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The Price of Coal

The Price of Coal: Meet the People
Genre Comedy-drama
Written by Barry Hines
Directed by Ken Loach
Country of origin UK
Production
Producer(s) Tony Garnett
Running time 75 mins
Release
Original network BBC1
Audio format Monaural
Original release 29 March 1977
Chronology
Related shows Play for Today
The Price of Coal: Back to Reality
Genre Drama
Written by Barry Hines
Directed by Ken Loach
Country of origin UK
Production
Producer(s) Tony Garnett
Running time 95 mins
Release
Original network BBC1
Audio format Monaural
Original release 5 April 1977
Chronology
Related shows Play for Today

The Price of Coal is a two-part television drama written by Barry Hines and directed by Ken Loach first broadcast in 1977. Set at the fictional Milton Colliery, near Barnsley in South Yorkshire, the episodes contrast "efforts made to cosmetically improve the pit in preparation for a royal visit (part one) and the target-conscious safety shortcuts that precipitate a fatal accident (part two)."

The plot bears some similarities to the Cadeby Main pit disaster of July 1912, which occurred whilst the King and Queen were visiting pit villages in Yorkshire. This disaster is discussed by managers in the first episode, who refer to the timing of the disaster at the same time as the visit as "bad luck".

Characters almost entirely use Yorkshire dialect, and both episodes have been shown with subtitles even when broadcast in England. Some characters have north-eastern accents, in a reference to the large-scale migration of displaced colliers from the run-down coalfields in Durham and Northumberland to the richer Yorkshire coalfield in the 1960s.

The two plays contain an unusually large amount of swearing for a BBC production in the 1970s. This becomes part of the plot in the first episode, as the management ask the miners not to swear during the royal visit. When signs are put up in the pit baths to forbid swearing, the miners attempt to speak in Received Pronunciation to mock the language of the royal family.

The first episode, Meet the People, is a comedy-drama dealing with preparations for an official visit to the colliery by Prince Charles. The humour revolves around the expensive and ludicrous preparations required for an official visit from a member of the Royal Family. Some workers recognise this and cannot take it seriously. Management recognises it but has to 'play the game'. Special toilets must be constructed "just in case" and destroyed after the visit. A worker is instructed to paint a brick holding up a window. On the eve of the visit, the slogan "Scargill rules OK" is painted on a wall. The manager comments "When I find out who did that I'll string him up by his knackers". In another scene, an argument takes place in a pub between colliers opposed to the expenditure on the visit and who think the colliery was chosen because its union officials were relatively conservative and other colliers who are looking forward to the visit.


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