Charles Curran
|
Charles Curran is also the name of a dissident Catholic theologian.
Sir Charles Curran (died January 9 1980) was Director-General of the BBC from April 1 1969 to September 30 1977. He is not to be confused with a former Conservative MP of the same name although it has been said that they had broadly similar politics. Following the appointment of the former Conservative minister Lord Hill as Chairman of the BBC Governors in 1967 (ironically, the Labour Prime Minister who appointed Hill, Harold Wilson, had attacked Hill's appointment as chairman of the Independent Television Authority under a Tory government in 1963), Curran's arrival marked a return to a more cautious approach after the radicalism of Sir Hugh Greene.
Curran was more influenced by Mary Whitehouse and other moralists than Greene had been, and was Director-General when Dennis Potter's play Brimstone and Treacle was banned in 1976 (although the decision to ban the play was ironically made by the more Left-leaning Alasdair Milne). He also suffered criticism from Harold Wilson, at that time Leader of the Opposition, who claimed that the 1971 documentary Yesterday's Men was biased against him and the Labour Party.
Some have suggested that the BBC under Curran was overtly middle-class, perhaps citing the claim by Edward Barnes, head of children's TV for the BBC at the time, that admirable characters should not be seen eating "chocolate and chips". There have also been repeated claims that MI5 had an overt influence on "vetting" BBC employees at the time, and those who believe that MI5 attempted to undermine the 1974-76 Labour government have claimed that it also influenced an overt Tory bias in BBC news bulletins of that period.
Conversely, it was under Curran that the BBC developed a distinctly populist current affairs format in the form of Nationwide, and also produced some of its best-loved and most consistently-repeated comedy series, such as Dad's Army, Porridge and the first series of Fawlty Towers. Curran has often been blamed for an unenthusiastic and somewhat censorious attitude towards Monty Python's Flying Circus, but the Python team still won many of their battles with BBC officialdom and produced one of the most innovative TV series of all time.
The Play For Today series continued to take risks throughout Curran's eight years as Director-General and, in the drama series Days of Hope which accounted the early years of the Labour movement in Britain, the BBC proved that it was not necessarily as Tory-biased as some thought (although significantly the series was never shown again; it might have been more likely to gain a repeat under Hugh Greene or Alasdair Milne). The Morecambe and Wise Show became one of the best-loved British TV institutions ever between 1969 and 1977, and the Curran era also saw the development of Michael Parkinson's hugely-popular Saturday-night chat show, which has become a major force again since its revival in 1998.
Preceded by: Hugh Greene 1960-1969 | Director-General of the BBC 1969-1977 | Followed by: Ian Trethowan 1977-1982 |