happily kill another guest, a former IRA man (Sean O'Dochartaigh)".[52]

"The Royal Family"

 
Andrew Morton on After Dark

On 21 October Tony Wilson hosted a discussion about royalty with, among others, Andrew Morton, Peregrine Worsthorne and Archduke Karl von Habsburg. The Irish Independent wrote that Worsthorne "likened meeting the Queen Mother to meeting Einstein".[117]

Xaviera Hollander and "Men and Women: What's the Difference?"

 

On 28 October 1989, during a discussion on differences between men and women with among others Mary Stott and Hans Eysenck, one guest, Malcolm Bennett, "successfully propositioned the Happy Hooker author Xaviera Hollander, and the pair walked off the live set to continue their discourse privately."[118]

Edwina Currie and "What Makes MPs Run?"

A week later, on "the night of 4th November 1989 the politician Edwina Currie appeared, truly live and unconstrained, on After Dark, while at exactly the same time the BBC transmitted her appearance on another programme (Saturday Matters) recorded earlier but as usual announced as "live". After Dark had fun with Currie's apparent bilocation and the clash of realities".[5] The Newcastle Journal reported that "An angry lady called her 'a conceited witch' and hoped she would never set eyes on her again".[119]

Series Four

"Arms and the Gulf"

The British Film Institute characterised the opening discussion of the new series in January 1991 as follows:

Discussion on the West's role in supplying arms to the Middle East. The speakers included: Adel Darwish (Egyptian journalist, author of Holy Babylon), Tam Dalyell MP, Bruce Hemmings (ex-CIA), Major-General James Lunt (former commander of Arab Legion), Rana Kabbani (author of "A Letter To Christendom" and daughter of Syrian Ambassador to Washington), Colonel Robert Jarman (ex-Minister of Defence), Joey Martyn-Martin (former arms dealer).[120]

"Survival – At What Cost?"

The programme the following week was described by ITN as "As the 1991 Gulf War begins, a group of survivors discuss their feelings – with a powerful appearance by Auschwitz survivor Rabbi Hugo Gryn and Sheila Cassidy, tortured by Chileans while General Pinochet was in power"[51] Gryn's daughter wrote: "At first Hugo and another guest, Karma Nabulsi, a representative of the PLO, seemed hostile to one another, but before long they were giggling like old friends".[121]

Oliver Reed and Kate Millett: "Do Men Have To Be Violent?"

 
Kate Millett and Oliver Reed on After Dark

At the height of the Gulf War, Oliver Reed appeared on an edition discussing militarism, masculine stereotypes and violence to women: "Both the topic and Reed's invitation were timely...the British Army were deploying women to the frontline for the very first time; also, that same week, Oliver Reed had won a libel case against The Sun, which had called him a wife beater".[17] As The Daily Telegraph wrote in 2021, "Reed's contributions to After Dark – and to British television history, thanks to much repeated clips – were indeed valuable: inappropriate comedy gold. Belligerent, disruptive, sloshed on half pints of wine...(Reed) freestyled about the dynamic between men and women".[17] After one hour Reed returned from the toilet and, getting more to drink, rolled on top of the noted feminist author Kate Millett, who then complained (though she later asked for a tape of the show to entertain her friends[122]). A member of the production team later wrote that Reed "got famously sloshed but perhaps not quite as much as viewers may have thought (or as other guests had been – the drinking record was held by philosopher A. J. Ayer)".[52] Another guest on the programme, author Neil Lyndon, wrote an article in The Independent about the experience.[123]

The show received much attention and, as reported later in The Daily Telegraph, "has become mythologised, largely because of the events around it. In a first for British TV, the show was pulled off the air during its live broadcast. Not because of Oliver Reed's antics...but because of a hoax call - a mistake that Channel 4 tried to swiftly brush under the wine-splashed carpet".[17] The producer wrote later to the British television trade magazine Broadcast:

The team responsible for After Dark were naturally pleased that Broadcast chose our programme as one of the most significant in Channel 4's history in your anniversary issue. Since you referred to the edition in which the late Oliver Reed took part, this seems a good time to correct some of the myths which have surrounded the programme since it was transmitted on 26 January 1991.

Although Reed was not the only disruptive guest in the history of After Dark, what put this particular show into the headlines was not so much Reed's behaviour as C4's. It took the show off the air for 20 minutes, filling the space with an old documentary about coal mining. When our programme returned, Reed was still on set and still disruptive.

That night Reed's behaviour was certainly causing concern. But neither the production team nor host Helena Kennedy felt the situation was out of control. Kennedy told us the guests could themselves decide whether and when to ask Reed to leave the set.

That night, while the then commissioning editor of After Dark, Michael Atwell, was watching the show, he was phoned by someone representing himself as the "duty officer" of the Independent Broadcasting Authority. This individual said an angry Michael Grade, then Chief Executive of C4, had demanded the programme be stopped. We sought to reassure Atwell, explaining that After Dark often received hoax calls and urged him to check further with his C4 superiors. We could not help reflecting that if Grade were truly upset it would have been more sensible for him to call either the studio or C4, rather than the regulator. However Michael Atwell, without further consultation, decided to stop transmission. We let the guests continue their discussions, though live broadcasting was obviously no longer possible.

But why did live transmission then resume after 20 minutes? Because further enquries by Atwell revealed that Grade was away on his boat. In fact it was Liz Forgan, awoken at home, who said the programme should be put back on air. The curious event of the disappearance of a live programme provided Fleet Street with some funny stories, not all of them true (but many are still recycled). We at Open Media were asked by C4 to issue a joint statement which would have absolved C4 from responsibility. This we refused to do. Six days later Atwell quietly admitted on C4's Right to Reply that After Dark was not implicated in the screw-up.

Viewers with long memories may recall that Reed was asked to leave by the other guests some while after the show resumed transmission. Atwell kept his job at C4 and axed the show at the end of that run.[124]

In his column in the Daily Mirror, Victor Lewis-Smith boasted of his hoax call: "The show was taken off air not by C4, but by... little-old-wine-drinking-me, sitting at home, far from the TV studio.... Once connected, I shouted: 'Michael Grade is furious about this. Take the bloody programme off... now!'"[125]

The lawyer Geoffrey Robertson wrote: "The Broadcasting Standards Council condemned the makers of After Dark for not blacking out Oliver Reed's crude and boorish behaviour...when this behaviour was actually proving the point in a discussion of 'men and violence'".[126]

Channel 4's Deputy Programme Director, John Willis, wrote an internal memo: "Oliver Reed got drunk and a hoaxer caused the programme briefly to be taken off air. I view the latter with a great deal more seriousness than the former... 1,000 calls from an audience estimated at just 300,000. Remarkable."[46]

Gordon Winter and Peter Hain

A week later the programme discussed "The Cost of a Free Press" with, among others, Duncan Campbell, Anthony Howard and Lord Lambton. In the course of the programme, Gordon Winter said "I was a chief witness against Peter Hain, and then BOSS ordered me to do a maverick witness to get him off in order to beat up Jeremy Thorpe. Peter Hain – of course he was set up by the South Africans – of course he was."[127] Peter Hain had himself appeared on the very first After Dark programme several years earlier (see here).

Prisons: No Way Out

On 29 February 1991, a discussion about prison reform featured a "rare live appearance by socialite writer Taki Theodoracopolous, who (admitted) he deserved his prison sentence for cocaine possession. Another striking guest (was) Tony Lambrianou, who served 15 years for his part in the murder of Jack The Hat McVitie."[51]

The Sunday Times wrote "Taki was reluctant to appear...nervous about what consorting with criminals would do to his image. Funny really, when the only person he hit it off with on the show was the long-term criminal Tony Lambrianou".[128]

The Gulf

 
Adnan Khashoggi on After Dark

The discussion on 2 March 1991 featured the only live TV appearance by Adnan Khashoggi, together with a confrontation between Lord Weidenfeld and David Mellor's friend Mona Bauwens (daughter of a senior PLO figure). Also on the programme Chris Cowley, implicated in the Iraqi supergun affair and former Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath."[51]

Andy Croall and "Satanic Ritual Abuse"

Britain's first alleged case of 'satanic' abuse was handled by staff at Nottinghamshire county council, and led to a debate on After Dark. Deputy director of social services Andy Croall was suspended by Nottinghamshire county council as a result of his appearance on the programme. The discussion on 9 March 1991 – "After Rochdale" – was later described by two academics:

(Satanic abuse) allegations collapsed during March 1991 ... That rare airing of issues in care proceedings led the Saturday night, three-hour round-table After Dark talk-show, popular with the opinion formers, to cover the subject. It then became the show to watch when news broke that the Royal Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (RSSPCC), the Northern Constabulary (NC), and social workers from Orkney Islands Council (OIC) had carried on regardless and seized another nine children to save them from Satan. When Professor (Sherrill) Mulhern and Dr. Bill Thompson systematically explained how MPD and disclosure therapy were iatrogenic, and neither Beatrix Campbell nor the feminist or Christian social work directors had an answer, the media set out to extricate itself from its uncritical coverage of the NSPCC's claims by pouring all over Orkney.[129]

Croall "agreeing with Campbell about the existence of satanic abuse" had said during the programme that "as a Christian I believe it's God time for it [satanic abuse] to be revealed….. it's a time when, in God's plan, it's going to be revealed."[130] The Daily Telegraph reported what happened next: "More than 100 Christians gathered outside County Hall to demonstrate their support for Mr Andrew Croall ... . Members of the National and Local Government Officers Association, meanwhile, held a protest backing the suspension. His supporters rallied before a meeting of the county social services committee. Mr Croall's remarks ... had outraged members of NALGO, who called for his resignation."[131]

James Harries and "Teachers"

 
James Harries discussing "Teachers" 23 March 1991

The New Statesman described the programme broadcast on 23 March 1991:

James Harries, aged 12, sat perched forward on the edge of his seat, dwarfed by the upholstery that threatened to devour both him and his blonde mop of frizzy curls. Annis (Garfield) was too busy pouring wine to notice anything more than where the next bottle was coming from. And when Peter (Davies) was not receiving a refill, he was lighting up another cigarette and attacking anything that smacked of tolerance. This bizarre trio transformed a potentially tedious After Dark into the most extraordinary three hours of television all week.... Anthony Clare in the chair had an enormously difficult job. "I've chaired many After Dark discussions," he said, "and we've had politicians, sexologists... but I've never seen any group of people less willing to listen to each other's point of view." Thank heaven, in all this, for Russell Profitt (deputy director of education in Southwark) and Zoe Readhead (daughter of A.S. Neill, and head teacher at Summerhill).[132]

The Yorkshire Ripper

Today described the programme broadcast on 6 April 1991:

The Yorkshire Ripper may have turned killer because he was forced to wear short trousers as a child, his father claimed yesterday. Young Peter Sutcliffe was humiliated by being the only boy in his school wearing them, John Sutcliffe said on television. "Looking back, it was terrible we made the poor devil wait all that time," Mr Sutcliffe said.... "We were very unjust to him". Mr Sutcliffe... admitted he had never visited his son since his transfer to top security Broadmoor hospital – on the orders of the Ripper's wife Sonia Sutcliffe.... He said Sonia was "extremely strange" but added: "There's nothing I would do to come between them if they feel that way."[133]

The Daily Star added:

Mr Sutcliffe also blamed a teenage motorcycle accident for turning his son into a killer. "Apparently he damaged his head in the pile-up. From that moment on, from being a pretty introverted young man, he was just the opposite and became very, very extrovert. There was an absolute personality change".... Mr Sutcliffe... also claimed his son was not a "monster". "I believe some people are born evil, but my son wasn't one of them. There's nothing now evil about him. I wish you could all meet him. You'd be amazed how sensitive, kind he is."[134]

Mr Sutcliffe also said his son was "a lovely lad" a description with which Michael Winner very much disagreed. The ICA wrote: "it ended with (Stefan Jaworzyn) vehemently debating the meaning of the word "integrity" with fellow guest Michael Winner".[135]

Channel 4 axing

In August 1991, Channel 4 announced the end of the series, an action which became the subject of an editorial in The Times.[136]

The Independent newspaper noted: "Grade's programming is confused: he axed the talk show... allegedly to make way for even more innovative programmes, yet replaced it with a series of Seventies repeats. He praised After Dark lavishly in public but, in a letter to Edward Heath, said it 'promised more than it delivered'."[137] The producer wrote later in an article in Lobster magazine:

Much to everyone's surprise, the programme survived the novelty of its form and remained a great event for some years, even to the extent that the head of the network, Jeremy Isaacs, selected it as one of his all-time favourite programmes when he left C4 and wrote a book. Not everyone was wholly supportive, however. Although launched by Isaacs, most of the ninety After Dark programmes were made under the reign of Michael Grade, who we were never sure actually watched the show. And Grade, always more of an aspiring Establishment man than his time at C4 suggested, had concerns. Interviewed some years after he axed After Dark for uncertain reasons, Grade said: "It (After Dark) was an interesting idea and well worth pursuing. I thought it was very badly produced, editorially."[138]

An open letter was published, signed by Professor Sir Ian Kennedy, Buzz Aldrin, Billy Bragg, Beatrix Campbell, Lord Dacre, Gerald Kaufman, Mary Midgley, Richard Perle, Merlyn Rees, Richard Shepherd, Ralph Steadman, Peter Ustinov, Lord Weidenfeld and many others:

We have learnt with great concern of Channel 4's decision not to continue with the television discussion programme After Dark. Some of us have worked on and with this production, others have been its on-screen guests, still others have no professional connection with the programme but as viewers have found After Dark uniquely entertaining, instructive and informative. We do not want to see it disappear.[139]

Angela Lambert wrote later in The Independent:

I am truly sorry to hear that the Saturday small hours talk show After Dark is to be dropped by Channel 4. It was the most original programme on television, and the only one in which the sound of the human voice – angry, boring, repetitive, excitable, but occasionally passionate, revealing and unforgettable – overcame the patina of artifice with which television habitually polishes and tidies up its speakers. Only on After Dark could we have heard the rolling Russian timbre of Tatyana Tolstaya... or seen Clare Short squirm as Tony Howard wondered why, if she was so protective about her private life, she'd talked on radio to Anthony Clare.... Only After Dark had the leisurely pace that made possible the exchange between the Holocaust survivor Rabbi Hugo Gryn and Yasser Arafat's PR voice Karma Nabulsi, whose mutual desire for a world in which their grandchildren could play together was so moving; and allowed Wendy Savage to admit to her own continuing pain at performing abortions. Late as the show was (and being open-ended, it sometimes ran till 3am) it was the most compulsive and dangerous viewing on the air. That'll be why they dropped it.[140]

The producers wrote warning that After Dark's "loss poses such a threat to broadcasting freedom. It is...the only television programme whose guests were not straitjacketed into a fixed time-slot, subjected to precensorship or editing, or confronted with a celebrity host and a noisy studio audience. That year and on through the 1990s we argued, loudly, that After Dark should be put back on air, it being an effective and necessary corrective to the limitations and excessive controls created by the mass broadcasting of those days."[5]

Later programmes

Specials

From 1993 Channel 4 broadcast a number of After Dark one-off specials. In 1995 the Financial Times wrote:

Channel 4 ended its remarkable season on capital punishment, "Lethal Justice", by reviving After Dark, the best studio discussion format ever created; why they do not run it 52 weeks a year is a mystery. Being live may mean enduring bores... but you can also come across amazing people – a former American prison governor in this instance – who, most unusually, have enough time to explain their ideas. As so often with After Dark I switched on to watch 10 minutes and stayed till the end.[141]

In 1997 a Channel 4 executive was said by The Guardian to be "insistent that 'it's a popular misconception that we killed it off. In fact we never lost it. We haven't done another series, but we did a one-off After Dark recently in our abortion season'. Bizarrely, Channel 4 cited After Dark as a model of the kind of cerebral programme it wanted when inviting (independent production company) submissions in May.... 'I can't think of any ideas that would make better late-night programming than After Dark,'[142] he said, echoing the words of the original commissioning executive of After Dark, Seamus Cassidy,[143] who in an interview to the Irish News in 2005 said, "I'm probably most proud of After Dark."[144]

 
"Bloody Bosnia" – 7 August 1993

"Bloody Bosnia"

In 1993 The Independent magazine wrote of the first After Dark special, broadcast as part of the Channel 4 season Bloody Bosnia:

Among those taking part was Nikola Koljević, the vice-president of the so-called Serbian Republic of Bosnia. Among those opposing him, and arguing for a multi-ethnic, non-nationalist Bosnia...were a Croatian historian, a Serb newspaper editor and a Muslim refugee.[145]

During the programme viewers saw "Koljević admit Serb concentration camps in Bosnia".[52] Also present was Sir Fitzroy Maclean, who was the British liaison to Josip Broz Tito's Partisans in World War II.

