Screen One
Screen One is a British television anthology series of standalone drama productions created by the BBC, broadcast primarily on BBC One from 1989 to 1998.[1] The series featured a collection of original, self-contained films spanning diverse genres, including crime, historical, and social dramas, often written by prominent British playwrights and directed by established filmmakers.[2] Comprising over 60 episodes across multiple series, Screen One showcased landmark works from the late 1980s and 1990s, highlighting the talents of actors such as Julie Walters, Alfred Molina, and Alun Armstrong, among others.[2] It served as a platform for challenging and pioneering narratives that explored contemporary British society, personal conflicts, and historical events, contributing to the BBC's archive of classic single dramas.[1] The format emphasized high production values and literary adaptation, distinguishing it from ongoing serials by focusing on episodic, cinematic storytelling without recurring characters or overarching plots.[2]Origins and Development
Inception and Context
The BBC's Play for Today strand, an anthology series of original single dramas transmitted on BBC1 from 1970 to 1984, produced over 300 plays that frequently addressed contemporary social and political themes through realist narratives.[3][4] By its conclusion in October 1984 with the play Z for Zachariah, the series faced institutional challenges, including the closure of the BBC's dedicated Plays Department, which shifted departmental resources toward more commercially viable serialized formats such as soap operas to align with rising production costs and audience preferences for ongoing narratives.[5][4] This transition occurred against a backdrop of intensifying competition in British television following the launch of Channel 4 in November 1982, which introduced innovative programming including independently produced television films and dramas that challenged traditional public service models with edgier, market-oriented content.[6] Channel 4's early emphasis on feature-length single productions, often with higher budgetary allocations for cinematic techniques, highlighted the BBC's need to adapt its drama output to retain viewer engagement and cultural relevance amid multichannel expansion.[7] The public broadcaster responded by prioritizing feature-length dramas designed for prime-time slots, seeking to elevate production values—such as location shooting and film-like aesthetics—over the studio-bound, issue-focused plays of prior decades, thereby broadening appeal without embedding overt ideological messaging.[8] Screen One, debuting in 1989, embodied this strategic pivot as a BBC1 vehicle for 90-minute anthology dramas, marking a deliberate evolution from Play for Today's format to sustain the single-play tradition through more polished, audience-friendly presentations amid empirical pressures for fiscal efficiency and competitive parity.[1][2]Key Developmental Milestones
In 1984, following the conclusion of the BBC's Play for Today strand, a dedicated team was assembled within the BBC to evaluate and adapt drama production strategies in response to Channel 4's innovative approach to television movies.[9] Producer Kenith Trodd played a central role in this effort, contributing to proposals for a refreshed single-drama format that emphasized filmed productions over traditional studio-bound plays.[10] This initiative marked a deliberate pivot toward more cinematic techniques, aiming to enhance visual storytelling and production values suitable for wider audience engagement.[2] The recommendations from this 1984 review culminated in the development of Screen Two, which debuted on BBC Two in 1985 as an anthology of one-off dramas, serving as a testing ground for the new model.[10] Building on its success, Screen One was established as the BBC One counterpart, launching on September 10, 1989, with 90-minute standalone films distributed internationally by BBC Worldwide.[11] The series prioritized genre diversity—including thrillers, comedies, and historical pieces—over the more uniformly issue-driven narratives of prior BBC drama strands, reflecting producer directives to foster creative variety amid competitive pressures from independent broadcasters.[2] This evolution was driven by internal BBC assessments prioritizing commercial viability and technical innovation, such as location shooting and film stock usage, to differentiate from theatre-derived television formats.[9]Production Format and Approach
Anthology Structure and Intent
