In 1953, the BBC secretly made its first ever documentary on homosexuality. The finished programme was so controversial that it sat on the shelf for four years. When a heavily edited version finally broadcast in July 1957, the original recording was lost. All that survived was a transcript, buried in a filing cabinet in a suburban bungalow in Reading.
It stayed there, unnoticed, for decades. Until Professor Marcus Collins, a historian at Loughborough University, opened a folder labelled ‘Sexual Offences, 1953–4’ and found himself looking at a moment of broadcasting history that nobody knew existed.
In this episode of Still Here, Leslie Clarke talks to Marcus about what he found, what the transcript reveals about 1950s Britain, and why a lost radio programme made by people who mostly feared and pitied gay men still has something urgent to say today.
They discuss:
- Why the BBC made the programme in secret, and why the director general then vetoed it
- Who was in the room: the clergymen, lawyers, psychiatrists and one ‘reformed’ homosexual brought on to offer hope of a cure
- What liberal opinion actually looked like in 1957, and how disturbing it still sounds
- The connection between the programme’s broadcast and the Wolfenden Report
- The eight-year silence that followed: no factual content about homosexuality on British radio or television
- The parallels with how trans people are discussed in public life today
- How the transcript became a stage play now heading to Dublin and the Edinburgh Fringe
Marcus Collins is Professor of Modern History at Loughborough University and was the AHRC BBC Centenary Fellow. His archival research into the BBC’s coverage of homosexuality spans the 1930s to the 1980s.
The stage play, The BBC’s First Homosexual, written by Dr Stephen Hornby and produced by Inkbrew Productions, plays at the International Gay Theatre Festival in Dublin and the Edinburgh Fringe in August 2026. A recorded version will be made available for LGBT+ History Month 2027. The play is sponsored by the Arts & Humanities Research Council.
Read the Scene article on Scene.
Watch the Loughborough University short film.
About Still Here
Still Here is a Scene Magazine podcast centring LGBTQ+ voices, history and lived experience.
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