The North sea oil boom
was a huge thing in the 1970s. In theory it was supposed to make the UK self-sufficient
in oil supplies instead of relying on the Arab countries who dominated the
market. It was controversial in many ways. There were suggestions that Scotland,
off whose coast the oil fields sat, did not receive enough of the profits while
others argued that the environmental cost was not worth it. For a period, the
industry thrived and there were benefits for the communities adjacent to the
fields. Given such topicality it is no wonder a tv drama was commissioned in
the form of Oil Strike North. The name sounds exciting and the series
suggests that oil companies competed, sometimes ruthlessly, over the fields and
there was much wheeling and dealing. It also depicts the pressurised
environment on the rigs themselves, cut off from land amidst harsh weather
Oil Strike North seemed to be a series the BBC had high expectations
for giving it a Radio Times cover (albeit shared with Quiller) and
launching it in a prime-time evening slot starting on 26 August 1975 at the beginning of
the prestigious Autumn Season. Created by Gerard Glaister and NJ Crisp, the
idea was that in contrast to the BBC’s previous hit The Troubleshooters, which was set amidst power struggles in
corporate offices and boardrooms, Oil Strike
North would take the viewer to the working heart of a big company, called
Triumph Oil, on the Nelson One oil rig in the North Sea. It was mainly about
the harsh challenges and how both that and the isolation affected the workers
and their families. This reflected a
general feeling at the Corporation that Seventies drama needed to connect more
with working families rather than be solely concerned with rich or powerful
individuals. To make the scenario more dramatic the narrative included the fact that the company only had three months left to find oil before their government funded
concessions ran out. The series was filmed in Peterhead and the regular cast
includes several well-known names from British tv drama of the 1970s including
Nigel Davenport, Barbara Shelley, Glyn Owen, and Maurice Roeves.
Born in 1915, Gerard Glaister had been working mainly in the theatre when he undertook a BBC directors’ course in the late 1950s and made his tv debut directing in January 1957. Over the next three decades he would work both as a director and/or producer on a number of flagship series including Maigret, Dr Finlay’s Casebook, The Expert, The Brothers, Colditz, Secret Army and Howard’s Way. The idea for Oil Strike North was pitched to the BBC by Glaiser along with NJ Crisp, a writer with whom he had frequently collaborated. The two had undertaken two years’ worth of research into the industry visiting coastal towns in North Scotland, oil rigs and the ships that serviced them as well as talking with oil company executives. They wanted the series to show how people dealt with the difficult weather conditions envisioning a series that used divers, helicopters and supply ships emphasising the remoteness of their location. The series would show fearsome storms as well as the drilling operation itself making the whole thing look hard and uncomfortable work to an audience sitting in the comfort of their home.
Glaister told Radio
Times: "We wanted to show that the battle for oil in the North Sea is not
just about priceless hardware, but about people at every level, from the
government official down to the rig-men and roustabouts (drilling
labourers)". He also highlighted what he felt was the importance of the
industry: “We think it's the most important economic development since the
Industrial Revolution. People do not seem to have grasped how totally we have
become an oil-dependent country. As one of our characters says, "Oil
doesn't just drive power stations and ships, and heat factories … it's in the
clothes you wear, the shoes on your feet, the paint on your house, the carpet
you walk on, plastics, chemicals, fertilizers…".
The more conventional
drama of the series was largely provided by Michael Whitney’s Frank Ward and his
wife Julia played by Angela Douglas. While he faced the pressures of the job
she was seen to struggle with no sense of direction while he was away. Crisp
told Radio Times: "(Ward) is particularly obsessive about his work. He
likes the uncertainty of never knowing what may happen next or where he's going
to be sent. His wife ……is on the other hand, like many wives both in and out of
the oil industry, a person who finds it nerve-wracking to have no permanent,
settled home, and not to know with any degree of assurance when her husband
will walk in through the front door." The environmental concerns raised by
oil were also included in the programme, as Glaister told Radio Times "We
aim to present both sides of the passionate argument about oil and its effect
on the environment. Angus Gallagher, who's the editor of our fictional Muirport
Gazette, is rigidly devoted to the old culture and to his native part of Scotland.
