Random thoughts - The Invisibility of Australian TV plays in memoirs

 I've been reading various memoirs of actors who appeared in Australian TV plays.  Ones written by John Bell, June Salter, Reg Livermore and Ruth Cracknell.

All appeared in Australian TV plays.

The only one to mention them in their memoirs was Livermore, whose book is the most exhaustive, and who appeared the most on TV. He devotes a few pages to The Tempest and The Recruiting Officer.

Salter only really appeared in one, They Were Big They Were Blue They Were Beautiful and doesn't mention it.

Cracknell was in a few, eg Reflections in Dark Glasses, but doesn't seem to mention any.

Neither does John Bell despite playing Ned Kelly in Ballad of One Gun.

It's quite striking. I don't think there was malice in this, I think they just forgot. There are pages on their TV hits, theatre work, colourful friends... but, Livermore aside, not the old TV plays.

The books are all worth reading. Salter's is compelling because of its description of her marriage to John Meillon. Cracknell is no-nonsense and interesting because her career was so incredible. Ditto for Bell, especially his thoughts on Shakespeare. Livermore is the most colourful, with spectacular photographs throughout. The prose in all four tends to be on the dry side.

Random thoughts - 1964 the year of pushback

 History rarely walks in a straight line. In the first few years of Australian television there was barely any local drama - by the early 1970s it was a deluge. The latter came about due to increased quotas but also a change in culture. But the years 1956-1970 weren't a steady expansion of Australian content.

The first boom in Australian drama came in 1960. The ABC finally recognised maybe it should be doing more than Patrick Hamilton adaptations and went on a "local stories" drive. You had Stormy Petrel a big historical mini series but also ten local stories from Australian writers including The Slaughter of St Teresa's Day.

The shows were a mixed bag but some very successful - Stormy Petrel had two sequels, plus some unofficial follow ups. Some of the TV plays received excellent reviews.

There was a slight bump in Australian stories over the next few years.

But then, in 1964, push back. Massively so. The ABC made 20 plays, of which three were Australian. Not only that, the plays which were made were really esoteric. Not all, but more than usual. Try this for a sample size: The Road by Nigel Kneale; A Provincial Lady from a play by Ivan Turgenev; The Sponge Room by Wallis and Hall; The Physicists by Durrenmatt; Six Characters in Search of an Author by Pirandello; Luther by John Osborne; Everyman, the medieval play; Corruption in the Palace of Justice by Betti; Betrand by Romily Cavan.

Pardon my French but what the f*ck was the ABC doing putting all these on? 

They had nothing to do with Australia. They were niche, off-off Broadway shows.

This was eight years into TV in this country. Eight. And they were still playing the "no writers" card.

Even bad Aussie drama would have had more point than Everyman. As if to prove a point, 1964 saw the debut of Homicide.

There must have been a reaction to all this art house stuff because 1965 saw a lot more local stories on the ABC, then in 1966 saw the broadcast of Australian Playhouse, which was pillored, but 1967 saw Bellbird which was a ten year hit.

The ABC is a precious institution which should be defended,  but sometimes they go wonky and 1964 is one of those times.

Random thoughts - why did so few directors make the leap to features?

 The directors from the American Golden Age of Television featured a number of made the leap successfully to features: John Frankenheimer, Arthur Penn, Sidney Lumet, Robert Aldrich, George Roy Hill, Delbert Mann, etc.

In Australia, barely any. Which is in part why Australian TV plays are so little known.

It's just surprising that when the film industry revived in the 1970s and 1980s that there weren't more people from Australian TV drama.

Some did make the jump:

* Ken Hannam - a director who came on in the 1960s, his credits included The Recruiting Officer. Like so many of his colleagues he emigrated to Britain and had success in TV. The British film industry went into a slump in the 1970s. But Hannam kept trying to make features and struck gold with his first: Sunday Too Far Away, one of the greatest Australian films of all time. Certainly it had a superb script. But... it was a troublesome shoot. Producer Gil Brearley wanted the running time down - I think with good reason (it's not a plot heavy movie). Hannam sulked - he was prone to doing this, he may have been a depressive. He whinged publicity "his" editor didn't fight more, which was completely unfair. 

Nonetheless the success of the film meant Hannam could direct some more features: Break of Day and Summerfield. They are well directed. I really like Summerfield especially. But Hannam whinged again. You don't need that from a director. (The script was flawed but the flaws were, to me, easily fixed... Hannam wasn't able to recognise what needed to be done, which happens and to me means you can't whinge). Dawn! was also flawed, with a central bad piece of miscasting. These three flops ended Hannam's feature career but got him a chapter in The Last New Wave. He kept busy in British TV and got the chance to direct the poor feature/mini series Robbery Under Arms. Sam Neill, who was in that, said Hannam was the better director to Don Crombie (true) but that Hannam wasn't enthusiastic.

Yet, he still made a classic of Australian cinema, which is pretty cool.

*Henri Safran - a Frenchman who wound up in Australia and had great success working at the ABC. He directed some key Australian TV drama, then went to England. Like Hannam he returned to make features and again like Hannam had great luck first time out at the SAFC, in his case with Storm Boy. Like Hannam, he could never top it, though he tried - Listen to the Lion, Norman and Rose, Bush Christmas. Like Hannam, there was always television.

Let's look at who else

* Alan Burke -one of the leading Sydney TV directors, had a strong theatre background and that's where his heart seemed to lie. Did a hell of a lot at the ABC. Probably an ABC lifer who never had the inclination to go an hustle the way you did to get up a feature. I wonder if he ever came close. Seems a shame he couldn't have at least produced.

*Christopher Muir - hugely busy TV director for many years. Of theatre background. Only one feature film credit to my knowledge - Libido, on which he was credited as a producer.(His wife at the time starred in the film). This for me indicates some desire to make movies but it never happened.

*Ray Menmuir - very successful in the early days of Australian TV he moved to England and had a lot of success there too notably with The Professionals. Maybe if the British film industry had been bigger in the 1970s he would have done more features, but... none. Not one. No inclination? No desire?

*Oscar Whitbread - lots of TV in the 1960s and even more over the next two decade, as a producer and director. Indeed, he was one of the most important people in the history of Australian TV drama. Not one feature. He probably couldn't be bothered and you know something? He was probably right.

*William Sterling - one of the key early directors in Australian TV, he moved to England where he was successful on TV. He tried to make features and got up one - Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. And that was it. He tried to get up movies in Australia, whinged about the ones that were made, His credits cut out after 1972. What the hell happened? Sterling actually did champion local stories in the early 60s when that was hard.

*Bill Bain - successful director of Australian, then British TV - he won an Emmy for Upstairs and Downstairs. He directed a film, the terrible Amicus movie Whatever Happened to Jack and Jill? He tried to make ones here but like Sterling had no luck. Died very young at age 52.

*David Cahill - a very good TV director his one feature was a feature version of You Can't See Round Corners which may have hurt his chances to make any more. May have been considered too old/unfashionable by the time the 70s came around for features. Or maybe he was more interested in TV and theatre.

*Colin Dean - king of historical miniseres. His TV credits seem to stop after 1964. What happened? He didn't die until 2007. I think he became an exec.

*Royston Morley - a renaissance man, someone only in the country briefly, it seems fitting that Morley only directed the one feature, Attempt to Kill (1961). Morley strikes me as one of those upper class toffs who are actually good at everything and try everything and do a little spying for MI5 on the side. A real character.

*Rod Kinnear - Mr Television, he did a lot of drama in the early sixties but also worked a lot in variety. No features.

*James Upshaw - like Rod Kinnear, a lot of TV, drama as well as variety. No features.

*Patrick Barton - imported from England to help direct TV in Melbourne (were there no Australians?), Barton seemed particularly allergic to Australian stories. I'm not sure what happened to him but have been unable to find feature film credits.

*Brian Faull - lots of TV. No features.

*John Croyston - lots of TV credits, as a director and a writer. Very active in the 1970s but no features. I sense he was an ABC lifer but I could be wrong.

*Storry Walton - a very nice man, did a lot of important directing in the 1960s but then moved into a more executive role including a crucial part in the establishment of AFTRS. No features. 

*Tom Jeffries, who did some late 1960s directing for ABC TV did a fair few features, including one classic (The Odd Angry Shot) and got a chapter in The Avacado Plantation.

*Eric Taylor - a very experienced producer and director, maybe more a producer. Became an ABC lifer.

*James Davern - did a little directing but really more a writer-producer, and also head of ABC drama. Made a fortune, deservedly, with A Country Practice. His company dabbled a little in features but Davern was more comfortable in TV.

So... what happened?

