The First interracial kiss 01-02-1959 on UK TV, Hot Summer Night

Published: 18 January 2018
on channel: Everything has its first time
12,216
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Director Ted Kotcheff
Script Ted Willis
Designer Timothy O'Brien
Cast: John Slater (Jack 'Jacko' Palmer); Ruth Dunning (Nell Palmer); Andrée Melly (Kathie Palmer); Harold Scott (old man); Lloyd Reckord (Sonny Lincoln)

When the daughter of a trade union organizer announces her relationship with a black man, the revelation exposes deep prejudice and hidden conflicts in her family. The post-World War II years saw the beginning of large-scale immigration to Britain, with race relations becoming a major issue for the first time. Ted Willis's 'Hot Summer Night' premiered on stage in November 1958, just a few months after Britain's first race riots erupted on the streets of Notting Hill. The confrontations depicted in Willis's play are a little more restrained, but only just. The play made a quick transition from stage to television, no doubt aided by the desire of newly-installed producer Sydney Newman to present a drama on Armchair Theatre (ITV, 1956-74) which reflected the real-world concerns of its audience. In the theatre, the play had focused as much on the neglect of Nell Palmer by her husband, Jacko, as on their daughter Kathie's relationship with the Jamaican, Sonny. For television, the emphasis was shifted more squarely onto the drama resulting from the proposed mixed marriage. 'Hot Summer Night' was one of the first television dramas to tackle issues of race. Whereas the BBC's A Man from the Sun (tx. 8/11/1956) had dramatized the experience of Caribbean immigrants and touched upon work-place racism, 'Hot Summer Night' took a domestic approach. By concentrating on the beliefs and instincts of one family and one immigrant, Willis is able to explore some of the fundamental issues of racial integration: mixed relationships, instinctive dislike of the 'other', and community double standards. Nell reveals a violent revulsion at the thought of the mixing of black and white skin; Jacko, a good Union man, is exposed as a hypocrite, fighting color bar at work but opposing mixed relationships at home; Sonny is made ashamed of his skin, wanting only to marry the girl he loves. 'Hot Summer Night' asks difficult questions of its characters and audience and provides no easy answers. Its ending is at least vaguely optimistic, with Kathie and Sonny maintaining their determination to marry despite the prejudice and social obstacles they know they will face. The play was later remade as the feature film Flame in the Street (d. Roy Ward Baker, 1961), with the action opened up to encompass more of the workplace and the local community. The exclusively domestic setting of 'Hot Summer Night', however, is one of its greatest strengths; it is recognizable to all viewers and can only have aided the audience's identification with the drama's characters and engagement with its underlying issues.

Some others consider the First ever on TV (Hispanic/Caucasian) I Love Lucy (first episode airing October 15, 1951) featured Desi Arnaz, a Hispanic male, and Lucille Ball, a Caucasian woman, frequently kissing each other. However, Desi Arnaz was often seen as white with Hispanic ancestry, so this may not count.

The British Film Institute found footage of an earlier interracial kiss from the television play You in Your Small Corner, broadcast on 5 June 1962. When the footage was discovered in November 2015, it was declared to be the earliest surviving footage of an interracial kiss on TV. This footage was found as part of an investigation for a BFI panel on race and romance, and during the panel, it was announced that an even earlier interracial kiss was found.

First-ever on American TV is The Wild Wild West episode "The Night the Dragon Screamed" aired on 14 January 1966 and had Jim West (Robert Conrad) kiss Princess Ching Ling (Pilar Seurat). The former is Caucasian, the latter is a Filipina playing a Chinese princess. First-ever African/Caucasian on American TV is Movin' with Nancy aired on December 11, 1967, and had a kiss between Nancy Sinatra (Caucasian) and Sammy Davis Jr. (African). Another important was between Captain Kirk himself with Pilar Seurat (a Filipina) in the Naked City episode "Without Stick or Sword", airing 28 March 1962.


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