Michael John Abbensetts (8 June 1938 – 24 November 2016)[1][2] was a Guyana-born British writer who settled in England in the 1960s. He had been described as "the best Black playwright to emerge from his generation,[3][4] and as having given "Caribbeans a real voice in Britain".[5][6] He was the first black British playwright commissioned to write a television drama series, Empire Road, which the BBC aired from 1978 to 1979.[1]
Although he began his writing career with short stories, Abbensetts had been attracted to playwriting after seeing a performance of John Osborne's Look Back In Anger in Montreal, while studying at university there, thereafter deciding to move to London to become a writer.[5][11] Abbensetts's work in stage drama debuted in 1973 at the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs with his play Sweet Talk, which had a cast including Mona Hammond and Don Warrington, and was directed by Stephen Frears.[12] Abbensetts became the Royal Court's resident dramatist, and Sweet Talk won the George Devine Award,[13] shared with Mustafa Matura.[11] Soon afterwards, Abbensetts's first television play, The Museum Attendant, inspired by his own experience of having worked as a security guard at the Tower of London in the mid-1960s, was broadcast on BBC2,[5] His next television play for the BBC, Black Christmas, aired in 1977 and was also directed by Frears,[13] being described in The Stage as "totally mature… beautifully constructed".[11]Stephen Bourne has called it "one of the best television dramas of the 1970s".[14] From the 1970s to 1990s, Abbensetts continued his theatre career throughout London. His works during this time period included Alterations (premiered in 1978 at the New End Theatre in Hampstead, featuring Don Warrington), Samba (at the Tricycle Theatre in 1980, with Norman Beaton), The Outlaw (1983), and The Lion (1993).[15]
Apart from plays, Abbensetts was a screenwriter for Empire Road (BBC, 1978–79), produced by Peter Ansorge,[16] and considered British television's first Black soap opera, although Abbensetts said: "I never really liked it being called a Soap. It was The Daily Mail that called it that. I always thought of it as a drama series, where each episode had a separate story."[9] The second series was directed by Horace Ové, "establishing a production unit with a Black director, Black writer and Black actors."[13] The cast featured Norman Beaton, Corinne Skinner-Carter, Joseph Marcell, Rudolph Walker and Wayne Laryea.[17] In the early 1980s, Abbensetts was a member of independent production company Penumbra Productions, together with Horace Ové, H. O. Nazareth, and a number of other black creatives among whom were Lindsay Barrett, Margaret Busby, Farrukh Dhondy and Mustapha Matura.[18] Other television projects by Abbensetts include Easy Money (with Norman Beaton again in the lead, 1982)), Big George Is Dead (Channel 4, 1987), starring Beaton, Linzi Drew and Ram John Holder,[19] and the mini-series Little Napoleons (1994, Channel 4, the cast including Beaton, Saeed Jaffrey, Lesley Manville and Simon Callow).[11][20] The last television script Abbensetts wrote was for an episode of the television series Doctors, entitled "Vanessa's World", aired on 16 October 2001.[21][22]
With Abbensetts' health declining in his latter years as a result of Alzheimer's disease,[2][24] a tribute was organised for his benefit by Anton Phillips on Sunday, 9 December 2012: a rehearsed reading of Sweet Talk, directed by Phillips and attended by Abbensetts himself, was held at the Tricycle Theatre, with many well known figures in Black theatre and arts in the audience, including Yvonne Brewster, Don Warrington, Rudolph Walker, Oscar James, Allister Bain, and Errol Lloyd.[25]
Abbensetts died aged 78 on 24 November 2016, survived by his daughter, Justine, from his relationship with Anne Stewart, and by two grandchildren, Sean and Danielle, as well as a sister Elizabeth. His first wife Connie, a lawyer, had died of cancer towards the end of the 1980s, and in 2005 he was married to Liz Bluett, although they later separated.[1]
A property that Abbensetts bought in 1990 in Kilburn, London, where he lived for 16 years and wrote the series Little Napoleons for Channel 4, was chosen as the location for a Nubian Jak Community Trust blue plaque honouring him.[27]