The following information just in from Jon East, British TV
producer who previously made the "It Can Be Done" DVD.
++++++++++++
SUMMERHILL
Summerhill is a powerful emotional drama for children
and adults from Tiger Aspect for BBC4 and CBBC. It is a story of
personal transformation set against the eponymous school's battle for
survival with Ofsted in 1999.
100' version
9pm, Monday 28th Jan, BBC4
30' version
Episode 1, 6pm, Monday 21st Jan, CBBC and
repeated 430pm, Wednesday 23rd Jan, BBC1
Episode 2, 6pm, Tuesday 22nd Jan, CBBC and
repeated 430pm, Thursday 24th Jan, BBC1
Episode 3, 6pm, Monday 28th Jan, CBBC and
repeated 430pm, Wednesday 30th Jan, BBC1
Episode 4, 6pm, Tuesday 29th Jan, CBBC and
repeated 430pm, Thursday 31st Jan, BBC1
Background
In 1999 Ofsted inspected the internationally famous 'free school'
Summerhill. Despite the fact that the school achieved higher than
national average exam pass rates and an unprecedented level of
parental and pupil satisfaction, Ofsted issued a notice of complaint
effectively seeking the school's closure. What lay behind this
clash?
Summerhill school was founded in 1921 by world-renowned educator
A S Neill on the principles of self-regulation. The unique Suffolk
based boarding school runs as a self-governing democratic community.
Pupils (aged 5 to 16), teachers, live-in house parents and
Headmistress Zoe Readhead, (Neill's daughter) only possess one equal
vote which they use during their thrice weekly school meetings to
decide on all matters pertaining to the running of the school. This is
no toothless school council. The amending, abolishing and making of
rules, matters of discipline, extra-curricular activities etc, all are
decided democratically, with a rotating chairperson drawn from the
school's entire community. The children police themselves, dealing
with infractions of their multitudinous self-imposed laws with
surprising compassion and wisdom. The only rule they cannot change is
the prime principle upon which A S Neill founded the school; that no
child should be compelled to attend any lesson that they do not choose
freely by themselves. And it was this guiding principle, at odds with
everything Ofsted and the newly elected Labour government's
"education, education, education" manifesto stood for, that
put the highly successful school at the top of a hit list otherwise
reserved for failing institutions.
Ofsted's notice of complaint required the school to abandon the
key freedoms it offered its pupils. Facing closure if it failed to
comply, the school instead took Ofsted to court and fought for its
survival.
This fast-paced vibrant drama is aimed at a broad audience and
offers the suspense generated by its compelling true David and Goliath
story with the emotion and humour of semi-fictionalised tales of
personal transformation. Partly filmed at the real Summerhill school
with Summerhillians taking some of the roles, the drama is inspired by
real events and aims to entertainingly contribute to the wider
national debate around the fundamental aims and methodology of
education in the UK.
Cast & Crew
Written by Alison Hume (Pure, The Vice, Rocket Man, New
Tricks), produced by Stephen Smallwood (Murphy's Law, Colditz,
Cadfael), exec produced for Tiger Aspect by Greg Brenman (Billy
Eliot, Robin Hood, Omagh), exec produced for the BBC and
directed by Jon East (Bodies, Silent Witness, The Vice).
Music by Sheridan Tongue (Spooks, Silent Witness),
Cinematography by Dave Marsh (Fear of Fanny, Bonekickers),
Editing by Helen Chapman, (Murphy's Law).
The cast includes Ron Cook (Hot Fuzz, Thunderbirds),
Annette Badland (Doctor Who, Cutting It), Jessie Cave (Harry
Potter and the Half-Blood Prince), Tracy Ann-Oberman
(Sorted), Connor MacIntyre (Drop Dead Gorgeous). Richard
Lintern (Syriana).