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The first volume of stage and TV plays by one of the best British
TV writers
Flint premiered just before the 1970 General Election which was to
replace the Labour Government of Harold Wilson. It is driven by the
figure of Ossian Flint, a seventy-year old swinging vicar who
believes in "crossing lines not drawing them" and espouses the
romanticised Communism of Lenin and Guevara; In the BBC play The
Bankrupt, Ellis Cripper, a woman aged fifty has become bankrupt
through operating at "the dishonourable end of the
system...capitalism"; An Afternoon at the Festival centres around a
version of middle-aged man Leo Brent who is an extreme egoist and a
failure in his personal relationships; Duck Song was first produced
in the dying days of the failing Heath government and the
characters represent a society in decline as the younger characters
attempt to find a solution through feminism or psychiatry, it
presents "a world to which one cannot relate, which one cannot
control, which one can't understand, and which one can't
manipulate"; The Arcata Promise centres around the attraction
betwen an actor and an inexperienced girl and the destructive
conclusion of such an attraction; Find Me returns to the theme of
ideological conflict and Eastern Europe; Huggy Bear, a Yorkshire
Television production that depicts Hooper, an infantile and
philosophical dentist with a "failure to integrate."
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