Maybe they didn't want to make features? I doubt it. In the 1970s making films was very sexy. And directors have more control in features - producers and writers rule television. I think Jim Davern never really wanted to direct - he was a writer. So he was in TV. But the others I'm less sure about. They did some writing but they weren't really writers.

Maybe there weren't opportunities? The British film industry struggled in the 70s and 80s unless it was horror or sex comedies; if a director didn't want to do one of them, they would find it hard. By the late 70s producers seemed to look for advertising people more than TV drama. However there were lots of opportunities in Australia. None, interestingly, seemed to go for America.

Maybe it was snobbery. Ageism. They were considered too old. Could have happened.

Also, maybe the directors got too comfortable. They were established in TV and back then you could work at the ABC for life. Why leave? You could tell stories, work consistently. You didn't have to go out and beg for money and suck up to stars. The work was varied and rich. Being senior helped rather than hindered.

I could totally be wrong about this.

But it is quite remarkable that so many of our leading TV directors either never directed a feature film or only directed one.

Random thoughts - clique-y directors

 Reading through the cast lists of old TV plays you see the same directors using the same actors: Wyn Roberts, Michael Duffield, Patricia Kennedy, Beverly Dunn, Edward Brayshaw, etc.

On one hand I get it. Directors want to use the best actors they can. They want people they can rely on. A good actor is a good actor. Actors shouldn't be discriminated against because they are good.

But what happens if you're not in the cool group? What if you're outside the gang? Or don't have the chance to prove yourself? It can't have been that fun.

A lot of the power for early Australian TV drama seemed to rest in a just a few hands. And I get there is a degree of inevitability about that in what is going to be a small industry.

But did it have to be so cliquey?

Or am I just reading things into it?

I can mount a defence - it was going to be live. Directors needed actors who could deliver. That does breed cliques. This was something that came out of radio.

One thing I've noticed is that there seemed to be no star system. The ABC weren't that big on star roles, building shows around certain actors.... unless they were in the country briefly while touring eg Googie Withers in The First 400 Years, Michael Denison and Dulcie Grey in Village Wooing.

"Well there were no stars," you could argue.

But was that the case? You could have tried Bob Dwyer in a comedy. Jack Davey. Graeme Kennedy.

Director Alan Burke didn't mind some stunt casting. Murray Rose in My Three Angels, for instance.

But it was the exception rather than the rule.

Maybe it was the ABC not wanting to be crassly commercial.

Or maybe it was the directors not wanting to lose control.

I do feel the directors have too much power when it came to picking scripts. They'd pick scripts "they'd like to have a crack at".

For me the biggest shame of ABC drama from this period was that it lacked someone with vision at the top going "let's just tell Australian stories". There was so much for them to pick from - history, short stories, plays, novels. And it would have meant something to the viewer. But that vision was too radical.

Random thoughts - Australian sci fi

 Not common on Australian TV but not entirely absent - I think in part because the BBC occasionally did it, so it had the stamp of approval.

* The first arguably sci fi appears to be the futuristic comedy Tomorrow's Child (1957) 

* Don Houghton wrote The Astronauts (1960) about an Australian in space! I would love to see this.

*The first out and out sci fi, gloomy and everything, was the post apocalyptic The End Begins (1961).

*There was also The Road (1964) from the great Nigel Kneale (who also wrote the adaptation of Wuthering Heights that was filmed in the late 1950s). 

* And of course there was also the TV series The Stranger.

That's not a lot but it is better than nothing.

George Landen Dann Papers at the Fryer Library

 As I understand it, for about four decades when people asked if there were any playwrights in Brisbane, you could answer "well... George Landen Dann." He toiled away for years in the most hostile of cultural environments; I grew up in Brisbane in the eighties and it wasn't fun being artistic then, but in the thirties, forties, fifties...? It would have been hard. So hard. Especially if, like Dann, you were interested in social realism: stories about Aboriginals and injustice.

No Australian supported themselves via playwriting at the time; I think David Williamson and Nick Enright may be the only two to achieve that. In Dann's era the playwrights tended to be actors (eg Bert Bailey), journalists, or radio writers. Dann was neither: his day job was a draughtsman at the Brisbane Council, which he did from 1924 until the mid 1950s, with a break for war service. That's a long time; presumably he could knock off at five and take time off as needed so he could be productive.

I felt a lot of kinship with Dann: like me, he was educated at Brisbane Grammar School, and did a "proper job", writing part time; also like me, he wound up at Coolum. Like me, his writing career was full of plenty of rejection, with enough half-nibbles and encouragement to keep going. Going through his papers at the Fryer Libary was moving - the rejections, the mild successes, telling Harvey Arthur he was going to quit altogether, the shabby amateur theatres, the ABC competitions. The occasional bursts of glory - the ABC wanting to buy Ring Out Wild Bells for instance, winning the odd competition - but no big hit, no classic.

Dann didn't leave Brisbane, at least not until he retired to Coolum. Would it have made a difference? Did he regret never making the leap? After World War Two seems the most obvious time; maybe there were others. He might have made a career in radio, then thriving. Or journalism - I have no idea if his inclination was in that direction. Could he have gone overseas? Should he? 

The horizons were so narrow in Brisbane, so very, very narrow.  Art existed on the fringes. And Dann didn't work in the crowd pleasing field: few comedies or epic or musicals; he did dramas about miscegenation.

There would have been compensations. A nice lifestyle. Friends. Maybe a lover, though I doubt it: Dann never married, or had kids; I assume he was gay, though maybe he was asexual. Neither would have been easy in Brisbane of the time.

What was he like as a writer? I've only read one - Vacancy on Vaughan Street. It was professional, accomplished work. It reads like someone who should have been able to get work in radio if he'd had some networking ability. Maybe he didn't want to.

He's very well remembered for someone without a classic on his resume: his papers at the Fryer Library, an award named after him, a thesis done on his work. And why not? His career was damn heroic. I hope he was happy - as happy as a writer can be anyway.

The Max Afford Papers at the Fryer Library

 The Fryer Library has a excellent collection of papers from Max and Thelma Afford. He was one of the leading radio writers of his day, Thelma one of the leading designers.

Max Afford got me into TV plays. I once thought of doing - may still do - a paper about Lady in Danger, one of the first Australian plays to have a run on Broadway. I was doing some casual research and came across an item in Leslie Rees' book on Australian drama which mentioned the play was filmed for Australian television in the 1950s. I had no idea we made TV then so did some research...

I didn't go through all the papers just the ones relevant to Lady in Danger. There were copies of contracts for the plays with Alexander Kirkland, who rewrote the play for Broadway. 

There were press clippings about Afford. He got a lot of publicity in his Adelaide days - he was a handsome dude, often with a cigarette. One article said he would go through 60 cigarettes a day. Sixty! The photos from the 1940s show a man who aged - his hair went grey. He died when he was 48. His wife outlived him by over forty years.

Afford was very successful in his day - there's a lot more he could have accomplished. (Based on the career trajectories of fellow radio writers Sumner Locke Elliott, Morris West, Rex Rienits, nd Peter Yeldham, I'm guessing this would have involved long stints overseas and best selling novels.) 

Don't smoke!

The papers included a radio adaptation of Lady in Danger which I tried listening to but the quality of the recording was not good. This play is easy to access though - the original I mean - because it is, I believe, in the pubic domain in Australia - http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks12/1203991.txt

I'm surprised they didn't adapt more Max Afford plays for Australian TV - Mischief in the Air, etc. Possibly he was considered too lightweight. 

Oh and a Thelma Afford interview is on line here.

Some Afford documents - letter from Neil Hutchison.

NAA Neil Hutchison

NAA Neil Hutchison


Movie review - "Wide Boy" (1952)

Enjoyable British B movie based on a script by Aussie Rex Rienits which was adapted for Australian TV in 1959 as Bodgie, which is why I'm including it here. 

Sidney Talfer's casting in the lead gives the piece integrity - not a pretty boy, he does seem to be a spiv. Susan Shaw is too good looking to be his girlfriend really but she's a good actor, and very easy on the eye.This is stripped back, quick, atmospheric. It was Ken Hughes' first credit as director and he does well. There's not an ounce of fat on it. It was probably too much of a coincidence that the girl blackmailed went to Shaw's hairdressing salon. It only clocks in at an hour - and thus ideal for TV adaptation.

Book review - "Australian Television History" Ed Liz Jacka (2007)

 Stimulating collection of papers. I read this for two in particular - one a personal recollection of the show Whiplash (someone recalling it as a viewer and wishing they were Aboriginal which is a different take), the other a memoir of working at ATN-7 in the early days of drama. The latter was particularly fascinating, especially its observations on how doing things "live" affects performance. A page was missed from the original Pardon Miss Wescott!

