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・ Play with Fire (comics)
・ Play with Fire (Hilary Duff song)
・ Play with Fire (The Reign of Kindo album)
・ Play with Fire (The Rolling Stones song)
・ Play with Me
・ Play with Me (album)
・ Play with Me (song)
・ Play with Me Sesame
・ Play with the Changes
・ Play with the Teletubbies
・ Play with Toys
・ Play with Your Head
・ Play Without a Title
・ Play for change
・ Play for P.I.N.K.
Play for Today
・ Play for Tomorrow
・ Play for Your Life
・ Play framework
・ Play from scrimmage
・ Play Gaelic
・ Play Girl
・ Play Girl (1932 film)
・ Play God
・ Play Guitar Play
・ Play Hard
・ Play It Again
・ Play It Again (Luke Bryan song)
・ Play It Again (record label)
・ Play it Again Des


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Play for Today : ウィキペディア英語版
Play for Today

''Play for Today'' is a British television anthology drama series, produced by the BBC and transmitted on BBC1 from 1970 to 1984. During the run, more than three hundred programmes, featuring original television plays, and adaptations of stage plays and novels, were transmitted. The individual episodes were between fifty and a hundred minutes in duration. A handful of these plays, including ''Rumpole of the Bailey'' and ''The Blackstuff'' (later ''Boys from the Blackstuff''), subsequently became television series' in their own right.
==History==
The strand was a successor to ''The Wednesday Play'', the 1960s anthology series, the title being changed when the day of transmission became variable. Popular works screened in anthology series on BBC2, like Willy Russell's ''Our Day Out'' (1977), were repeated on BBC1 in the series. The producers of ''The Wednesday Play'', Graeme MacDonald and Irene Shubik, transferred to the new series. Shubik continued with the series until 1973〔Irene Shubik ("Letters: Eclectic roster on Play for Today", ) ''The Guardian'', 5 April 2008〕 while MacDonald remained with the series until 1977 when he was promoted. Later producers included Margaret Matheson and Richard Eyre (1978–80).
Plays covered all genres. In its time, ''Play for Today'' featured contemporary social realist dramas, historical pieces, fantasies, biopics and occasionally science-fiction〔Richard Hewett (''Flipside of Dominick Hide, The (1980)'' ), BFI screenonline〕 (''The Flipside of Dominick Hide'', 1980). Most pieces were written directly for television, but there were also occasional adaptations from other narrative forms, such as novels and stage plays.
Writers who contributed plays to the series included Ian McEwan, John Osborne, Dennis Potter, Stephen Poliakoff, David Hare, Willy Russell, Alan Bleasdale, Arthur Hopcraft, Alan Plater, Graham Reid, David Storey, Andrew Davies, Rhys Adrian and John Hopkins. Several prominent directors also featured, including Stephen Frears, Alan Clarke, Michael Apted, Mike Newell, Roland Joffe, Ken Loach, Lindsay Anderson, and Mike Leigh. Some of the best remembered plays broadcast in the strand include ''Edna, the Inebriate Woman'' (1971), ''The Foxtrot'' (1971), ''Home'' (1972), ''Bar Mitzvah Boy'' (1976), ''Abigail's Party'' (1977), ''Blue Remembered Hills'' (1979) and ''Just a Boys' Game'' (1979). Certain other well known plays, including ''Penda's Fen'' (1974), ''Nuts in May'' (1976), were commissioned by David Rose of the BBC's English Regions Drama department based in Birmingham.
Some installments in the series were spun off into full-blown series. Probably the two best-remembered examples of this are ''Rumpole of the Bailey'', which was produced as a one-off in the ''Play for Today'' strand in 1975 and three years later became a series for Thames Television, again with Leo McKern, and Alan Bleasdale's ''The Blackstuff'', which was developed into ''Boys from the Blackstuff''. Other offshoots were ''Gangsters'', and a single series of science fiction-based plays styled as ''Play for Tomorrow''. Towards the end of the run, three plays set in Northern Ireland were written by Graham Reid. Known as the Billy Plays, they starred Kenneth Branagh as Billy Martin in his first acting role following his graduation from RADA.
There were also some groups of plays transmitted that — for various reasons — did not go out under the ''Play for Today'' banner, but which were funded from the same department, used much the same production team and are generally regarded in episode guides and analysis as being part of the ''Play for Today'' 'canon'.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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