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Flame in the Streets |
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Flame in the Streets - 1961 | 93 mins | Drama | ColourThe Production TeamDirector: Roy
Ward Baker. Producer: Roy Ward Baker. Script: Ted Willis. (also play "Hot Summer Night") Cinematography: Christopher Challis. Film Editing: Roger Cherrill. Art Direction: Alex Vetchinsky. Costume Design: Yvonne Caffin. Makeup Department: W.T. Partleton and Stella Rivers. Sound Department: Gordon K. McCallum, Dudley Messenger and Harry Miller. Original Music: Philip Green. |
The CastBrenda De
Banzie - Nell Palmer John Mills - Jacko Palmer Sylvia Syms - Kathie Palmer Glyn Houston - Hugh Davies Dan Jackson - Jubilee Ann Lynn - Judy Gomez Olive Milbourn - Mary Jones Barbara Windsor - Girlfriend Michael Wynne - Les Johnny Sekka - Peter Lincoln Meredith Edwards - Harry Mitchell Gretchen Franklin - Mrs. Bingham Irvin Allen - Christie Harry Baird - Bil; Newton Blick - Visser Wilfrid Brambell - Old man Earl Cameron - Gabriel Gomez Cyril Chamberlain - Dowell |
Plot SynopsisMade in the wake of the 1959 Notting Hill riots, Flame in the Streets is an early examination of tense racial prejudices within a working-class family when their daughter falls in love with a Jamaican. Adapted by Ted Willis from his own stage play Hot Summer Night, it had already been produced for television in 1959 for the Armchair Theatre strand. Director Roy Ward Baker makes no allowances for liberal sensibilities and pulls few punches in delivering what he himself termed "a harsh picture". Baker elicits a stirring performance from Brenda De Banzie, whose transformation from typical housewife and mother to snarling racist is the centrepiece of the drama. Jacko Palmer (John Mills), a liberal-minded trade unionist, fights racial discrimination in a London furniture factory and averts a threatened strike over the appointment of West Indian Gomez (Earl Cameron) to shop steward, but has to face up to his own deeper prejudices when his daughter (Sylvia Syms) falls in love with a Jamaican teacher. The couple plan on marrying, and that creates havoc in the Palmer household where Kathie's racist mother Nell (Brenda De Banzie) throws a fit. Meanwhile, the streets of London are infused with racial tension as Teddy Boys confront the West Indian immigrants on an intense Guy Fawkes night. |
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