Screen One employed a strict anthology format, presenting a collection of standalone, feature-length dramas without recurring characters, serialized plots, or enforced thematic links across episodes. Each installment functioned as an independent production, typically lasting 80 to 100 minutes, allowing creators to explore self-contained narratives in diverse genres including historical recreations, thrillers, and comedy-dramas.[2][12] This structure rejected continuity-driven storytelling in favor of discrete artistic endeavors, enabling varied directorial visions and script styles unburdened by prior episodes.[2] The series' core intent centered on delivering "movies for television"—ambitious, cinema-caliber works broadcast on BBC One to elevate the medium's dramatic output beyond routine programming. Producers aimed to prioritize scripts of exceptional quality, grounded in rigorous narrative craftsmanship rather than market-tested formulas designed for broad appeal or repeat viewership.[12] This approach reflected a commitment to uncompromised creative autonomy, fostering original tales that could stand alone as substantive viewing experiences comparable to theatrical releases.[2] In production methodology, Screen One diverged from antecedent anthology predecessors like Play for Today by amplifying scale and technical sophistication, incorporating extensive location filming and meticulous period detailing where narratives demanded it to enhance authenticity and visual impact.[12] Such elements underscored an empirical drive toward cinematic verisimilitude, leveraging television's resources to achieve immersive, high-fidelity storytelling without the constraints of studio-bound shoots or episodic brevity.[13] This format positioned the series as a deliberate showcase for mainstream filmed dramas, bridging public broadcasting's mandate for quality content with aspirations for artistic prestige.[12]Production Techniques and Innovations
Screen One episodes were predominantly produced using 16mm film stock, which imparted a cinematic texture and visual fidelity uncommon in contemporaneous BBC studio dramas, thereby enhancing the perceptual realism of depicted events and locations. This single-camera film technique facilitated exterior location shoots and controlled lighting setups, allowing directors to capture nuanced environmental interactions and character motivations with greater fidelity to real-world causal sequences than multi-camera video methods permitted.[14] In a departure from the multi-wall, limited-set constraints of earlier anthology formats like Play for Today, Screen One's filmed approach post-1984 emphasized expansive narrative scopes within 90-minute features, prioritizing locational authenticity over theatrical staging to underscore plot developments driven by verifiable social and psychological dynamics.[3] This shift supported the series' intent to foreground original, non-formulaic stories that examined consequence-based progressions, unencumbered by serialized continuity or contrived resolutions.[15] Certain installments innovated within this framework; for instance, the 1992 episode Ghostwatch eschewed 16mm in favor of electronic videotape and handheld cameras to evoke immediacy and psychological immersion, mimicking live reporting to heighten the portrayal of emergent horrors rooted in domestic causality rather than supernatural contrivance.[16] Such adaptations demonstrated the series' flexibility in technical choices to align production methods with thematic demands for unadorned causal exposition, though they remained outliers amid the prevailing film standard. The anthology's production ethos, evolving from the Play for Today legacy, integrated these techniques to sustain a platform for standalone originals in the late 1980s and early 1990s, rejecting trope-driven narratives in favor of scripts that modeled empirical linkages between actions and outcomes.[17] This method constrained artificial dramatic escalations but enabled deeper fidelity to observed human and institutional behaviors, as evidenced by the series' focus on contemporary issues rendered through location-specific filming.[18]Talent and Contributors
Producers and Creative Team
Kenith Trodd served as the primary producer for Screen One, guiding its formulation and episode selections from the series' launch in 1989 through its conclusion in 1993 across five series totaling 29 episodes. With a background in producing script-intensive dramas, including Dennis Potter's Pennies from Heaven (1978) and The Singing Detective (1986), Trodd emphasized high-production-value single films that prioritized narrative rigor and character-driven causality over formulaic structures.[19][20] Trodd's role extended to greenlighting scripts based on their artistic merit and feasibility, drawing from his experience in a 1984 BBC initiative to adapt studio plays into more cinematic formats in response to Channel 4's television movie experiments. This approach facilitated diverse anthology entries, from historical recreations to contemporary thrillers, selected for their potential to deliver empirically grounded stories rather than adhering to prevailing institutional preferences.[21] BBC drama department executives provided oversight, ensuring budgetary and technical alignment, while the core team under Trodd maintained focus on creative autonomy in commissioning, countering tendencies in BBC output toward ideologically slanted content by favoring works with verifiable dramatic integrity.[22]Directors, Writers, and Performers
