SP#4 - They Were Big, They Were Blue, They Were Beautiful (27 June 1959)

 The first episode of Shell Presents based on an original Australian script.

Premise

Set in Sydney. Two men (Stewart Ginn and Kevin Brennan), after being released from prison, unintentionally become involved in a baby kidnapping plot.  

Cast

  • Stewart Ginn
  • Kevin Brennan
  • June Salter as Ginn's girlfriend
  • Fifi Banvard as the landlady of the house
  • Diana Davidson
  • Gordon Glenwright

Production

The production was broadcast live in Sydney and later shown in Melbourne via a video-tape recording. 

The original script, by Ross Napier, won third prize of £400 in the £3,000 Shell Australian TV drama competition.[

First prize when to a play about Victoria's "Black Friday" on 13 January 1939, "The Day Called Black," by Robin Cornfield. Second prize went to "The Bed by the Window" about a hospital murder by Paul Chidlow. 

The first prize for adaptations went to Charles Phillips for an adaptation of the Henry Lawson story "Send Around the Hat." Second prize went to Catherine Hamilton for an adaptation of the Emlyn Williams play, "The Druid's Rest". James Downing won third prize for adapting the Victorian Sardou story, "The Black Pearl." The judges, Harry Dearth, Royston Morley, and John McCallum, said the standard of entries was disappointingly low. 

None of the above plays were filmed.

Napier rewrote the play after submitting it for the prize. He called it "a light drama with a humorous element." Brett Porter producer of Shell Presents said "So far we have concentrated on topline American plays. These have proved very successful... But we need a proportion of good Australian plays if we are really going to produce first-rate TV drama for Australian audiences. We are making every effort to assist local writers and to introduce them to the particular problem of writing plays for TV."

It was the first TV appearance for Stewart Ginn and Fifi Banvard. Kevin Brennan had impressed in Johnny Belinda.

Australian's Governor General, Sir William Slim visited the set and watched dress rehearsals.

The budget of the show was £3,070

 Reception

The TV critic for the Sydney Morning Herald wrote that the "chief fault" of the play was it "stretched half an hour's worth of material over an hour-long format" and "the direct, waist-high frontal attack of director David Cahill's cameras. A little more imagination in the choice of angles and distance would have considerably reduced this monotony of observation" however it praised the touches and thought "the actors served... [the writer] well.

The Sunday Sydney Morning Herald said the production "left me a shade disappointed. Author Ross Napier proved to be a skilled and professional manipulator of words and dialogue but he developed one joke... far too long."

The Woman's Weekly critic called it "embarrassingly bad to watch".

The Age said "there was not much to enthuse about" calling the play "feeble, thin and unfunny."

In 1992 June Salter said it was the worst play or show she had ever been in

SMH 22 June 1959

SMH 27 June 1959

 

 

SMH 17 Jan 1992

The Age 13 Aug 1959

The Age 13 Aug 1959

AWW 12 Aug 1959

SMH 5 July 1959

SMH 29 June 1959

SMH 28 June 1959

The Age 11 June 1959

SMH 1 June 1959

The Age 12 March 1959

SMH 14 June 1959

The Biz17June 1959

The Age 6 Aug 1959

SMH 22 June 1959

TV News Times 27 June 1959



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