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By Jennifer Harby
BBC News
A ground-breaking BBC radio documentary which was lost after airing in the 1950s is being brought back to life on the stage.
The staging of The BBC's First Homosexual will take place at the New Adelphi Studio, in Salford, on 30 November.
Made in 1953, it was the BBC's first documentary about gay men but the work was later lost.
The new production is based on the research of a Leicestershire academic.
Dr Marcus Collins, a reader in contemporary history at Loughborough University, has unearthed archive materials held by the BBC.
These include the full transcript of the original recording, BBC internal memos about the programme and letters from members of the public following the broadcast.
These materials have been adapted by award-winning playwright and director Dr Stephen M Hornby, who specialises in playwriting from archives.
He said: "I've mixed up fragments from the BBC archive with the fictional story of a young man exploring his sexuality in the 1950s.
"Through him, we get a window into being gay in the 1950s and we see the impact the documentary has upon him.
"It's been hard to read some of the material at times, but it's also been an honour to get this amazing insight into this lost programme."
Being gay in 1950s England
At the time, the topic examined by the work was so taboo that the finished radio programme sat on the shelves for four years, with a version finally being broadcast in 1957.
Dr Collins said: "This brilliantly insightful play illustrates why LGBTQ+ issues created any number of dilemmas for the BBC in the 1950s.
"The BBC first had to overcome its aversion to discussing anything to do with sex, then it had to grapple with the competing claims of a wide array of groups.
"The messy compromise the BBC came up with was nonetheless instrumental in starting to shape how lesbian, gay and trans people perceived themselves and how they were perceived by the wider British public."
The play's director Oliver Hurst added: "It's a great challenge to bring this documentary and this period to life."
The play is being staged by Inkbrew Productions as a script-in-hand performance in the New Adelphi Studio at the University of Salford on 30 November.
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