Screen One engaged a range of established directors, including John Schlesinger, who helmed the 1991 adaptation of Alan Bennett's "A Question of Attribution," drawing on his experience with literary dramas to emphasize character-driven narratives.[23] Other directors, such as Robert Young for the 1989 opener "One Way Out," contributed by focusing on realistic portrayals of personal crises, leveraging television's intimacy to explore themes of isolation and redemption without reliance on sensationalism.[24] This selection reflected a commitment to directors proven in substantive storytelling, prioritizing technical precision and actor guidance over experimental gimmicks. Writers like Alan Bennett provided scripts rooted in acute social observation, as seen in his contribution to the series, which adapted his stage work to screen while preserving its understated wit and psychological depth. Bennett's involvement underscored the anthology's aim to showcase literary talent capable of distilling complex human motivations into concise forms, with his episode exemplifying a preference for scripts grounded in historical and personal verisimilitude rather than ideological messaging.[23] The performers spanned seasoned stage actors and emerging screen talents, with Julie Walters delivering versatile portrayals across episodes, demonstrating her command of emotional nuance in roles requiring both humor and pathos.[2] Alfred Molina appeared in multiple installments, showcasing his ability to inhabit diverse characters from historical figures to contemporary everymen, which highlighted the series' emphasis on actors with broad interpretive range.[2] Other notables included Sean Bean and David Thewlis, whose early appearances foreshadowed their later breakthroughs in major film franchises, evidencing the program's role in identifying and elevating performers based on demonstrable skill and adaptability. This merit-based approach yielded empirical outcomes, as evidenced by the subsequent international careers of contributors like Molina in high-profile Hollywood productions and Walters in award-winning roles, though some episodes featured lesser-known casts that did not achieve comparable longevity.[2]Broadcast Details
Transmission Schedule
Screen One aired on BBC One primarily on Sunday evenings, with episodes typically scheduled between 9:00 pm and 10:00 pm.[1] The anthology series began its regular transmission on 10 September 1989 with the premiere episode "One Way Out", directed by Robert Young.[24] Subsequent episodes in Series 1 followed weekly on Sundays, such as "1996" on 17 September 1989 and "The Accountant" on 24 September 1989.[25] This pattern of autumn-season blocks on Sundays continued across the six series through 1994, with occasional holiday specials integrated into the strand, like "She's Been Away" on 8 October 1989.[26] The schedule occasionally adjusted for BBC programming priorities, but maintained a consistent prime-time slot to target mainstream audiences, as evidenced by listings in official BBC archives.[27] Series 6 concluded the regular run in late 1994, with an example episode "Meat" transmitted that year amid the strand's established Sunday format.[28] Following the end of annual series, standalone specials were produced and aired irregularly from 1995 to 1998, preserving the Sunday evening tradition where possible.[27] Viewership data for specific episodes is limited in public records, but the placement on BBC One's flagship channel during peak hours indicates an intent to achieve broad reach, with no major scheduling disruptions reported during the core 1989–1994 period.[1]Series Organization
Screen One was divided into six principal series transmitted annually from 1989 to 1994, each comprising multiple standalone, feature-length dramas that explored diverse themes without interconnected narratives. Episode counts varied across series, with examples including eight episodes in the inaugural 1989 run and six in the 1994 series.[29] [30] This structure was supplemented by eight subsequent one-off specials aired between 1995 and 1998, maintaining the anthology approach amid a broader BBC shift toward serialized formats.[10] The annual series organization aligned production cycles with broadcast seasons, permitting the incorporation of topical subjects and emergent events in a deliberate manner, rather than through protracted storylines that might dilute focus. By eschewing multi-part episodes common in rival anthology or drama strands of the era—such as those favoring serial continuity—Screen One emphasized the autonomy of each installment, enabling comprehensive thematic coverage while preserving narrative self-sufficiency.[2]Episodes
Series 1 (1989)
Series 1 of Screen One premiered on BBC One on 10 September 1989 with "One Way Out," marking the introduction of the anthology format for original single dramas aimed at prime-time Sunday viewing.[31] Written by Mick Ford and directed by Robert Young, the episode centers on architect James Carlisle navigating life after divorce while maintaining contact with his children.[24] Subsequent installments aired weekly, testing the strand's versatility through diverse narratives, with runtimes typically around 60 to 90 minutes.[10] The series encompassed seven core episodes in autumn 1989, spanning family dramas, thrillers, comedies, and period pieces:- "One Way Out" (10 September 1989): Explores personal and familial tensions following separation; starring Bob Peck as the protagonist.[24][32]
