Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

It’s A Sin

That’s the title of a five-part TV series written by Russell T. Davies. Spanning the years 1981 to 1991, and set in London, it charts the impact of the AIDS crisis on a group of friends.

It is, quite simply, a stunning piece of work, a masterpiece. A strong cast, inspired directing, and RTD’s writing combine to give explosions of joy, horror, and homophobia.

Watching it together with Martin brought all those times back to us. The friendships we made, the friends we lost, the callousness of Thatcher’s government, and the homophobia in British society, fanned by the tabloid press.

RTD’s writing draws upon all of this – there are references to the infamous Section 28 legislation, and he puts the word “cesspit” into the mouth of a policeman in one scene that directly references the utterance by the then Chief Constable of Greater Manchester, James Anderton, who said that homosexuals, drug addicts and prostitutes who had HIV/AIDS were “swirling in a human cesspit of their own making”.

As well as the wider references, RTD has drawn upon his own memories of the friends he knew to create his central characters. The character of Jill Baxter is modelled on his actress friend Jill Nalder, who herself plays the role of Jill Baxter’s mother in the series.

As I say, watching the events unfold brought all the best and the worst of those times flooding back. These days, while HIV/AIDS is not the automatic death sentence that it once was, it is still not something that should be treated casually. I hope that the series will be watched by the younger gay generations to learn something of what we went through and the awakening of our political action.

It struck me that RTD and his team have produced a work that completely fulfils Lord Reith’s directive to the BBC that its programming should “inform, educate and entertain”. The irony is that it ended up, not on the BBC, but on its commercial rival, Channel 4…

2 responses to “It’s A Sin”

  1. Matthew D Healy Avatar
    Matthew D Healy

    Yes, HIV brought out both good and bad in people, as COVID-19 is doing now. A former boss (under whose leadership I helped put five Antiviral drugs on the market) has told me that before I began working for him he tearfully left the Church in which he had grown up because its leaders chose rigid theology over science and compassion for people with HIV.

    In this pandemic the scientific community has accomplished amazing things at unprecedented speed. Sadly, many political leaders have failed to learn the lessons from past epidemics.

  2. […] following on from the It’s A Sin TV drama, Olly Alexander teams up with Elton to perform a big production number of The Pet Shop Boy’s […]

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