He uses his position to crusade against what he sees as the roughshod methods
of the oil companies”
The series opened with
`Deadline` penned by Ken Hughes and directed by Peter Cregeen which is a
feature length introduction running one hour seventeen minutes and thankfully someone
has uploaded it to YouTube. A year ago, I’d watched (and enjoyed) The Rig,
a series also set in the North Sea albeit in the declining days of the oil boom.
Comparing the two shows how television has changed. Nowadays if a series is set
in a work environment like this that is merely a backdrop to something else- a
thriller or a romance or, in the case of The Rig, a science fiction
adventure. Back in the 70s they made a drama out of the work itself and
watching `Deadline` it was with the expectation of some strange happening that
did not occur. I am too used to modern drama I suppose. Instead, Peter Cregeen
manages to squeeze enough tension from matters with directorial flourishes mixed with a lot of real North Sea footage. Because all the outdoor material was shot
on film this mixes with the other scenes perfectly. You don’t always know what
is going on but it is suitably windswept and metallic to work effectively in conveying the difficult environment. A sequence when a
ship almost crashes into the rig is particularly well conveyed using only editing, camera
tricks and sound work. No model shots here.
The other thing I
noticed is that the lead characters are all older, white men. There’s no
attempt to shoehorn a younger or more diverse character in to be a conventional
hero- instead the drama comes from the dilemma that Nigel Davenport’s character
Jim Fraser faces. To trump an opposing company Triumph, he must move a rig to a
remote field and start drilling within the three months left of the option, so
Fraser needs to recruit the best to make this seemingly impossible thing
happen. The script does have plenty of technical jargon and business meetings
but it’s always delivered in a manner that is understandable to the viewer.
The man he calls in for
the job is American Frank Ward who clashes right away with Maurice Roeves' character McGraw. Their arguments form the majority of the more dramatic moments
in the episode. Ward wants to do something while they are towing the rig,
McGraw says it can’t be done and in the end it is done. Angela Douglas adds the human side to things as Julie struggles with the
loneliness and Scottish gloom. She runs away to go to New York (though as far
as I can tell she’s English) and Frank has to rush to the airport to stop her.
He takes a helicopter by the way! There’s a silent passport control officer we
keep cutting back to who would be played by a comedian in a modern series but Oil
Strike North does not do jokes so the opportunity is not fully taken.
There is a hardbitten pioneer
spirit to these characters as if they’re hewn from those explorers of yore.
When they get home they reach for the drinks cabinet rather than the kettle and
they always think they are right. I suppose this had more appeal in the
Seventies which was not a period for much gender subtlety on the whole. I do
think though that the portrayal of the lonely wife is reasonably well written
even if it becomes rather melodramatic. It’s an otherwise emotional part of a
strangely emotionless drama.
To be honest Nigel Davenport
looks a bit ill at ease in this part, perhaps reflecting the rigours of the
character’s job or maybe he felt it was a role with alot of dialogue little of
which was character based. He seems to wince at each setback. It is actually not clear why his senior character is in situ, surely he would remain back at the base? Though the actor
was in his forties he gives the impression of a much older man. An actor who’d
appeared in a variety of stage, film and tv roles I wonder if he recalled this
series as a highlight or a role soon forgotten?
Across the board the
episode shows efforts made by actors and director Peter Cregeen to pump pace
along with oil but it’s a dry subject and thirteen episodes of this would be
likely see a fall off in viewing figures. In the end it looks like the
boardroom sparring was simply replaced by engineers arguing. Compared to the
varied locales and better weather of Warship or the more melodramatic
likes of The Brothers and Sutherland’s Law, spending a lot of
time in the company of gruff characters arguing over technical issues intercut
with bad weather and lots of machinery is not compelling viewing. Yet I did
quite enjoy this one episode for its laudable attempts at authenticity and
giving space to the debate over the benefits and otherwise of the North Sea oil
boom. Also some of the synopses for the other episodes look promising.
To work better for an introductory episode I think
the series needed to start from a different place making the main characters
inhabitants of the village some of whom end up working for the oil company,
others who lose their livelihood because of it. Instead of being a show about
drills, moving rigs, tugboats and rough seas, it then becomes a drama about
radical change in traditional communities. Some younger cast would also make it
less of a staid drama. As it is I can’t imagine which section of the viewing
public the series was aimed at though perhaps it offered a window into the
North Sea oil boom which was a contemporary topic people were aware of but knew little detail about.