- "1996" (17 September 1989): A police procedural thriller featuring Commander Jack Bentham (Keith Barron) and Detective Superintendent Frank Burroughs (Alun Armstrong) investigating linked cases amid rising unrest.[33][32]
- "The Accountant" (24 September 1989): Comedy depicting a Jewish accountant entangled with the Italian Mafia; starring Alfred Molina.[34][32]
- "Home Run" (1 October 1989): Follows Bill English, a returning expatriate adjusting to life in London with newfound affluence.[32]
- "She's Been Away" (8 October 1989): Written by Stephen Poliakoff and directed by Peter Hall, this drama portrays Lillian (Peggy Ashcroft), institutionalized for decades due to nonconformity, forming an alliance with housekeeper Pat (Geraldine James) upon release to her nephew's home.[26][35][27]
- "The Mountain and the Molehill" (15 October 1989): Written by David Reid, set in 1944 on the eve of D-Day, involving espionage and military preparations.[36]
- "Blore, M.P." (22 October 1989): Written by Robin Chapman, adapted from David Nobbs' novel about a hapless politician's career.[37]
Series 2 (1990–1991)
Series 2 of Screen One aired four standalone dramas on BBC One starting in September 1990, marking an expansion from the inaugural series by embracing bolder satirical and social themes while maintaining the anthology's focus on character-driven narratives grounded in plausible causal sequences.[39] Unlike the more exploratory tone of Series 1, these installments delved into contemporary British societal pressures—media sensationalism, ethical boundaries in science, informal justice among youth, and urban alienation—often tracing how individual motivations precipitate broader conflicts without contrived resolutions.[40] The episodes featured emerging talents and established performers, with production emphasizing realistic dialogue and settings to underscore cause-and-effect dynamics in everyday dysfunction. The opening episode, "News Hounds," written and directed by Les Blair, broadcast on 2 September 1990, satirized the cutthroat world of tabloid journalism, where reporters' ambitions drive them to fabricate stories amid competitive deadlines. Starring Adrian Edmondson as a ruthless hack and Alison Steadman, the drama illustrates how institutional incentives for scoops erode personal ethics, leading to a cascade of deceit that mirrors real-world press excesses.[40] [41] "Frankenstein's Baby," directed by Robert Bierman and aired on 9 September 1990, presented a dark comedy exploring reproductive tensions, with protagonist Paul (Nigel Planer) quarreling with his partner Jane (Kate Buffery) over starting a family until an eccentric scientist enables his impregnation via experimental means. The plot hinges on causal realism in personal relationships strained by mismatched timelines and unintended consequences of pseudoscientific intervention, highlighting how deferred decisions amplify relational fractures.[42] [43] In "The Police," broadcast on 16 September 1990, young Edgar (Guy Faulkner) organizes classmates into a vigilante group to combat school bullies, only for the makeshift authority to spiral into authoritarian overreach. Written with attention to peer dynamics, the narrative causally links initial protective intent to escalating power abuses, reflecting how unstructured responses to disorder breed new tyrannies among children.[44] [45] Closing the initial run, "Sweet Nothing," written by Vincent O'Connell and directed by Tony Smith on 23 September 1990, follows schoolboy Phil (Lee Ross), who returns to an abandoned home and drifts into a homeless community led by figures like Ros (Charlotte Coleman), exposing the chain of familial neglect leading to societal marginalization. The story underscores realistic pathways from domestic rupture to street survival, critiquing systemic failures in care provision during economic shifts.[46] [47]Series 3 (1991–1992)
Series 3 of Screen One featured a selection of original dramas broadcast primarily on BBC One from September 1991 into 1992, emphasizing standalone narratives that ranged from biographical depictions to examinations of personal and social conflicts. The episodes maintained the anthology's commitment to film-quality production, utilizing practical locations and concise scripting to deliver self-contained stories without ongoing serialization. This season included works addressing historical espionage, drug culture, and intercultural relationships, often drawing on real events or societal observations with a direct, unvarnished approach.[48] Key episodes highlighted contemporary and historical themes handled through character-driven plots. "Hancock," aired on 1 September 1991, portrayed the final years of comedian Tony Hancock, focusing on his personal struggles and professional decline in the entertainment industry. "Tell Me That You Love Me," broadcast on 8 September 1991, explored romantic entanglements amid emotional turmoil, starring actors including Sean Bean and James Wilby in a narrative centered on interpersonal deceptions. "Filipina Dreamgirls," transmitted on 15 September 1991, followed five Welsh men on a package tour to the Philippines seeking Filipina brides via arranged introductions, satirizing mail-order marriage dynamics and cultural mismatches without romanticizing the transactions.