60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & ‘60s

 In 2019 I wrote an article on 60 Australian TV plays for Filmink. I remember starting out doing a top ten, which became 20, then 50 then 60, after which I had to stop. The link is here - https://www.filmink.com.au/60-australian-tv-plays-1950s-60s/

I reproduce it below:

60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & ‘60s
by Stephen Vagg
February 18, 2019
A format that thrived in the US and UK during a similar period, Stephen Vagg uncovers the many Australian filmed plays that appeared on our televisions and are barely remembered today.

The accepted narrative of Australian TV drama history traditionally goes something like this… in the 1950s and ‘60s, we basically just watched stuff from America, with a little from England, then Homicide came along and proved that Australians like to watch local stories. It helped lead to quotas, which ensured the successful industry we have today (for now).

And there is a lot of truth to that – Homicide was the game changer, the first really big local dramatic hit. (we’re talking drama series, not quiz shows or variety series).

But things weren’t a complete graveyard of creativity before then.

It was a graveyard compared to what came later, but there were shows being made. There was Australian drama on the first night the ABC broadcast television in this country (5 November 1956).

It just seems like nothing was made, because:

a) most of the shows weren’t repeated, so people don’t realise they existed;

b) audiences weren’t huge in the early days of television, so they had minimal impact;

c) it’s hard to source copies of the shows even now;

d) there tends to be a lack of historical writing about local TV drama of this period outside of academia (there is a superb academic resource, AustLit, which lists most of them but you need to belong to a library to access it; there is also a great website – https://www.classicaustraliantv.com/index.html – but that focuses on series);

e) the majority of Australian drama were one-off stand-alone plays, which tended to linger less strongly in the cultural memory than a popular series;

f) many of the shows were Australian adaptations of overseas stories set overseas so they didn’t feel particularly Australian, eg Patrick Hamilton’s Rope, various plays of William Shakespeare, J.M. Barrie’s Twelve Pound Look (the show dramatised on said first night of the ABC), the Hollywood film Johnny Belinda (the first live one hour drama done on commercial TV); and

g) most of the actors, writers and directors who worked on those shows didn’t go on to become famous – unlike, say, those that worked in the Golden Years of American television.

But there was a surprisingly large amount of early Australian TV drama.

Some of the regular series are vaguely remembered, like the first Aussie soap, Autumn Affair (1958 – ‘59), the meat-pie Western Whiplash (1961), the legal series Consider Your Verdict (1962) or the mini series Stormy Petrel (1960).

What aren’t remembered at all are the one-off Australian TV plays – by Australian authors on Australian subjects with Australian casts.

This was a format of drama that thrived at the time in America and Britain (usually in the form of anthology shows), though it is not very popular now.

FilmInk were certainly unaware of the existence of these plays until a few years ago, when we stumbled upon a reference to them in Leslie Rees’ history of Australian drama, and were prompted to do further research.

In an attempt to shed some light on this topic, here are 60 notable Australian TV plays of the 1950s and 1960s.

A few things about the list:

It is not exhaustive. We picked sixty because that’s a nice round number; we could have gone higher as we are not sure exactly how many were made.)

It doesn’t include adaptations of foreign stories (unless for a good reason) of which there were many. (Part of the reason Australian writers struggled during this period was television executives continually commissioned Australian productions of overseas scripts.)

It doesn’t include mini series or regular series of the time. The focus is on one-off plays, or episodes of an anthology series.

It doesn’t include variety shows and revues, many of which have their own considerable historical value, such as Trip Tease and High C’s (1958), which features early performances from Barry Humphries.

Our focus is on the years 1956-64, the year of Homicide. We have included some from the late ‘60s, though, because Australian TV drama didn’t really flourish until the 1970s.

Pretty much all the productions were filmed in Sydney or Melbourne. The ABC shot in both, ATN-7 did a lot in Sydney and GTN-9 in Melbourne (this is before the stations were networked). Occasionally other cities and production companies had a go, and that will be discussed, but those were the big three. (The way it usually worked is the show would be performed, and shown, live in one city, and a recording of that performance was shown in other cities.)

We have not included plays written by Australians and starring Australians which were made for British TV, of which there was a surprisingly large amount, including several written by Peter Yeldham, such as Thunder on the Snowy (1960), Reunion Day (1962) and Stella (1964), and adaptations of The Harp in the South (1964) and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll (1964).

We haven’t seen ANY of the productions listed. They are very hard to source. The National Film and Sound Archive have copies of some. Many, if not most, were erased. Information has been culled from the internet and newspapers.

We’ve listed the plays alphabetically and tried to include the year of broadcast, production company, director and writer, duration and where it was filmed.

    Adventure Unlimited (1965) d Robin Lovejoy. Waratah Productions. 25 mins. Shot on the Great Barrier Reef. This was an episode of the Adventure Unlimited anthology series produced by Lee Robinson, a filmmaker best known for 1950s features and the TV series Skippy. Adventure Unlimited consisted of stand-alone adventure tales which were filmed in 1963 (many on location) and were screened two years later on Channel Ten. They had titles like Crocodile and Camel Patrol. This episode was about divers combatting a people smuggling racket on the Barrier Reef. The cast included Richard Meikle (father of Australian TV writer Sam), the legendary Chips Rafferty, and Australian Olympic swimming champ Murray Rose (who was then trying to be an actor… he went on to have a small role in Ice Station Zebra).

2. The Astronauts (1961) w Don Houghton d Christopher Muir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. An original Australian TV play about men training to be astronauts (two Americans, a Britisher and an Australian) at an Australian research facility. Is this the only Australian TV drama about the space race? The cast includes Alan Hopgood, the actor and writer, who was in many of these plays.

3. Ballad for One Gun (1963) w Phillip Grenville Mann d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. A version of the Ned Kelly story, which depicted him as something of a juvenile delinquent. None other than John Bell plays Ned and Mark McManus (later Taggart) plays Dan Kelly.

4. The Big Day (1959) w John Ford d Rod Kinnear. GTV-9. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. A play about the last working day of a clerk, produced for Shell Presents, an anthology series by ATN-7 in Sydney and GTN-9 in Melbourne and sponsored by Shell Oil. It sounds like it was one of those naturalistic slice of life dramas that they liked to do on TV in the late ‘50s off the back of the success of Paddy Chayefsky’s TV writing. Critics loved it.

5. Blue Murder (1959) w George Kerr d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. Decades before the Richard Roxburgh-starring Blue Murder, there was this Australian TV thriller, about an actress murdered by her son. It sounds as if it would be great, campy fun – a theatre critic even gets involved. Nancye Stewart, a leading character actress of the time, plays the dead actress.

6. Bodgie (1959) w Alan Seymour d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. This one had a long gestation: Australian writer Rex Rienits came up with the story, used it as a radio play and novel; it was then adapted into the 1952 British feature film Wide Boy, and into this 1959 TV play, where the screenwriter (Australian Alan Seymour, best known for The One Day of the Year) relocated the action to Australia. One of the few on screen depictions of the “bodgie and widgee” phenomenon of the 1950s. John Ewart played the lead.

7. Boy Round the Corner (1962) w Greg Bunbury d Christopher Muir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. A crime drama about a man who robs a taxi and goes on the run. Sounds like the sort of storyline that would become standard fare for Homicide and the like. Although shot in Melbourne it was set in the Sydney suburb of Erskineville. Norman Kaye was in this.

Burst of Summer

8. Burst of Summer (1961) w Oriel Gray. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. An adaptation of a play by Oriel Gray about an aboriginal girl who is cast in a film. It’s based on the story of Ngarla Kunoth, the female star of Jedda (1955) (who, as an aside, later became a nun, then a wife and mother, then a political activist under the name of Rosalie Kunoth-Monks). The cast included Anne Charleston, aka Madge from Neighbours, and Robert Tudawali, the male star of Jedda, who in real life would die tragically at a young age.

9. The Coastwatchers (1959) w John Sherman d Roger Mirams. Pacific Film Production. 65 mins. Pilot for a proposed series about coastwatchers. The series never eventuated – maybe two men watching coasts isn’t inherently dramatic – but the pilot screened as a stand alone film and New Zealander Mirams (who became a major producer of kids’ TV in this country) later reworked the concept as Spyforce (1971–72).

10. Close to the Roof (1960) w Rex Rienits d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. Another play by the prolific Rex Rienits, who should be better known – his other Australian TV work around this time included Who Killed Kovali? (1960) and Stormy Petrel (1960), as well as a number of B movies in Britain. This one is about two robbers who get caught in an attic, the sort of one-location thriller that adapts well to television. One of the stars was Ron Haddrick, father of noted writer Greg Haddrick. A full copy of the script is available at the National Archives of Australia, an excellent resource for complete on-line copies of old Australian screenplays.

