TV series - "I've Married a Bachelor" (1968-69)

 Premise

Peter Prentiss (Peter Whitford) is recently married but forever fighting to break with his old bachelor habits – beer, rugby union, poker games and his mates – and while his wife, Molly (June Thody) is very tolerant, she is not beyond devious means to achieve her own ends.

Molly is aided in her constant struggle by her mother, Mrs Malloy (Aileen Britton, one of Australia’s best-known radio actresses), from whom she often accepts help and advice.

Peter could only rely on his dim-witted best mate, Mervyn MacGregor (Donald McDonald), a source of constant disruption and disaster in the Prentiss household.

Episodes

There Goes the Groom | She’ll Have to Go | Prisoner at the Bar | The Segregated Vice Den | It’s an Ill Typhoon That Blows Mother-In-Law In | You Tell Me Your Dreams, I’ll Tell You My Dreams | I Hate Roger Stokewell || Somebody Stole My Still | The Shame of Mother Malloy | I Only Deliver the Bread | The Army Will Make a Man of You, Mrs Malloy | The Second Honeymoon | Into the Breach | In the Key of A Flat 

Production

Filming started 14 Aug 1968 see here. Produced by Alan Morris, directed by Brian Bell, written by Lyle Martin.

Awards

Won TV Week Logie award for Best Comedy Series in 1968.

NAA McNair/Anderson 1968 Pt 1

NAA McNair/Anderson 1968 Pt 1

Brian Bell later made The Thursday Creek Brunch see here

 


The Interpretaris (7 Oct 66), Vega 4 (19 May 68), Phoenix Five (24 Apr 70)

The Interpretaris

Sci fi kids series. 6 x 30

The Interpretaris is a spacecraft which is the flagship of the World Council fleet. The series is set over 500 years in the future, with the Earth at the centre of a peaceful federation of planets under the jurisdiction of the World Council.  

The ship is run by a multinational three-person crew consisting of European Commander Alan De Breck (Stanley Walsh), Australian pilot David Carmichael (Kit Taylor) and Russian Cosmonaut Vera Balovna (Lorraine Bayly). The crew are assisted by a clumsy-looking robotic computeroid named Henry (operated by Gordon Mutch). The onboard computer (which looked like a mantelpiece clock) was named Alys (voiced by Judi Farr).

The villain of the piece was evil scientist Parta Beno (Ben Gabriel) who had been found guilty by the World Council of imprisoning and shrinking inhabitants of various planets. As punishment, he has been exiled to a remote asteroid.

Cast

Stanley WalshCommander Alan de Breck
Kit TaylorDavid Carmichael
Ben GabrielParta Beno
Lorraine BaylyVera Balovna
Gordon MutchHenry
Judi FarrAlys

Production

Started same week as Crackerjack - see here. The Sun Herald called them "runaway winners".

Started airing Sydney Oct 21.

Vega 4

A threat to Earth has been detected by Earth Space Control from Galaxy Five. When it is suggested that the spacecraft, the Interpretaris, should be sent on this mission, it is revealed that it is not equipped for travel to Galaxy Five. Therefore, the President orders the commissioning of an untested new spaceship the Vega 4, which is the only hope for Earth to survive.

As onboard the Interpretaris, a three-person crew is selected for the mission: Captain Phillip Wallace (John Faasen), Lieutenant James Adam (Evan Dunstan) and Ensign Eve Poitier (Julianna Allan). They are assisted by a computeroid named Henry, which looks exactly the same as the Henry from The Interpretaris.

It is soon revealed that the threat to Earth from Galaxy Five is the handiwork of banished evil scientist turned saboteur, Zodian (Eddie Hepple) who is seeking revenge for being exiled to an asteroid.

Cast

  • John Faassen as Captain Wallace
  • Evan Dunstan as Lieutenant Adam
  • Juliana Allan as Ensign Poitier
  • Edward Hepple as Zodian
  • Ken Fraser as President
  • Philip Jay as Professor Kendrick

Production

Directors: John S. Edwards, Alex Ezard, Alan Burke.