[49][50] Later installments delved into gritty realism and historical intrigue. "Alive and Kicking," aired on 13 October 1991, presented a black comedy on drug addiction, depicting a dealer's interactions with a counselor and the harsh realities of dependency in urban settings. "A Question of Attribution," broadcast on 20 October 1991, dramatized the dual life of Soviet spy Sir Anthony Blunt as art advisor to Queen Elizabeth II, interweaving his espionage confessions with discussions of artistic authenticity. These productions reflected refinements in pacing and visual fidelity, with tighter editing to heighten dramatic tension compared to earlier series, while avoiding didactic moralizing on sensitive topics like addiction or betrayal.[51][52]| Episode Title | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|
| Hancock | 1 September 1991 | Biographical drama on comedian Tony Hancock's later life and challenges.[53] |
| Tell Me That You Love Me | 8 September 1991 | Story of love, doubt, and relational conflicts.[33] |
| Filipina Dreamgirls | 15 September 1991 | Group of Welsh men pursue romances on a Filipina tour, exposing transactional aspects of international dating.[49] |
| Alive and Kicking | 13 October 1991 | Black comedy examining drug dealing and rehabilitation efforts.[51] |
| A Question of Attribution | 20 October 1991 | Account of art expert Anthony Blunt's covert Soviet activities alongside royal duties.[52] |
Series 4 (1992)
Series 4 of Screen One aired on BBC One throughout 1992, comprising standalone dramas that increasingly emphasized personal narratives and character psychology over the broader social commentaries prevalent in prior installments.[54] This shift was evident in episodes exploring individual ambitions, professional dilemmas, and psychological tensions, such as journalistic hoaxes and expatriate adjustments, while retaining some docudrama elements tied to real events. The series maintained the anthology format with approximately 90-minute runtimes, produced under BBC Studios with contributions from writers like Andrew Davies and Stephen Volk.[27] Key episodes included spin-offs and original works, with production noting standard BBC archiving practices of the era that led to partial losses for certain tapes. For instance, "Trust Me," a comedy-thriller written by Tony Sarchet and directed by Tony Dow, aired on October 25, 1992, and centered on Harry Greaves (played by Alfred Molina), a hoaxer targeting tabloid journalists who escalates by fabricating memoirs of a contract killer, only to face unintended consequences.[55] This episode is partially lost, with only fragments surviving due to BBC's selective preservation policies at the time, though synopses and clips confirm its focus on media gullibility and personal overreach.[56] Other notable entries diverged into horror and docudrama:| Episode Title | Air Date | Writer/Director | Synopsis Highlights |
|---|---|---|---|
| A Very Polish Practice | September 6, 1992 | Andrew Davies / David Tucker | Spin-off from A Very Peculiar Practice, following Dr. Stephen Daker (Peter Davison) navigating hospital chaos in post-communist Warsaw with his family, confronting past colleagues amid political upheaval.[54][57] |
| Disaster at Valdez | September 13, 1992 | Michael Baker / N/A | Docudrama on the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, starring Christopher Lloyd and John Heard, detailing corporate negligence and cleanup failures through individual crew and executive perspectives.[58] |
| Black and Blue | September 27, 1992 | Ian Curteis / N/A | Investigation into the murder of a local black politician, blending procedural elements with personal stakes for detectives amid racial tensions.[59][60] |
| Running Late | October 11, 1992 | N/A / N/A | Comedy-drama on a surgeon's high-stakes personal and professional life, highlighting individual pressures in the medical field.[61] |
| Ghostwatch | October 31, 1992 | Stephen Volk / Lesley Manning | Live-format mockumentary horror simulating a poltergeist investigation, featuring Michael Parkinson and Sarah Greene, which probed viewer reactions to blended reality and supernatural fear through family dynamics.[62] |
Series 5 (1993)
The fifth series of Screen One comprised five standalone dramas transmitted on BBC One during September and early October 1993, typically in the 21:05 slot on Sunday evenings, reflecting the anthology's evolution toward more nuanced portrayals of personal and societal realities drawn from verifiable experiences and historical contexts.[64][65] These installments attracted prominent performers and emphasized factual underpinnings, such as memoirs and commemorative events, to ground fictional elements in observable causal sequences of human behavior and institutional dynamics. "Wide-Eyed and Legless", the series opener, broadcast on 5 September 1993, adapted humorist Deric Longden's autobiographical account of his wife Diana's battle with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), portraying the incremental erosion of family life amid medical skepticism and diagnostic delays. Directed by Richard Loncraine from a script by Jack Rosenthal, it featured Julie Walters as Diana and Jim Broadbent as Deric, running 102 minutes and highlighting empirical details of symptom progression and relational strain without romanticization.