 
Sinéad O'Connor on After Dark on 21 January 1995

Sinéad O'Connor and "Ireland: Sex & Celibacy"

In January 1995 "Sinéad O'Connor was so interested in a discussion about [sexual] abuse and the Catholic church that she rang in to ask if she could appear. They sent a taxi to her home."[73] The Evening Standard wrote that "After Dark made a brief reappearance last Saturday night when, true to its unpredictable form, Sinéad O'Connor walked on to the set 10 minutes before closedown."[146] Host Helena Kennedy described the event:

On that occasion, former taoiseach, Garret FitzGerald, was sharing the sofas with a Dominican monk and a representative of the Catholic church. "While we were on the air, Sinéad O'Connor called in," says Kennedy. "Then I got a message in my earpiece to say she had just turned up at the studio. Sinéad came on and argued that abuse in families was coded in by the church because it refused to accept the accounts of women and children." But O'Connor's intervention was not all that pleased her that night. For Kennedy, herself from Irish Catholic stock, the real merit of the programme was the way the abuse scandals led into a wider debate, and a bigger picture of the social changes taking place in Ireland at the time, which were challenging teaching on contraception and divorce, and the traditional deference to the church. "It was more than a discussion of child sex abuse," she says. "You could see a new Ireland coming into being."[62]

"Lethal Justice"

The Glasgow Herald wrote of the After Dark special broadcast on 17 August 1995:

The debate on judicial murder looked to be going nowhere. Positions were settled, opinions fixed. A defence lawyer, a policeman, a psychologist, a convicted murderer and a victim's widow were arrayed before us, each saying exactly what was expected of them. Then a fat, smiling American spoke. This was Don Cabana, a professor of Criminal Justice from Mississippi but once a prison governor and once, indeed, an executioner. Quietly, and with some effort, he described exactly what happens when cyanide is released into the chamber, when the gas touches the skin, when the convulsions and the soiling begins, and how it all affects those whose job it is to carry out the orders of the state.... It was a simple, unvarnished account, and the most riveting piece of television this week.[147]

 
After Diana in 1997

"After Diana"

This special was broadcast on 13 September 1997, a fortnight after Diana, Princess of Wales, died from the injuries she sustained in a car crash. With a rare appearance by Claus von Bülow, guests also included George Monbiot, Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie and Beatrix Campbell, who "argued that Princess Diana had survived victimhood to realise her true self-identity".[148]

BBC series

 
Tony Wilson hosting After Dark in 2003

In January 2003, The Guardian wrote:

After Dark, the open-ended discussion programme that gave its guests free rein to ruminate or ramble – depending on how much alcohol they had consumed – is to make a comeback on BBC Four...." After Dark is one of the great television talk formats of all time – it was careless of Channel 4 to have let it go", said the BBCFour controller, Roly Keating. The programme allowed its guests to talk entirely freely. They were allowed to drink, if they wanted, and the programme ended only when they ran out of things to say.

It produced some memorable television moments: John Sutcliffe, father of the Yorkshire Ripper, was able to give a considered view of his son's behaviour; General Sir Anthony Farrar-Hockley, a former commander of British forces in Northern Ireland, swapped anecdotes with Bernadette Devlin; and arms dealer Joey Martyn-Martin claimed Mark Thatcher was a beneficiary of the international weapons trade. However, the show was dropped from its regular Saturday night slot in 1991 by the then Channel 4 chief executive, Michael Grade. His decision prompted a campaign by more than 100 public figures, from an astronaut to a zoologist, to save the programme. It returned the following year for occasional specials until its final demise in 1997.

The BBC Four version will remain unchanged in format, and will be made by the original producer...: 'After Dark is a unique combination of a genuinely live programme, not on a delay of two hours like Question Time or five minutes like a radio programme. There is no studio audience, so the participants are under no obligation to exhibit themselves. There is no celebrity host who has to make himself look good. And, most important of all, it is open-ended, which shifts the power from the broadcaster and the producers to the participants.' He predicted that the programme could seem even more unusual now, in the age of slick and formatted television.[149]

Tom O'Carroll and "Child Protection: How Far Should We Go?"

In March 2003 After Dark gave airtime to a self-confessed paedophile. The Guardian described the show:

Tom O'Carroll... argues that sex with children is not harmful.... The 56-year-old is Ireland's most notorious paedophile. He moved to Leamington Spa in 1972 where he established the Paedophile Information Exchange...(which) called for the open discussion of paedophilia and the abolition of laws against consensual sexual acts between children and adults. And the "boy lover" – as he calls himself – has addressed international conferences across the globe and written a book justifying the behaviour of those who prey on children. Mr O'Carroll and five other members of the exchange were convicted for "conspiring to corrupt public morals" in the 1980s by publishing a magazine advocating sex with children. He joined the After Dark panel for a discussion on paedophilia and child protection. Also on the panel were high profile child protection campaigner Esther Rantzen, lawyer Helena Kennedy QC, a former abuse victim, a criminologist, a solicitor and two academics. The BBC defended the decision to give a platform to Mr O'Carroll, saying he was invited on as part of a legitimate discussion about a topical issue."[150]

Silke Maier-Witt and "Terrorism: Who Wins?"

A week later, a discussion about terrorism saw "the one-time Baader-Meinhof terrorist Silke Maier-Witt confess she could no longer remember why she had done what she did".[52]

"Iraq: Truth and Lies?"

The last After Dark ("Iraq: Truth and Lies?") was transmitted on 29 March 2003. The producer wrote: "The very last After Dark programme ended, appropriately enough perhaps, with a plug for the campaign for a screen-free TV Turnoff Week".[5]

Other notable programmes

As listed on the webpage of ITN Source:[35]

1988

  • On 11 March fashion designer Bruce Oldfield arrived well after the programme began, having decided to finish his meal in a West End restaurant before joining the other guests.
  • On 30 April – during a discussion between a witch, a psychiatrist, an exorcist and an alleged victim of Satanic abuseAfter Dark became possibly the first UK TV programme to air claims that newborn babies were ritually consumed.
  • On 27 August one of the Oz trial defendants was reintroduced to the judge who sentenced him.

1989

  • On 16 September, possibly the first discussion about paedophilia on British television featured a perpetrator, a victim and a psychiatrist who recommended castration.
  • On 18 November, Whitley Strieber, who said he was abducted by space aliens, met astronaut Buzz Aldrin.
  • On 25 November, a man who proposed to take up the offer by the then government of South Africa to emigrate to their country very cheaply, was introduced to South Africans who told him what to expect, including newspaper editor Donald Woods and the musician Abdullah Ibrahim, who closed the programme with an extended jazz impro on piano.
 
Claus von Bülow, "After Diana", 13 September 1997

1997

Other

Some other After Dark programmes were highlighted in an article in the Radio Times in 2003:

  • "One show ("Counting The Cost of a Free Press", 2 February 1991)[151] was plunged into darkness by a power cut. The guests carried on talking during the blackout."
  • "Mary Whitehouse was told by a female pensioner: 'What women want is a Mars bar and a bottle of gin.'"
  • "The guest who consumed the most alcohol was philosopher A. J. Ayer. 'He had been through the best part of a bottle of Scotch, but he was still brilliant.'"[73]

And, from a comment in The Guardian in 2012:

  • "Off the top of my head I remember...a group of witches...and a heart-breaking discussion on euthanasia with a lot of people about to die. There has never been anything else like it."[152]

Channel 4 anniversaries

In October 2007, as part of its 25-year anniversary celebrations, Channel 4 repeated the first ever After Dark on the More4 channel,[153] billing it as "Anthony Wilson hosts a discussion concerning secrets – both secrets of the State and the personal secrets we keep from one another."[154] In 2012, on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of Channel 4, After Dark featured prominently in a number of two-page tributes in British newspapers.[155]

BFI InView

In 2009 the British Film Institute announced that After Dark programmes were available online through its service. This web-based learning resource was free but accessible only to UK Higher Education/Further Education institutions, in partnership with The National Archives, the Parliamentary Broadcasting Unit, the BBC, FremantleMedia and the After Dark production company Open Media. The BFI said InView offered examples of how some of the UK's key social, political and economic issues have been represented and debated. Until the service came to an end in 2020 fifty editions of what the BUFVC called 'the much missed series After Dark'[156] were streamed online.[157]

Production

Editorial

The producer wrote: "We made programmes about familiar British issues (or 'diseases', as we called them): the treatment of children, of the mentally ill, of prisoners, and about class, cash and racial and sexual difference. Several programmes were concerned with matters of exceptional sensitivity to the then Thatcher government, such as state secrecy or the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Places further afield but just as important – Chile, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Nicaragua, South Africa and Russia – featured regularly, as did programmes explicitly about the pressures history puts on the present (After Dark noted anniversaries as various as the Second World War and the death of Freud). Less apparently solemn subjects – sport, fashion, gambling, pop music – were in the mix from the start and turned out to be more serious than viewers might have expected."[5]

The main themes of After Dark were listed in an internal memo in 1988:

  1. Lovelessness: the spaces in our society that for whatever reason are cold, empty, formulaic, unfeeling, systematised and filled only with empty rhetoric or silence.
  2. Who owns your body? Do you? Does the State? Your doctor? Your lover? The police? Your parents? This theme covers a variety of apparently unrelated subjects: imprisonment, health care, capital punishment, mental illness, abortion, schooling...
  3. What happens "after dark"? Sex, crime, astronomy...
  4. Shining light into the shadows we find not only Ralf Dahrendorf's underclass but also the invisible people. Some invisible people are so because they choose to be (criminals, spies, the hidden rich) but others are invisible because we do not want to see them (the homeless, the dispossessed, the mentally confused, the dying...). Among the invisible there is a new slave class: some of those were uncovered by Gunther Wallraff in his documentary "The Lowest of the Low" (illegal immigrants who are used for clearing up nuclear accidents although the work is known to be fatal).
  5. Do you want to know a secret? Guests tell all, or their bit of it.
  6. What is beyond the law? Who is beyond the law?
  7. Not knowing is an act of choice. During a discussion on the Holocaust, an Austrian woman claimed "We did not know"; another participant countered by saying that not all knowing comes from reading newspapers. Looking, listening and drawing deductions are another way of knowing, so choosing not to look or listen or draw a deduction can be conscious "not knowing". So: what things in our society are we choosing to look away from, choosing not to know? What will our grandchildren accuse us of?"[158]

Guest selection

 
Ex-MP John Stonehouse after a pilot episode in 1987

"After Dark is different: experts sit side by side with ordinary people – irrespective of age, race, gender or sexual orientation – whose experience happens to relate to the subject.... (The producer says) 'An average show should consist of Punch, Judy, a crocodile, a hangman and a grandmother'."[159] 'There's nobody I wouldn't have on the programme'.[160]

Mark Lawson wrote in The Independent:

The Watergate conspirator John Ehrlichman was at the dentist when the surgery phone rang. It was for him. A voice from London: how would he like to take part in an open-ended, very-late-night discussion on the nature of truth. If he was interested, he had four hours to get on the plane...Jeremy Isaacs, in his farewell speech to the television industry, counted (After Dark) among the innovations of which he was most proud.... The key to the series... is the casting.... (The producer says) "We start with one or two people without whom the discussion wouldn't take place, the catalysts. Then there are the people who are not known TV performers but who will bring personal testimony to issues which would otherwise be argued theoretically. Then there are the historians or journalists who provide a context.... In a documentary the meetings between these points of view would happen in a cutting room or, at best, around a table under bright lights with time running out. You don't, in any other programme, get the full nuances of a meeting between people."[161]

 
A production meeting in 2003

The Times wrote: "Some of the juxtapositions have been inspired."[162] "After the Nelson Mandela concert last summer it ran a discussion programme including Harry Belafonte, Breyten Breytenbach, Denis Worrall and Ismail Ayob, Mandela's lawyer. Belafonte came directly from Wembley with a police escort for his only British TV appearance. Programme hired a private plane to fly in Breytenbach. Worrall came from South Africa at After Dark expense. But this largesse is apparently unusual."[77]

The producer wrote: "In amongst the exceptional and the celebrated, the stars and the scandalous, quieter folk often triumphed. Those who had written to us with a story to tell or who had been discovered through diligent research found that the format allowed them a voice, despite strong competition. Though maybe as late as an hour or more into the programme, they could nonetheless re-shape the discussion and might well trump the polished assertions of more professional experts."[5]

Working method

 
"Peace in Our Time", 3 July 1987, with Edward Teller, Beatrix Campbell, Rudolf Peierls, Enoch Powell, Sergei Kapitsa and host John Underwood.

The Times wrote:

After Dark has managed a genuinely fresh approach. It has done so by freeing itself of such conventions as a studio audience and a set running time, of carrying on through commercial breaks and of dealing with one subject instead of several.[162]

and the TV trade magazine Televisual commented:

The show was successful in making its guests forget the cameras and the host. Edward Teller, inventor of the H-bomb, only agreed to appear on the show because it wasn't edited.[163]

The programme was "the most uncensorable programme in the history of British television. Genuinely live – unlike many so-called "live" shows which are delayed by seconds or longer – and crucially open-ended, the participants in these unique broadcast discussions were able to take control of the content: the programme concluded only when everyone had said everything they wanted to say."[11]

The producer described the working method:

... so designed as to empower the guests, rather than have them act out a preordained and inevitably limited agenda designed by others. In all the ways that matter the control of After Dark passed from the producer and the broadcaster to the participants. As a result it was never our show – it always belonged to the guests, which is only right, proper and as it should be but normally never is.... The special freedoms guaranteed by the programme were grabbed by the participants, who often said the apparently unsayable. Intelligent production kept us out of the law courts, if not out of hot water.[34]

Presenter Tony Wilson said "After Dark kept its participants apart before the transmission"[164] Presenter John Underwood reckons the first give-away is guests' choice of seats when they enter the studio: "Power figures, people used to being listened to, plump themselves down opposite the host. The seat on the presenters' right, a bit in the shadows, is chosen by dark horses whose contributions are few but deadly." He also relishes the unexpected alliances that are formed and the genuine dialogue that becomes possible.[165]

Jay Rayner described the backstage atmosphere in Arena magazine:

The situation is a little more controlled than the viewer might imagine...As the guests arrived they were shepherded off to individual dressing rooms. Such solitary confinement was to protect the guests from meeting each other and...talking themselves out before the television fun began.... The plush red furniture is positioned on a well-planned formation: two long couches on each side, two big armchairs at either end where, it is hoped, strong personalities might sit, and an outsider's chair on one corner, pushed back into the shadows... the seating plan was designed by an Austrian psychologist for the original programme, though none of the guests are told where to sit.... The researchers used their personal knowledge of each guest to help the discussion along. From a phone in the hospitality room they rang the TV gallery and asked the directors to urge Ian Kennedy, that evening's host, to call upon particular members of the party who were well-informed in the area under discussion. Using the radio link secreted in Kennedy's ear the directors passed the message to him. A few seconds later, as though the researchers were lip synching with Kennedy, the question came out of his mouth. It was an act of great skill... the guests had managed to relax in the usually intimidating environment of a TV studio.... They had been given a proper environment to talk in and they had done just that.[160]

City Limits wrote:

As Don Coutts, director of the show, says 'the first half-hour sounds like a Newsnight situation, but after a while people relax and get properly into the subject.... Given that it is a set-up situation and cast quite carefully, after that it's completely open'.[159]

Q magazine quoted the producer: "We're actually trying to break down the barriers that divide people...Jeremy Isaacs told us it was the best proposal for a live show he'd ever seen."[166] "I really don't know what's going to happen."[159] The Listener magazine said 'After Dark has taken the format towards the realm of psychodrama, peeling away its participants layers of restraint and front.'"[167]

Hosts

 
Ian Kennedy hosting After Dark in 1987

The production team sought hosts who were "more than the usual mechanical hack audience appeal" and "a facilitator rather than a celebrity figure".[168] Senior director Coutts intended their role to be minimal, saying that "They interrupt if everyone is shouting at each other and generally just keep things going." He added that getting the hosts to "shut up" was the most difficult thing.[159] "Tony Wilson, a familiar face to programme watchers in Granadaland, understands that he will not be the host next week. Indeed he knows he will not be asked again if he attempts to direct the discussion."[169]

At a broadcasting conference in 1992 Tony Wilson said:

One of my privileges in television is that the wonderful Sebastian Cody let me present several editions of After Dark. You cannot record a programme like that. You cannot get those human and emotional and intellectual things to happen...Somewhere about twenty or thirty minutes in, you poke a couple of questions...and it's like you know that train has started, the roller coaster, and you will be on it for at least two and a half hours. And that roller coaster of emotions and intellect is fused with the red lights. It's fused with the fact that this is live television. Those people are aware of it. You are aware of it. That is the great delight of it.[164]

In 2021 journalist Fergal Kinney wrote of Tony Wilson’s work as a host of the programme:

His appearances on Channel 4’s freewheeling late-night debate show After Dark...are exhilarating, pitched somewhere between a malevolent David Dimbleby and a slightly effete Jonathan Meades.[170]

Other frequent presenters of the series included Prof. Anthony Clare, Helena Kennedy QC, Prof. Sir Ian Kennedy, Sheena McDonald, Matthew Parris and John Underwood. Those who hosted only one edition include Anthony Holden, Stuart Hood, Henry Kelly and John Plender.