Episodes

Mission of Vega 4 | The Forbidden Planet | Double Trouble | Flight of Fate | Dive Into Danger | Zodian’s Day | Day of Destruction

 Phoenix Five

26 x 30 mins

The series was set in the year 2500 AD and followed the adventures of the crew of the galactic patrol ship Phoenix Five, "the most sophisticated craft in the Earth Space Control Fleet." 

Captain Roke (Mike Dorsey) and his team – Ensign Adam Hargreaves (Damien Parker) and Cadet Tina Kulbrick (Patsy Trench) – patrolled the outer galaxies for Earth Space Control. Accompanied by their ‘computeroid’, Karl, they fended off aliens, space giants, mutants and evil would-be universe dominators, especially Zodian the humanoid (pictured below right), from planet Zebula 9.

Zodian’s ambition was to become “dictator of outer space”, with the aid of his computers, Alpha and Zeta . The crew of the Phoenix Five finally captured Zodian in episode 13 and subsequently were pitted against a new villain, Platonus (Owen Weingott). Platonus was captured in the final episode. Captain Roke was subsequently promoted to Head of Earth Defence, and Adam was promoted to Captain of the Phoenix Five.

 Cast

* Patsy Trench as Cadet Tina Kulbrick
* Damien Parker as Ensign Adam Hargreaves
* Stuart Leslie as Karl the Computeroid
* Mike Dorsey     as Captain Mike Roke
* Peter Collingwood     as Earth Space Controller

*Redmond Philips as Zodian

See some clips here and here.

Episodes

Zone of Danger | Two Heads Are Better Than None | To End Is To Begin | Stowaway | The Human Relics | Six Guns Of Space | Back to Childhood | Two Into One Won’t Go | A Sound In Space | A Gesture From Kronos | The Hunter | Slave Queen | The Bigger They Are | The Cat | Toy Soldier | Something Fishy | Spacequake | The Pirate Queen | The Baiter Is Bitten | Planet Of Fear | Dream On | Shadow Ship | General Alarm | Efficiency Minus | Spark For A Dying Fire | A Little Difficulty

Production

Phoenix Five was produced in 1969 in Sydney by Artransa Park Television in association with the Australian Broadcasting Commission and Amalgamated Television Services. The series premiered on ABC television on Friday 24 April 1970 at 5:40pm [2] with other states following in May 1970.

An article on it is here.

Hunter (1967-69)

Aussie spy series. 65 x 60 mins.

Premise

Special agent John Hunter (Tony Ward), deals with the evil CUCW (Council for the Unification of the Communist World) who had its Australian headquarters at Delta Exports. Mr Smith (Ronald Morse) headed the Australian operation of the Council, and his chief agent was Kragg (Gerard Kennedy).

Hunter worked for COSMIC (Commonwealth Office for Security and Military Intelligence Coordination), in a special unit under the cover of research specialists, Independent Surveys Ltd. Hunter had a side-kick, Eve Halliday (Fernande Glyn), and worked for Charles Blake (Nigel Lovell), who headed up the organisation.

 Sample ep is here.

Ian Jones told Susan Lever:

Hunter was one of those rare instants, sort of ‘put a spoonful of stuff in the cup, add boiling water and you’ve got a show’.  It was quite extraordinary.  So Charles Spry, a friend of Hector’s, the head of ASIO, came to lunch at Crawford’s.  We had an amazing range of people who lunched at Crawford’s because we have a board meeting every lunchtime.  In effect, the family would have lunch together it was, in effect, a board meeting, an informal board meeting.  
Then, at the end of the day, we’d get the creative team together and have drinks at the close of the day which made for a very, very efficient operation.  Everybody knew what was happening all the time.  One of our luncheon guests was Sir Charles Spry and I thought about it and over the weekend, it was a Friday and it all just came together, a show about an Australian agent in a fictitious organisation.
I even got the name, COSMIC, commonwealth office with security and military intelligence coordination.  I got the idea of Hunter being a Hunter agent.  He is called John Hunter, another agent may be Charles Hunter or whatever.  It was a class of agent and few ideas floating around.  
Hector had been thinking about the same thing over the weekend, came in on the Monday and that was it.  Hunter was born and it was sold with a very good budget, quite a high budget, because the idea was we were going to travel Hunter and one of the early ideas was to take it up to Surfers Paradise, glamour venue.  
The big thing was I had conceived Hunter as a sort of almost tongue-in-cheek serial in half hour episodes with a cliff hanger every half hour and it was hopefully exciting and involving but it had this serial quality about it.  It was about the same level of reality, if I think about it, as Raiders of the Lost Ark – a little more serious.  
I think we put the first two episodes together to make the first two storylines that I had done, the first two scripts to make the first hour and we then gradually veered away from Hunter being a bit tongue-in-cheek and cliff hangerish which worked well but I still would have liked to have seen the fun half hours given a go.  
Q    Was Brigadier Spry then – I mean it seemed to me you had access to all these government sites.
A    We had the most fabulous cooperation.  After my time with ASIO, if I had been younger, I would have been into ASIO as a shot because in those days they were doing a fabulous job.  One of the things they did was show us a film they had made but never shown, a documentary on the Skripov Affair where they busted this top Russian agent who arrived in Australia after the resumption of diplomatic relations which had been broken off by the Petrov business. 
Now that was an extraordinary exercise.  Skripov who was a second deputy vice assistant cultural attachĂ© at the Russian Embassy, sort of posting, the first agent he recruited was a female ASIO agent and the one thing they wouldn’t tell us was how the hell they managed that.  
We had this woman having dinner with Skripov in a Chinese restaurant.  She had a microphone in her bra, though being filmed from a van about 100 metres away, shooting through the front window of the restaurant with Skripov saying things like “I like to eat here because they play music and people cannot hear what we are saying” and stuff like that.  
Skripov, leaving the restaurant with the agent and she walked off one way, Skripov walked off the other way then turned the corner, stopped, came and looked back and all this stuff and fabulous stuff.  Anyway, an ASIO operative was assigned to the program and we worked very closely with him.  ASIO provided some of the props we used.  
They showed us all these great gimmicks like dead letter drops.  You go into a phone booth and light a cigarette.  You’d use your matches, light a cigarette and then the matchbox has got the material in for the dead letter drop in microfilm or who knows what and it’s also got a magnet in it.  You tap the matchbox under the coin box on the phone, have another matchbox if you’re really covering it which you produce with the other hand, walk out of the phone, putting your matchbox in your pocket, puffing your cigarette.  You’ve gone, somebody sees you’re gone, watching from a couple hundred metres away perhaps, they come down the street, take the matchbox, they’ve got the microfilm or whatever you wanted to give them.  All that stuff.  It was great.  
Some of the stories, the first story of Hunter, the Tolhurst File was based very solidly on fact, not in the nature of the material but on the mechanics of a fellow who was working on a top secret project and intercepted by some Russian agents and drugged and photographed in a compromising situation and put back in his house and these photographs were produced and he thinks he’s going mad.  
How on earth could these – because in those days you couldn’t doctor photographs the way we can today, they had comparatively crude techniques like the photo of Nate we looked at.  Yes.  The material was just astonishing.  Some of it, of course, we couldn’t use but they were very open with us and enjoyed the show.  
The only thing is they asked for approval of casting which was interesting.  They approved Tony Ward, Fernande Glyn, Gerard, of course.  He was a baddy.  He could be a rabid commo it probably wouldn’t have mattered but one actor we put up for Mr Blake was proved to be a no-no and I’ve never known why.
Q    And Gerard Kennedy was more successful than Hunter himself as an audience...
A    Very.  See I’d wanted Jerry to play Hunter.  I shouldn’t call him Jerry.  He hates being called Jerry, Gerard.  The idea was Gerard to play Hunter and Norman Yemm to play Craig, the villain.  What a double, what a double.  But Hector said, “No we’ve got to have a matinee idol good looks for a hero” and, of course, the success of Jerry, Gerard, sorry Jerry, that showed just how wrong that principle was.  I think Tony did a good job but he...Tony he worked very hard at it.  He cared about it but it wasn’t really him whereas Jerry just slipped into that role and...
Q    Villains maybe get the audiences in, right?
A    That’s right.  But then he brought the same quality to banner when he became a hero.  That was one sad thing.  When we were looking for a new show for Gerard, Channel 9 wanted to continue with Hunter but we just thought we could come up with something better for Gerard and we talked about a private I show which I was very lukewarm about and Ryan, which didn’t really work, was the result of all of that. 
I came up with an idea of Gerard leaving intelligence work.  Just think of it, ‘I’ve changed sides, I feel a bit lost’, leaves it and doesn’t know what he’s going to do and sees a middle aged guy being beaten up by a couple of hoods.  So he steps in and disposes the hoods and says to the fellow, “Look, are you alright?”  And the fellow said, “Oh, yes.  Where do you live?”  He said, “Well I’m going to back to my office” and takes this guy back to his office and he’s a private detective, we imagined played by Keith Eden with a middle aged secretary and runs this private detective business and Gerard thinks does this happen often?  
He says, “I get into a little bit of trouble and, you see, I’ve got this case going” and Gerard helps him with the case involving the hoods and becomes a fixture.  So you’ve got the middle aged private detective and the middle aged secretary and Gerard getting in there and cutting the mustard.









