Containing an Explanation, an (Undelivered) Funeral Oration, Divers Reminiscences, a Draft
Treatment for a Docudrama (and Some Dialogue Therefrom), and Some Shandyan Digressions. When,
back in 1972, the original Theatre Quarterly devoted one of its earliest issues (TQ6)
to television drama, the strongest reactions were to remarks by Tony Garnett concerning the
recently developed form already being dubbed documentary drama. Subsequent issues featured both
an attack on the form from Paul Ableman, and a vigorous defence from its leading practitioner–
Jeremy Sandford, author of the seminal Cathy Come Home (1966) and Edna the Inebriate
Woman (1972). The debate continues, but despite the critical esteem in which Sandford's
work is held, the man himself became persona non grata on national television, and
devoted himself to his many other concerns, notably the traditions and present treatment of the
gypsy people. He died on 12 May 2003 – an apparent recluse, yet with websites devoted to
hundreds of loving tributes from young and old alike. The leading historian of docudrame,
Derek Paget – author of True Stories: Documentary Drama on Radio, Stage, and
Television (Manchester University Press, 1990) – here offers a tribute which refuses to
fit a ‘proper’ academic format, and takes on something of the variegated style of
Sandford's own work.