Sarah Sands: See why diversity works – switch on your set

It has been a rough year for the BBC, but its programmes have never been better. It ends the year with two dramas of towering intent and execution.

Tonight is the first part of Small Island, adapted from the Andrea Levy novel. For Christmas, hurrah, we have the second series of Cranford. If the BBC had lost its grip on period drama it would have deserved the fury of its critics. But we have Judi Dench back in her bonnet and can rest easy in our beds. Small Island is also first-class drama with first-class acting.

When Greg Dyke called the BBC "hideously white" he spread a panic about the lack of ethnic diversity. But one should be realistic about representation. Jane Austen was just not very diversity minded. It would have been a pity, as well as a commercial disaster, if the BBC had ditched Austen as a result.

Dyke was also unobservant about the different geographical demographics of Britain. I remember a lunch with a television big cheese and the Telegraph columnist and BBC licence martyr Charles Moore. The television chief talked of the scandalous lack of ethnicity on screen, relative to the British population. I nodded furiously, citing my experience of London. Charles politely pointed out that television was not underrepresenting the ethnic population of Sussex.

Race on television has not been an issue this year, which makes the superb production of Small Island all the more potent. From nowhere, comes a drama of such humanity and comedy that it is life enriching. Coincidentally, it is being shown days after the all-black cast of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof won such praise from theatre critics. The cast members were not simply black, they were exhilarating.

You will not see much finer acting on television this year than from Naomie Harris, playing Hortense in Small Island, the haughty, vulnerable young Jamaican wife, or from David Oyelowo, her striving husband, Gilbert, or from the white actress Ruth Wilson, as Queenie the landlady at the emotional heart of the drama that illuminates a period of British history, the post-war Windrush immigration from the Caribbean. Despite the crude racism – "no niggers, no dogs, no Irish" – in its way it was an age of migration innocence. The newcomers carried British passports, pledged allegiance to the Queen, respected English history and language. Hortense and Gilbert talk always of the Mother Country. The prejudice they encounter is fear of the unfamiliar, rather than anything more organised.

What makes it such compelling television is the personal rather than social relationships. Hortense is cold and affected at the start, until she finds that her proudly held teaching qualification count for nothing in Britain. Her exasperated husband nevertheless finds her touching and is grateful for the unexpected tenderness that she eventually shows. Queenie tests the limits of society by her love affair with a Jamaican. It is a tough and tragic tale but fellow feeling and human dignity prevail. The story of racial integration is essentially optimistic.

Each new wave of immigration brings social tensions and anxiety. And what of those who do not love the Mother Country, but despise it? Yet the many who arrive here, work hard, prosper, settle. Queenie understands the drabness of Britain without immigration and grabs her chance of excitement, defiant of the heart-breaking consequences. The real point of diversity, on television and in life, is not that is correct but that it is vibrant.

Sarah Sands is deputy editor of the London Evening Standard

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Career Services

Day In a Page

Can we pull the plug on the plug?

Can we pull the plug on the plug?

Wireless power is beginning to surge its way into homes, businesses and garages
The 10 Best Lecture Series

The 10 Best Lecture Series

From Intelligence Squared - possibly the world's premier debating forum - to the ICA Talks
Still making a big noise: A season of Michael Frayn plays is set to reaffirm the brilliance of his work

Michael Frayn: Still making a big noise

A season of Frayn's plays is set to reaffirm the brilliance of his work
'You could have a job like mine': How successful alumni can inspire pupils

How successful alumni can inspire pupils

Hilary Wilce sees an innovative scheme in action at a London comprehensive
The tuition paradox: You pay more money, you get less choice

The tuition paradox

You pay more money, you get less choice
The rivals: Canberra's political hate story

The rivals: Canberra's political hate story

Six years ago, Kevin Rudd was ousted as Australian PM by former ally Julia Gillard. Is he about to get his revenge?
Menswear finds its swagger to escape role as poor relation of British fashion

Menswear finds its swagger...

... and escapes role as poor relation of British fashion
'There was someone who needed it...' 60 lives, 30 kidneys, all linked in longest donor chain

60 lives, 30 kidneys, all linked in longest donor chain

Organ donation to stranger starts an amazing series of events across 11 US states
The ad that only plays to women: the future of marketing or useless gimmick?

The ad that only plays to women

The future of marketing or useless gimmick?
Sam Wallace: Chelsea's class of 2012 fail to make the grade

Sam Wallace

Chelsea's class of 2012 fail to make the grade
Lewis Moody: My five ways England can bring down the red curtain

Lewis Moody column

My five ways England can bring down the red curtain
Picture preview: Charline von Heyl, Tate Liverpool

Charline von Heyl, Tate Liverpool

Picture preview
Slow progress in Christchurch one year after quake

Christchurch a year on

Residents mark the first anniversary of the earthquake
Niceness rocks! Ballads take centre stage at the Brits

Niceness rocks!

Ballads take centre stage at the Brit Awards
Robert Fisk: 'If only hague and clinton would listen to yusuf islam'

Robert Fisk

'If only Hague and Clinton would listen to Yusuf Islam'