Staffing

The Guardian ran the first recruitment advertisement for programme staff:

In May Channel 4 launch an extraordinary discussion programme.... Open Media are offering a number of short-term contracts on this remarkable series.... We need senior researchers with considerable experience of current affairs television, versatility, good humour, a limitless capacity for work and, above all, sympathy with and knowledge of many different viewpoints and people – not all of them sympathetic.[171]

The producer wrote:

Diversity was anyway guaranteed by the colourful production teams who researched the programmes. It was the 1980s so we employed a member of Militant (at least I think he used to get the newspaper) but also a member of a Roman Catholic sect, a retired rent boy and someone who was later splashed across the front page of The Observer as an SIS agent. We gave a break to a minicab driver who nonetheless carried on sending us abusive faxes for years. There was a troublesome former Private Eye man whose stories led me to discover that Peter Cook was a serious and professional proprietor (Cook's otherwise incessant comedy shtick vanished when he discussed the magazine's personnel problems). There was no collective bias: the staff were a motley crew who fought hard to promote their individual interests.[34]

A gameshow producer got his break into television by writing to After Dark: "They eventually put me on a very short contract cutting articles out of the papers. It was the most junior job I'd ever had and I was extremely happy! Over the next two series of After Dark, I read and cut 10 newspapers a day, 10 magazines a week, plus monthly digests of foreign press – a fantastic introduction to current affairs. I enjoyed the intellectual cut-and-thrust of the office, the thrill of live broadcasting, and the diversity of the subjects we covered."[172]

A senior member of staff described her working week:

On Saturdays when the show goes out, I might be in the studio till 5 am. On a weekday, I might have a 10 am start, kicking off with a production meeting. This includes everyone who works for Open Media, the production company – plus a couple of experts on topics we are considering for the future. We have a post mortem on the previous Saturday's programme. Then we move onto next week's show. We discuss possible guests and possible hosts. Later on, we break up into smaller units of one producer and two or three researchers. Within my team, I will draw up a shortlist of maybe 15 guests and 20 books to be read. I will allocate tasks, giving myself a slightly smaller workload so that I can keep a supervisory eye on the overall progress of the one or two projects in hand. I spend the rest of the day on the phone, liaising with my colleagues and meeting useful contacts.[173]

Direction

 
"Brave New World?", 1994

In 2021 The Daily Telegraph wrote: "Don Coutts directed it like a drama. "Because it was a drama every week...And it wasn't always about the person speaking. There was a lot of looking at other people"."[17] About the look of the show Coutts said "We used big close-ups, pulled focus or used a panning system. The camera work was radical...The idea was to use very low light conditions, and an atmosphere that was supposed to be dark and moody". Coutts is still pleased with the way viewers could turn the television on and within seconds know that what they were watching couldn't be anything other than After Dark."[174]

The producer wrote: "Guests sat in a circle and so concentrated on each other rather than the cameras. For the benefit of the watching audience at home, the participants were often filmed listening, a sight far more expressive than the faces we make when speaking. In fact After Dark gave such opportunities for listening that on occasion viewers even saw guests – slowly, perhaps only provisionally but nonetheless – changing their minds on air.".[52]

Legal

A Channel 4 lawyer wrote:

After Dark producers weighed the chances of the guest behaving naturally against becoming tongue-tied because of a frightening formal legal document and opted for the side of freer speech. A Channel 4 lawyer was always on hand to explain the handling of particularly sensitive areas to guests, informally warning them of dangers ahead. Particular problems encountered included contempt of court or possible identification of minors during the debate on the Cleveland child abuse cases. It was especially important to give guidance on contempt of court as guests risked a criminal offence if they committed contempt. The Channel 4 duty lawyer sat up in the gallery to spot problems as they happened. If disaster struck the lawyer would speak to the host at the earliest possible (commercial) break. If the host had not already responded by making it clear that a guest's libellous views were his or hers alone, that is.[175]

Cultural references

See also

References

  1. ^ Broadcast magazine, 28 January 2003
  2. ^ Broadcast magazine, 4 March 2010
  3. ^ 'Not So Dumb', The Times, 3 October 2018
  4. ^ see Club 2 in German Wikipedia
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "After Dark and the Future of Public Debate", Westminster Institute for Advanced Studies, 3 September 2017, accessed 29 March 2023
  6. ^ Frances Bonner, Personality Presenters, 2011, p.82
  7. ^ Enniscorthy Guardian, 31 January 1991
  8. ^ Tom Fordy, 29 January 2021, accessed 3 February 2021
  9. ^ Rod Stoneman "The Theories We Need", Petrie and Stoneman Educating Film-Makers, 2014
  10. ^ News release by the Open University, accessed 4 June 2014
  11. ^ a b Programme notes 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine for the academic conference, 1984: Where Are We Now?, held 23 April 2014
  12. ^ "An instinctive look at the world is taken through a glass darkly", The Herald, Neil Cooper, 5 January 2016, accessed 13 September 2017
  13. ^ David Lee and John Corner, "After Dark – Channel 4's Innovation in Television Talk", Journal of British Cinema and Television, Volume 14 Issue 4, September 2017
  14. ^ a b David Lee, Independent Television Production in the UK, Palgrave Macmillan, 2018
  15. ^ No Twitter mobs, just intelligent debate, Simon Heffer, The Daily Telegraph, 18 August 2020, accessed 19 August 2020
  16. ^ Rerun the jewels, Jack Seale, The Guardian, 18 April 2020, accessed 20 April 2020
  17. ^ a b c d e Tom Fordy, The Daily Telegraph, 29 January 2021, accessed 3 February 2021
  18. ^ Jeremy Isaacs, Storm Over 4, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, UK, 1989
  19. ^ 'The talk-masters of television', The Independent, 7 June 1989
  20. ^ . Off The Telly. November 2002. Archived from the original on 8 June 2011.
  21. ^ The Listener, 21 December 1989
  22. ^ Deans, Jason (28 January 2003). "BBC4 to resurrect After Dark". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  23. ^ Virginia Matthews, The Guardian, 8 June 1987
  24. ^ BMRB Survey, 1988
  25. ^ Sonia M. Livingstone, Peter Lunt, Talk on Television: Audience Participation and Public Debate, Routledge 1993
  26. ^ 'Remembering Cold War Eighties with innocence of youth', Gail Walker, Belfast Telegraph, 20 June 2016
  27. ^ A Sword In The Darkness, by Joe Morgan, accessed 13 May 2022
  28. ^ Liberal England, accessed 31 May 2022
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External sources

  • Production company's list of all guests, hosts, programme titles and dates
  • Credits (from IMDb)
  • One entire episode and several clips of others (from the production company's YouTube channel)
  • Interview with Helena Kennedy launching a new series of After Dark (The Sunday Times, 23 February 2003)

