Steptoe and Son in #MeToo sleaze row as actress who played stripper reveals she stormed off 1972 set due to 'out of control' drunken medical students hired as extras for striptease scene

  • Steptoe and Son actress Carolyn Seymour says filming was 'out of control'
  • She claims the extras wereĀ 'boisterous and lewd' during a striptease scene
  • Ms Seymour slammed the female producer for not putting a stop to chaos
  • The actress declined to film any other scenes after the 'nightmare' situationĀ 

Beloved British sitcom Steptoe and Son has become embroiled in a #MeToo row after an actress revealed she was met with 'out-of-control' behaviour on set while filming a striptease scene.Ā 

Actress Carolyn Seymour, who played nightclub stripper Zita in the 1972 spin-off film 'Steptoe and Son', claims a group of medical students hired as extras were encouraged to be 'boisterous and lewd' during the filming of the dance scene, featuring the two rag-and-bone men starsĀ Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H. Corbett.Ā 

Ms Seymour, now 74, said their behaviour wasĀ so appalling that she refused to film any further scenes. She also claimed the picture's female producer was a 'nightmare' and 'not interested' in stopping the chaos.

The actress, best known for her work on the BBC series Survivors, said that had the #MeToo movement existed in the 70s 'I would have had a very solid case.'

Actress Carolyn Seymour, who played nightclub stripper Zita in Steptoe and Son'sĀ 1972 spin-off film of the same name,Ā revealed she was met with 'out-of-control' behaviour on set as she filmed a striptease scene

Actress Carolyn Seymour, who played nightclub stripper Zita in Steptoe and Son'sĀ 1972 spin-off film of the same name,Ā revealed she was met with 'out-of-control' behaviour on set as she filmed a striptease scene

Ms SeymourĀ claims a group of medical students hired as extras were encouraged to be 'boisterous and lewd' during the filming of the sensual dance scene

Ms SeymourĀ claims a group of medical students hired as extras were encouraged to be 'boisterous and lewd' during the filming of the sensual dance scene

Ms Seymour (pictured in 2002), now 74, said their behaviour was so appalling that she refused to film any further scenes

Ms Seymour (pictured in 2002), now 74, said their behaviour was so appalling that she refused to film any further scenes

Steptoe and Son focused on inter-generational conflicts between 'dirty old man' Albert Steptoe (Wilfrid Brambell, on right) and his son Harold Steptoe (Harry H. Corbett, on left)

Steptoe and Son focused on inter-generational conflicts between 'dirty old man' Albert Steptoe (Wilfrid Brambell, on right) and his son Harold Steptoe (Harry H. Corbett, on left)

Ms Seymour said filming the beloved series about the father-and-son rag and bone men was miserable, recalling the alleged inappropriate behaviours on set.Ā 

'The director [Cliff Owen] had put wine on the tables and encouraged the students to drink because he wanted them to be boisterous and a bit lewd,' she revealed in Mr. Brambell's biography, released earlier this month.

'He would have been mortified by how it all turned out because he was a good man, just weak.'

The actress alleged the female producer in charge of the set, Aida Young, seemed unconcerned with the drunken actions of the 'group of medical students were hired as extras.'

'We had a woman producer in Aida Young and she was a nightmare, not interested in what was happening in front of her,' Ms Seymour penned inĀ 'You Dirty Old Man!': The Authorized Biography of Wilfrid Brambell, which was reviewed by The Mirror.Ā 

'Eventually, the cameraman managed to halt the chaos.'

Afterwards Ms Seymour refused to film anymore scenes, telling production staff: 'There was no way I was going back.'

She had a 'couple of small scenes' left to film following the striptease, which she says the crew 'fudged.'

Ms Seymour added: 'Had the "Me Too" movement been around, I would have had a very solid case.'

The now-famed movement first began in 2006 when AmericanĀ sexual assault survivorĀ and activist Tarana Burke used the phrase 'Me Too' in the context of assault on Myspace.