[64][66] "A Foreign Field", aired on 12 September 1993, examined the lingering psychological impacts of World War II through four American and British D-Day veterans reuniting in Normandy for the 50th anniversary commemorations in June 1994, interweaving memory, loss, and reconciliation based on observed veteran testimonies. Charles Sturridge directed this 95-minute piece, starring Alec Guinness as the introspective Amos, Leo McKern as the gruff Cyril, and Edward Herrmann as the optimistic Waldo, with authentic period reconstruction underscoring the physical and emotional toll of combat.[65][67] "Down Among the Big Boys", transmitted on 19 September 1993, depicted intergenerational tensions within Glasgow's criminal and law enforcement spheres, centering on a detective's impending marriage to a gangster's daughter amid a planned bank heist, rooted in the city's documented underworld patterns of the era. Written by Peter McDougall and directed by Charles Gormley, the 88-minute drama starred Billy Connolly as the cunning criminal Jo-Jo Donelly, emphasizing pragmatic decision-making under risk rather than moral absolutes.[68][69] "Royal Celebration", broadcast on 26 September 1993, portrayed simmering neighborhood conflicts erupting during a 1981 street party for the Prince of Wales's wedding, drawing on contemporaneous reports of social frictions in middle-class London amid economic pressures. Directed by Ferdinand Fairfax from William Humble's script, it featured Kenneth Cranham and early appearances by Minnie Driver and a young Keira Knightley, using the event's factual timeline to illustrate causal escalations from petty disputes to confrontation.[70] The concluding "Tender Loving Care", aired on 3 October 1993, explored institutional vulnerabilities in healthcare through a nurse suspected of euthanizing patients, inspired by a real 1980s Austrian case involving multiple caregiver killings, with procedural scrutiny revealing overlooked patterns in patient outcomes. Dewi Humphreys directed Lucy Gannon's script, starring Dawn French in a dramatic turn as the ostensibly dutiful Elaine Dobbs alongside Rosemary Leach and Joan Sims, prioritizing evidentiary chains of suspicion over sensationalism in its 90-minute runtime.[71][72]Series 6 (1994)
Series 6 of Screen One, transmitted in 1994, comprised seven standalone dramas aired on BBC One, representing the culmination of the anthology format's core run with its emphasis on original, diverse narratives ranging from personal adoption struggles to military experiences, familial reunions, social critiques, psychological tensions, and peripatetic character studies. The season began with a single early episode before a clustered autumn transmission schedule, reflecting the BBC's evolving priorities toward serialized content while preserving the strand's commitment to high-caliber single plays. This final regular series bridged the program's foundational approach—showcasing emerging and established talent in compact, self-contained stories—to the sporadic specials that followed, without altering the production ethos of writer-driven, director-led pieces.[27] The opening installment, "Bambino Mio," aired on 6 February 1994 at 21:10, written by Colin Welland and directed by Edward Bennett. It depicted a woman's determined fight to adopt a child from abroad amid personal infertility challenges, starring Julie Walters in the lead role.[73][74] The bulk of the series aired consecutively on Sunday evenings starting in September:- "A Breed of Heroes" on 4 September 1994 at 21:30, an adaptation of Alan Judd's semi-autobiographical novel about a British Army officer's experiences in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, directed by Ferdinand Fairfax and starring Iain Glen.[75]
- "Pat and Margaret" on 11 September 1994, a comedy-drama by Jack Rosenthal about a Lancashire-born American soap opera actress reunited with her estranged sister during a live British television family reunion special, featuring Lorraine Chase and Eileen Pollack.[76][77]
- "Two Golden Balls" on 18 September 1994 at 21:20, written by Maureen Chadwick and directed by Anya Camilleri, exploring themes of feminism and pornography through an anti-porn activist's evolving perspectives, with Kim Cattrall in a principal role.[78][79]
- "Meat" on 25 September 1994 at 21:20, a social realist piece about an ex-young offender working in a London café who encounters a prostitute, scripted by Hugh Stoddart and directed by David Attwood.[80][81]
- "Murder in Mind" on 2 October 1994 at 21:10, a psychological drama by David Thomas concerning a therapist's manipulative entanglement with a police inspector investigating a patient's death, starring Charlotte Rampling and directed by Robert Bierman.[82][83]
- "Doggin' Around" on 16 October 1994 at 22:05, concluding the series with Alan Plater's script about a faded American jazz pianist touring northern England amid personal decline, directed by Desmond Davis and featuring Elliott Gould alongside a young Ewan McGregor.[84][85]