Division Four (11 Mar 1969-75)

Cop show. 300 x 60 mins.

Cast

* Gerard Kennedy as Frank Banner
* Terence Donovan as Mick Peters
* Chuck Faulkner as Keith Vickers
* Ted Hamilton as Kevin Dwyer
* Frank Taylor as Scotty MacLeod
* Patricia Smith as Margaret Stewart
* Rowena Wallace as Jane Bell
* Andrew McFarlane as Roger Wilson
* Clive Davies as Bob Parry

Production

Ian Jones told Susan Lever:

Phil Freedman and I created Division 4 which was originally going to be Saints and Sinners.  It was going to be based around the St Kilda police station but the local member whose name escapes me at the moment, objected because he thought it would give St Kilda a bad name and people would think St Kilda was full of criminals and prostitutes.  Shock!  Horror!  What a fantastic concept.  
So we came up with a whole string of alternative titles and Dorothy Crawford, because of D24, the famous Crawford radio police show, Dorothy came up with the idea of Division 24, echoing the D24 thing.  It was mistyped as Division 4 and that’s the one Channel 9 picked which is extraordinary.  
Phil and I co-wrote the first couple of episodes and I directed the film and set a directorial style for the show.  More prearranging sort of style than we were using on Homicide.  A lot of handheld camera participation.  That became a bit of a pattern for the ongoing Crawford programs.  I would help put the first script together and then direct the film...
Division 4 was just broad spectrum urban and suburban crime.  Yarra Central was fictitious.  We didn’t quite say where Yarra Central was.  It was actually on Montague Street, an old closed down police station but it gave us access to things that could turn into homicides but we generally shied off homicide per se.

The radio show D24 ran from 1951-60. Some episodes are here.

Age 6 March 1969


Good Morning Mrs Doubleday (9 Feb 1969)

 Commercial sitcom 26 x 30 mins. See info here.

Based on a US sitcom Mr Peepers.  Article here. Fremantle shot it in Melbourne at Nunawading. Ron Way produced and Ron McLean wrote most of the eps.

Premise

Robinson Doubleday (Gerry Gallagher) is a bumbling science teacher at Kannabri High School, a co-ed country secondary school in rural Victoria. His girlfriend (and later fiancée) is home economics teacher Jenny Hamilton (Katy Wild).

Supporting characters included Doubleday’s best pal, history teacher Wes “Tobe” Tobin (‘Tobe’) (Allan Lander) and eccentric English teacher Beryl Garney (Kay Eklund), school principal Bates (William Hodge) and students Walter Murdock (Robert Brockman) and Madeline Donetti (Naomi Swart).

Later episodes introduced Tobe’s fiancee, Sandra Hunter (Joy Mitchell) and Jenny’s father (Tony Bazell). Comedian Mary Hardy made a guest appearance in an early episode as ex-Army physical education teacher Phylis McTaggart. The character eventually replaced Eklund’s Beryl Garney from episode 12 onwards.