None of the other
twelve episodes appear to be available though a torrent site may have them.
There was someone advertising them on DVD but without any idea of quality and
in any case the link doesn’t work. I’m not sure I could sit through all of them
though.
There is no sense of this being a treasured archival show as many other
Seventies programmes are treated. You’d have thought it would have been a good
release for Network when they were going but as far as I can tell it was never
considered.
Despite (or perhaps
because of) all the effort that went into giving the series authenticity, it
was not renewed for a second season. It may be that ultimately the series was
just too realistic and hard bitten lacking a tv `glamour` aspect to
counterpoint all the metal, high waves, frowns and big coats. The location may just
have been too far removed from the cosiness of people’s living rooms- after all
who would look at the stormy North Sea and wish they could visit the location!
Another BBC series of the time set mostly at sea, Warship, enjoyed more success as the weather and conditions were
considerably more telegenic and probably far more aspirational. I’d doubt if
anyone watching Oil Strike North
would be inspired to sign up for a job in the North Sea…
Broadcast 26 August – 18 November 1975, Created by Gerard Glaister, N.J. Crisp, Tom Veitch, Joan Veitch / Producer:
Gerard Glaister
Regular Cast: Nigel Davenport: Operations Area Manager Jim Fraser, Michael Whitney: Frank
Ward, Angela Douglas: Julie Ward, Andrew Robertson: Donald Cameron, Angela
Cheyne: Shona Cameron, Glyn Owen: Jack Mullery, Callum Mill: Angus Gallacher, Barbara
Shelley: Elaine Smythe, Richard Hurndall: Charles Wayman, Maurice Roeves: McGraw
Episodes (broadcast date)
Deadline (26 Aug 75) Jim Fraser's company Triumph
Oil has just three months to find oil in the North Sea. Texan Frank Ward is
brought in as Operations Manager to make it happen..
Quiet Day (2 Sep 75) A lorry carrying pipes for the oil rig is involved in a fatal road crash which causes negative press from local journalists. Ward attempts an emergency helicopter lift to get the pipes to their destination.
Storm Clouds (9 Sep 75) Triumph Oil start a PR campaign to counter stories by local newspaper editor Angus Gallacher who stirs up MP Calvert. Ward and McGraw's relationship reaches breaking point when they disagree about policy.
First Lion (16 Sep 75) A diver embellishes his experience as a diver in order to earn big money on the oil rig. On his first dive, loosening cables from a fallen pylon, he panics, causing serious injury to a colleague.
The Decision (23 Sep 75) With the three-month deadline imminent, Triumph is running behind in the search for oil and gas and the government is threatening to go to rivals President Oil. Frank Ward's past comes back to haunt him.
The Floating Bomb (30 Sep 75) A
Russian trawler is abandoned after an explosion and is now heading towards to
North Sea oil field. Triumph wants the ship sank because it is carries sodium
nitrate but there might be an injured sailor on board.
It Depends Where You Stand (7 Oct 75)Newspaper editor Angus Gallacher starts to campaign against local residents, who are selling their property to the highest bidder. Frank Ward receives an offer from President Oil.
Shore Leave (14 Oct 75)The oil rig workers bad reputation ashore is tarnished by the newspapers. Ward is sued over an injury on the rig.
Workhorse (21 Oct 75) A storm has damaged Triumph's supply ship and Cameron pulls the crew from a wedding to get a replacement to the rig as soon as possible.
Time of Hazard (28 Oct 75) Jim Fraser wants Frank Ward to be less cautious while drilling and push on regardless of the risk. Julie Ward goes missing while horse riding near cliffs
Headhunters (4 Nov 75) With Triumph close to production, Jim Fraser's stock has never been higher, so when a vacancy appears on the board he should be favourite. Meanwhile, the French oil industry looks to recruit Frank Ward.
The Fatal Hours Part 1 (11 Nov 75) Frank Ward decides to remain in Scotland but wants a better deal. With everybody waiting for the predicted oil output, Shona uses her friendship with Donald to get an exclusive for the Gazette.
The Fatal Hours Part 2 (18 Nov 75) A heavy storm arrives, and a Met Buoy has come loose from its anchor and is trapped between the legs of the rig. Frank Ward has to get seventy men to safety in case the weather causes a collapse.
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