Kate Chisholm

Behind the scenes

Already a subscriber? Log in

This article is for subscribers only

Subscribe today to get 3 months' delivery of the magazine, as well as online and app access, for only £3.

  • Weekly delivery of the magazine
  • Unlimited access to our website and app
  • Enjoy Spectator newsletters and podcasts
  • Explore our online archive, going back to 1828

Up pipes drama producer Steven Canny. ‘I’m not sure how this will work, but I’ve been in talks with Lenny Henry. He wants to do something for the anniversary. A kind of Look Back in Sorrow. You know, stories that will make us think about what it was like to be a slave. We’ve got to get away from being white and middle class and so typically Radio Fourish about this.’

‘Lenny Henry! You can’t be serious. This was a truly awful business. Britain’s shameful ships of death. Don’t you realise that all those West End squares you can see from beyond these windows were built up in the 18th century from the money made from dealing in slaves? We’re expected to do something really powerful on Radio Four. Remember the licence fee. You can’t make a joke about Abolition.’

‘Well, all I’m saying is that it’ll be different. We can’t just trot out a few bars of “Amazing Grace” and hope that’s enough. And Lenny’s got a great cast together — his mates Adrian Lester and Jenny Jules (nothing white about them), plus Brian Blessed (perfect ripe English voice for Wilberforce), Greg Wise and even Francine Stock. She’ll give us a bit of intellectual street-cred.’

‘Have you got a script?’

‘Well, no, not exactly. We thought we might try to recreate the spirit of some of those early radio programmes; you know, when people were really excited about what you can do with sound. Using lots of different mikes. And playing around with the idea that you’re miles away in a radio studio creating conversations that echo inside the listener’s head.’

‘Oh, all right then. We’ve got nothing better. So I guess we’ll just have to trust you not to be flippant.’

Slavery: The Making of…(the Saturday Play on Radio Four) was billed as ‘a humorous, doomed attempt to make a drama-documentary about slavery’. Not at all promising. But I was intrigued by the suggestion that it would go behind the scenes to look at ‘the fictional creative process’. Maybe Lenny Henry and co. would recapture something of that old wireless magic? And come up with something more meaningful almost by accident?

Greg Wise plays the harassed producer trying to put together a drama for which Lenny Henry has provided sheafs of research printouts from the internet — but no script. His team of actors has somehow to provide the links between the harrowing account of a slave’s journey by sea (read by Adrian Lester with such power) and Wilberforce’s stirring speech to Parliament (memorised by Brian Blessed, who else?) via the sugar boycott by London’s fashionable ladies and the uprising in Jamaica led by Samuel Sharpe, the last slave to be executed before the much later Bill (1833) outlawing slavery itself.

‘Whose story is this?’ demands Adrian Lester in an angry exchange with Brian Blessed. Were they in character? Or were they arguing for real? You could so easily imagine them not getting on in the studio, Brian so over-the-top and macho white male, Adrian so right-on and liberal.

Amid the deluge of programmes on TV and radio about Abolition and slavery, Slavery: The Making of…was refreshingly honest about the impossibility of understanding now what went through the minds of the captains who commanded the evil-smelling ships across the oceans. Or the planters in Jamaica who lived alongside the slaves they were so cruelly mistreating. ‘You can’t just bang on about the horror of it,’ said Lenny.

Comments

Join the debate for just $5 for 3 months

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first three months for $5.

Already a subscriber? Log in