after, dark, programme, this, article, contains, many, overly, lengthy, quotations, encyclopedic, entry, please, help, improve, article, presenting, facts, neutrally, worded, summary, with, appropriate, citations, consider, transferring, direct, quotations, wi. This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource November 2017 After Dark is a British late night live television discussion programme that broadcast weekly on Channel 4 between 1987 and 1991 and which returned for specials between 1993 and 1997 it was later revived by the BBC for a single season broadcast on BBC Four in 2003 After Dark South Africa 11 June 1988Created byOpen MediaCountry of originUnited KingdomOriginal languageEnglishNo of episodes90 list of episodes ProductionRunning timeOpen endedReleaseOriginal networkChannel 4 1987 1991 1993 1997 BBC Four 2003 Original release1 May 1987 1987 05 01 29 March 2003 2003 03 29 Roly Keating of the BBC described it as one of the great television talk formats of all time 1 In 2010 the television trade magazine Broadcast wrote After Dark defined the first 10 years of Channel 4 just as Big Brother did for the second 2 and in 2018 the programme was cited in an editorial in The Times as an example of high quality television 3 Broadcast live and with no scheduled end time the series inspired by an Austrian programme called Club 2 4 was considered to be a groundbreaking reinvention of the discussion programme format The programme was hosted by a variety of presenters and each episode had around half a dozen guests often including a member of the public Contents 1 Programme synopsis 2 Specials and spin offs 3 Start on Channel 4 4 Viewer response 5 Critical response 6 Guest response 7 Notable guests and programmes 7 1 Series One 7 1 1 Peter Hain Clive Ponting Peter Utley Colin Wallace and Secrets 7 1 2 Simon Hughes 7 1 3 Do the British Love Their Children 7 1 4 David Mellor David Yallop and The Mafia 7 1 5 Teresa Gorman and Is Britain Working 7 1 6 Killing With Care 7 1 7 Edward Teller and Peace in Our Time 7 1 8 Jacques Verges and Klaus Barbie 7 2 Series Two 7 2 1 Freemasonry Beyond The Law 7 2 2 Shere Hite and Marriage 7 2 3 William Spider Wilson 7 2 4 Bernadette McAliskey and Licensed to Kill 7 2 5 Horse Racing 7 2 6 Bewitched Bothered or Bewildered 7 2 7 Derry 68 7 2 8 Israel 40 Years On 7 2 9 What is Sex For 7 2 10 Winston Churchill 7 2 11 Harvey Proctor and Open To Exposure 7 2 12 Harry Belafonte Denis Worrall and South Africa 7 2 13 Patricia Highsmith 7 2 14 Bill Margold and Pornography 7 2 15 British Intelligence 7 2 16 Save the Whale Save the World 7 2 17 Bianca Jagger and Nicaragua 7 2 18 Jonathan Miller and Alternative Medicine 7 2 19 Gerry Adams 7 3 Series Three 7 3 1 Tony Benn and Out of Bounds 7 3 2 Hillsborough and Football The Final Whistle 7 3 3 Blue and Drugs 7 3 4 Denis Healey and Back in the USSR 7 3 5 Edward Heath 7 3 6 Pride and Prejudice 7 3 7 Germany 50 Years On 7 3 8 Body Beautiful 7 3 9 Death Penalty 7 3 10 The Royal Family 7 3 11 Xaviera Hollander and Men and Women What s the Difference 7 3 12 Edwina Currie and What Makes MPs Run 7 4 Series Four 7 4 1 Arms and the Gulf 7 4 2 Survival At What Cost 7 4 3 Oliver Reed and Kate Millett Do Men Have To Be Violent 7 4 4 Gordon Winter and Peter Hain 7 4 5 Prisons No Way Out 7 4 6 The Gulf 7 4 7 Andy Croall and Satanic Ritual Abuse 7 4 8 James Harries and Teachers 7 4 9 The Yorkshire Ripper 8 Channel 4 axing 9 Later programmes 9 1 Specials 9 1 1 Bloody Bosnia 9 1 2 Sinead O Connor and Ireland Sex amp Celibacy 9 1 3 Lethal Justice 9 1 4 After Diana 9 2 BBC series 9 2 1 Tom O Carroll and Child Protection How Far Should We Go 9 2 2 Silke Maier Witt and Terrorism Who Wins 9 2 3 Iraq Truth and Lies 10 Other notable programmes 10 1 1988 10 2 1989 10 3 1997 10 4 Other 11 Channel 4 anniversaries 12 BFI InView 13 Production 13 1 Editorial 13 2 Guest selection 13 3 Working method 13 4 Hosts 13 5 Staffing 13 6 Direction 13 7 Legal 14 Cultural references 15 See also 16 References 17 External sourcesProgramme synopsis EditThe programme featured a different topic each week with guests selected to provoke lively discussion subject matter included the treatment of children of the mentally ill of prisoners and about class cash and racial and sexual difference as well as matters of exceptional sensitivity to the then Thatcher government such as state secrecy or the Troubles in Northern Ireland places further afield Chile Eritrea Iran Iraq Israel Nicaragua South Africa and Russia featured regularly and less apparently solemn subjects sport fashion gambling and pop music were in the mix from the start 5 A television historian wrote in 2011 that the programme was not concerned to allow the revelation of celebrities private lives or the promotion of their products they were expected to converse seriously Oliver Reed appeared drunk groped Kate Millett and was removed in contrast Bianca Jagger appeared in intellectual debate with several high ranking American officials over the Contras in Nicaragua 6 Other memorable conversations included footballer Garth Crooks disputing the future of the game with politician Sir Rhodes Boyson and MP Teresa Gorman walking out of a discussion about unemployment with Billy Bragg Other guests included poets and pornographers spies and solicitors feminists and farmers witches and whalers judges and journalists 7 The Daily Telegraph said the discussion was open ended It would stop when the guests decided the debate was over not when TV executives said so 8 In 2014 an academic book summed up the series as After Dark created an unprecedented climate which encouraged spaces where the process of thinking could be brought to light 9 Specials and spin offs EditThe show ended in 1991 but a number of one off specials were broadcast from 1993 and 1997 with a subsequent reboot by the BBC in 2003 In 2004 After Dark was characterised as legendary by the Open University 10 and in 2014 as the most uncensorable programme in the history of British television 11 In 2016 The Herald wrote that Unlike reality television live feeds today After Dark was essential viewing with some very serious talk enlivened even more by unexpected events 12 In 2017 the Journal of British Cinema and Television called it an excitingly different and politically adventurous kind of programme 13 and in 2018 an academic history of independent television production in the UK judged it as an experiment that challenged the limitations of television as a medium of intensive and democratic deliberation and discussion it was very successful and from the vantage of history still seems remarkably fresh to this day 14 From 2010 to 2020 individual programmes were available for online streaming at BFI InView In 2020 Simon Heffer wrote in The Daily Telegraph that the time is surely ripe for the return of a programme such as After Dark 15 and The Guardian listed After Dark as one of the jewels in the history of television it offered a thing that s now extinct constructive debate 16 In 2021 The Daily Telegraph wrote of the curious brilliance of the show It feels like the art of reasonable discussion has been lost in the modern world increasingly sanitised and controlled since the freeform days of After Dark 17 Start on Channel 4 Edit Money 13 August 1988 The media academic David Lee described the founding of the programme in his history of independent television production in the UK A topical talk show format that allowed quite unique forms of political and personal discussion evolve and take place on British television After Dark was created as a counterpoint to the dominant and rather conventional talk show ecology of the time which included the twin pillars of broadcasting talk Parkinson and Question Time Participants were encouraged to discuss a topic intensively but also exhaustively until there was no more to say It also encouraged a more reflective kind of discussion with guests often modifying their original position as a result of the interactions on the show The format encouraged dissent controversy and also reflective frankness Its lack of a determined end point was critical ensuring an open ended somewhat indeterminate quality to proceedings Participants were often positioned as outside of the mainstream political and social agenda and the programme relished its outsider status 14 Sir Jeremy Isaacs the founding Chief Executive of Channel 4 wrote an account of the network s early years in his book Storm Over 4 In it he selects twenty six programmes a very personal choice including After Dark which he describes as follows Open ended talk Lifted by an astute producer from Austria s Club 2 de it began at midnight and went on till it finished The aim discussion between people with burning experience of the subject e g the murderer and the judge A participant might wait long to utter but in the end his turn came Viewers could fall asleep in front of it wake up and find the discussion just hotting up 18 The programme allowed Isaacs to realise one of his longest held ambitions When I first started in television at Granada Sidney Bernstein said to me that the worst words ever uttered on TV were I m sorry that s all we have time for Especially since they were always uttered just as someone was about to say something really interesting After Dark would only end when its guests had nothing more to say 19 From late April in 1987 Channel 4 screened a Nighttime strand a mixture of films and discussion programmes that ran until 3am on Thursdays Fridays and Saturdays 20 Channel 4 launched After Dark as an open ended format broadcast on Friday nights later Saturday nights as an original piece of programming that would be inexpensive to produce There was no chair simply a host and the discussion took place around a coffee table in a darkened studio Due to its late night scheduling the series was dubbed After Closing Time by the BBC1 comedy series Alas Smith and Jones 21 The series was made by production company Open Media The series editor Sebastian Cody talking about the programme in an interview in 2003 said that Reality TV is artificial After Dark is real in the sense that what you see is what you get which isn t the case with something that s been edited to give the illusion of being real Other shows wind people up with booze beforehand then when they re actually on the programme they give them glasses of water We give our guests nothing until they arrive on set and then they can drink orange juice or have a bottle of wine And we let them go to the loo 22 Viewer response EditIn 1987 The Guardian wrote After Dark the closest Britain gets to an unstructured talk show is already finding that the more serious the chat the smaller the audience Channel 4 s market research executive Sue Clench says that around three million saw some of After Dark in its first slot 23 The audience survey conducted later by Channel 4 reported that After Dark was watched by 13 of all adults rising to what the research company referred to as a staggering figure of 28 amongst young men 24 One viewer is quoted in the academic study Talk on Television as follows After Dark is far better because it allows people to go over all sorts of stages in a discussion and they are not shut off Well I suppose they are on for three or four hours but I think that is a really good idea that you can really work everything out for yourself 25 The programme is still fondly remembered by viewers For example in 2016 Gail Walker the editor of the Belfast Telegraph recalled After Dark programmes about nuclear issues 26 and in 2020 the Cardiff based writer Joe Morgan wrote a tribute A Sword in the Darkness saying the show broke all existing rules and conventions There has been nothing like it ever since 27 In 2022 the Liberal Democrat Jonathan Calder published Remembering After Dark the best TV discussion programme ever 28 Critical response Edit Abortion Whose Choice 1 November 1997 After Dark earned a remarkable spread of critical enthusiasm from the Socialist Worker my favourite chat show and The Guardian one of the most inspired and effective uses of airtime yet devised and The Daily Telegraph A shining example of late night television to more media focussed journals such as the BFI s Sight amp Sound often made The Late Show look like the Daily Mirror and even the US showbiz bible Variety in its review of the year compulsive for late night viewers 5 The Listener magazine called it The programme in which you can see the people think 29 Guest response EditAuthor James Rusbridger wrote in The Listener magazine When I appeared on a Channel 4 After Dark programme recently my postman milkman and more than two dozen strangers stopped me in the street and said how much they d enjoyed it and quoted verbatim extracts from the discussion 30 In 2021 author David Hebditch wrote an article about appearing on After Dark to discuss pornography It is available here Journalist Peter Hillmore described appearing on After Dark as follows In the age of the glib packaged sound bite a discussion programme that is long and open ended lasting as long as the talk is remotely interesting occasionally longer seems a necessity For all its faults as when Oliver Reed appeared tired and emotional as a newt the programme fulfilled its purpose and filled a gap I appeared on it once It was a strange feeling to realise that if you had failed to make your point properly you had more time a short while later So Channel 4 s decision to axe it seems incomprehensible and wrong In his book on the channel its founder Jeremy Isaacs gave a long list of programmes that he felt summed up its ethos With the ending of After Dark not a single programme from the list remains That is not a coincidence 31 Notable guests and programmes EditMain article List of After Dark editions Series One Edit Peter Hain Clive Ponting Peter Utley Colin Wallace and Secrets Edit The first ever After Dark programme 1 May 1987 was described in The Listener After Dark made a historic breakthrough by rediscovering the structure of adult conversation the ingredients are intelligence candour and courage and the absence of impeding structures such as television time barriers Seven people talked live from midnight to the early hours of the morning on a subject dear to our hearts and at the moment costly to our nerves secrets Clive Ponting ex MOD Anne Marie Sandler French psychiatrist Peter Hain former anti apartheid campaigner Colin Wallace former army information officer engaged in psychological warfare in Northern Ireland in the Seventies Mrs Margaret Moore widow of one of the computer scientists who have died recently in mysterious circumstances Isaac Evans a farmer who campaigns against bureaucratic secrecy and T E Utley Times political columnist who still believes Section 2 of the Official Secrets Act has a point all these discussed frankly their experiences and their perception of the consequences of excessive secrecy 32 Nancy Banks Smith wrote in The Guardian A bit of fun a bit of excitement and quite the best idea for a television programme since men sat around the camp fire talking while in the darkness watching eyes glowed red It will be many a midnight before Channel 4 comes up with the subject so on the ball as Secrets and such an enthralling group of guests Who you may reasonably ask is Isaac Evans He described himself as a peasant up from the country In old age he has with great simplicity taken up the cause of small people ruined by secret files Peter Hain and Clive Ponting were referred to affectionately by the chairman Tony Wilson as You two gaolbirds It was suggested that only half a dozen MI5 men were watching After Dark On double time said Colin Wallace and gave them a wave 33 The programme finished with the Beatles singing Do You Want to Know a Secret 34 The programme is available online here Simon Hughes Edit The second programme of the first series transmitted on 8 May 1987 centred on press ethics and featured among others Tony Blackburn Peter Tatchell Victoria Gillick Johnny Edgecombe and a Private Eye journalist 35 A week later After Dark broadcast the following correction in relation to the British Member of Parliament Simon Hughes Mr Hughes has asked us to say that he is not a homosexual has never been a homosexual and has no intention of becoming a homosexual in the future 36 He has however since declared that he is bisexual 37 Do the British Love Their Children Edit As described by academic Nick Basannavar in 2021 For its fourth week journalist Chantal Cuer chaired Do the British Love Their Children The trigger for that particular topic was the case of four year old Kimberley Carlile starved and murdered by her stepfather Nigel Hall Carlile s former foster father Gordon Whiteley participated in After Dark He was joined amongst others by the critic Germaine Greer Lambeth Council leader Linda Bellos and the former headmaster of Westminster School John Rae During the live show Bellos stated her belief that British society had neither demonstrated that it liked children nor made any provision for children to live fully within it Greer argued that mating couples who bore children ought not to be entrusted with raising them alone Rae meanwhile felt that the thought of parenthood without at least some violence performed on the child such as smacking was unreal although as long as any violent act performed was carried out within love it was containable 38 David Mellor David Yallop and The Mafia Edit The Financial Times described the following week s discussion about the Mafia After Dark may well be cheap but is one of the most interesting innovations for years Two factors give the programme a special character its length which allows time for both personal reminiscence and discussion of theory or principle without that I must stop you there malarkey and the camera arrangements with the participants set in a pool of light within a darkened studio producing a peculiarly powerful sense of intimacy for late night The combination of Home Office minister David Mellor former Cosa Nostra bagman Bob Dick former Scotland Yard intelligence officer Frank Pulley who made particularly astute political and social comments New York undercover policeman Douglas le Vien and several journalists who write about organised crime proved highly productive After Dark bears out what has long been said that ordinary discussion programmes have the time only to establish the participants credentials before going off the air This programme establishes credentials moves on to discussion of the principles and sometimes even manages some interesting conclusions The points made in the final 15 minutes last Friday about the differences between Britain and the US in attitudes towards wealth and the way in which this might explain the puzzling albeit pleasing failure so far of organised crime in Britain were the most interesting of the entire discussion Do not switch on for a taste telling yourself that you will go to bed at 1 00 You will still be there at 3 00 39 During the programme it was claimed that Pope John Paul I was eliminated because he discovered that mafia profits from heroin had been laundered using the Vatican Bank 40 Spectacular corruption allegations from author David Yallop 41 were described by The Observer as follows Perched in the gallery above a Channel 4 lawyer nervously watches in case the stew bubbles over His worst moment came at 1 30 yesterday morning when David Yallop cut short some coy evasions about who heads PII the Italian variety of freemasonry by naming him The lawyer was quietly told that Mr Yallop had just named a senior minister in the Italian Government Mr Yallop had not gone so far in his book He also suggested that a member of the British Cabinet was on the board of the same company as some members of PII Since After Dark unlike most radio phone ins boasts no tape delay the alleged defamation could not be prevented 42 Chris Horrie and Peter Chippendale detail what followed the story had caused horror among the country s journalists who waited breathlessly for a shower of writs to descend on the programme makers But although hacks who missed the show swapped videos and endlessly replayed extracts for snippets of information nothing happened to the programme makers 43 Some years later David Mellor and writer Gaia Servadio described how their friendship started on the programme 44 Teresa Gorman and Is Britain Working Edit Billy Bragg appearing on After Dark on 12 June 1987On 12 June 1987 the night after the British General Election the first day of the third term of Thatcherism a show called Is Britain Working brought together victorious Tory MP Teresa Gorman Red Wedge pop singer Billy Bragg Helen from the Stonehenge Convoy old colonialist Colonel Hilary Hook and Adrian one of the jobless It was a perfect example of the chemistry you can get There were unlikely alliances Bragg and Hook and Mrs Gorman 45 stormed off the set claiming she had been misled about the nature of the programme 46 She told the leftist pop singer Billy Bragg You and your kind are finished We are the future now 47 Bragg said I sing in smokey rooms every night and I can keep talking for far longer than you can Teresa 48 Bragg explained later She was so smug And because she was Essex I took it personally Then she accused me of being a fine example of Thatcherism 49 The Independent said the wonderful open ended discussion show mused through the early hours of Saturday someone took umbrage It was Mrs Gorman marching away beyond the table lamps into the outer darkness Now we ll have a civilised discussion said Billy Bragg 50 Killing With Care Edit Killing With Care on 26 June 1987 The programme the following week was described by ITN as A discussion on euthanasia with the controversial Dutch doctor Piet Admiraal nl who has performed euthanasia British Socialist and Methodist preacher Lord Soper the founder of the Cancer support charity Cancerbackup Dr Vicky Clement Jones in an appearance from her death bed she died shortly after the end of this programme quadraplegic Maggie Davis Catholic philosopher John Finnis a gay man and the founder of a hospice 51 Edward Teller and Peace in Our Time Edit The programme on 3 July 1987 saw the father of the H bomb Edward Teller concede that he lobbied for the worst of all weapons because of what the Russians had done to his country 52 Jacques Verges and Klaus Barbie Edit Jacques Verges appearing on After Dark in July 1987 After Dark ending its ten week trial run has been a remarkable success wrote The Independent in July 1987 The series has brought to television the rare acts of listening thinking and thorough and subtle discussion In the small hours of Saturday morning Maitre Jacques Verges defence counsel to the Butcher of Lyons leaned back on a sofa with a half glass of something pale and put his case A journalist and a canon and a Resistance fighter and a concentration camp survivor listened and put theirs 53 Verges said the reason people were still prosecuted for massacring Jews was because the Jews were white if they had not been the crimes would have been swept under the carpet long ago 54 The Guardian described what happened After Dark had Maitre Verges on a panel that discussed whether it was ever desirable or even possible to forgive Klaus Barbie 43 years after his crimes Verges attempted to indict French crimes in Africa imperial crimes everywhere It was canon Paul Oestreicher who isolated from the trial the real distinction between Barbie and the Nazi regime and the imperial brutality Verges wanted to expose the unique evil was