Channel 4 has got a bumper season of TV specials and documentaries to mark 50 years since the first Pride march took place in the UK, with Nick Grimshaw and at the helm.
The radio DJ and TV presenter will star in a Pride anniversary episode of Celebrity Gogglebox alongside other British LGBTQ+ personalities.
Two documentaries commissioned to reflect on the last 50 years for the LGBTQ+ community will also air around the anniversary of the first UK Pride rally in on July 1, 1972.
One film, with the working title of 50 Years Of Pride, will explore the history of the movement in the UK through first-person testimonies and archive footage.
Made in collaboration with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Stephen Daldry and playwright Joe Robertson, it will hear from those who faced hostility and discrimination in the early years of the movement.
The documentary will also feature people from the younger generations who have always had Pride celebrations as part of their life and identity.
Another programme, provisionally titled April Ashley, will focus on one of the UK’s most prominent transgender women.
Ashley, who died last year at the age of 86, was a model and dancer who received an MBE for services to equality and was involved in the landmark divorce trial Corbett v Corbett.
The film will ‘take the audience inside the intimate reality of the transgender experience’ and explore how Ashley ‘paved the way for future generations of transgender people’, Channel 4 said.
Another two-part documentary scheduled for later in the year will explore how pop star George Michael risked his career by speaking openly about his sexuality after being outed as gay.
The piece, with a working title of Outed: George Michael And The Fight For Freedom, will feature other public figures whose sexuality was revealed by the media.
Nick and his niece Liv, Rylan and his mother Linda, and comedian Paul Sinha and his husband Oliver will be among stars joining Celebrity Gogglebox.
There will also be compilations of n**ed.n**ed Attraction and First Dates celebrating some of the memorable LGBTQ+ contributors across those shows.
Channel 4 said its line-up will ‘reflect on the incredible achievements and challenges of advancing LGBTQ+ rights and visibility over the last half century, while also platforming the diversity of identity and sexuality in the 2020s’.
The broadcaster has been behind a number of LGBTQ+ focused shows including It’s A Sin, the Russell T Davies series about the UK’s HIV/Aids crisis in the 1980s which has been nominated for 11 Bafta TV awards.
‘Channel 4 has been responsible for more outstanding LGBTQ+ content over its 40 years than any other public service broadcaster – often commissioning content others wouldn’t touch, from award-winning dramas It’s A Sin, Queer As Folk, and Brookside to innovative factual stories including Football’s Coming Out, Genderquake, and Hollyoaks: Gay Dads Forever,’ said Louisa Compton, who is overseeing the Pride season for the channel.
‘It only seems fitting that at this important moment for LGBTQ+ history in the UK we do what we’ve always done, double down on our commitment to agenda-setting programming with exciting new commissioning and All 4 firsts.’