A Very British Coup (TV series)
A Very British Coup | |
---|---|
Genre | Political drama |
Based on | A Very British Coup by Chris Mullin |
Written by | Alan Plater |
Directed by | Mick Jackson |
Starring | Ray McAnally Alan MacNaughtan Keith Allen Geoffrey Beevers Marjorie Yates Jim Carter |
Theme music composer | John E. Keane |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 3 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Ann Skinner Sally Hibbin |
Cinematography | Ernest Vincze |
Editor(s) | Don Fairservice |
Running time | 3 × 1 hour (Including ad breaks) |
Release | |
Original network | Channel 4 |
Picture format | 4:3 |
Audio format | Mono |
Original release | 19 June 3 July 1988 |
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External links | |
[{{#property:P856}} Website] |
A Very British Coup is a 1988 British political serial adapted from Chris Mullin's 1982 novel A Very British Coup in 1988 by screenwriter Alan Plater and director Mick Jackson. Starring Ray McAnally, the series was first screened on Channel 4 and won Bafta and Emmy awards, and was screened in more than 30 countries.
The 2012 four-part Channel 4 series Secret State was "inspired" by the same novel.[1] It starred Gabriel Byrne and was written by Robert Jones.[2]
Contents
Plot
Harry Perkins, an unassuming, working class, very left-wing Leader of the Labour Party and Member of Parliament for Sheffield Central, becomes Prime Minister in March 1991. The priorities of the Perkins Government include dissolving all newspaper monopolies, withdrawal from NATO, removing all American military bases on UK soil, unilateral nuclear disarmament, and true open government. Newspaper magnate Sir George Fison, with allies within British political and Civil Service circles, moves immediately to discredit him, with the United States the key, but covert, conspirator. The most effective of the Prime Minister's domestic enemies is the aristocratic Sir Percy Browne, Head of MI5, whose ancestors "unto the Middle Ages" have exercised subtle power behind the scenes. However, Perkins finds support in Joan Cook, his Home Secretary; Fred Thompson, his Press Secretary; Inspector Page, his police bodyguard; and Sir Montague Kowalski, the Chief Scientific Adviser to the Ministry of Defence.
The US Secretary of State visits London to try to persuade Perkins of his country's need of a nuclear deterrent. However, as Perkins undiplomatically rejects his pleas, severe financial pressure is applied to Britain in retaliation for his actions. The government turns to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which agrees to help, but only on condition that Perkins abandons most of his policies. While the IMF offer is being debated in Cabinet, Perkins receives a call from his Foreign Secretary Tom Newsome, who has been having meetings in Sweden, and is able to announce that the International State Bank of Moscow has agreed to lend the money without preconditions.[3] In retaliation, Newsome's affair with a woman with spurious IRA connections is reported by Fison's newspapers, resulting in his eviction from the Cabinet and his wife's suicide.
Failed negotiations between the government and labour unions to formulate an economic strategy result in a strike by the Power Workers' Union purportedly over job losses that might be caused by the adoption of alternative energy. The resultant blackouts seriously damage public opinion of the Perkins Government. After Thompson outlines the members of the conspiracy, including the moderate, politically ambitious Chancellor of the Exchequer Lawrence Wainwright, Perkins bluffs Wainwright into ending the strike by threatening to investigate his connections with his co-conspirators and subsequently demotes him to Northern Ireland Secretary. Cook is promoted to Chancellor of the Exchequer.
The Perkins Government's policies for nuclear disarmament and neutrality, despite the live national broadcast of the disarming of a nuclear warhead, are hampered by the Chiefs of Staff fudging the figures regarding British, Allied and Warsaw Pact military capabilities, representatives of the United States Armed Forces stalling over the removal of US military bases by running out the clock until the next general election, and the covert assassination of Sir Montague staged as a road accident.
Browne presents Perkins with forged evidence of financial irregularity following a short-lived affair years previously. He suggests that Perkins should resign rather than see the story made public, the groundwork having been laid with manufactured press speculation over Perkins's health and fake opinion polls suggesting overwhelming public support for a Wainwright premiership. He agrees to make a resignation speech on live television, but instead announces the attempted blackmail and calls for a new election. Senior Army officers and security service officials watch in apparent silence.