that the Nazis built a system and a policy for the extermination of whole peoples 55 The Sunday Times Verges is clearly a man who knows how not to lose an argument even when he cannot win it but there was a moment when his mind boggling calm was almost shattered It came when a young American lawyer Eli Rosenbaum announced that he had flown in for the programme specifically to confront Verges with evidence of his anti Semitic right wing connections and general moral corruption It was a moment of high drama but it was the outraged American who cracked first You re losing your temper the old maitre instructed him That is no way for a good lawyer to make his case Game and set if not match to Verges 56 Jewish Telegraphic Agency Rosenbaum angered Verges by asking why there was an anti Zionist anti Israel element in so many of the cases he has defended in the last 30 years He also questioned the Siam born lawyer about his alleged connections with a wealthy Swiss neo Nazi Verges avoided direct answers but made remarks about Rosenbaum s Jewish affiliation Another panelist Auschwitz survivor Gena Turgel said his remarks smacked of anti Semitism 57 Series Two Edit Freemasonry Beyond The Law Edit At the start of the second series The Independent reported Masons pull out of TV debate with policeman that Chief Inspector Brian Woollard the Metropolitan Police officer at the centre of the Freemasonry controversy will go on national television tonight to state his case 45 Woollard completed 33 years in the force earned seven commendations and was responsible for tracking down the Angry Brigade 58 The Listener magazine described the programme After Dark turned its attention with some daring to the issue of Masonic influence in the police force Daring because a truly unfettered programme live under virtually no constraints of length it chose to deal with matters both potentially libellous and believed by some to be bound by sub judice limitations The central figure was a police officer who alleges he was suspended because his investigations into fraud came up against corrupt Masonic loyalties There were two ex Masons a clergyman who abandoned the brotherhood on religious grounds and a solicitor Sir David Napley who had briefly flirted with it in the old days Former Deputy Metropolitan police commissioner Sir Colin Woods spoke unofficially for the police A journalist Martin Short gave a run down of the history of the Masonic movement and T Dan Smith told how in jail he got the Masonic knuckle squeeze from both wardens and prisoners many an insight into the kind of society we inhabit its anxieties and preoccupations 59 Shere Hite and Marriage Edit Mark Lawson wrote in The Independent where else would James Dearden screenwriter of Fatal Attraction be required to sit while sexpert Shere Hite gave the ending of the film away and demolished his characterisation In a discussion of what women really wanted Dearden and Ms Hite were joined by Mary Whitehouse Naim Attallah and proponents of career motherhood lesbianism and open marriage the advantage of the length is the opportunity to see positions crumbling and being constructed We began with a rough consensus and Mary Whitehouse designated the runt of the discussion People sighed and shifted their eyes when she spoke A couple of hours on we had the unlikely alliance of Dearden and Whitehouse against Hite 60 The Evening Standard described this as totally compelling viewing It is not simply what is said that is important Equally fascinating are small gestures and expressions beautifully caught at significant moments by some astute camerawork the group s physical and verbal interaction with each other and above all the ways in which we are able to see how and why an individual might have arrived at his her set of ideas and beliefs 61 William Spider Wilson Edit Spider Wilson appearing on the same programme John Heddle appearing on After Dark No Place Like Home in 1988 The Sunday Times said the programme on 4 March 1988 certainly remains lodged in many minds Spider was discovered by a programme researcher ferreting out characters at London s cardboard city Spider duly came into the Channel 4 studios cobweb tattooed on his forehead to talk about drug addiction being gay and living rough Host Helena Kennedy recalls that homeless Spider sitting on the plump sofas in the mock studio living room with fellow guests did not take kindly to being lectured about fecklessness by John Heddle a Tory MP 62 She described the confrontation Spider Wilson s argument with John Heddle who at that time was chairman of the Tory backbench housing committee was a perfect example of what could happen Heddle s tactic was to lecture the feckless Spider and tell him to pull up his socks The argument actually felt quite menacing Ironically Heddle later committed suicide while Spider went into rehab sobered up and now has both a home and a job 63 Bernadette McAliskey and Anthony Farrar Hockley Bernadette McAliskey and Licensed to Kill Edit The Financial Times wrote of the programme on 18 March 1988 Bernadette McAliskey formerly Devlin was allowed to talk throughout as though the British Army were waging war against her people Those who remember the Army going in to protect her people in 1968 will find this odd 64 Another guest General Sir Anthony Farrer Hockley suggested to Ms McAliskey that she owed her life to the skill of paratroop surgeons who cared for her after loyalist paramilitaries tried to kill her 65 Horse Racing Edit Margaret Duchess of Argyll and others The Racing Post described the programme broadcast on the evening after the 1988 Grand National Jockey Frankie Dettori recalls Many years ago when I was 17 or 18 there was a programme on Channel 4 at about midnight called After Dark a discussion show for people who couldn t sleep I came in from a night out and there was McCririck and a couple of others sitting there on the TV talking a load of rubbish But there was this guy sitting there quietly who would chip in every now and again and say something which was quite outstanding That was Barney Curley and I was drawn to him like a magnet 66 Among the other guests was the Duchess of Argyll appearing so she said to put the point of view of the horse who later walked out of the programme because she was so very sleepy 67 Bewitched Bothered or Bewildered Edit On 30 April 1988 Tony Wilson hosted a special Walpurgis Night edition which featured representatives of several pagan occult and Satanist groups The general tone of the questioning was inquiring and non judgmental and the only hostility was expressed by the token Christian spokeswoman ex witch Audrey Harper Before the mid 1980s it would have appeared ludicrous to discuss British Satanists as a serious phenomenon still less a social problem 68 Derry 68 Edit Socialist Worker wrote A recent discussion on the Irish civil rights struggle in 1968 provided one of the best nights viewing in ages Eamonn McCann dominated the whole discussion destroying anyone who dared to cross him 69 The television reviewer of the New Statesman wrote that The After Dark discussion Derry 68 Look Back in Anger was simply the most enlightening programme on Northern Ireland I have ever seen 70 In 2021 this programme was shown again during the Docs Ireland international documentary festival run by the Belfast Film Festival 71 Israel 40 Years On Edit On 14 May 1988 The Daily Telegraph wrote Tonight s edition of After Dark will mark the 40th anniversary of Israel The programme is likely to cause controversy as the Shadow Foreign Secretary Gerald Kaufman and a number of Israelis will appear alongside Faisal Aweidah the hardline PLO representative in London For Kaufman the appearance will not be without a political risk mainly of a backlash from British Jews who are unlikely to be happy about him appearing alongside Aweidah a supporter of Yasser Arafat However for the Israelis involved in the programme there are even greater dangers They will brave the wrath of the government of their country where it is illegal for citizens to share a platform with the PLO One participant has already backed out after being told she would face arrest when returning home after the broadcast 72 What is Sex For Edit A week later during a discussion about sex the programme introduced the physically unappealing Anthony Burgess to the equally charming and equally sex obsessed Andrea Dworkin in the observant presence of a third writer transgender rights activist Roz Kaveney 52 Winston Churchill Edit David Irving on After Dark The Socialist Worker described the 28 May 1988 edition of my favourite chat show Winston Churchill Hero or Madman Unfortunately the character arguing this was none other than the historian David Irving Here sat a man who was pro Hitler who was insulting the legendary Churchill Facing him was a guy who had been Churchill s private secretary for ten or so years And there was Lord Hailsham who as Quintin Hogg had been a Tory MP at the time But it was not Irving they reserved their contempt and anger for Occasionally they got a bit annoyed by him but it was the left representative they despised dear old respectable Jack Jones former leader of the transport workers union 69 As the Radio Times wrote later The most explosive argument was between Lord Hailsham and veteran trade unionist Jack Jones There was 50 years of hate between them 73 Harvey Proctor and Open To Exposure Edit Harvey Proctor on After Dark in 1988 Milton Shulman in The Listener magazine wrote about the edition broadcast on 4 June 1988 I never plan to watchAfter Dark and usually am surprised to see that it is on when I return from some social occasion on Saturday night and switch on the box at one o clock My own favourite evening was involved with the subject of ethics and journalism At first Harvey Proctor was the main focus of our concern as he claimed he was hounded out of public life not because of his sexual predilections but because of his right wing political views But his complaints as well as Christine Keeler s grievance about her treatment during the Profumo affair soon faded into insignificance compared to the weird admissions of the journalists about what they got up to to get a story Nina Myskow admitted she had jumped into bed with a hunk of masculine beefcake after she had seen him in a male beauty contest she had been judging Annette Witheridge of the News of the World told how she had sent a rent boy wired for sound around to the home of the late Russell Harty 74 And the Evening Standard described riveting television Harvey Proctor the Spanking MP of tabloid legend now resigned from his Billericay constituency and running a shirt shop in Richmond in debate round a studio table with a cross section of his tormentors Proctor turned on reporter Annette Witheridge He drew from his pocket a story she d written headlined Spank Row MP Urged to Take AIDS Test linking him allegedly to a former male lover believed to have the killer disease AIDS Had she checked this out Had she attempted to contact the former male lover No Annette Witheridge s admission that she d left this story to others to check out hadn t discovered for four months that it was false and hadn t apologised because nobody had asked her to marked a turning point in the debate 75 Proctor himself reported in his 2016 memoir that It was the antithesis of today s sound bite culture It took the format of an after dinner conversation among friends around a table with drinks only we were no friends The programme was one of the most watched and most video requested apparently one such request came from Buckingham Palace and as a result of the programme I managed to get further investors for a shirt shop 76 Harry Belafonte Denis Worrall and South Africa Edit After the Nelson Mandela concert last summer After Dark ran a discussion programme including Harry Belafonte Breyten Breytenbach Denis Worrall and Ismail Ayob Mandela s lawyer 77 The Guardian described this as the most civilised and stimulating of current TV programmes 78 pictured here with a complete list of guests here and later Victoria Brittain described the extraordinary experience of debating with Worrall Every letter I received from viewers focussed on how the programme had changed their perception of him Harry Belafonte said how much he looked forward to meeting him because of his image in the US as an enlightened voice After Dark was probably the first television programme accurately to reflect the real balance of forces on the South African political scene The significance of the programme was how it shifted the debate from the white political agenda followed so assiduously by South Africa based correspondents and gave due weight to the real opponents of the regime 79 A year later it became public that there was a revealing off camera incident between Harry Belafonte and South Africa s ex ambassador Denis Worrall For the first three hours of the programme Worrall played Mr Nice Guy but in the closing 30 minutes the diplomatic layers peeled off The noble Belafonte shook his head regretfully as Worrall s tone changed and he said he would pray for Worrall Trying to regain lost ground after the programme Worrall went up to Belafonte and according to the production team said Well Mr Belafonte you re really quite intelligent aren t you 80 Patricia Highsmith Edit Patrica Highsmith on After Dark in June 1988 Following the programme broadcast on 18 June 1988 The Guardian wrote After Dark a three hour discussion on subjects which will not always bear the light of day was about murder There was Patricia Highsmith the thriller writer inquisitive as a monkey Georgina Lawton Ruth Ellis s daughter Lord Longford the Rev James Nelson and David Howden the father of a girl who was murdered in her bedroom two years ago I don t know if you can imagine the scene of my daughter s bedroom Friends and neighbours had to go and clean that bedroom up The stains and fingerprints They had to take the carpet up sandpaper the floor and get rid of the marks buy a new carpet and put it down What kind of marks asked Patricia Highsmith who will be slaughtered herself some day 81 The Today newspaper wrote There have been some very peculiar people on After Dark There was the skinhead who left mid show to look for fresh supplies of lager And two weeks ago journalist Peter Hillmore sweated so much I thought I would have to throw him a rubber ring But for sheer oddness none has outmatched crime writer cum New York bag lady lookalike Patricia Highsmith asking a series of staggeringly daft and insensitive questions to poor David Howden whose daughter was strangled by a maniac as she slept 82 Andrew Wilson in his biography of Highsmith expanded Sitting next to Howden Highsmith questioned the bereaved father in a near clinical fashion What kind of man was the murderer Had he been watching the daughter Was robbery part of the motive Had she been raped 83 Bill Margold and Pornography Edit The Evening Standard reviewed the 25 June 1988 discussion In the business they call him Poppa Bear or is it Bare Bill Margold a large American with the vocabulary of a peanut and one of the guests appearing on this week sAfter Dark The subject was pornography and a well balanced mixture of perversion puritanism and prurience combined to entertain and enlighten insomniacs 84 The Guardian added Margold s breezy definition of hard core up in out off belies his ambition to give the public genuine artistic storylines I was waiting for someone preferably a woman to hang one on big burly Poppa Bear who is about the most arrogant bullying bulldozer loudmouth this sleep cheating series has so far brought us 85 The background to the programme is detailed in an article by one of the guests author David Hebditch available here All editions of After Dark ended with music more or less related to the subject of the week That week the Evening Standard noted This intelligent mostly thought provoking discussion was brought to an end by the song It s Illegal It s Immoral or It Makes You Fat 84 British Intelligence Edit After Dark on 16 July 1988 British Intelligence In a discussion titled British Intelligence broadcast on 16 July 1988 the guests included Merlyn Rees H Montgomery Hyde and a man called Robert Harbinson described by Francis Wheen in The Independent newspaper as follows Robin Bryans a travel writer and sometime music teacher who also goes under the names Robert Harbinson and Christopher Graham His opponent is Kenneth de Courcy who likes to be known as the Duc de Grantmesnil Though both are Irish by birth both have intelligence connections Bryans was a friend of Blunt both are ex jailbirds and both are how shall we say quite eccentric Bryans denounced de Courcy on the Channel 4 programme After Dark His allegations are too confused and too libellous to be summarised here but names such as Mountbatten Shackleton Churchill Blunt seem to pop up often 86 Bryans himself wrote Before the cameras we delighted to talk about Adeline de la Feld s family upsetting Mussolini with their writings I was then asked by Robin Ramsay of the Lobster magazine about my own early writing which he knew about from his co editor Stephen Dorril who had interviewed me for his book Honeytrap the sad story of my friend Stephen Ward hounded by the Establishment to suicide in 1963 But the Channel Four masterminds wanted to know about my war activities and the following day Montgomery Hyde a barrister phoned me to warn me that a High Court writ was on its way 87 The journalist Paul Foot described it as one magnificent edition of After Dark in which Robin Ramsay excelled himself 88 During the discussion another guest retired GCHQ employee Jock Kane claimed that the new procedures recommended by the Security Commission regarding the removal of documents from GCHQ had not been implemented four years later 89 The following week The Guardian newspaper reported Thirty Labour MPs yesterday called for a judicial inquiry into claims that the Government has used private security companies to carry out undercover operations on its behalf A motion drawn up by Mr Ken Livingstone Brent E refers to statements made by Mr Gary Murray a private investigator who says he has been employed by the Government on Channel 4 s After Dark programme 90 Save the Whale Save the World Edit On 30 July 1988 After Dark turned its attention to the whale One guest Shigeko Misaki of the Institute of Cetacean Research subsequently wrote Kieran Mulvaney on Save the Whale Save the World It might have been the British sense of fair play that required the Japanese views for balance they asked Mr C W Nicol the author of Harpoon to appear on the show to speak for the Japanese position Responding to Mr Nicol s call I flew to London to appear on the show with him Several distinguished persons appeared on the program including Dr Jim Lovelock who coined the name Gaia for global environmental crisis Heathcote Williams poet and author of The Whale Nation enormously popular with young generation of the U K Petra Kelly then a German parliamentarian of the Green Party Kieran Mulvaney then a 17 year old energetic anti whaling activist who later became the spokesman for Greenpeace and Tony Ball who represented the British motor industry During the course of the program I happened to remark on the traditional use of whale baleen plates that is an important part of the respect paid to all parts of the whales caught using them without waste I explained that the whale baleen has been used inside the extremely delicate mechanism for the movements of puppets heads in the traditional Japanese theatrical art called bunraku To this poet Williams responded Using a whale product for a puppet show which Japanese call culture It s unforgivable Japanese should use plastic Bunraku one of the three most treasured traditional theatrical arts of Japan apparently meant nothing to one whose life is dedicated to arts of the West 91 Bianca Jagger and Nicaragua Edit John Underwood wrote of the programme broadcast on 6 August 1988 I recall hosting an edition of After Dark in which Bianca Jagger intellectually crushed Dr John Silber a senior adviser to Ronald Reagan and Roberto Ferrey an apologist for the Contras Furthermore she left Sir Alfred Sherman lost for words a feat rarely achieved before or since 92 Jonathan Miller and Alternative Medicine Edit Jonathan Miller on After Dark In the New Statesman the writer Sean French described the best moment of my week occurring at the end of the 3 September 1988 edition After Dark had been debating the problems of alternative medicine After a few hours of acrimonious debate each of the participants was asked to say a few words on what they hoped for the future of medicine The last comment of all was made by Dr Jonathan Miller Since he had been the evening s most vociferous opponent of fringe medicine I expected him to deliver a final diatribe Instead of this he said he wanted to speak of something which was more important than any kind of medicine delivered on a one to one basis The main welfare which was ever conferred on the human community was actually by social administration They were the improvement of drainage the rationalisation of diet and a humane society administered by a just and equitable government which actually sees human welfare as being something which has to be honoured according to principles of distributive justice Therefore he concluded he thought the most pressing need was the ousting of this appalling government 93 Gerry Adams Edit The following week Channel 4 dropped plans to invite the Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams to appear on its late night talk show After Dark after protests from other contributors The Independent Broadcasting Authority said then that it would have banned Mr Adams on the grounds that his views were offensive to public feeling Channel 4 avoided a dispute with the IBA by dropping the programme saying it had only wanted Mr Adams to appear if a suitable context could be found and that at such short notice it had been impossible to achieve that 94 The Guardian wrote On Thursday 8 September Channel 4 took a decision which has serious implications for freedom of speech on British television The arguments used including what appears to be an unprecedented threat to use the 1981 Broadcasting Act and the way the decision was taken were as significant as the decision itself The invitation to Adams was made public by Paul Wilkinson professor of international relations at Aberdeen University and chairman of the Research Foundation for the Study of Terrorism The programme makers asked him for advice and contacts they did not invite him to appear Wilkinson publicly attacked the proposal to have Adams on the programme Tory MPs including Neil Hamilton Mrs Thatcher s parliamentary private secretary and Tony Marlow joined what was likely to lead to a chorus of protest C4 was under pressure to react Initially it said that Adams would only appear if a suitable context could be found A second statement announcing the decision that the programme had been abandoned said that it was impossible at such short notice to achieve that satisfactory context C4 thereby successfully avoided a dispute with the IBA which announced later that day that if necessary it would have used Section 4 of the Broadcasting Act to stop Adams appearing After Dark in the past has included Roberto Ferrey a member of the Contras seven man directorate Klaus Barbie s defence counsel and a man who admitted having molested 200 schoolchildren The decision to drop the programme