Episode guide

Back To School | Poor Butterfly | The Roneo Machine is Mightier Than The Sword | All You Need Is An Honest Face | Debbie’s Party | Bronze Bird | Queen To Mate | Coup De Pressure | A Friend In Need | A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words | Call Of The Wild | A Sidecar Named Desire | High Pressure | Never Say Goodbye | Once In A Lifetime | Tobe’s Apartment | It Fits Where It Touches | Party Piece | Peek-A-Boo | Espanoza’s Never Wrong | It’s An Ill Wind | Vive La Discipline | Quick, Quick, Slow | The Best Laid Plans | Who’ll Pay The Piper | Something Old, Something New

 

Australian content amounts

 From 1957

NAA TA 3/8 Pt 1

NAA TA 3/8 Pt 1

NAA TA 3/8 Pt 1

NAA TA 3/8 Pt 1

NAA TA 3/8 Pt 1

NAA TA 3/8 Pt 1



NAA 3/12

NAA 3/12

NAA 3/12

NAA 3/12

NAA 3/12

NAA 3/4

NAA 3/4

NAA 3/4

NAA 3/4


Society of Australian Writers in Great Britain

 I think formed in London in 1952 see here.

From When London Calls

The Society of Australian Writers (SAW) became mainly a writers' association, despite early suggestions of alternative titles, including the 'Australian Literary and Drama Association'. It sought 'to further the cause of Australian writers and writing wherever possible, and to act as a spokesman and advice and information centre for Australian writers in the United Kingdom'.19 Oriented to professionals, rather than amateurs and enthusiasts, it offered full membership to any professionally published Australian writer, playwright or scriptwriter. Associate membership, for those not so qualified, and corporate membership were also available. Australian High Commissioners, who supported the Society from the beginning, included Sir Thomas White, who had been soldier, author and book censor as Minister for Customs in the 1930s, and later Sir Alexander Downer 

  Dr Gilbert Murray was president in 1953 see here. It had 110 members. I think the High Commissioner Sir THomas White set it up along with the Australian Artists Association, and the Australian Musical Association - see here. White was an author.

Oct 1952 On the committee are Ian Bevan, Russell Braddon, Judy Fallon, Ian Grey, John Gunn, Hugh Hastings, George John ston, Enid Lorrimer, Rex Rienits, and Betty Roland.

Nov 1952 have inaugral party. Article promotes most famous members: Wilmot, Moorehad, Brickhill. See here. The Society claimed more than 750,000 books written by Aussies sold in London alone previous year see here.

1953 they greet Florence James see here.

Members contributed to a publication called The Sunburnt Country published in 1954. They included Paul Brickhill, Chester Willmot, Jack Fingleton, Martin Boyd. See here. Complete copy of book here.

"If you want to make money by writing you must go to London," said Braddon in 1953 here. "I know writers are not supposed to be interested in money but they have to eat. Sales of books by top Australian writers in England last year exceeded one million copies."

In 1957 involved in putting up a plaque for Henry Handel Richardson see here.

In 1962 head of the Society was Russell Braddon and Strealla Wilson see here.  In 1963 an article said it had more than 50 members and the "big three" were Braddon, Paul Brickhill and Alan Moorehead.

March 1965 announces the Sir Thomas White Memorial TV Play Writing Award - open to Austrralians. See here

Hugh Edwards won a 1967 prize see here.

1967 did poetry prize. 1970 crime novel prize

In 1967 according to When London Calls:

In late 1967, Russell Braddon protested vociferously on behalf of the SAW and of Australian screenwriters in London at the Australian Writers' Guild's policy that 60% of Australian television series ‘must be written by financial members of the Guild, who are also resident in Australia'.26 By that time, when writers more often just passed through London, and others returned to Australia, the Society of Australian Writers' activities had retreated; it became mainly a vehicle for screening Australian films. The films attracted audiences of up to 200, including many Australians in London (amongst them the scriptwriter Alan Seymour), and even prospective immigrants. In contrast, literary readings often attracted less than 50 people. Writing is one of the more solitary of creative professions and most established writers who remained in Britain had drifted off to their own activities. That earlier London experience would, however, shape the destinies of several young Australians who had landed on the Strand of the great city during the postwar era.

In 1973 presented lecture from Wilfred Thomas.

In 1982 in process of being wound up see here.

Papers of the society are at the NLA see here.