11. The Concord of Sweet Sounds (1963) w Patricia Hooker d Henri Safran. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. A play about a pianist touring Australia. The pianist was played by Stuart Wagstaff who became a noted figure on Australian stage and TV. Unlike the majority of Australian TV play directors from the early ‘60s, Safran went on to direct some impressive feature films, including Storm Boy (1976).

12. Dark Under the Sun (1960) w Chris Gardner d William Sterling. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. Drama about a half aboriginal man who marries a white woman – an indication that Australian television was willing to confront some of the nation’s trickier social issues head on.

13. The Devil Makes Sunday (1962) w Bruce Stewart d William Sterling. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. Stewart was an Australian-New Zealander who originally wrote the script for Britain’s ITV Sunday Night Theatre, after which it was adapted for American TV, before being filmed in Australia. However, the subject matter was very Australian: a convict uprising in 1840s Norfolk Island. Yep, that’s right, there was an American TV show about an Australian convict uprising – it was done as part of The US Steel Hour in 1961 with a cast including Dane Clark and Fritz Weaver. This, along with Light Me a Lucifer, is the old Australian TV play more than any other we wish we could see because it sounds very exciting.

14. Eye of the Night (1960) w Kay Keaveny d Christopher Muir. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Melbourne. Feature-length thriller about a man who is a mummy’s boy and who murders people. Keaveny was one of the top radio writers in Australia in the 1950s, and also did episodes of shows like Skippy and The Adventures of Long John Silver. The cast included familiar “you’ll recognise them if you see them” Melbourne actors like Brian James and Dennis Miller.

15. Fisher’s Ghost (1963) w John Gordon. ABC. Shot in Sydney. This was an opera, so cheating a little putting it on the list, but it was the first opera ever broadcast by the ABC that had an Australian historical setting. (They showed a lot of operas but they were normal local productions of Carmen and the like.) It’s about the legend of Fisher’s ghost – a great true story that could form the basis of a modern day horror film, by the way – and was performed on stage first in 1960.

16. The First Joanna (1961) w Dorothy Blewett d Christopher Muir. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Melbourne. Adaptation of a 1942 play by Dorothy Blewett about a woman who moves to an old house in South Australia and draws inspiration from a diary of the woman who lived in the house in colonial times. Blewett and Muir also collaborated on another TV production based on one of her plays, Quiet Night (1961), a medical drama.

17. Funnel Web (1962) w Phillip Grenville Mann d William Sterling. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. A lot of TV plays around this time sound as though they were inspired by Dial M for Murder, which started as a TV play, i.e. tales of murder among the monied classes. Mann originally wrote this for British TV, then adapted it into a play, then adapted it for Australian TV when he moved here. It stars Grant Taylor, Australian film leading man of the 1940s, who eventually ate his way out of romantic leads into character parts, Jack Thompson-style.

18. The Grey Nurse Said Nothing (1960) w Sumner Locke Elliott d David Cahill. ATN-7. Shot in Sydney. Elliot’s TV play, based on the real life Shark Arm murder, was originally written for Playhouse 90 in America in 1959 with a cast including Angela Lansbury. It was filmed in Australia the following year for Channel Seven’s General Motors Hour, the title for a grab-bag series of specials sponsored by – you guessed it – General Motors. Patrick Brady, who was tried and acquitted in the real life murder case, tried unsuccessfully to get an injunction to stop the broadcast of the Australian production, which was very well reviewed. Surprising that no one has tried to remake this. Elliott is best known for his novels, which included Careful He Might Hear You, but for over a decade was one of the most in-demand writers on American television, and he came up with some cracker stories.

19. Heart Attack (1960) w George Kerr. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. Another Dial M for Murder type tale, about a doctor who decides to kill his blackmailer. The cast included Campbell Copelin, a suave old time actor who we’ve had a fondness for ever since we read about the time he once stole a plane for a joyride, crashed it into a golf course and survived.

20. Jenny (1962) w George Kerr d Henri Safran. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Sydney. A drama about a teenager who considers killing herself when her parents’ marriage breaks up. A rare Australian drama that focused on a teenager. It starred Grant Taylor.

21. Lady in Danger (1959) w Max Afford d Colin Dean. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. Max Afford’s breezy 1942 comedy thriller was one of the few Australian plays to have a run on Broadway (Afford’s original story was set in England but the Broadway producers, ironically, had it rewritten so it was set in Australia). The ABC filmed a TV adaptation in 1959. The play is very enjoyable, and we wish this film was still around.

22. Light Me a Lucifer (1962) w John O’Grady d William Sterling. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. This sounds like brilliant fun: a comedy about the devil (played by Frank Thring) going to Sydney to persuade more Australians to come to hell, based on a script by O’Grady (who wrote They’re a Weird Mob). Contemporary reviews were superb, and considering Thring played the lead there’s every chance this was fantastic. Why is this not more widely available?

23. A Little South of Heaven (1961) w George Kerr d Alan Burke. ABC. 60 mins. Cross cultural romance between an Italian and an Anglo-Australian, based on a radio play by the writing power couple of D’arcy Niland and Ruth Park which had been adapted by the BBC in 1960. It seems to owe a little to the play They Knew What They Wanted which may have invented the migrant-sends-fake-photo-of-someone-hotter-to-prospective-migrant-wife bit used here.

24. Lola Montez (1962) w Alan Burke d Alan Burke. ABC. 90 mins. Shot in Sydney. This was an adaptation of one of the few original Australian stage musicals produced professionally in the 1950s. Burke wrote the book to the musical and thus knew it intimately; he said this TV production fixed up the errors in the original stage production, which make the fact that this show can’t be seen particularly frustrating.

25. Manhaul (1962) w Osmar White d John Sumner, Rod Kinnear. ATN-7. 75 mins. Shot in Sydney.  Tell us this doesn’t sound like it would be awesome? It’s set on an Australian Antarctic base where seven men have been stranded together for 12 months and one is murdered. White was a journalist who had been in Antarctica. Australia’s own version of The Thing… Well, with no creature but still… a murder mystery at a base in Antarctica… How cool is that?

26. Man in a Blue Vase (1961) w Richard Beynon d Rod Kinnear. GTV-9. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. Slice of life drama about a Polish family in Australia. One of the bewilderingly few writing credits from Beynon, best known for the classic play The Shifting Heart (see below).

27. The Mystery of a Hansom Cab (1961) w Barry Pree d Rod Kinnear. GTV-9. 90 mins. Fergus Hume’s 1886 novel had been hugely popular and was filmed three times in the silent era; the ABC would film it as a TV movie in 2012. All those versions treated the material seriously, but this TV version filmed a stage adaptation that sent up the material, playing it for camp.  Screened as part of The General Motors Hour.

28. Ned Kelly (1959) w Douglas Stewart d William Sterling. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Melbourne with some location filming in Glenrowan. For those who can’t get enough Ned Kelly adaptations, this began as a 1942 radio play by Douglas Stewart, which was turned into a stage play (Leo McKern did a production), then a TV play.

29. Night of the Ding-Dong (1961) w Ralph Peterson d William Sterling. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. This sounds like a lot of fun, with a concept like the 1966 film The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming: just after the Crimean War, panic hits Adelaide when a Russian boat is spotted off the coast. It was based on Peterson’s 1954 Australian play which was filmed by British TV before being adapted for Australian TV.

30. No Picnic Tomorrow (1960) w Barbara Vernon d Rod Kinnear. ATN-7. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. A lot of Australian TV plays of this period involved cross cultural romances – this one, for Shell Presents, was about an Australian woman and a Greek man.

31. The One Day of the Year (1962) w John Sumner d Rod Kinnear. GTV-9. Shot in Melbourne. Alan Seymour’s classic 1958 play about Anzac Day has, bewilderingly, never been turned into a feature film, but was adapted for Australian TV, using the cast of one of the theatre productions… making its difficulty to access all the more frustrating.

32. Outpost (1959) w John Cameron d Christopher Muir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. An original Australian TV play about five soldiers isolated on a New Guinea outpost during World War Two; one of the soldiers is murdered. Author John Cameron, a war veteran, worked at the ABC as a facilities supervisor and submitted the script under a pen name. This production sounds terrific; the production was so well received it was bought by CBS and screened in the USA in 1961 (along with another Australian TV play, The Scent of Fear, which was an adaptation of a script by English writer Ted Willis set in Europe). Why are not achievements like this better known?

33. Pardon Miss Westcott (1959) w Peter Benjamin, Alan Burke music Peter Stannard d David Cahill. ATN-7. 75 mins. Shot in Sydney. A full length original Australian musical written expressly for television and recorded live. A convict-era story, it was done by the creative team behind Lola Montez (see above) and from all accounts was a lot of fun. Wouldn’t it be great to be able to do such stuff now? A cast album was released but is hard to source.