was taken as the programme makers who often do not finalise the show until Friday midday were trying to get a Tory spokesman from the mainland Ian Gow who left the government over its Irish policy initially said he had no objection in principle to appearing but then changed his mind 95 The Daily Telegraph wrote A spokesman for the IBA said The fact that it is a live programme also means that there is no editorial control over remarks Mr Adams may make The issue comes a month after an appeal from the Prime Minister to the British media to withhold publicity from IRA sympathisers 96 Channel 4 s former Chief Executive Jeremy Isaacs speaking at a public lecture that month said he would have given the After Dark air time to Adams Although I sympathise with what must have been a difficult decision broadcasters are always going to be accused of self censorship Yasser Arafat was allowed on Channel 4 because he happened to represent a lot of people but I knew this would lead to criticism because he is one of many who believe it is right to use any means of obtaining power 97 The row was later placed in context by the academic study The Media and Northern Ireland There were a few straws in the wind in the autumn of 1988 which with hindsight suggested what was on the way In September Channel Four pulled an After Dark programme which was to feature Gerry Adams Most journalists though saw this as an isolated case of self censorship brought on by the post Ballygawley atmosphere 98 An alternative view is provided by Laura K Donohue writing in the Cardozo Law Review 99 who summarises Professor Keith Ewing and Conor Gearty as follows at the urging of the British Government Channel 4 eliminated one of the After Dark programs in which Gerry Adams was scheduled to appear 100 Following a debate in the House of Commons Liz Forgan of Channel 4 challenged this account in a letter to The Times After Dark considered inviting Gerry Adams on to the programme not simply for him to express his views but to hold him to account for his apology for vile acts of terrorism against the vigorous challenge of five other participants Michael Mates cites this as an example of the media failing to put its house in order He omits to mention that in fact the invitation was never issued and programme was never made or transmitted because I decided that we could not gather enough other participants on that date of sufficient authority to ensure that the programme did not turn into a free run for Mr Adams and flout the normal standards of due impartiality 101 The producer later commented in an article in Lobster magazine Adams had apparently agreed to what was at the time quite a coup he would sit down with sworn political enemies Finally the C4 Director of Programmes Liz Forgan and I agreed a deal if a former British prime minister would come on the programme Adams could appear Wilson had Alzheimers Callaghan never liked us and Edward Heath who later appeared twice on After Dark couldn t make it So that was the end of it I was subsequently told our unmade programme was the straw which broke Downing Street s back I cannot confirm this but the timing is eloquent our programme with Adams was to be on 10 September On 19 October Douglas Hurd then Home Secretary introduced broadcasting restrictions the broadcasting ban on organisations proscribed in Northern Ireland and Britain including direct statements by members of Sinn Fein From November 1988 to September 1994 the voices of Irish republican and Loyalist paramilitaries were barred by the government from British television and radio 34 Series Three Edit Tony Benn and Out of Bounds Edit The first programme of the third series was titled Out of Bounds 1988 was the year of the tri centenary of the Bill of Rights yet in May 1989 in the shadowy studio of Channel 4 s After Dark programme a group of former British and US intelligence agents discussed the merits and evils of new legislation on official secrets When this legislation completes its processes through Parliament such a gathering is likely to become illegal 102 The Financial Times wrote Channel 4 s After Dark triumphantly broke all the rules from the beginning The first of the new series on Saturday proved that the formula is still working extremely well The subject was official secrecy and during the course of the night remarks included I was in Egypt at the time plotting the assassination of Nasser and Wilson and Heath were destroyed in part by the action of intelligence agents and spoken with incredulity You mean we shouldn t have got rid of Allende The hostility between just two of the participants which often brings most life to the programme occurred this time between Tony Benn and ex CIA man Miles Copeland and it was the fundamental difference in political outlook between these two which informed the entire discussion Anyone who regarded Benn as a dangerous loony leftie but watched right through until 2 00 may have been astonished at his thoroughly conservative British attitudes 103 Tony Benn wrote in his diary later published as The End of an Era Saturday 13 May In the evening I went to take part in this live television programme After Darkwith John Underwood in the chair It was an open ended discussion which started at about midnight and went on till the early hours The other participants were the historian Lord Dacre Eddie Chapman who had been a double agent during the war Anthony Cavendish who is a former MI6 and MI5 officer Miles Copeland an ex CIA man James Rusbridger who has worked with MI5 at one stage and Adela Gooch a defence journalist from The Daily Telegraph Every one of them made admissions or came out with most helpful information I was terribly pleased with it 104 Asked during the course of the programme if the secret service should be democratically accountable Lord Dacre replied I would like to see it accountable indirectly by having the ultimate authority outside party politics and if there was a body which consisted of respectable people respected by all sides then it wouldn t be dependent on the government of the day 105 The Listener magazine described the programme The new Official Secrets Act has just received the Queen s assent This may be the last time for some years that any disclosures can be made on such matters After Dark exists for mysterious reasons probably something to do with a necessary safety valve in a climate of increasing pressure on the media Its strength is that it has rescued that endangered species genuinely spontaneous conversation and presented it absolutely without frills It does not have to rely on a presenter or on the glamour of its guests as other talk shows do Its force is its unique lack of inhibition in dealing with very controversial issues without exhibitionism an invaluable programme 106 Richard Norton Taylor reported on guests who did not appear because of concerns about contempt of court Michael Randle and Pat Pottle who admitted helping the spy George Blake escape from prison in 1966 have been dropped from the programme Mr Randle and Mr Pottle were arrested and released on police bail last week after admitting in a book that they had helped Blake escape 107 Michael Randle eventually appeared on After Dark fourteen years later on 22 March 2003 Hillsborough and Football The Final Whistle Edit On 20 May 1989 following the Hillsborough disaster and on the night after the FA Cup Final After Dark invited bereaved parents to participate one of whom said 35 they didn t give the poor people who were killed any dignity I bent down to kiss and talk to my son and as we stood up there was a policeman who came from behind me trying to usher me and my husband out I had to scream at the police officer to allow us privacy the total attitude was you ve identified number 33 so go 108 A lengthy extract from what bereaved mother Eileen Delaney said can be read here 109 Blue and Drugs Edit A week later The Times wrote The sexiest show of the week by far is After Dark Saturday night s talking point was the demon drug crack a subject which would normally leave this viewer in a state of lacquered composure Again however one s hackles soon rose and one was up there punching the air taking sides Unfortunately the debate was hijacked by a black musician called Blue who shouted everyone down with non sequiturs Eventually he got up and left 110 Denis Healey and Back in the USSR Edit Denis Healey on After Dark The programme the following week was described by ITN as being about the changes in Soviet Russia Former communist and later British Chancellor Denis Healey novelist Tatania Tolstoya and other Russians including journalist Vitali Vitaliev and dissident Vladimir Bukovsky 62 The Communist journal Unity later wrote The last time I saw Bukovsky was on a Channel 4 programme After Dark in which he slaughtered the drinks trolley and got up the nose of the former Labour leader sic Denis Healey who seemed to work out pretty early that this bloke was not the best of people 111 Edward Heath Edit Edward Heath on After Dark On 10 June 1989 in the course of a bad tempered late night television discussion programme during the European election campaign in June former Prime Minister Edward Heath contemptuously rejected the possibility posed by the former American Defence Secretary Richard Perle that the political map of Europe was about to be transformed Does anyone seriously believe that these satellite countries are going to become free democracies and does anyone really believe that Moscow is going to see the disintegration of the Soviet empire 112 This was the first time a former Prime Minister had appeared on After Dark Edward Heath was a guest again on 2 March 1991 discussing the Persian Gulf with Lord Weidenfeld and Adnan Khashoggi Pride and Prejudice Edit On 24 June 1989 in the run up to the 20th anniversary of the Stonewall riots in New York After Dark asked what progress in terms of gay rights had been made since the 1960s Guests included the playwright Martin Sherman and the psychiatrist Dr Ismond Rosen The Wellcome Collection describes the programme in their catalogue Each participant except Rosen is asked to speak about their relevant personal experiences in the 1960s The discussion moves on to examine some experiences with psychiatrists and the attitude of psychiatrists treating homosexual or lesbian child or adult patients Rosen is asked about the strategies he would employ with a person seeing him in connection with their sexual identity His job as a psychiatrist is to understand that process not to deem whether something is normal or not From here on the discussion develops and during it Rosen is challenged a number of times on his views or asked to explain them in more detail as a professional speaking to lay people There is a certain amount of hostility from various participants towards Rosen s views 113 Germany 50 Years On Edit In his book A Thread of Gold the Rabbi Albert Friedlander describes his participation in the After Dark discussion held on the 50th anniversary of the start of the Second World War I had a strange and almost traumatic encounter with some Germans of the type I had basically avoided I was asked to join Christof Wackernagel de a former Baader Meinhof actor and poet a Herr Spitzi from Austria who was a revisionist historian and questioned whether a Holocaust had in fact happened a camp survivor a Wall Street Journal writer a psychiatrist and Franz Schoenhuber head of the new Republican party in Germany At least three times during the long night I excused myself and marched out of the TV studio into the street to breathe fresh air 114 Body Beautiful Edit Later in September 1989 the Evening Standard said After Dark provided us with the best talk entertainment and drama of the weekend when a group sat down to discuss the Body Beautiful On one seat sat Mandy Mudd representing the London Fat Woman s Group Strategically seated next to her on the sofa was the exquisite Suzanne Younger Miss United Kingdom The most impressive guests were Molly Parkin who asked all the right questions ex body builder Zoe Warwick whose perceptiveness and incisive comments kept opening up new areas of discussion and Professor Arthur Marwick who had to bear the brunt of everyone s criticism and abuse Ms Mudd and disabled actor Nabil Shaban shouted him down 115 A columnist in The Times Barbara Amiel wrote A very fat lady and a deformed man told a beauty queen that her looks were boring Any suggestion that she was beautiful they explained was simply a reflex of a conditioned and oppressed culture My outrage at this nonsense was tempered by the inability of the beauty queen to do much more than squeak 116 Death Penalty Edit A week later on 7 October 1989 a hangman Syd Dernley declared in the presence of a judge yearning for the return of the death penalty Michael Argyle that if authorised he would happily kill another guest a former IRA man Sean O Dochartaigh 52 The Royal Family Edit Andrew Morton on After Dark On 21 October Tony Wilson hosted a discussion about royalty with among others Andrew Morton Peregrine Worsthorne and Archduke Karl von Habsburg The Irish Independent wrote that Worsthorne likened meeting the Queen Mother to meeting Einstein 117 Xaviera Hollander and Men and Women What s the Difference Edit Xaviera Hollander and Malcolm Bennett on After Dark On 28 October 1989 during a discussion on differences between men and women with among others Mary Stott and Hans Eysenck one guest Malcolm Bennett successfully propositioned the Happy Hooker author Xaviera Hollander and the pair walked off the live set to continue their discourse privately 118 Edwina Currie and What Makes MPs Run Edit A week later on the night of 4th November 1989 the politician Edwina Currie appeared truly live and unconstrained on After Dark while at exactly the same time the BBC transmitted her appearance on another programme Saturday Matters recorded earlier but as usual announced as live After Dark had fun with Currie s apparent bilocation and the clash of realities 5 The Newcastle Journal reported that An angry lady called her a conceited witch and hoped she would never set eyes on her again 119 Series Four Edit Arms and the Gulf Edit The British Film Institute characterised the opening discussion of the new series in January 1991 as follows Discussion on the West s role in supplying arms to the Middle East The speakers included Adel Darwish Egyptian journalist author of Holy Babylon Tam Dalyell MP Bruce Hemmings ex CIA Major General James Lunt former commander of Arab Legion Rana Kabbani author of A Letter To Christendom and daughter of Syrian Ambassador to Washington Colonel Robert Jarman ex Minister of Defence Joey Martyn Martin former arms dealer 120 Survival At What Cost Edit The programme the following week was described by ITN as As the 1991 Gulf War begins a group of survivors discuss their feelings with a powerful appearance by Auschwitz survivor Rabbi Hugo Gryn and Sheila Cassidy tortured by Chileans while General Pinochet was in power 51 Gryn s daughter wrote At first Hugo and another guest Karma Nabulsi a representative of the PLO seemed hostile to one another but before long they were giggling like old friends 121 Oliver Reed and Kate Millett Do Men Have To Be Violent Edit Kate Millett and Oliver Reed on After Dark At the height of the Gulf War Oliver Reed appeared on an edition discussing militarism masculine stereotypes and violence to women Both the topic and Reed s invitation were timely the British Army were deploying women to the frontline for the very first time also that same week Oliver Reed had won a libel case against The Sun which had called him a wife beater 17 As The Daily Telegraph wrote in 2021 Reed s contributions to After Dark and to British television history thanks to much repeated clips were indeed valuable inappropriate comedy gold Belligerent disruptive sloshed on half pints of wine Reed freestyled about the dynamic between men and women 17 After one hour Reed returned from the toilet and getting more to drink rolled on top of the noted feminist author Kate Millett who then complained though she later asked for a tape of the show to entertain her friends 122 A member of the production team later wrote that Reed got famously sloshed but perhaps not quite as much as viewers may have thought or as other guests had been the drinking record was held by philosopher A J Ayer 52 Another guest on the programme author Neil Lyndon wrote an article in The Independent about the experience 123 The show received much attention and as reported later in The Daily Telegraph has become mythologised largely because of the events around it In a first for British TV the show was pulled off the air during its live broadcast Not because of Oliver Reed s antics but because of a hoax call a mistake that Channel 4 tried to swiftly brush under the wine splashed carpet 17 The producer wrote later to the British television trade magazine Broadcast The team responsible for After Dark were naturally pleased that Broadcast chose our programme as one of the most significant in Channel 4 s history in your anniversary issue Since you referred to the edition in which the late Oliver Reed took part this seems a good time to correct some of the myths which have surrounded the programme since it was transmitted on 26 January 1991 Although Reed was not the only disruptive guest in the history of After Dark what put this particular show into the headlines was not so much Reed s behaviour as C4 s It took the show off the air for 20 minutes filling the space with an old documentary about coal mining When our programme returned Reed was still on set and still disruptive That night Reed s behaviour was certainly causing concern But neither the production team nor host Helena Kennedy felt the situation was out of control Kennedy told us the guests could themselves decide whether and when to ask Reed to leave the set That night while the then commissioning editor of After Dark Michael Atwell was watching the show he was phoned by someone representing himself as the duty officer of the Independent Broadcasting Authority This individual said an angry Michael Grade then Chief Executive of C4 had demanded the programme be stopped We sought to reassure Atwell explaining that After Darkoften received hoax calls and urged him to check further with his C4 superiors We could not help reflecting that if Grade were truly upset it would have been more sensible for him to call either the studio or C4 rather than the regulator However Michael Atwell without further consultation decided to stop transmission We let the guests continue their discussions though live broadcasting was obviously no longer possible But why did live transmission then resume after 20 minutes Because further enquries by Atwell revealed that Grade was away on his boat In fact it was Liz Forgan awoken at home who said the programme should be put back on air The curious event of the disappearance of a live programme provided Fleet Street with some funny stories not all of them true but many are still recycled We at Open Media were asked by C4 to issue a joint statement which would have absolved C4 from responsibility This we refused to do Six days later Atwell quietly admitted on C4 s Right to Reply that After Dark was not implicated in the screw up Viewers with long memories may recall that Reed was asked to leave by the other guests some while after the show resumed transmission Atwell kept his job at C4 and axed the show at the end of that run 124 In his column in the Daily Mirror Victor Lewis Smith boasted of his hoax call The show was taken off air not by C4 but by little old wine drinking me sitting at home far from the TV studio Once connected I shouted Michael Grade is furious about this Take the bloody programme off now 125 The lawyer Geoffrey Robertson wrote The Broadcasting Standards Council condemned the makers of After Dark for not blacking out Oliver Reed s crude and boorish behaviour when this behaviour was actually proving the point in a discussion of men and violence 126 Channel 4 s Deputy Programme Director John Willis wrote an internal memo Oliver Reed got drunk and a hoaxer caused the programme briefly to be taken off air I view the latter with a great deal more seriousness than the former 1 000 calls from an audience estimated at just 300 000 Remarkable 46 Gordon Winter and Peter Hain Edit A week later the programme discussed The Cost of a Free Press with among others Duncan Campbell Anthony Howard and Lord Lambton In the course of the programme Gordon Winter said I was a chief witness against Peter Hain and then BOSS ordered me to do a maverick witness to get him off in order to beat up Jeremy Thorpe Peter Hain of course he was set up by the South Africans of course he was 127 Peter Hain had himself appeared on the very first After Dark programme several years earlier see here Prisons No Way Out Edit On 29 February 1991 a discussion about prison reform featured a rare live appearance by socialite writer Taki Theodoracopolous who admitted he deserved his prison sentence for cocaine possession Another striking guest was Tony Lambrianou who served 15 years for his part in the murder of Jack The Hat McVitie 51 The Sunday Times wrote Taki was reluctant to appear nervous about what consorting with criminals would do to his image Funny really when the only person he hit it off with on the show was the long term criminal Tony Lambrianou 128 The Gulf Edit Adnan Khashoggi on After Dark The discussion on 2 March 1991 featured the only live TV appearance by Adnan Khashoggi together with a confrontation between Lord Weidenfeld and David Mellor s friend Mona Bauwens daughter of a senior PLO figure Also on the programme Chris Cowley implicated in the Iraqi supergun affair and former Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath 51 Andy Croall and Satanic Ritual Abuse Edit Britain s first alleged case of satanic abuse was handled by staff at Nottinghamshire county council and led to a debate on After Dark Deputy director of social services Andy Croall was suspended by Nottinghamshire county council as a result of his appearance on the programme The discussion on 9 March 1991 After Rochdale was later described by two academics Satanic abuse allegations collapsed during March 1991 That rare airing of issues in care proceedings led the Saturday night three hour round table After Dark talk show popular with the opinion formers to cover the subject It then became the show to watch when news broke that the Royal Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children RSSPCC the Northern Constabulary NC and social workers from Orkney Islands Council OIC had carried on regardless and seized another nine children to save them from Satan When Professor Sherrill Mulhern and Dr Bill Thompson systematically explained how MPD and disclosure therapy were iatrogenic and neither Beatrix Campbell nor the feminist or Christian social work directors had an answer the media set out to extricate itself from its uncritical coverage of the NSPCC s claims by pouring all over Orkney 129 Croall agreeing with Campbell about the existence of satanic abuse had said during the programme that as a Christian I believe it s God time for it satanic abuse to be revealed it s a time when in God s plan it s going to be revealed 130 The Daily Telegraph reported what happened next More than 100 Christians gathered outside County Hall to demonstrate their support for Mr Andrew Croall Members of the National and Local Government Officers Association meanwhile