The final sequence, on the morning of the election, is deliberately ambiguous, but implies that a military coup has begun: Perkins' polling station is shown with the screen becoming obscured by the shadow of a soldier, and the quiet of the early morning being disrupted by the noise from a helicopter's engines and rotor. The scene quickly fades to black, also implying an end of constitutional monarchy in the UK.
Cast
- Harry Perkins MP, Prime Minister and Leader of the Labour Party – played by Ray McAnally
- Sir Percy Browne, Director General of MI5 – played by Alan MacNaughtan
- Fred Thompson, former reporter and Perkins' Press Secretary – played by Keith Allen
- Lawrence Wainwright MP, Chancellor of the Exchequer, later Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, conspirator – played by Geoffrey Beevers
- Joan Cook MP, Home Secretary, later Chancellor of the Exchequer – played by Marjorie Yates
- Tom Newsome MP, Foreign Secretary, resigns over affair – played by Jim Carter
- Sir George Fison, owner of a consortium of newspapers, conspirator – played by Philip Madoc
- Alford, Director-General of the BBC, conspirator – played by Jeremy Young
- Fiennes, assistant to Browne – played by Tim McInnerny
- Marcus Morgan, US Secretary of State – played by Shane Rimmer
- Thomas Andrews MP, Leader of the Conservative Party, Prime Minister before Harry Perkins – played by Roger Brierley
- Inspector Page, Perkins's police bodyguard – played by Bernard Kay
- Sir Montague Kowalski, Chief Scientific Adviser to the Ministry of Defence – played by Oscar Quitak
- Sir Horace Tweed, Prime Minister's aide – played by Oliver Ford Davies
- Sir James Robertson, Cabinet Secretary – played by David McKail
- Helen Jarvis, former lover of Perkins – played by Kika Markham
Production
Setting
The series is set in 1991 and 1992, which was then the near future from when it was made (1988), with a King as the British monarch (the royal cypher on one of the Prime Minister's red boxes is shown as "C III R," suggesting that the monarch is Charles III, the current Prince of Wales). The 1991 and 1992 dates can be clearly seen on several newspapers and car tax discs shown on screen.
Writing
The endings of the novel and the television version are significantly different. In the novel, the Prime Minister is forced from office following a catastrophic nuclear accident at an experimental nuclear plant that he had pushed for while Secretary of State for Energy in a previous government. This is the most explicit parallel between Harry Perkins and Tony Benn who was in the post from 1975 to 1979. The ending was changed because "the TV people thought [Mullin] had allowed Perkins to cave in and resign too easily when he's blackmailed."[4]
Home media and streaming
The TV series of A Very British Coup was released in the UK on DVD (region 2) in September 2011.[5] The series is available for streaming within the United Kingdom on Channel 4's website.[6]
Awards
The TV version of A Very British Coup won four Bafta Awards in 1989 – for Best Actor (Ray McAnally), Best Drama Series, Best Film Editor (Don Fairservice) and Best Film Sound – and a 1988 International Emmy Award for Best Drama.[7]
See also
- Clockwork Orange (plot), an alleged 1974–75 British secret service black propaganda campaign against Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson
- House of Cards (British TV series)
- House of Cards (American TV series)
- Seven Days in May, a 1964 American political thriller film about a military coup in response to a disarmament treaty with the Soviet Union
- Okkupert, a 2015 Norwegian political thriller TV series about a Russian occupation of Norway in response to a Green government shutting down fossil fuel production
- List of fictional prime ministers of the United Kingdom
Notes
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- ↑ Awards for "A Very British Coup" (1988) Archived 29 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine Internet Movie Database
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: A Very British Coup (TV series) |
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). A Very British Coup at IMDb
- A Very British Coup at the BFI's Screenonline
- A Very British Coup 4oD (Video on Demand – UK only)
Preceded by | British Academy Television Awards Best Drama Series or Serial 1989 |
Succeeded by Mother Love |
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