An Archive of the Representation of LGBTQ Characters Within UK Fictional Television Programmes in the Last 20 Years.

Queer as Folk

Channel 4 (1999 - 2000) 

Writer/Director

Written and directed by Russel T. Davies. This was the first TV show in the world where all the main and supporting characters were homosexual. Davies represented the homosexual characters in a truthful and realistic manner, as opposed to the usual misrepresentation of LGBTQ people at this time (and of which is still an issue today). The characters in the programme do not struggle so much with coming out, they are already openly and happily gay - being gay is something they just happen to be, much like in Banana and Cucumber. The show was so successful because of the way it normalised sexuality. It focuses on gay men in the club scene of the late 1990s. It received huge viewing rates on the first episode, numbers dwindled a little afterwards but remained impressive. It also received a high number of complaints because it was 'seen by conservative and homophobic viewers as a direct challenge to the heterosexual regime, and as an attack on the hitherto uncontested heterosexuality of the televisual representational arena'. The programme has a lot of sex scenes, which didn't sit well with some viewers. It touches upon race and gender issues also. 

Setting 

Canal Street in Manchester, the city's gay area. Some people in the LBGTQ community felt that Canal Street got an overly glamorised representation, but still depicted it as the safe and accepting space that is is. The 90s was when Canal Street really began to become the place that it is today. 

Characters 

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