held a protest backing the suspension His supporters rallied before a meeting of the county social services committee Mr Croall s remarks had outraged members of NALGO who called for his resignation 131 James Harries and Teachers Edit James Harries discussing Teachers 23 March 1991 The New Statesman described the programme broadcast on 23 March 1991 James Harries aged 12 sat perched forward on the edge of his seat dwarfed by the upholstery that threatened to devour both him and his blonde mop of frizzy curls Annis Garfield was too busy pouring wine to notice anything more than where the next bottle was coming from And when Peter Davies was not receiving a refill he was lighting up another cigarette and attacking anything that smacked of tolerance This bizarre trio transformed a potentially tediousAfter Darkinto the most extraordinary three hours of television all week Anthony Clare in the chair had an enormously difficult job I ve chaired manyAfter Dark discussions he said and we ve had politicians sexologists but I ve never seen any group of people less willing to listen to each other s point of view Thank heaven in all this for Russell Profitt deputy director of education in Southwark and Zoe Readhead daughter of A S Neill and head teacher at Summerhill 132 The Yorkshire Ripper Edit Today described the programme broadcast on 6 April 1991 The Yorkshire Ripper may have turned killer because he was forced to wear short trousers as a child his father claimed yesterday Young Peter Sutcliffe was humiliated by being the only boy in his school wearing them John Sutcliffe said on television Looking back it was terrible we made the poor devil wait all that time Mr Sutcliffe said We were very unjust to him Mr Sutcliffe admitted he had never visited his son since his transfer to top security Broadmoor hospital on the orders of the Ripper s wife Sonia Sutcliffe He said Sonia was extremely strange but added There s nothing I would do to come between them if they feel that way 133 The Daily Star added Mr Sutcliffe also blamed a teenage motorcycle accident for turning his son into a killer Apparently he damaged his head in the pile up From that moment on from being a pretty introverted young man he was just the opposite and became very very extrovert There was an absolute personality change Mr Sutcliffe also claimed his son was not a monster I believe some people are born evil but my son wasn t one of them There s nothing now evil about him I wish you could all meet him You d be amazed how sensitive kind he is 134 Mr Sutcliffe also said his son was a lovely lad a description with which Michael Winner very much disagreed The ICA wrote it ended with Stefan Jaworzyn vehemently debating the meaning of the word integrity with fellow guest Michael Winner 135 Channel 4 axing EditIn August 1991 Channel 4 announced the end of the series an action which became the subject of an editorial in The Times 136 The Independent newspaper noted Grade s programming is confused he axed the talk show allegedly to make way for even more innovative programmes yet replaced it with a series of Seventies repeats He praised After Dark lavishly in public but in a letter to Edward Heath said it promised more than it delivered 137 The producer wrote later in an article in Lobster magazine Much to everyone s surprise the programme survived the novelty of its form and remained a great event for some years even to the extent that the head of the network Jeremy Isaacs selected it as one of his all time favourite programmes when he left C4 and wrote a book Not everyone was wholly supportive however Although launched by Isaacs most of the ninety After Dark programmes were made under the reign of Michael Grade who we were never sure actually watched the show And Grade always more of an aspiring Establishment man than his time at C4 suggested had concerns Interviewed some years after he axed After Dark for uncertain reasons Grade said It After Dark was an interesting idea and well worth pursuing I thought it was very badly produced editorially 138 An open letter was published signed by Professor Sir Ian Kennedy Buzz Aldrin Billy Bragg Beatrix Campbell Lord Dacre Gerald Kaufman Mary Midgley Richard Perle Merlyn Rees Richard Shepherd Ralph Steadman Peter Ustinov Lord Weidenfeld and many others We have learnt with great concern of Channel 4 s decision not to continue with the television discussion programmeAfter Dark Some of us have worked on and with this production others have been its on screen guests still others have no professional connection with the programme but as viewers have foundAfter Darkuniquely entertaining instructive and informative We do not want to see it disappear 139 Angela Lambert wrote later in The Independent I am truly sorry to hear that the Saturday small hours talk show After Dark is to be dropped by Channel 4 It was the most original programme on television and the only one in which the sound of the human voice angry boring repetitive excitable but occasionally passionate revealing and unforgettable overcame the patina of artifice with which television habitually polishes and tidies up its speakers Only on After Darkcould we have heard the rolling Russian timbre of Tatyana Tolstaya or seen Clare Short squirm as Tony Howard wondered why if she was so protective about her private life she d talked on radio to Anthony Clare Only After Dark had the leisurely pace that made possible the exchange between the Holocaust survivor Rabbi Hugo Gryn and Yasser Arafat s PR voice Karma Nabulsi whose mutual desire for a world in which their grandchildren could play together was so moving and allowed Wendy Savage to admit to her own continuing pain at performing abortions Late as the show was and being open ended it sometimes ran till 3am it was the most compulsive and dangerous viewing on the air That ll be why they dropped it 140 The producers wrote warning that After Dark s loss poses such a threat to broadcasting freedom It is the only television programme whose guests were not straitjacketed into a fixed time slot subjected to precensorship or editing or confronted with a celebrity host and a noisy studio audience That year and on through the 1990s we argued loudly that After Dark should be put back on air it being an effective and necessary corrective to the limitations and excessive controls created by the mass broadcasting of those days 5 Later programmes EditMain article List of After Dark editions Specials Edit From 1993 Channel 4 broadcast a number of After Dark one off specials In 1995 the Financial Times wrote Channel 4 ended its remarkable season on capital punishment Lethal Justice by revivingAfter Dark the best studio discussion format ever created why they do not run it 52 weeks a year is a mystery Being live may mean enduring bores but you can also come across amazing people a former American prison governor in this instance who most unusually have enough time to explain their ideas As so often withAfter Dark I switched on to watch 10 minutes and stayed till the end 141 In 1997 a Channel 4 executive was said by The Guardian to be insistent that it s a popular misconception that we killed it off In fact we never lost it We haven t done another series but we did a one off After Dark recently in our abortion season Bizarrely Channel 4 cited After Dark as a model of the kind of cerebral programme it wanted when inviting independent production company submissions in May I can t think of any ideas that would make better late night programming than After Dark 142 he said echoing the words of the original commissioning executive of After Dark Seamus Cassidy 143 who in an interview to the Irish News in 2005 said I m probably most proud of After Dark 144 Bloody Bosnia 7 August 1993 Bloody Bosnia Edit In 1993 The Independent magazine wrote of the first After Dark special broadcast as part of the Channel 4 season Bloody Bosnia Among those taking part was Nikola Koljevic the vice president of the so called Serbian Republic of Bosnia Among those opposing him and arguing for a multi ethnic non nationalist Bosnia were a Croatian historian a Serb newspaper editor and a Muslim refugee 145 During the programme viewers saw Koljevic admit Serb concentration camps in Bosnia 52 Also present was Sir Fitzroy Maclean who was the British liaison to Josip Broz Tito s Partisans in World War II Sinead O Connor on After Dark on 21 January 1995 Sinead O Connor and Ireland Sex amp Celibacy Edit In January 1995 Sinead O Connor was so interested in a discussion about sexual abuse and the Catholic church that she rang in to ask if she could appear They sent a taxi to her home 73 The Evening Standard wrote that After Dark made a brief reappearance last Saturday night when true to its unpredictable form Sinead O Connor walked on to the set 10 minutes before closedown 146 Host Helena Kennedy described the event On that occasion former taoiseach Garret FitzGerald was sharing the sofas with a Dominican monk and a representative of the Catholic church While we were on the air Sinead O Connor called in says Kennedy Then I got a message in my earpiece to say she had just turned up at the studio Sinead came on and argued that abuse in families was coded in by the church because it refused to accept the accounts of women and children But O Connor s intervention was not all that pleased her that night For Kennedy herself from Irish Catholic stock the real merit of the programme was the way the abuse scandals led into a wider debate and a bigger picture of the social changes taking place in Ireland at the time which were challenging teaching on contraception and divorce and the traditional deference to the church It was more than a discussion of child sex abuse she says You could see a new Ireland coming into being 62 Lethal Justice Edit The Glasgow Herald wrote of the After Dark special broadcast on 17 August 1995 The debate on judicial murder looked to be going nowhere Positions were settled opinions fixed A defence lawyer a policeman a psychologist a convicted murderer and a victim s widow were arrayed before us each saying exactly what was expected of them Then a fat smiling American spoke This was Don Cabana a professor of Criminal Justice from Mississippi but once a prison governor and once indeed an executioner Quietly and with some effort he described exactly what happens when cyanide is released into the chamber when the gas touches the skin when the convulsions and the soiling begins and how it all affects those whose job it is to carry out the orders of the state It was a simple unvarnished account and the most riveting piece of television this week 147 After Diana in 1997 After Diana Edit This special was broadcast on 13 September 1997 a fortnight after Diana Princess of Wales died from the injuries she sustained in a car crash With a rare appearance by Claus von Bulow guests also included George Monbiot Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie and Beatrix Campbell who argued that Princess Diana had survived victimhood to realise her true self identity 148 BBC series Edit Tony Wilson hosting After Dark in 2003 In January 2003 The Guardian wrote After Dark the open ended discussion programme that gave its guests free rein to ruminate or ramble depending on how much alcohol they had consumed is to make a comeback on BBC Four After Dark is one of the great television talk formats of all time it was careless of Channel 4 to have let it go said the BBCFour controller Roly Keating The programme allowed its guests to talk entirely freely They were allowed to drink if they wanted and the programme ended only when they ran out of things to say It produced some memorable television moments John Sutcliffe father of the Yorkshire Ripper was able to give a considered view of his son s behaviour General Sir Anthony Farrar Hockley a former commander of British forces in Northern Ireland swapped anecdotes with Bernadette Devlin and arms dealer Joey Martyn Martin claimed Mark Thatcher was a beneficiary of the international weapons trade However the show was dropped from its regular Saturday night slot in 1991 by the then Channel 4 chief executive Michael Grade His decision prompted a campaign by more than 100 public figures from an astronaut to a zoologist to save the programme It returned the following year for occasional specials until its final demise in 1997 The BBC Four version will remain unchanged in format and will be made by the original producer After Dark is a unique combination of a genuinely live programme not on a delay of two hours like Question Time or five minutes like a radio programme There is no studio audience so the participants are under no obligation to exhibit themselves There is no celebrity host who has to make himself look good And most important of all it is open ended which shifts the power from the broadcaster and the producers to the participants He predicted that the programme could seem even more unusual now in the age of slick and formatted television 149 Tom O Carroll and Child Protection How Far Should We Go Edit In March 2003 After Dark gave airtime to a self confessed paedophile The Guardian described the show Tom O Carroll argues that sex with children is not harmful The 56 year old is Ireland s most notorious paedophile He moved to Leamington Spa in 1972 where he established the Paedophile Information Exchange which called for the open discussion of paedophilia and the abolition of laws against consensual sexual acts between children and adults And the boy lover as he calls himself has addressed international conferences across the globe and written a book justifying the behaviour of those who prey on children Mr O Carroll and five other members of the exchange were convicted for conspiring to corrupt public morals in the 1980s by publishing a magazine advocating sex with children He joined the After Dark panel for a discussion on paedophilia and child protection Also on the panel were high profile child protection campaigner Esther Rantzen lawyer Helena Kennedy QC a former abuse victim a criminologist a solicitor and two academics The BBC defended the decision to give a platform to Mr O Carroll saying he was invited on as part of a legitimate discussion about a topical issue 150 Silke Maier Witt and Terrorism Who Wins Edit A week later a discussion about terrorism saw the one time Baader Meinhof terrorist Silke Maier Witt confess she could no longer remember why she had done what she did 52 Iraq Truth and Lies Edit The last After Dark Iraq Truth and Lies was transmitted on 29 March 2003 The producer wrote The very last After Dark programme ended appropriately enough perhaps with a plug for the campaign for a screen free TV Turnoff Week 5 Other notable programmes EditAs listed on the webpage of ITN Source 35 1988 Edit On 11 March fashion designer Bruce Oldfield arrived well after the programme began having decided to finish his meal in a West End restaurant before joining the other guests On 30 April during a discussion between a witch a psychiatrist an exorcist and an alleged victim of Satanic abuse After Dark became possibly the first UK TV programme to air claims that newborn babies were ritually consumed On 27 August one of the Oz trial defendants was reintroduced to the judge who sentenced him 1989 Edit On 16 September possibly the first discussion about paedophilia on British television featured a perpetrator a victim and a psychiatrist who recommended castration On 18 November Whitley Strieber who said he was abducted by space aliens met astronaut Buzz Aldrin On 25 November a man who proposed to take up the offer by the then government of South Africa to emigrate to their country very cheaply was introduced to South Africans who told him what to expect including newspaper editor Donald Woods and the musician Abdullah Ibrahim who closed the programme with an extended jazz impro on piano Claus von Bulow After Diana 13 September 1997 1997 Edit On 13 September After Dark featured an appearance by Claus von Bulow Other Edit Some other After Dark programmes were highlighted in an article in the Radio Times in 2003 One show Counting The Cost of a Free Press 2 February 1991 151 was plunged into darkness by a power cut The guests carried on talking during the blackout Mary Whitehouse was told by a female pensioner What women want is a Mars bar and a bottle of gin The guest who consumed the most alcohol was philosopher A J Ayer He had been through the best part of a bottle of Scotch but he was still brilliant 73 And from a comment in The Guardian in 2012 Off the top of my head I remember a group of witches and a heart breaking discussion on euthanasia with a lot of people about to die There has never been anything else like it 152 Channel 4 anniversaries EditIn October 2007 as part of its 25 year anniversary celebrations Channel 4 repeated the first ever After Dark on the More4 channel 153 billing it as Anthony Wilson hosts a discussion concerning secrets both secrets of the State and the personal secrets we keep from one another 154 In 2012 on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of Channel 4 After Dark featured prominently in a number of two page tributes in British newspapers 155 BFI InView EditIn 2009 the British Film Institute announced that After Dark programmes were available online through its InView service This web based learning resource was free but accessible only to UK Higher Education Further Education institutions in partnership with The National Archives the Parliamentary Broadcasting Unit the BBC FremantleMedia and the After Dark production company Open Media The BFI said InView offered examples of how some of the UK s key social political and economic issues have been represented and debated Until the service came to an end in 2020 fifty editions of what the BUFVC called the much missed series After Dark 156 were streamed online 157 Production EditEditorial Edit The producer wrote We made programmes about familiar British issues or diseases as we called them the treatment of children of the mentally ill of prisoners and about class cash and racial and sexual difference Several programmes were concerned with matters of exceptional sensitivity to the then Thatcher government such as state secrecy or the Troubles in Northern Ireland Places further afield but just as important Chile Eritrea Iran Iraq Israel Nicaragua South Africa and Russia featured regularly as did programmes explicitly about the pressures history puts on the present After Dark noted anniversaries as various as the Second World War and the death of Freud Less apparently solemn subjects sport fashion gambling pop music were in the mix from the start and turned out to be more serious than viewers might have expected 5 The main themes of After Dark were listed in an internal memo in 1988 Lovelessness the spaces in our society that for whatever reason are cold empty formulaic unfeeling systematised and filled only with empty rhetoric or silence Who owns your body Do you Does the State Your doctor Your lover The police Your parents This theme covers a variety of apparently unrelated subjects imprisonment health care capital punishment mental illness abortion schooling What happens after dark Sex crime astronomy Shining light into the shadows we find not only Ralf Dahrendorf s underclass but also the invisible people Some invisible people are so because they choose to be criminals spies the hidden rich but others are invisible because we do not want to see them the homeless the dispossessed the mentally confused the dying Among the invisible there is a new slave class some of those were uncovered by Gunther Wallraff in his documentary The Lowest of the Low illegal immigrants who are used for clearing up nuclear accidents although the work is known to be fatal Do you want to know a secret Guests tell all or their bit of it What is beyond the law Who is beyond the law Not knowing is an act of choice During a discussion on the Holocaust an Austrian woman claimed We did not know another participant countered by saying that not all knowing comes from reading newspapers Looking listening and drawing deductions are another way of knowing so choosing not to look or listen or draw a deduction can be conscious not knowing So what things in our society are we choosing to look away from choosing not to know What will our grandchildren accuse us of 158 Guest selection Edit Ex MP John Stonehouse after a pilot episode in 1987 After Dark is different experts sit side by side with ordinary people irrespective of age race gender or sexual orientation whose experience happens to relate to the subject The producer says An average show should consist of Punch Judy a crocodile a hangman and a grandmother 159 There s nobody I wouldn t have on the programme 160 Mark Lawson wrote in The Independent The Watergate conspirator John Ehrlichman was at the dentist when the surgery phone rang It was for him A voice from London how would he like to take part in an open ended very late night discussion on the nature of truth If he was interested he had four hours to get on the plane Jeremy Isaacs in his farewell speech to the television industry counted After Dark among the innovations of which he was most proud The key to the series is the casting The producer says We start with one or two people without whom the discussion wouldn t take place the catalysts Then there are the people who are not known TV performers but who will bring personal testimony to issues which would otherwise be argued theoretically Then there are the historians or journalists who provide a context In a documentary the meetings between these points of view would happen in a cutting room or at best around a table under bright lights with time running out You don t in any other programme get the full nuances of a meeting between people 161 A production meeting in 2003 The Times wrote Some of the juxtapositions have been inspired 162 After the Nelson Mandela concert last summer it ran a discussion programme including Harry Belafonte Breyten Breytenbach Denis Worrall and Ismail Ayob Mandela s lawyer Belafonte came directly from Wembley with a police escort for his only British TV appearance Programme hired a private plane to fly in Breytenbach Worrall came from South Africa at After Dark expense But this largesse is apparently unusual 77 The producer wrote In amongst the exceptional and the celebrated the stars and the scandalous quieter folk often triumphed Those who had written to us with a story to tell or who had been discovered through diligent research found that the format allowed them a voice despite strong competition Though maybe as late as an hour or more into the programme they could nonetheless re shape the discussion and might well trump the polished assertions of more professional experts 5 Working method Edit Peace in Our Time 3 July 1987 with Edward Teller Beatrix Campbell Rudolf Peierls Enoch Powell Sergei Kapitsa and host John Underwood The Times wrote After Dark has managed a genuinely fresh approach It has done so by freeing itself of such conventions as a studio audience and a set running time of carrying on through commercial breaks and of dealing with one subject instead of several 162 and the TV trade magazine Televisual commented The show was successful in making its guests forget the cameras and the host Edward Teller inventor of the H bomb only agreed to appear on the show because it wasn t edited 163 The programme was the most uncensorable programme in the history of British television Genuinely live unlike many so called