Saturday Night Theatre
Saturday Night Theatre was a long-running radio drama strand on the BBC Home Service and its successor, BBC Radio 4. Launched in April 1943 the strand showcased feature-length, middlebrow single plays on Saturday evenings for more than 50 years. The plays featured included stage plays, book adaptations and original dramatisations. For most of its history, programmes ran for 90 minutes and were largely entertainment-centred, such as thrillers, comedies and mysteries.
History
Saturday Night Theatre was noted as the major drama of the week on BBC Radio 4 from 1943 until it was scrapped in 1996. Audiences reached a peak of 6.75 million in 1955, but by the end the average audience levels had fallen to between 50,000 and 100,000, although with another 500,000 listening to the Monday afternoon repeat. Shorter plays continued to be broadcast on Radio 4 on Saturday evenings from 1996 until the relaunch of the channel's schedule in April 1998 by James Boyle, when single dramas were removed from the Saturday evening schedule.Since 1998, the main weekly play on the station has been The Saturday Play, a daytime programme that runs for 60–90 minutes. There have since been campaigns to bring back Saturday Night Theatre, but in the context of BBC budget cuts, that have included the 2010 axing of Radio 4's Friday Play, any return looks unlikely.
Episodes
Many plays, mainly from the 1940s all the way through to the early 1970s, are considered to be lost or destroyed. The earliest surviving audio is The Corn Is Green, by Emlyn Williams, adapted for radio by T. Rowland Hughes, which was broadcast on 27 January 1945, though re-discovered archive copies are still being found.First ten episodes
- 3 April 1943: The Man With No Face, Dorothy L. Sayers, adapted by Audrey Lucas
- 10 April: Great Uncle Upton, a new play by Lionel Brown
- 17 April: Shall We Join the Ladies, play by J. M. Barrie
- 24 April: The Man Who Changed His Name, Edgar Wallace, adapted by Hugh Stewart
- 1 May: Consider Your Verdict, play revived for broadcasting by Norman Edwards
- 8 May: Parisian Ghost, new play by Peter Cheyney
- 15 May: The Brass Bottle, F T Anstey, adapted by Peggy Wallace and Moultrie Kelsall
- 22 May: Marigold: An Arcadian Comedy, Lizzie Allen Harker and Francis R. Pryor, adapted by Moultrie Kelsall
- 29 May: The Hairless Mexican, Somerset Maugham, adapted by Hugh Stewart
- 5 June: The House of the Arrow, A. E. W. Mason, adapted by Cynthia Pughe