34. The Passionate Pianist (1957) w Barbara Vernon. ABC. 30 mins. Shot in Sydney. A comedy based on Vernon’s one act play about a family of book makers. Vernon brought the family back the following year in a play which was also filmed for TV, The Multi Coloured Umbrella (1958). Being Australia, some idiot politician (MLA Lawrence) complained in parliament that Umbrella was immoral and the production was not shown in Melbourne. The reason given was “Technical issues” but it was likely that the ABC were gun-shy about copping criticism.

35. Prelude to a Harvest (1963) w Kay Keavney d Colin Dean. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. Drama about crop failures in colonial Sydney under Governor Phillip. Director Dean worked on a number of TV series set in colonial times in the early ‘60s including Stormy Petrel, The Patriots and The Hungry Ones.

36. A Private Island (1964) w Chris Gardner d Henri Safran. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney.  Seachange style drama about a Sydney real estate agent who drops out to live on a Queensland island. There were a few Australian TV plays with this sort of theme around this time – Otherwise Engaged (1965) was another.

37. The Quiet Season (1965) w John Cameron d John Croyston. ABC. 30 mins. Shot in Brisbane. Most TV was made in Melbourne and Sydney, but this romance set in a boarding house, was shot in Queensland’s capital. Contemporary reviews from the southern media were harsh. It’s entirely possible the production was terrible but from reading a bunch of reviews from Sydney and Melbourne about TV plays for this article, there was a definite bias from critics against programs not made in that critic’s home city.

38. The Recruiting Officer (1965) d Ken Hannam. ABC. 100 mins. Shot in Sydney. We’re cheating including this one because it’s an adaptation of George Farquhar’s 18th century comedy… but that comedy was the first stage play ever performed in Australia (in Sydney in 1789), so it has historical importance. John Meillion and Reg Livermore starred. The production was filmed in 1964 but screening was delayed until after a Senate election because of the title – conscription had been an issue in the 1964 election.

39. Reflections in Dark Glasses (1960) w James Workman d David Cahill. ATN-7. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. A thriller about a woman whose child goes missing and who may (or may not) be crazy. It starred Muriel Steinbeck, who specialised in housewife heroines around this time on shows like Autumn Affair, and co-starred the eventually-legendary Ruth Cracknell as a psychiatrist.

40. The Right Thing (1963) w Raymond Bowers d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 80 mins. Shot in Sydney.  A family drama with cross-cultural themes (in this case via a visiting Spaniard). The production was also broadcast in England. Rod Serling (of Twilight Zone fame) saw it and criticised the script but praised the acting, which is par for the course for most critics of Australian television.

41. Rusty Bugles (1965) w John Warwick d Alan Burke. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Sydney. Ever since the 1930s, Australian radio writer Sumner Locke Elliott wanted desperately to be a successful playwright. For a decade he had minimal success with his imitations of plotty, quippy Broadway hits, so he wrote Rusty Bugles, a plotless slice of life piece about bored servicemen in the Northern Territory during the war based on his own experience. This premiered in 1948 and proved to be a massive hit, if controversial due to its “bad language”. It was filmed for Australian TV in 1965; by that stage Elliott was based in the US so the adaptation was done by John Warwick, an actor and writer whose achievements included helping discover Errol Flynn in the 1930s. The play has been in print for years; the lack of plot is distracting but it captures a time and a place brilliantly and we would have loved to have seen this production.

42. A Season in Hell (1964) w Patricia Hooker d Henri Safran. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. This wasn’t an Australian story, but included here anyway because it was an original Australian script and the content was so remarkable for its time: it tells the story of the relationship between the poet Rimbaud and Verlaine in nineteenth century France. Yep, gay love on 1964 TV screens in Australia (without having seen it, this element may have been severely downplayed).

43. The Sergeant from Burralee (1961) w Philip Grenville Mann d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 90 mins. Colonial era drama about the fall of a white settler which is blamed on an aboriginal. Hot topic drama which was critically acclaimed at the time.

44. Shadow of a Pale Horse (1961) w Bruce Stewart d David Cahill. ATN-7. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. Another script by Stewart which, like The Devil Makes Sunday (see above), had been filmed by British and American TV before being done in Australia, although it was an Australian story: in the 19th Century, a murder trial takes place in the town of Cobar. It sounds awesome and won the Best Drama at the 1961 Logies.

45. She (1967) choreographed by Juan Corelli d Chris Muir. ABC. 30 mins. The ABC filmed a lot of ballet back in the day. Strictly speaking She falls outside the parameters set for this list but we couldn’t resist… This was an original ballet done for television, set in an Antarctic base! Starred Elke Neidhardt who was married to Muir at the time. Other ballets filmed by the ABC include G’day Digger (1958), a ballet about two Australian soldiers on leave in the city.

46. She’ll Be Right (1962) w George Kerr d Chris Muir. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Melbourne. Based on an Australian radio play about travellers in France who hear the story of an Australian soldier killed in World War Two fighting for the French Resistance.

47. The Shifting Heart (1968) ABC. 65 mins. Richard Beynon’s 1957 play about families in Collingwood was one of the most successful local stage plays in the 1950s, touring the country to great acclaim and being produced in London. Typically, for cultural cringe Australia, it was filmed by British TV first before the Australians did a version in 1968, as an episode of the ABC anthology Wednesday Theatre. The cast included Anne Charleston and Tom Oliver, both later of Neighbours. Beynon, like most Australian writers of the 1940s and 1950s, had to move to London to make a living.

48. The Silver Backed Brushes (1965) w Joyce Spelling d Ken Hannam. Waratah Productions. 25 mins. Shot in New Guinea. An episode of Adventure Unlimited about a soldier killed minutes after he marries a nurse in New Guinea during World War Two. Tom Oliver has the lead. Hannam went on to become a noted feature director, his credits including Sunday Too Far Away (1965).

49. The Slaughter of St Teresa’s Day (1960) w Peter Kenna d Alan Burke. ABC. 90 mins. Shot in Sydney. Kenna’s play, based on the life of Tilly Devine, isn’t as well known as his later classic, A Hard God, but was still very popular. He wrote the leading role for Neva Carr Glynn, a top actor of the time (perhaps best remembered now as Nick Tate’s mother), who had great success with it on stage, and who reprised her performance in this 1960 TV adaptation – which makes it even more of a shame that this production is not easily available. The play was later filmed in England for the BBC starring Susannah York.

Neva Carr Glynn

50. The Small Victory (1958) w Iain MacCormick. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Melbourne. A Korean War drama which doesn’t have much to do with Australia, but we put it on the list because the author, MacCormick, was Australian; he served in the army in World War Two, was a POW, elected to stay on in London, where he became one of the top writers in British television. Several of his plays were performed on Australian TV, such as this and One Morning Near Troodos (set during the Cyprus Emergency) but to our knowledge he did not write on Australian themes – a typical example of the talent drain of the time.

51. The Square Ring (1960) w Ralph Peterson d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 90 mins. Shot in Sydney. Peterson originally wrote this boxing story as an Australian radio play, then adapted that into a British stage play, which became a 1953 British movie with Jack Warner… before being filmed for Australian television. The cast included Guy Doleman, a New Zealand actor who worked for many years in Australia and England, appearing in films like The Ipcress File (1965). Peterson went on to be the main writer on the successful sitcom My Name’s McGooley What’s Yours? (1966-68).

Raymond Menmuir

52. The Sub-Editors Room (1956) w Leslie Rees. ABC. 30 mins. The first Australian written drama to be performed on Australian TV, based on a 1937 one act play by Rees, who was better known as an author of children’s fiction. The word “slut” is heard in dialogue – saucy!

53. The Swagman (1965) w Ian Stuart Black d Henri Safran. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. Cheating a little with this one because the writer was British, who never visited Australia, but the story is very Australian: a bored housewife in the outback is about to sleep with a neighbour when a swagman comes along. This was considered titillating material at the time and the production prompted letters of complaint to the ABC.

54. Swamp Creatures (1960) w Alan Seymour d Raymond Menmuir. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Sydney. Seymour is best known for writing The One Day of the Year, but his first play, Swamp Creatures, was also acclaimed. This was the TV adaptation.

55. The Sweet Sad Story of Elmo and Me (1965) w Ric Throssell d Henri Safran. ABC. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. Slice of life suburban drama about a man who struggles to keep up with the Joneses. Author Throssell was a diplomat, the son of a VC winner and grandson of a West Australian premier, who was later accused of spying for the Russians.