live shows which are delayed by seconds or longer and crucially open ended the participants in these unique broadcast discussions were able to take control of the content the programme concluded only when everyone had said everything they wanted to say 11 The producer described the working method so designed as to empower the guests rather than have them act out a preordained and inevitably limited agenda designed by others In all the ways that matter the control of After Dark passed from the producer and the broadcaster to the participants As a result it was never our show it always belonged to the guests which is only right proper and as it should be but normally never is The special freedoms guaranteed by the programme were grabbed by the participants who often said the apparently unsayable Intelligent production kept us out of the law courts if not out of hot water 34 Presenter Tony Wilson said After Dark kept its participants apart before the transmission 164 Presenter John Underwood reckons the first give away is guests choice of seats when they enter the studio Power figures people used to being listened to plump themselves down opposite the host The seat on the presenters right a bit in the shadows is chosen by dark horses whose contributions are few but deadly He also relishes the unexpected alliances that are formed and the genuine dialogue that becomes possible 165 Jay Rayner described the backstage atmosphere in Arena magazine The situation is a little more controlled than the viewer might imagine As the guests arrived they were shepherded off to individual dressing rooms Such solitary confinement was to protect the guests from meeting each other and talking themselves out before the television fun began The plush red furniture is positioned on a well planned formation two long couches on each side two big armchairs at either end where it is hoped strong personalities might sit and an outsider s chair on one corner pushed back into the shadows the seating plan was designed by an Austrian psychologist for the original programme though none of the guests are told where to sit The researchers used their personal knowledge of each guest to help the discussion along From a phone in the hospitality room they rang the TV gallery and asked the directors to urge Ian Kennedy that evening s host to call upon particular members of the party who were well informed in the area under discussion Using the radio link secreted in Kennedy s ear the directors passed the message to him A few seconds later as though the researchers were lip synching with Kennedy the question came out of his mouth It was an act of great skill the guests had managed to relax in the usually intimidating environment of a TV studio They had been given a proper environment to talk in and they had done just that 160 City Limits wrote As Don Coutts director of the show says the first half hour sounds like a Newsnight situation but after a while people relax and get properly into the subject Given that it is a set up situation and cast quite carefully after that it s completely open 159 Q magazine quoted the producer We re actually trying to break down the barriers that divide people Jeremy Isaacs told us it was the best proposal for a live show he d ever seen 166 I really don t know what s going to happen 159 The Listener magazine said After Dark has taken the format towards the realm of psychodrama peeling away its participants layers of restraint and front 167 Hosts Edit Ian Kennedy hosting After Dark in 1987 The production team sought hosts who were more than the usual mechanical hack audience appeal and a facilitator rather than a celebrity figure 168 Senior director Coutts intended their role to be minimal saying that They interrupt if everyone is shouting at each other and generally just keep things going He added that getting the hosts to shut up was the most difficult thing 159 Tony Wilson a familiar face to programme watchers in Granadaland understands that he will not be the host next week Indeed he knows he will not be asked again if he attempts to direct the discussion 169 At a broadcasting conference in 1992 Tony Wilson said One of my privileges in television is that the wonderful Sebastian Cody let me present several editions of After Dark You cannot record a programme like that You cannot get those human and emotional and intellectual things to happen Somewhere about twenty or thirty minutes in you poke a couple of questions and it s like you know that train has started the roller coaster and you will be on it for at least two and a half hours And that roller coaster of emotions and intellect is fused with the red lights It s fused with the fact that this is live television Those people are aware of it You are aware of it That is the great delight of it 164 In 2021 journalist Fergal Kinney wrote of Tony Wilson s work as a host of the programme His appearances on Channel 4 s freewheeling late night debate show After Dark are exhilarating pitched somewhere between a malevolent David Dimbleby and a slightly effete Jonathan Meades 170 Other frequent presenters of the series included Prof Anthony Clare Helena Kennedy QC Prof Sir Ian Kennedy Sheena McDonald Matthew Parris and John Underwood Those who hosted only one edition include Anthony Holden Stuart Hood Henry Kelly and John Plender Staffing Edit The Guardian ran the first recruitment advertisement for programme staff In May Channel 4 launch an extraordinary discussion programme Open Media are offering a number of short term contracts on this remarkable series We need senior researchers with considerable experience of current affairs television versatility good humour a limitless capacity for work and above all sympathy with and knowledge of many different viewpoints and people not all of them sympathetic 171 The producer wrote Diversity was anyway guaranteed by the colourful production teams who researched the programmes It was the 1980s so we employed a member of Militant at least I think he used to get the newspaper but also a member of a Roman Catholic sect a retired rent boy and someone who was later splashed across the front page of The Observer as an SIS agent We gave a break to a minicab driver who nonetheless carried on sending us abusive faxes for years There was a troublesome former Private Eye man whose stories led me to discover that Peter Cook was a serious and professional proprietor Cook s otherwise incessant comedy shtick vanished when he discussed the magazine s personnel problems There was no collective bias the staff were a motley crew who fought hard to promote their individual interests 34 A gameshow producer got his break into television by writing to After Dark They eventually put me on a very short contract cutting articles out of the papers It was the most junior job I d ever had and I was extremely happy Over the next two series of After Dark I read and cut 10 newspapers a day 10 magazines a week plus monthly digests of foreign press a fantastic introduction to current affairs I enjoyed the intellectual cut and thrust of the office the thrill of live broadcasting and the diversity of the subjects we covered 172 A senior member of staff described her working week On Saturdays when the show goes out I might be in the studio till 5 am On a weekday I might have a 10 am start kicking off with a production meeting This includes everyone who works for Open Media the production company plus a couple of experts on topics we are considering for the future We have a post mortem on the previous Saturday s programme Then we move onto next week s show We discuss possible guests and possible hosts Later on we break up into smaller units of one producer and two or three researchers Within my team I will draw up a shortlist of maybe 15 guests and 20 books to be read I will allocate tasks giving myself a slightly smaller workload so that I can keep a supervisory eye on the overall progress of the one or two projects in hand I spend the rest of the day on the phone liaising with my colleagues and meeting useful contacts 173 Direction Edit Brave New World 1994 In 2021 The Daily Telegraph wrote Don Coutts directed it like a drama Because it was a drama every week And it wasn t always about the person speaking There was a lot of looking at other people 17 About the look of the show Coutts said We used big close ups pulled focus or used a panning system The camera work was radical The idea was to use very low light conditions and an atmosphere that was supposed to be dark and moody Coutts is still pleased with the way viewers could turn the television on and within seconds know that what they were watching couldn t be anything other than After Dark 174 The producer wrote Guests sat in a circle and so concentrated on each other rather than the cameras For the benefit of the watching audience at home the participants were often filmed listening a sight far more expressive than the faces we make when speaking In fact After Dark gave such opportunities for listening that on occasion viewers even saw guests slowly perhaps only provisionally but nonetheless changing their minds on air 52 Legal Edit A Channel 4 lawyer wrote After Dark producers weighed the chances of the guest behaving naturally against becoming tongue tied because of a frightening formal legal document and opted for the side of freer speech A Channel 4 lawyer was always on hand to explain the handling of particularly sensitive areas to guests informally warning them of dangers ahead Particular problems encountered included contempt of court or possible identification of minors during the debate on the Cleveland child abuse cases It was especially important to give guidance on contempt of court as guests risked a criminal offence if they committed contempt The Channel 4 duty lawyer sat up in the gallery to spot problems as they happened If disaster struck the lawyer would speak to the host at the earliest possible commercial break If the host had not already responded by making it clear that a guest s libellous views were his or hers alone that is 175 Cultural references EditAfter Dark featured in Biff cartoons from The Guardian in 1988 176 After Dark was parodied on a regular basis as part of the BBC1 comedy series Alas Smith and Jones 177 178 The comic writer William Donaldson ran a column in The Independent newspaper about attempts made by After Dark staff to contact him they didn t know me from a hole in the road and merely wanted Janie Jones s number 179 Simon Bell plays the part of an After Dark presenter in the 1989 film The Tall Guy 180 In 2011 Oliver Reed s appearance on After Dark featured in the BBC radio play Burning Both Ends by Matthew Broughton 181 In 2016 After Dark was the inspiration for the touring production The Destroyed Room by theatre company Vanishing Point 182 183 See also EditList of After Dark editions Open MediaReferences Edit Broadcast magazine 28 January 2003 Broadcast magazine 4 March 2010 Not So Dumb The Times 3 October 2018 see Club 2 in German Wikipedia a b c d e f g After Dark and the Future of Public Debate Westminster Institute for Advanced Studies 3 September 2017 accessed 29 March 2023 Frances Bonner Personality Presenters 2011 p 82 Enniscorthy Guardian 31 January 1991 Tom Fordy 29 January 2021 accessed 3 February 2021 Rod Stoneman The Theories We Need Petrie and Stoneman Educating Film Makers 2014 News release by the Open University accessed 4 June 2014 a b Programme notes Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine for the academic conference 1984 Where Are We Now held 23 April 2014 An instinctive look at the world is taken through a glass darkly The Herald Neil Cooper 5 January 2016 accessed 13 September 2017 David Lee and John Corner After Dark Channel 4 s Innovation in Television Talk Journal of British Cinema and Television Volume 14 Issue 4 September 2017 a b David Lee Independent Television Production in the UK Palgrave Macmillan 2018 No Twitter mobs just intelligent debate Simon Heffer The Daily Telegraph 18 August 2020 accessed 19 August 2020 Rerun the jewels Jack Seale The Guardian 18 April 2020 accessed 20 April 2020 a b c d e Tom Fordy The Daily Telegraph 29 January 2021 accessed 3 February 2021 Jeremy Isaacs Storm Over 4 Weidenfeld amp Nicolson UK 1989 The talk masters of television The Independent 7 June 1989 Features Channel 4 at 25 1987 Off The Telly November 2002 Archived from the original on 8 June 2011 The Listener 21 December 1989 Deans Jason 28 January 2003 BBC4 to resurrect After Dark The Guardian Retrieved 2 August 2018 Virginia Matthews The Guardian 8 June 1987 BMRB Survey 1988 Sonia M Livingstone Peter Lunt Talk on Television Audience Participation and Public Debate Routledge 1993 Remembering Cold War Eighties with innocence of youth Gail Walker Belfast Telegraph 20 June 2016 A Sword In The Darkness by Joe Morgan accessed 13 May 2022 Liberal England accessed 31 May 2022 The Listener 22 December 1988 The Listener 27 July 1989 The Observer 25 August 1991 Peter Lennon The Listener 7 May 1987 Nancy Banks Smith The Guardian 4 May 1987 a b c d After Kelly Lobster 55 Summer 2008 a b c Getty Images Itnsource com Retrieved 2 August 2018 I still want to get married but to a woman not a man The Times 27 January 2006 Hughes explains his gay admission BBC News 26 January 2006 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Nick Basannavar Sexual Violence Against Children in Britain Since 1965 Palgrave Macmillan 2021 Christopher Dunkley Financial Times 3 June 1987 Gillian Ania Fortunes of the Firefly University Texts University of Hull 1996 London Daily News 1 June 1987 Hour has dawned for the late late show The Observer 31 May 1987 Chippendale and Horrie Disaster The Rise and Fall of the News on Sunday Sphere Books 1988 How We Met Independent on Sunday 4 December 1994 a b The Independent 19 February 1988 a b Maggie Brown A Licence To Be Different BFI 2007 Alwyn W Turner Rejoice Rejoice Britain in the 1980s Aurum 2010 An Introduction to the Nature and Functions of Language Jackson and Stockwell Continuum 2010 Daniel Rachel Walls Come Tumbling Down Picador 2016 The Independent 15 June 1987 a b c d Getty Images Itnsource com Retrieved 2 August 2018 a b c d e f g Defending the right to say it British Journalism Review Sage vol 28 nr 4 December 2017 The Independent 13 July 1987 The Tablet 25 July 1987 Crime and the punished The Guardian 16 July 1987 The Sunday Times 19 July 1987 Angry TV Debate on Nazi War Crimes Trials Jewish Telegraphic Agency dispatch published in The Jewish Week of New York 4 September 1987 The article also noted that Rosenbaum was substituting on short notice for the Paris based Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld who refused to appear on the same program with Verges Verges s life story is told in the 2009 film Devil s Advocate the trailer for which is here The Tablet 27 February 1988 The Listener 25 February 1988 The Independent 29 February 1988 The Evening Standard 29 February 1988 a b c Baroness goes back to the twilight zone The Sunday Times 23 February 2003 Helena Kennedy on After Dark which returns next week The Guardian 17 February 2003 Christopher Dunkley Financial Times 23 March 1988 Summary of the After Dark programme on 18 March 1988 by the Channel 4 company Screenocean Accessed 8 August 2022 Frankie Dettori talks to Alastair Down Racing Post 12 June 2010 Tony Wilson Britain s finest live presenter MediaGuardian 14 August 2007 Archived from the original on 20 September 2008 Retrieved 6 October 2008 Prof Philip Jenkins The Devil Rides In Charismatic Christians and the Depiction of a Satanic Menace in Contemporary Great Britain RELIGIOLOGIQUES 11 Spring 1995 pp 169 192 a b Fascism on FOUR Socialist Worker 4 June 1988 W Stephen Gilbert Talking Revolution New Statesman 13 May 1988 Docs Ireland to host Derry Days celebration Derry Journal 18 August 2021 accessed 19 August 2021 Troubled talks with the PLO The Daily Telegraph 14 May 1988 a b c All night long Radio Times 15 March 2003 Milton Shulman The Listener 8 December 1988 Falling foul of the Press gang Evening Standard 10 June 1988 Harvey Proctor Credible and True Biteback 2016 a b The Times 8 February 1989 The Guardian 11 June 1988 Victoria Brittain Foreign Bodies The Listener 30 June 1988 The Listener 18 May 1989 Nancy Banks Smith A manna of speaking The Guardian 20 June 1988 Today 23 June 1988 Andrew Wilson Beautiful Shadow Bloomsbury 2003 p 432 3 a b Jaci Stephen Seeing life through Mr Porn s eyes Evening Standard 27 June 1988 Poppa Porn The Guardian 27 June 1988 Francis Wheen The Independent 9 September 1990 Robin Bryans The Dust Has Never Settled Honeyford 1992 Paul Foot Who Framed Colin Wallace Macmillan 1989 Peter Gill Policing Politics Security Intelligence and the Liberal Democratic State Frank Cass amp Co 1994 The Guardian 22 July 1988 Shigeko Misaki Whaling for the Twenty First Century The Institute of Cetacean Research 1996 John Underwood Bianca For President The Independent 16 May 1992 Sean French Diary New Statesman 9 September 1988 The Guardian 26 September 1988 The Guardian 19 September 1988 The Daily Telegraph 9 September 1988 The Stage and Television Today 22 September 1988 Ed Moloney in The Media amp Northern Ireland ed Bill Rolston Macmillan 1991 Laura K Donohue Terrorist Speech amp The Future of Free Expression vol 27 1 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Cited K D Ewing amp C A Gearty Freedom Under Thatcher Civil Liberties in Modern Britain OUP 1990 Liz Forgan Air time ban The Times Letters 22 October 1988 Andrew Gray amp William I Jenkins Public Administration and Government in 1988 89 Parliamentary Affairs vol 42 no 4 October 1989 Christopher Dunkley Never Mind the Chit Chat Where s The Conversation Financial Times 15 May 1989 Tony Benn The End of an Era Diaries 1980 90 Hutchinson 1992 Quoted in How Democractic is Britain in The Rape of the Constitution ed Keith Sutherland 2000 The Listener 25 May 1989 Richard Norton Taylor Blake escape men dropped by Channel 4 The Guardian 12 May 1989 Programme extract quoted in Phil Scraton Power conflict and criminalisation Routledge London and New York 2007 From Scraton Coleman amp Jemphrey Hillsborough and After Edge Hill College of Higher Education Centre for Studies in Crime and Social Justice 1990 Chris Peachment Speech Therapy The Times 29 May 1989 Unity 24 January 2004 John Campbell Edward Heath A biography Jonathan Cape 1993 Rosen appearing on After Dark Pride and Prejudice broadcast 4 6 89 Channel 4 Wellcome Collection accessed 24 June 2022 Albert H Friedlander A Thread of Gold Journeys Towards Reconciliation SCM Press London 1990 Jaci Stephen A night of chewing the fat Evening Standard October 1989 Barbara Amiel Hired for their bodies fired for their wrinkles The Times 13 October 1989 Irish Independent Eddie Holt on TV 28 October 1989 Vincent Raison Obituary of Malcolm Bennett The Guardian 8 April 2015 accessed 15 October 2015 The Newcastle Journal 7 November 1989 Access Restricted BFI InView Bfi org uk Retrieved 2 August 2018 Three Minutes of Hope Hugo Gryn Continuum 2010 footnote 8 to the introduction by Naomi Gryn The Observer 14 August 1994 I warned them it was a bad idea to invite Oliver The Independent 29 January 1991 Letter in Broadcast magazine 27 November 2002 Daily Mirror 8 May 1999 Geoffrey Robertson QC Freedom The Individual and The Law Penguin 1993 p 288 Francis Bennion Hain Prosecution Scrapbook Archived 22 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine accessed 16 October 2015 High lifer still up to his Taki tricks Style File The Sunday Times 3 March 1991 Bill Thompson and Andy Williams The Myth of Moral Panics Sex Snuff and Satan Routledge 2013 Quoted by David Aaronovitch in an online article 5 July 2015 Child abuse row draws rival demos The Daily Telegraph 25 April 1991 New Statesman 29 March 1991 Today 8 April 1991 Daily Star 8 April 1991 Five wretched years of Blackest Ever Black ICA London 26 09 15 Blackest Ever Black Blackesteverblack com Retrieved 2 August 2018 Best of a bad job The Times 28 August 1991 William Leith Crisis on Four The Independent 15 September 1991 After Kelly Lobster 55 Summer 2008 quoting a recorded interview held at the headquarters of First Leisure on 25 February 1999 Letter in The Independent 30 August 1991 Angela Lambert A modern twist to an old old story The Independent 15 September 1991 Christopher Dunkley Sizzlers for summer evenings Financial Times 23 August 1995 Bob Strange quoted in John Dugdale The big question The Guardian 24 November 1997 Irish News 29 January 2000 Irish News 12 September 2005 The Independent 21 August 1993 The Evening Standard 25 January 1995 Glasgow Herald 19 August 1995 Mark Kirby Death of a Princess Capital amp Class issue 64 Spring 1998 29 41 Wells Matt 29 January 2003 Risky After Dark chat show to return The Guardian Retrieved 2 August 2018 Cozens Claire 4 March 2003 BBC braced for paedophile row The Guardian Retrieved 1 March 2017 Jaci Stephen New Statesman 8 February 1991 The 10 best Channel 4 moments The Guardian 22 October 2012 Listing on online guide Modculture News Archived 31 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine All 4 TV Guide Channel4 com Retrieved 2 August 2018 Just don t f it up The Guardian 1 December 2012 and The Sunday Times and The Observer 2 December 2012 A New Source of History Patrick Russell BFI accessed 1 July 2020 Home BFI InView Archived from the original on 12 January 2016 Retrieved 4 August 2010 Quoted in After Kelly Lobster 55 Summer 2008 a b c d The Dark Side City Limits 30 April 1987 a b Jay Rayner Table Talk Arena 1989 Mark Lawson All we ve got time for The Independent 19 February 1988 a b Deep talk into the night The Times 13 May 1989 After Dark s leading light Televisual September 1987 a b Edited Nod Miller and Rod Allen It s Live But Is It Real John Libbey 1993 Watching Brief The Guardian 13 May 1989 Q 7 April 1987 The Listener 21 April 1988 Cody Sebastian 14 August 2007 Tony Wilson Britain s finest live presenter The Guardian Retrieved 2 August 2018 Sean Day Lewis Dark Thoughts London Daily News 1 May 1987 Fergal Keane interview with Paul Morley The Quietus 9 October 2021 accessed 12 October 2021 The Guardian March 1987 Jack Kibble White interviews Justin Scroggie Off the Telly July 2002 OFF THE TELLY Interviews Justin Scroggie Archived from the original on 14 May 2008 Retrieved 2008 08 20 accessed 20 August 2008 Margaret Coen Girl About Town 18 July 1988 Television Week 24 November 1988 Sarah Andrew TV Live and dangerous TV Producer December 1991 After Dark biffonline co uk The Spectator 2 December 1989 The Evening Standard 16 April 1993 William Donaldson I blame Mad Maria and Pratt the Playwright The Independent 8 September 1990 The Tall Guy 1989 IMDb com Retrieved 2 August 2018 BBC Sounds accessed 7 May 2019 The Destroyed Room the panel show that tears down convention The Scotsman 2 February 2016 An instinctive look at the world is taken through a glass darkly The Herald 5 January 2016 accessed 13 September 2017External sources Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to After Dark Production company s list of all guests hosts programme titles and dates Credits from IMDb One entire episode and several clips of others from the production company s YouTube channel Interview with Helena Kennedy launching a new series of After Dark The Sunday Times 23 February 2003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title After Dark TV programme amp oldid 1151323274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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