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“Dressed in an Angel's Nightshirt”: Jesus and the BBC

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2017

Abstract

This article examines images of Jesus broadcast on the BBC from the 1930s through the 1950s. During these years, the BBC sought to use its cultural influence to replace popular religiosity with what the clerics who staffed its Religious Broadcasting Department (RBD) regarded as a more masculine, modern, and vigorous national religious faith. To achieve this aim, the RBD marshaled the might of British New Testament scholarship and its image of a warrior-like, apocalyptic historical Jesus. Yet the RBD's hopes of bridging the gap between popular religiosity and its own vision of Christianity went unrealized. Programs on Jesus that reached a genuinely national audience—The Man Born to be King, Dorothy L. Sayers's wartime radio drama, and Jesus of Nazareth, a popular television series from the 1950s—instead featured Anglicized and ahistorical images deeply embedded within British popular culture. The story of Jesus on the BBC highlights both this popular culture's strength and Christian Britain's fragmentation.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The North American Conference on British Studies 2017 

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References

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69 See also Goody, Alex, “Dorothy L. Sayers's The Man Born to Be King: The ‘Impersonation’ of Divinity: Language, Authenticity and Embodiment,” in Broadcasting in the Modernist Era, ed. Feldman, Matthew, Tonning, Eric, and Mead, Henry (London, 2014), 7996 Google Scholar; Low, Donald L., “Telling the Story: Susan Hill and Dorothy L. Sayers,” in British Radio Drama, ed. Drakakis, John (Cambridge, 1981), 111–38Google Scholar; Reynolds, Barbara, Dorothy L. Sayers: Her Life and Soul (New York, 1993), 298306, 317–30Google Scholar; Wolfe, Churches and the BBC, 218–38.

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72 Publicity, WAC R1.

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77 Sayers to Welch, 6 January 1942, in Letters, 339.

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79 J[ohn] Coatman to D. G. [Sir Frederick Ogilvie], 30 December 1941, WAC R41/102.

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81 Welch to Sayers, 4 December 1940, in Letters, 212.

82 Welch to Children's Hour Department, 29 February 1940, WAC R1/910.

83 B. E. Nicolls, BBC Controller of Programmes, to Sayers, 18 October 1942, in Letters, 376.

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86 See, for example, Sayers to unknown recipient, 28 November 1941, in Letters, 329–34.

87 See Welch's comments on Hugh Ross Williamson's use of John's gospel for the “Life of Jesus Interludes” in the Worship Service Broadcasts for Schools: DRB [Welch] to DSB, 12 January 1944, WAC R16/442/5.

88 Sayers to Derek McCulloch, 25 October 1940, in Letters, 186; Sayers to Marjorie Barber, 26 October 1942, in Letters, 379.

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92 Ibid., 100, 271.

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96 Ibid., 295–96.

97 Sayers to Father Taylor, after 8 March 1942, in Letters, 354.

98 MBTBK, 54, 53, 5.

99 Virgina Graham, “Cinieika,” Spectator, 20 September 1951, 12. See also “Film of Passion Play,” Times, 9 September 1951, 8.

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103 House to Lingstrom, 1 June 1955, WAC T2/74/2.

104 House to Colin Beale, 24 May 1955, WAC T2/74/2.

105 Ibid.

106 Harington to Lingstrom, 20 December 1954, WAC T2/74/1 (emphasis in original); House to Harington, 8 October 1954. See also Memo from Harington, 1 September 1954, WAC T2/74/1.

107 Minute of the Central Religious Advisory Committee, 31 January 1952, BBC WAC T2/74/1.

108 R. McKay, “Points Arising from the Discussion at the Consultation on the Life of Christ Series Held on Wednesday July 6th, 1955,” 8 July 1955; and “House's Addendum to McKay's Memo, Children's Life of Christ Series (Television) 12 July 55,” BBC WAC-T2/74/3.

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111 House, “Life of Christ for Children's Television—Note of Informal Conversation with H. E. B. on May 23rd [1955],” WAC-T2/74/2.

112 For the priority of Mark, see T. W. Manson, “The Foundations of the Synoptic Tradition and the Gospel of Mark” (Rylands lecture, 1944), in Studies, 30–45; Manson, Teaching, 23–26.

113 Harington to House, 6 December 1954; House to Harington, 14 December 1954, WAC-T2/74/1.

114 “Points Arising”; “Notes on Holy Land Meeting,” no date [July–December 1955], WAC-T2/74/3.

115 Robert Walton to H. C. Tel., 5 October 1955.

116 I thank Deborah Perkin and BBC Wales for enabling me to watch the series.

117 Harington to Lingstrom, 18 May 1955, from Jerusalem, Jordan, continued 22 May, WAC-T2/74/2.

118 Freda Lingstrom, “Jesus of Nazareth,” Radio Times, 10 February 1956, 3.

119 Harington to Lingstrom, 18 May 1955.

120 Ibid., emphasis in original.

121 Ibid.

122 For a similar contemporary critique, see Freda Lingstrom, “A Report on the Cycle of Plays on the Life of Jesus of Nazareth with a Recommendation,” August 1956, 4, WAC T2/74/5.

123 Still from Jesus of Nazareth, “Jesus of Nazareth: A Souvenir of One of the Most Memorable TV Programmes yet Produced,” in The Television Annual for 1957, ed. Kenneth Baily (London, 1957), 52–55, at 54.

124 Ibid.

125 “Jesus of Nazareth. A Souvenir,” 52.

126 Audience research report, 12 February 1956, WAC T2/74/5; Viewer response survey, 25 April 1956, WAC T2/74/5; Lingstrom, “Report,” 14.

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