56. The Tape Recorder (1966) w Pat Flower d Henri Safran. ABC. 30 mins. Shot in Sydney A clever thriller from Flower, originally done for the Australian Playhouse anthology series. It’s a one hander, about a woman taking taped dictation from her unseen boss, and proved so popular that it was adapted for TV productions in Britain, Canada, Belgium, the US and Italy, as well as the stage. Flower had an affinity for these sort of tales – her other scripts included titles like The Prowler, Fiends of the Family and Done Away with It.

57. They Were Big, They Were Blue, They Were Beautiful (1959) w Ross Napier d David Cahill. ATN-7. 60 mins. Shot in Sydney. An original Australian story by Napier about two people who get involved in a baby kidnapping. This was an episode of the semi-regular anthology series Shell Presents. The script was chosen via a competition. June Salter, familiar to fans of The Restless Years, was in it and she described the production as terrible.

58. The Torrents (1969) w Oriel Gray. ABC. Shot in Melbourne. Oriel Gray’s 1955 play became famous in Australian theatre for coming equal first in a competition alongside Summer of the Seventeenth Doll but never receiving anything like the same amount of attention afterwards. It was adapted for radio, and then for TV, in 1969 as part of Australian Plays, a short lived anthology series.

59. The Tower (1965) w Noel Robinson d Chris Muir. ABC. 75 mins. Shot in Sydney. Version of the Hal Porter gothic play about a family in colonial Tasmania. Surprising more films aren’t made in the Tasmanian gothic genre, the state is so beautiful and creepy.

60. The Valley of Water (1962) w Jean Allen d Rex Heading. 60 mins. NWS-9. Shot in Adelaide. The main producer of drama during the early days of TV was the ABC with ATN-7 in Sydney second and GTV-9 in Melbourne third. Occasionally, stations did make drama somewhere else – this was an Adelaide production about a flood (ambitious to do in a studio. Future DOP Dean Semler was the floor manager).

Some random observations:

The most popular subjects for writers seemed to be: cross cultural romance, murder in an isolated setting (often in colonial times), murder in a sophisticated setting, and slice of life drama about a “little man”. But really there was great variety in the stories.

Every significant Australian play around this time was adapted for television, notably The One Day of the Year, Rusty Bugles, The Shifting Heart, The Torrents, and Lola Montez – which is a hell of a lot more than Australia’s TV industry does now.

We’re sure some of these plays were terrible. They would all seem primitive. We bet the sets wobbled. But all would be worth seeing and some would be outstanding. It’s an outrage none of them are easily available. The least we can do is leave some record of them.

Interview with Barry Creyton

 Annette Andre put me in contact with Barry Creyton for an interview. I reproduce that interview here: https://www.filmink.com.au/barry-creyton-live/

Barry Creyton Live!
by Stephen Vagg
October 11, 2020
Barry Creyton is a legend in Australian showbusiness. He leapt to national fame in The Mavis Bramston Show but that was just one chapter in a many-faceted career that has included acting, directing and writing all around the world.

Stephen Vagg thought he would ask Mr Creyton about one of the more obscure chapters… his appearances in Australian TV plays of the 1960s.

What do you remember about live Australian TV drama from the time?

It was a very important period. Australian television was just starting in the late 1950s. They did ambitious plays – the sort that they didn’t get around to doing again for at least another decade.

How did you get involved?

I was from Brisbane originally. I established myself in theatre there, such as it was in those days, and in radio plays for the ABC.

In the 1950s, Brisbane was a very large industrial town with a dirty river. The “arts”, particularly the performing arts, were low on the list of essentials. Yet there were three ambitious theatre groups, which did accomplished productions with good actors: Brisbane Repertory Theatre, Twelfth Night Theatre and Brisbane Arts Theatre. These had devoted audiences, yet the press reviews came in somewhere below the sports news. My mentor and champion in those days was the redoubtable Babette Stephens.

Creyton’s first TV drama appearance was in a 1960 production of Macbeth

Needing to spread the wings, I relocated to Melbourne in 1960, when I was twenty. I was there only a year, but did many radio plays, a revue and my first TV production – I literally carried a spear in Macbeth. This, after I’d had so much success in my hometown (laughs).

Brian James, the actor, was a friend and he helped me find a rooming house. The landlady was one of those great funny women who told me her entire life story when I unpacked my bag. At the end, she said, “Oh, by the way, you need to be at ABC studios right now, they want you in Macbeth.” I took a cab to the ABC studio – and held a spear, and I was on television. It was my very first day in Melbourne. Kind of an overwhelming day (laughs).

Then, I was in a production of a Clifford Odets play with Googie Withers, which toured Australia and finished in Sydney. I decided to stay there, and the very first thing I was cast in was The Merchant of Venice.

The Merchant of Venice was adapted for TV on the ABC in 1961. Barry Creyton played Lorenzo.

That was memorable for me, it was a large, lavish production. Being live, you were constantly running from one part of the stage to another, from scene to scene. I remember during my vital speech to Jessica, “how sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank”, a makeup girl dropped a jar nearby. That was very disconcerting, but being live, we just continued as if a makeup jar dropping onto concrete was a common sound in old Venice.

The Sydney production went out live, but the play was recorded by kine for showing in the rest of Australia – this was a method of filming simultaneously via the TV camera lens – there was no video tape in 1960. The kine lost half an hour of sound, so Annette Andre (who played Jessica) and I had to go back to the studio to loop one of our scenes. I remember in the scene I was in a gondola (on wheels) punting my way up the Venetian canals; and there was a balcony scene. My first experience of looping, that was very exciting.

Even when video tape started it was very primitive. In 1964 doing the Bramston Show, if we flubbed a line, we couldn’t go back and simply do the line again, we had to do the entire segment again. You couldn’t edit videotape easily then. It was very primitive until the late 1960s.

The director of Merchant of Venice was Alan Burke. He became a good friend – I respected him tremendously. He wrote the book for Lola Montez, the stage musical, which was a staggering breakthrough in Australian theatre. He became a great buddy and even though I never worked for him again, he was always a champion of my work as an actor. He was a very gentle, erudite man. Very sympathetic – he knew exactly what he wanted from actors and how to get it without ranting and raving; he would coax it out of you. We wanted to make the Shakespeare accessible to even a non-Shakespearean ear. We tried to make it sound like actual conversational English and were criticised by old Shakespearean actors for doing so. My leading lady at the Sydney Music Hall [where Creyton performed in the early 1960s] was Fernande Glyn and she told me, furiously, she couldn’t understand why we ignored the poetry.

The production employed three cameras. We got to know where our close ups would be, where our long shots would be – it was handled with great efficiency.

Live TV had its drawbacks for an actor like me, who was brought up in theatre. It was like rehearsing a play exhaustively for just one performance. We rehearsed for a month and then it was over. In the theatre, if you were lucky, you got to perform a play eight times a week for many months and you could always improve and hone a character. Live TV drama was anti-climactic that way.

Any memories of your fellow cast members?

I met Annette Andre doing Merchant and we became very good friends – and still are. She and I played the lovers Jessica and Lorenzo. She was a terrific actress, great sensitivity and assuredness, and very glamorous! She’d had much more TV experience than I and was wonderful to work with.

The actors I got to work with in this production were big radio stars when I was a kid, my idols – and now I was playing alongside them.

Owen Weingott (who played Shylock) was a very grand actor, a very good actor. Great stature, great presence.

Tanya Halesworth (Portia) was an ABC newsreader at the time. She played Portia very well. Sweet, very nice. We got on tremendously well.

Leonard Teale (the Prince of Morocco) was in it – I used to listen to him playing Superman on the radio when I was ten! A very nice guy.

Carolyn Keely played a servant to Jessica. When I wrote Lady Audley’s Secret for the Musical Hall in 1962, I wanted her to play the young ingenue because she was very funny.

Veronica Lang played a servant. She played my wife in the London production of Don’s Party.

John Faasen was also in it. He went on to direct at the Music Hall.

Why didn’t you do more TV drama after Merchant of Venice?

I think, because they wanted to cast me as young juveniles, and the roles really didn’t excite me. I auditioned for another TV play right after Merchant of Venice, it was an Australian play, I can’t remember the name, but the character, while my age, was far from the usual milk-sop juve. I remember the director said to me, “We don’t need any long-haired romantics in this one.” That’s how I was thought of. I put the lie to that the same year at Sydney’s Music Hall Theatre.

During the year I spent in Melbourne in 1960, I saw George Miller’s production of East Lynne.

I was so impressed by it, and by the comedy that could be extracted from a creaky old melodrama if played earnestly, for real. When I heard Miller was going to open a lavish theatre restaurant in Sydney with East Lynne, I practically badgered my way into the role even though I was twenty years too young (laughs). A little gray in the sideburns, a villainous moustache. It proved to be the right decision – it established me in Sydney theatre and led to the Bramston Show. So that sort of took over my life. Then I became known as a “personality”.