The movement gained traction online again in 2017 when actress and producer Alyssa Milano took to Twitter and told her followers: ā€˜If youā€™ve been sexually harassed or assaulted, write ā€œme tooā€ as a reply to this tweet.ā€™Ā 

Milano's post came one week after The New York Times had printed an investigation into the then most powerful man in Hollywood, Weinstein. It accused the film mogul of being a serial sexual predator whoā€™d been paying off his accusers for decades.Ā 

Since then, hundreds of powerful men worldwide have been taken down by #MeToo allegations, most notablyĀ Hollywood film mogul Harvey Weinstein.

She also claimed the picture's female producer was a 'nightmare' and 'not interested' in stopping the chaos caused by the drunken med student extras

She also claimed the picture's female producer was a 'nightmare' and 'not interested' in stopping the chaos caused by the drunken med student extras

'The director [Cliff Owen] had put wine on the tables and encouraged the students to drink because he wanted them to be boisterous and a bit lewd,' Ms Seymour said

'The director [Cliff Owen] had put wine on the tables and encouraged the students to drink because he wanted them to be boisterous and a bit lewd,' Ms Seymour said

Afterwards Ms Seymour refused to film anymore scenes, telling production staff: 'There was no way I was going back.' She had a 'couple of small scenes' left to film following the striptease, which she says the crew 'fudged'

Afterwards Ms Seymour refused to film anymore scenes, telling production staff: 'There was no way I was going back.' She had a 'couple of small scenes' left to film following the striptease, which she says the crew 'fudged'

In the biography, Ms Seymour also commented on working with the programme's stars, saying how she 'adored WilfredĀ but Harry seemed almost suicidal, he was so miserable.'

Mr Corbett died from a heart attack in 1982 aged 57. Mr Brambell, 72, passed away after a battle with cancer in 1985.

SteptoeĀ and Son was written by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, who had spent their teens in a sanatorium recovering from tuberculosis.

Albert Steptoe and Harold made their first appearance in January 1962 on Comedy Playhouse, which also gave birth to shows includingĀ Last Of The Summer Wine, The Liver Birds and Are You Being Served.

Proving to be enormously popular, the BBC quickly commissioned a series.Ā 

Over the course of 57 episodes, the programme changed the course of TV and comedy history, laying down the rules for popular sitcoms that followed.Ā 

Unlike the comedy that had come before, there were no stand-up jokes, punchlines or sketches. Steptoe just depicted believable characters, with the comedy in the situation itself - no matter how achingly tragic the Harold and Albert's story was.Ā Ā 

The father and son lived in a cluttered junkyard on the fictional Oil Drum Lane in Shepherd's Bush.

Albert Steptoe and Harold made their first appearance in January 1962 on Comedy Playhouse. Mr Brambell, Mr Corbett and Ms Seymour are pictured in programme's 1972 spin-off film titled Steptoe and Son

Albert Steptoe and Harold made their first appearance in January 1962 on Comedy Playhouse. Mr Brambell, Mr Corbett and Ms Seymour are pictured in programme's 1972 spin-off film titled Steptoe and Son

Mr Corbett and Ms Seymour are pictured in the film during their characters' wedding scene atĀ St John's Church, Ladbroke Grove, London

Mr Corbett and Ms Seymour are pictured in the film during their characters' wedding scene atĀ St John's Church, Ladbroke Grove, LondonĀ 

Harold longed to escape his surroundings and his drunken father's influence, but his attempts were always frustrated by the older man.Ā 

The setting was the early 1960s, when the rag-and-bone man had no future in a world defined by burgeoning technical development and household incomes.Ā 

In the pilot episode, Harold was seen breaking down as his attempts to leave the junkyard with a cart filled with his possessions failed.Ā  Ā 

The influence of the show was visible in the likes of Dad's Army, Fawlty Towers and even UK version of The Office.Ā 

Such was its popularity in the 1960s that Labour's Harold Wilson lobbied the BBC to change the time that it aired on the night of the 1964 election, because he feared working class voters may stay at home to watch the show instead of voting for his party's candidates.

The BBC's director general Sir Hugh Greene agreed to shift the time that the episode aired to after the polls had closed, and Labour won the election with a majority of just four seats.

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