The Sunday Telegraph

Wednesday

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Against the Law BBC TWO, 9.00PM

In 1954, journalist Peter Wildeblood was sentenced to 18 months in Wormwood Scrubs for “buggery”. On his release he chose not to hide from the society that had condemned him but instead to fight. His book, Against

the Law, was subsequent­ly described in the New Statesman as “the noblest, and wittiest, and most appalling prison book of them all”. It led to the Wolfenden Report on Homosexual Offence and Prostituti­on and to the legalisati­on of homosexual­ity in 1967.

Against the Law, then, is part dramatisat­ion of Wildeblood’s story and part documentar­y about what it was like to be a gay man in this era. The fictional retelling is sensitivel­y scripted by Brian Fillis ( An Englishman

in New York) and features a wonderful turn from Daniel Mays as the shy Wildeblood – who falls in love with a man only for it to collapse into shattering, heartbreak­ing pieces. Yet, good as the drama is, it is ultimately the testimony of those who lived through this that lingers. “Even now I sometimes pinch myself and think it is true. It has happened. I never thought the law would change. I never thought public opinion would change,” says one. The emotion is overwhelmi­ng. SH

Long Lost Family ITV, 9.00PM

Depending on your sentimenta­lity threshold, this series reuniting close relatives is either mawkish or uplifting. Tonight, as it begins its seventh run, a divorced couple come together to search for the child they gave up as teenagers. Patrick Smith

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