The Music Hall plays led to Creyton being cast in The Mavis Bramston Show which made him nationally famous. He returned to TV plays with two productions in 1966, both part of the Australian Playhouse anthology series: Keep it Clean and All Fall Down.

Keep It Clean.

I remember that one co-starred a friend of mine, Desmond Rolfe. A dear, funny man whom I’d worked with on stage. I enjoyed that. I got to play a scheming bank executive intent on robbing the bank vault and inadvertently being locked in it at the end. That was fun to do. By that time, we had tape. We still had to do it in one fell swoop, though.

All Fall Down.

I didn’t enjoy that as much – due to ego more than the script, though (laughs). My co-stars where these singing twins, two girls who were popular at the time (Katherine and Karen Kessey). At that time in the ‘60s, I was well enough known to have top billing and they didn’t give it to me, they gave it to the twins, and I was pretty pissed.

What was the cultural impact of Australian TV plays?

I think they were popular. They weren’t blockbusters – not compared to something like an American TV series of the time like, say, The Untouchables. I remember very well when I was touring with Googie Withers she used to complain that Thursday night audiences were sparse because it was Untouchables night. But these early entries were indicative of the future of Australian TV drama which became strong, and evolved into major series, and movies. I think they had a pretty good impact. I think people were curious and generally impressed with the productions, albeit experimental and constricted as they were by being done live.

I was particularly impressed by a couple of ambitious productions of opera the ABC did in those early days – again live! The singers were recorded and actors lip-synced. Ric Hutton played Pinkerton in Madame Butterfly in a pretty lavish production. No idea who sang the role, but Ric was handsome and convincing.

Why didn’t you do more drama?

I loved doing it so much – I thought I found my niche. But the “personality” had taken over my life. After the Bramston Show, I did my own show The Barry Creyton Show. Then I wanted to become a working actor again, so I went to London for twelve years and virtually started my career over. I did quite a few shots in TV dramatic series for BBC, ITV and London Weekend, and musicals, revues and straight plays on stage.

This doesn’t have anything to do with TV plays, but I want to ask you about Michael Plant. He’s not very well remembered but he had an incredible career… wrote for English and American TV, had a play on Broadway and an early producer on Mavis before dying at the age of 33.

Michael Plant was a terrific guy. I was very close to him and was devastated when he died. He had a lot of success overseas and they brought him back to do the Bramston Show. He had a wicked sense of humour and understood precisely the nature of topical and political satire. ATN kept a bunch of lawyers vetting everything we did for libel and slander, but Michael always managed to stay one step ahead of the threatened lawsuits, always with stinging wit. He was a great talent. It was an immense loss when he died so young. We’d relieve the driven week of Bramston rehearsals by having drinks at the Southern Cross hotel on Saturday afternoons with friends in the business. Michael would join us, along with Patti Mostyn who was Johnny O’Keefe’s assistant, my secretary, a couple of other friends from Seven and a few of the multitude of writers. We got to let off steam those afternoons, with much laughter. It was necessary – the Bramston schedule was relentless. We’d rehearse all day Monday and record the show before a live audience Mondays, then started in rehearsing for the following week the very next day. We did more than forty shows in our first year and Michael was on top of all of this.

For more, head to Barry’s website

Interview with Annette Andre

I was lucky enough to do an interview with Annette Andre which was published in Filmink. I reproduce it here - but the link with pictures is at https://www.filmink.com.au/annette-andre/

Annette Andre: My Brilliant Early Australian Career 

by Stephen Vagg August 29, 2020


Years before Kylie Minogue, Isla Fisher and Cate Blanchett came along, another Australian female actor conquered London.

Annette Andre, born and raised in Sydney, lit up British screens in the 1960s and 1970s on shows such as Randall and Hopkins (Deceased), The Saint and Crossroads, as well as films like A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and He Who Rides a Tiger – matters she’s discussed in her excellent memoir Where Have I Been All My Life?

Ms Andre is less well known for her considerable contribution to the early years of Australian TV drama – the really, really early period no one talks about much, the 1950s and 1960s.

Stephen Vagg, who is currently obsessed with this era, decided to rectify this and got in touch to ask Ms Andre some questions about her early Australian career.

How did you get into acting?

I started in ballet as a child when I was four years old. My mother put me in ballet classes, little knowing that I would be totally obsessed. Through childhood I wanted to be a ballet dancer. At age 15, I was chosen for the Australian Ballet Company and then they discovered I was underage – I was only 15 and it wasn’t legal for me to be professional. I was chucked out. I could have waited another year, but I just thought “no, anything can happen between now and then, I’m not going to just wait around”, so I gave up ballet.

I knew I would go on the stage. I left school and did some theatre work as a dancer, not ballet, just as a dancer. Then I thought ‘Okay, let’s get further into it and start acting’. Radio was a big thing in Australia then. I started in radio just a little bit before television. I was 17 when I got my first radio job. Then with all the radio work I was [also] doing some theatre. Then television opened up. They were just doing strange things then, little programs for five hours a day, that sort of thing until drama finally started.

The first thing I did on television was this religious program [The House on the Corner (1957) a drama produced by the Christian Television Association which aired on ATN-7] – a quarter hour show. I think it was 4 eps in total, and I was in the four.

I played a young Hungarian girl, and I didn’t know any Hungarians. I went around the shops and eventually found one girl serving behind a counter who was Hungarian. I got into conversation with her and explained that I had to acquire a Hungarian accent. She was very helpful and spent some time talking with me. The director was quite happy with the accent – but I really don’t think he knew what a Hungarian accent sounded like either.

She then appeared in If It’s a Rose (1957), a TV play produced at the ABC by Ray Menmuir based on a play by Italian Dario Niccodemi. (Australian producers were reluctant to present Australian material at the time.)

I did the second play to be done on ABC TV – If It’s a Rose [1957, produced by Ray Menmuir based on a play by Italian Dario Niccodemi. Producers were reluctant to present Australian material at the time.] It was a two hander, just Don Pascoe and myself. It was all done live. The sets weren’t too steady, I remember they shook a bit when you opened a door (laughs).

It was a period play set in Italy with the appropriate costumes of the time, long skirts and frilled bodices etc. I had two quick changes, which were done at the side of the set with a woman dresser. With the second change I ran off the set where the dresser was waiting and she got me out of my costume and into the new one in record time but the zip at the back got stuck and, poor woman, could not fix it. We started the new scene and I had to turn my back on Don, and when he saw the dress open, got such a shock and called me “Annette” instead of “Maria.” (laughs) How I restrained from laughing out loud I don’t know. It was all a bit hit and miss in those days.

Ray Menmuir was a lovely man, small with a little round face, a good director, knew what he was doing. He was one of the ABC directors at the time.

Don Pascoe was one of the leading actors of the time. We’d worked together on radio. He was a lovely man, quite a good actor – but a bit stiff.

What was it like performing live?

I got used to it. We all did ‘live’ TV then. When you’re on television you have to hit marks, which are specified, rehearsed positions, because the cameras were large and heavy and couldn’t move about quickly to follow you. And back then, we hadn’t had any experience, not many people to learn from, so you had to be a quick self-learner in those days.

Also, if you do forget a line you can see it in your face as the camera picks up everything. Your face freezes a bit, or you look like a deer caught in the headlights. If you start moving around, you move away from where the camera is used to seeing you. Of course, being ‘live’ does set the adrenalin going but because you had to be so precise for the cameras it was a bit nerve-wracking.

Things did go wrong. On stage, if something goes wrong you can actually ‘fake’ it a bit, by moving around, or picking something up, little bits of ‘business’, or hoping one of the actors will help you out. But you can’t do that on television. Eventually, ‘taping’ or ‘recording’ the shows replaced a lot of the ‘live’ stuff. Most of the dramas I did after that were taped.

Wuthering Heights (1959), an adaptation of the famous novel by Emily Bronte, produced at the ABC by Alan Burke.

I was Isabelle, Lew Luton was Heathcliffe, Delia Williams was Cathy – I liked her and we worked together several times. Lew was strange but we got on well. I remember my hair was very blonde. I’d had to colour it for a TV drama I’d just done in Melbourne.

We rehearsed up in Kings Cross – there were ABC rehearsal rooms up there I believe. Lew and I went off for lunch one day just at the time when the police were looking for a man who was attacking and killing women. Lew looked somewhat like him and also, he apparently had a blonde girlfriend. People would look at us when we were walking together and somehow, we came to the attention of the police, because Lew had to be interviewed. It was rather scary, but it all turned out OK. It did make us a bit nervous though for a while.

I knew Alan Burke very well and liked working with him. I was thrilled to be playing that role, although I would’ve loved to have played Cathy. But Wuthering Heights had been a favourite of mine for years. We worked very hard on it and I enjoyed playing in period costume.

