Minstrel shows had become a long-established feature of British music halls and seaside entertainment since the success of acts such as the
Virginia Minstrels in Liverpool in the 1840s and
Christy's Minstrels in London in the 1850s. These led directly to many British imitators, such as Hamilton's Black and White Minstrels in the 1880s and many others, with Uncle Mac's Minstrels becoming such a popular mainstay in
Broadstairs,
Kent, from the 1890s to the 1940s that a plaque was erected to honour their memory. Though any development in the performance of such acts may have ended before the
First World War, the "old-time" minstrel theme remained a consistently popular form of entertainment in the UK well into the 1950s.
The Black and White Minstrel Show was created by
BBC producer George Inns, working with
George Mitchell. It began as a one-off special in 1957 called
The 1957 Television Minstrels, featuring the male Mitchell Minstrels (Mitchell was the musical director) and the female
Television Toppers dancers. The show was first broadcast on the BBC on 14 June 1958. It developed into a regular 45-minute show on Saturday evening prime-time television in a
sing-along format, with both solo and
minstrel pieces (often with extended
segueing), some
country and western numbers, and music derived from other foreign folk cultures. The male minstrels performed in
blackface; the female dancers and other supporting artists did not. The show included comedy interludes performed by
Leslie Crowther,
George Chisholm and
Stan Stennett. It was initially produced by George Inns with George Mitchell. The minstrels' main soloists were
baritone Dai Francis,
tenor John Boulter, and
bass Tony Mercer. During the nine years that the show was broadcast in
black and white, the blackface makeup was actually red, as black did not register as well. The series gained considerable international regard and was sold to over thirty countries; in 1961 the show won a
Golden Rose at
Montreux for best light entertainment programme, and its first three albums of recordings (1960–1962) were all hits, the first two being long-running number 1 albums in the
UK Albums Chart. The first of these became the first album in UK album sales history to pass 100,000 sales. By 1964,
The Black and White Minstrel Show was achieving audience figures of 21 million. In the spring of 1962, the BBC musical
variety show The Black and White Minstrel Show opened at the
Victoria Palace Theatre. The three lead singers of the TV show, Mercer, Boulter and Francis, appeared simultaneously in the theatrical version, but the chorus singers and dancers would be different groups in the theatre and on TV. The stage show was produced by
Robert Luff, and ran for 6,477 performances from 1962 to 1972;
The Guinness Book of Records listed it as the stage show seen by the largest number of people. In
Melbourne in 1962, a production of the show ran for three years, and set Australian and New Zealand box office records. While it started off being broadcast in black and white, the TV show was first shown in colour on
BBC2 in 1967. Several personalities guested on the show, whilst others started their careers on it. Comedian
Lenny Henry, then in his teens, became the first black performer to appear on it in 1975. In July 2009, Henry explained that he was contractually obliged to perform and regretted his part in the show, telling
The Times in 2015 that his appearance on the show led to a profound "wormhole of depression", and that he regretted his family not intervening to prevent him from continuing in the show. == Denunciation as racist ==