Hard Labour (1973)
March 12, 1973Release Date
Hard Labour (1973)
March 12, 1973Release Date

Plot.
Where to Watch.





Currently Hard Labour is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: BritBox, BritBox Amazon Channel, Criterion Channel, Britbox Apple TV Channel , Amazon Video
Streaming in:🇺🇸 United States
Cast & Crew.

Liz Smith
Mrs. Thornley

Clifford Kershaw
Mr. Thornley

Polly Hemingway
Ann Thornley

Bernard Hill
Edward Thornley

Alison Steadman
Veronica Thornley

Vanessa Harris
Mrs. Stone

Cyril Varley
Mr. Stone

Ben Kingsley
Naseem

Linda Beckett
Julie

Alan Erasmus
Barry

Paula Tilbrook
Mrs. Thornley's Friend

Rowena Parr
June

June Whittaker
Mrs. Rigby

Keith Washington
Mr. Shaw

Louis Raynes
Tallyman

Christopher Rowlands
Editor

Mike Leigh
Director / Writer

Paul Munting
ProductionDesigner

Tony Garnett
Producer

Tony Pierce-Roberts
Director of Photography
Details.
Wiki.
"Hard Labour" is the 20th episode of third season of the British BBC anthology TV series Play for Today. The episode was a television play that was originally broadcast on 12 March 1973. "Hard Labour" was written and directed by Mike Leigh, produced by Tony Garnett, and starred Liz Smith in her first major role.
The episode is the most clearly drawn in all Leigh's work from the background in Higher and Lower Broughton where he grew up. "Though elements of autobiography are buried in all Leigh's films and plays, only Hard Labour is set in Salford, – the scenes in the Stones' house were shot in a house just two doors along from where the Leighs had lived in Cavendish Road."
In this, Mike Leigh's first television drama, Mrs Thornley quietly endures a life of unceasing domestic work: as a char for Mrs Stone and at home for her demanding husband, Jim. Throughout, Mrs Thornley is inarticulate and passive. Her characterisation attracted complaints from left-wing and feminist critics suggesting that, when he derived the character from his middle-class mother's cleaning lady, Leigh could not imagine a fulfilling life beyond such work. However, although she does not articulate her feelings, Leigh uses cutaway shots of her to comment on others' attitudes. Furthermore, her apparent passivity serves several dramatic purposes.
Leigh uses visual echoes and parallels to juxtapose Mrs Thornley's domestic and paid jobs, heightening the play's exploration of identity as shaped by work and maternal duty (hence the pun in the title) and gender roles across classes and generations. It also heightens Leigh's wider social point that people's private lives are so separate that they are often connected only by economic convenience. Leigh acknowledges his position by filming the middle-class Stone in a house two doors away from his old home. He cites Hard Labour as a very personal film which unusually for him touches, albeit marginally, upon his Jewish background.
The play's closing scenes imply submerged depths beneath Mrs Thornley's passivity and Jim's belligerence. Mrs Thornley rubs Jim's unsightly hairy shoulders, alleviating rheumatic pain but also satisfying his unarticulated need for intimacy and physicality. This leads Mrs Thornley haltingly to discuss her emotional restraint with a priest, who prescribes penance. There follows a lengthy closing shot of Mrs Thornley cleaning windows, implying that penitence motivates her work. This, alongside recurring Catholic imagery, implicates religious guilt in her confused identity and offers active interpretations of her stoical labour, although she does not experience the moments of realisation common to characters in Leigh's later work.
Reinforcing the play's political concern with isolation and working-class communities, Leigh heightens confinement and the repetition of mundane tasks through restrictive editing and compositions, including shots which isolate feet and hands at work. Although he retains characteristic features, such as his noted process with actors, he also employs improvised location footage inspired by producer Tony Garnett, a device which he would subsequently avoid. Though more sombre than Leigh's later work, Hard Labour's visuals, which comment on the action and on modern life's ironies in an understated, witty way, address a common Leigh theme: limited social and emotional communication.
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