Annette then went into The Slaughter of St Teresa’s Day (1960), under the direction of Alan Burke. This was one of the few times she appeared in a play by an Australian writer – in this case Peter Kenna, based on his play.

I remember that quite well – it was with Neva Carr Glynn. I became friendly with her son Nick Tate [an actor, later famous for Space 1999 among other shows] but that was in England. I had worked with Neva on radio and television. She was a wonderful actress – I was always terrified of her, she was a really tough lady, but very professional and experienced. I have to say I learned a lot from her. I was actually quite shy. And in order to cover my shyness I became a bit stand offish, a bit cold. Not overly-friendly I suppose. But I was scared stiff. Neva never really talked to me a lot until we did Slaughter of St Teresa’s Day and she said “my God I was terrified of you.” I said “What? I’m terrified of you.” We both laughed and became quite friendly after that.

That was a good play. It gave me an opportunity to play a significant role in a modern drama with a good cast and a very good script, and addressing a real life situation. I guess it was the beginning of the “kitchen sink” dramas.

Another member of the cast was Walter Sullivan. I believe I worked with him when I was 8 years old and I was cast in a professional theatre production of Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Theatre Royal in Sydney and I played the fairy, Cobweb. I think Walter Sullivan was in that production and I “fell in love“ with him. Love at 8 !!! However, in later years in Slaughter of St. Theresa’s Day, he tries to seduce me!!

In Sydney, there was a group of actors that I was lucky enough to be part of – we were offered some of the better roles.  Gordon Glenwright, John Tate, John Meillon and Charles Tingwell, Madge Ryan, Dorothy Allison, Lewis Fiander, Kevin Brennan and Barry Creyton. We all ended up in England at some point. It’s strange remembering all these actors, and all were really well-known in Australia at the time.

She guest starred in several episodes of Whiplash (1960-61) – a “meat pie Western” starring American actor Peter Graves as the owner of a coach line.

Whiplash was the first filmed TV series in Australia. I had done a bit of filming, just as an extra, but none of us had done much filming except for a few actors who’d gone to England. In Whiplash, we were all at sixes and sevens – never done something like that before. The directors were English and American, they were experienced. But most of the crew and cast had never filmed a series.

As an example, in one of the episodes, I was working with an actor called Joe McCormick. It was a scene where we were being threatened by the ‘bad guy’ with a shotgun. The bad guy pulls the trigger and Joe falls to the ground, shot. Thing is, he was really shot. Luckily, it was blanks that were fired but because it was so close they caused quite a bad injury, which sent Joe to hospital for about two weeks. Obviously, whoever was in charge of “props” didn’t check it out correctly. That was inexperience!

I can’t swim. But in one of my episodes, I was on a canoe with Peter Graves and I have to fall overboard. Well, I told the director I couldn’t swim, which was true, I couldn’t, but he reassured me that I’d have a double to do the stunt. When we went to shoot it and I asked where the double was, they said “we haven’t got one.” I said, “I can’t swim I really mean it.” But I was told it was shallow and I’d be able to stand up. So, when the moment came, I took a deep breath and threw myself into the water. I went down and down and down and then I did come up but went down again!! When I came up the second time Peter was ashen, he grabbed me by the dress and yanked me up into the boat – it wasn’t very elegant – but they kept that shot in.

We took a lot of chances in those days, it would never get past the insurance now, but back then, I doubt there was any insurance for the actors. We were all learning, it was early days. We had to find our own way through it – there was no one to teach us.

I think it was an excellent time for people like me, because I was young, and we had to cope with a lot of things that were beyond our experience. But it was a truly good grounding for actors, I’ve always been grateful for that.

Peter Graves was such a lovely man. And very helpful to us, because he was a very experienced American actor. He was one of the few at the time that we could learn from. Sometimes there were problems on set with the odd argument or disagreement or upset or just nerves, but Peter always calmed things down. He was a bit like Roger Moore in that way.

The other thing I remember about Whiplash was the actor Robert Tudawali – he was in one episode with another Aboriginal man called “Nose Pecker.” Robert was a gorgeous looking man. Nose Pecker was the sweetest person and I enjoyed talking to him, in Pigeon English. When I grew up in Australia, I never saw a black person, everyone was white.

There was another episode where I acted with Reg Lye. I later did an episode of The Saint with him, which was set in Australia. In my Whiplash episode, we were caged with two emus. I love animals but emus are a bit scary. They have sharp beaks and they peck you. Poor Reg was bald, and they loved to peck at his head, it was not amusing to him. The emus were eventually taken out of the cage. There were a lot of odd things that went on in Whiplash.

Another one of my co-stars was Guy Doleman – I worked with him a few times, in radio quite a lot and in a theatre production of The Reluctant Debutante – I was understudy for Rona Newton John, elder sister of Olivia. In those days, you worked at everything you could. I’d do that at night and radio in the day, and even piked up the occasional TV commercial. I remember being paid £6 for a commercial, which I thought was a gift from heaven.

John Meredyth Lucas, one of the directors on Whiplash, was a bit difficult. He wasn’t easy to get on with.

Another actor I worked with on the show was Grant Taylor. I worked with him a lot of times, in television, and certainly a lot of radio.

I think he had a role in Kid Grayson Rides the Range – that was a radio series I was in. One day, we came in and the tape wasn’t working – so we had to record it on a record (vinyl) and you can’t make a mistake. If so, you had to go right back to the beginning and start all over. Well, we were all crowded around the microphone and halfway through, one of us made a terrible mistake, I don’t remember exactly what happened, but we all started laughing, hysterically, we couldn’t stop, so we had to go right back to the beginning again. And we didn’t even get overtime!!!!!

Annette had a small role in Stormy Petrel (1960), directed by Colin Dean – the first Australian historical miniseries ever made, about the Rum Rebellion.

I played one of the daughters of Captain Bligh (played by Brian James). I remember we had the 18th century dresses with bonnets and high waistlines. I remember being on board the ship with Brian James. I don’t remember much else about that production.

She was in an adaptation of William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice (1961), directed by Alan Burke.

I played Jessica, Barry Creyton played Lorenzo. He became famous on Australian TV with The Mavis Brampston Show I think in the ‘60s. He now lives in Los Angeles. One of my friends, Tanya Haylesworth played Portia – she was a TV presenter but also did some acting. And here I was, a nice Catholic girl – God! I’m a long way from that now – playing Jessica, daughter of Shylock. I would’ve loved to play Portia, but Tanya gave a wonderful performance

Martine (1961) directed by Chris Muir, based on a play by Jean-Jacques Bernard

That was directed by Chris Muir. I loved him as a director, he was very intelligent and more experienced. He wasn’t easy, but he could get a performance out of an actor. I really enjoyed working in Martine. We did that down in Melbourne. I played a mute girl, a very different role for me but an interesting one. I think I got some reasonable reviews.

Boy Round the Corner (1962), directed by Chris Muir was an original TV play by Australian Greg Bunbury.

I think it was the last thing I did before going to England. I have no recall of it except I know I liked working with Chris.

Annette Andre also appeared in a number of TV variety shows at the time, such as In Melbourne Tonight.

I did a lot of those. I won a contest, and became a co-host on a TV early evening show. And then from that, I think I started working with comedians on the Tonight Show in Sydney. The early days of Australian TV seemed to attract quite a few of the English and American variety stars. That’s where I first met Benny Hill. He loved working in Australia and was very popular. In Melbourne, I worked on the Graham Kennedy Show. From those two TV variety shows, I had the pleasure of working with people like Bob Crosby,  Paul Desmond, Bobby Limb, Dorothy Squires, Digby Wolfe and a teenage guest called Liza Minelli, who at that time was a dancer, and she was sweet, we talked for quite a while.

Andre moved to England in 1962 and was soon very busy appearing in plays, films and television. Some of her roles had an Australian link, such as the episode of The Saint that was set in Australia, “The Loving Brothers”.

Leslie Norman, the director, kept stopping me in the middle of a scene and shouting “for god’s sake, speak Australian will you?” (laughs). He was good fun, though. I liked Leslie very much.

She also appeared in Up Jumped a Swagman (1965), which tried to make a film star out of Australian singer Frank Ifield.

A very strange film. Good cast. Frank was nice, I was just never a fan of his singing. But he was pleasant. I was young enough to have fun with it. At the time, it was good work and I was thrilled to be doing it.

These earlier television performances were just one chapter of a many-storied life. To find out more, see Ms Andre’s website at https://annetteandreofficial.wordpress.com/2018/06/18/welcome/ or buy a copy of her memoir, Where Have I Been All My LIfe at http://www.quoitmedia.co.uk/annetteandre.htm

 

Janus of the Age aka Gordon Bett