Riptide (5 Feb 1969)

A British financed procedural. 26 episodes. The first hour-long colour show produced in Australia

Premise

An American (Ty Hardin) solves cases on his charter boat.

Production

Michael Noonan told Albert Moran in an oral history that he knew Guy Thayer from The Flying Doctor and says Thayer asked him to do an outline for a series about a guy who ran a charter boat on the barrier reef. It was to be called Charter Boat. Noonan was to receive 10 percent of the profits and said he never got paid.

They raised a million dollars via Artransa. Thayer got Associated British interested and got finance for 26 episodes in colour each running an hour.

Noonan told Albert Moran that Oliver Reed was going to star but they wound up with Ty Hardin.

The intention that the series would be written by three Aussies under Noonan's supervision - Bruce Stewart, Tony Scott Veitch and Rex Rienits. They did two eps each but Associated British knocked back all scripts. Noonan says he had to do uncredited writing on them so the Aussies would get paid. Noonan says that Robert Banks Stewart became story editor instead. Noonan wrote some episodes.

Noonan thought it was remarkable the show got off the ground and that it was wonderful thing for Australian television that a $2 million series was made.  Noonan says that's why he never pressed for profit participation he wanted the show to go ahead.

He said Ralph Smart was called in half way "and he lowered the whole standard" of the series rewriting scripts.

Richard Lane in his oral history with Graham Shirley says that the AWG complained to Channel Seven that all the scripts were written by foreigners (including Australians based in London). James Oswin of Seven, with whom Lane normally got along with, said Lane and Australians were welcome to write episodes but that Oswin would just throw them in the bin. Lane understood Oswin was just doing "his masters' bidding".

Lane lobbied for Australian writers to do it. There was an assocation of Australian writers in London headed by Russell Braddon who said the AWG were discriminating against Australian writers overseas - people like Stewart, Peter Yeldham and Scott Veitch. This made Lane uncomfortable as he said he was friends with many of them from radio. Lane also says that most Aussie expats didnt particularly want to write for the show. In the end, he didn't get a quota for local writers (he wanted 50%). Ron McLean did some stories for it see here.

There's a profile on Hardin here and here. He arrived in Sydney on 14 Nov 1967 see here.

The budget was $2 million see here. It started 5 Feb 1969.

SMH 16 Nov 1967

Age 31 Jan 1969







AWG Minutes Jun 1968

Motel (27 May 1968)

 A daytime serial for ATN-7. I think it ran for 135 episodes.

Premise

A family run a motel.  

The motel was run by Hal (Walter Sullivan) and Mary (Brenda Senders) Gillian, whose family included businessman son Rod (Noel Trevarthen), his glamorous – and none-too-faithful – wife Gaye (Jill Forster), their rebellious teenage son Chris (Gregory Ross) and their daughter Liz (Gae Anderson), who was secretary to a politician called Paul Brennan (Brian James)

Other characters included motel employees Maria (Margot Reid) and Janie (Maggie Gray), motel owner Alec Evans (John Faasen) and Reverend Larcombe (Ross Higgins).

Production 

Richard Lane says the J Oswin of Seven wanted to do a day time soapie. He approached James Workman and Richard Lane. Lane, in his oral history with Graham Shirley, says the idea was Workman's but Lane helped develop it.

Lane said he and Workman would write two eps a week each. He says another female writer started but didn't work out (this was Joan Levy). Eventually the fifth ep a week was by Kay Keavney. Keavney did it moonlighting while working full time for the Australian Woman's Weekly. Creswick Jenkinson wrote for it.

The series did well in the daytime. So well that Oswin decided to play it at night. Lane said this was a disaster as the show didn't have production values high enough for nighttime viewing.

Lane says later on when Number 96 was a hit Oswin spoke to Lane and said he wished they could've done that with Motel

Sample segment is here.

SMH 22 Apr 1968

SMH 4 May 1968

Age 15 May 1968

Fairfax


Australian Plays/Company of Eight

 Refer to Patrick White, Peter Yeldham, Ralph Peterson, Hal Porter. Bruce Stewart, Alan Poolman, Jon Cleary.













1969 refers to Writers Guild embargo by which ABC bound:




NAA Pt 10

NAA Pt 10