Invisible Circus (1946) and Interval (1939) by Sumner Locke Elliott

Two stage plays by Sumner Locke Elliott.  Done at the Independent.

 Interval

1939 play. Review in SMH here.  Locke's second play, after The Cow That Jumped Over the Moon. Played in every state. Published in a collection in 1942 see here.

AustLit here. Someone did a thesis on it here.

Premise 

Set behind the scenes of a theatre during a two year run of a play in London.

Invisible Circus

Runs in 1946. About radio. Review is here

Austlit here. Excerpt on line is here.

Leslie Rees, Towards an Australian Drama



Lists of Australian Plays in Leslie Rees Book Towards an Australian Drama

 From 1953









"Who'll Come a Waltzing" (1963 play)

A 1963 Australian comedy play by South African born Peggy Caine who had emigrated to Australia three years previously. The premise of the play was about British migrants in Australia.

It was staged by J. C Williamson's in the major cities of Australia, at a time when that company rarely put on Australian plays. It was adapted for radio in Australia, England and New Zealand.

It was first performed for radio in Dec 1962. See here Replayed in June 1963 see here.

The original production featured Campbell Copelin, Marion Johns, Isla Tait (daughter of Frank Tait see piece here),

 Premise

The Eldred family arrive in Sydney and move to a rambling home in an outer suburb. When they have trouble making ends meet, Mrs Eldred takes in boarders, passing them off as family friends to avoid her husband's disapproval. 

Background

Peggy Caine moved from South Africa to Sydney in 1959. "I think I've put most of what I know about Australia into this play" she said. See here.  She was married with kids.

History

Play made debut in Feb 1963 directed by Richard Campion at St Martin's Theatre. JC Williamsons produced it with them I think.

Had a sell out season over four weeks. Decided to transfer it to a larger theatre and take on tour.

Ran in larger theatre in May 1963 see here. Williamsons gave it a five week season in Sydney starting in July 1963 see here. SMH review here. This account here says it was a "huge flop" in these large theatres although the play had a successful run in Adelaide.

John McCallum said the play caused them a financial loss. See this Variety piece here.
 

ABC

Paul O’Loughlin decreed it was “not worthy of” the “expense of a TV production.”

Ausstage listings here







 
Montreal Star 8 Feb 1964

SMH 11 Jul 1963

SMH 19 June 1`963

Age 22 Feb 1963

Museums Victoria









Variety 8 Jan 1964

Mischief in the Air by Max Afford (1944)

 

 Plays by Max Afford

Premise

The action takes place in a Rex Broadcasting Studios, a station  owned by Larry Carlson, a former Australian soldier, and Clay Tuttle, an American serviceman. Larry manages the business while Clay writes scripts. Larry is engaged to Fern, a doctor. Larry and Clay need the interest of sponsors Mc McGuinness, a Scotsman and Mr Mandelberg, a Jewish new Australian, but problems arise when the former falls dead.  Fern figures out it was due to poison.

Other characters include novelist Mrs Van Leydon, studio supervisor Arnold Vickery, actor Clarence Parsons and his wife Muriel. Fern, Larry  and Clay decide to hide McGuinness' corpse until Mandelberg signs the deal.  But it turns out the dead person isn't McGuinness. It's McGuinness' brother a Commonwealth Investigations officer investigating foreign spies working at Woomera and broadcating in code. The trio decide to solve the case themselves.

While they are figuring out who poisoned Charles McGuinness (the killer used poisoned darks bought by Van Leydon a New Guina expert), the real McGuiness wants to arrive. Mandleberg loses his diamond ring. They think the agent is Vickery. Fern persuades Mandleberg to sign the contract. Then Charles McGunnis comes back to life. He was paralysed. They realise Vicket is innocent (Fern tells them they read the note in his pocket wrongly).

Fern, who becomes the lead, realises the killer is Van Leydon - she used a lipstick device as a blow pipe. Van Leydon is about to kill Fern but is disrupted by a murder mystery play that is on.

Thoughts on play: Okay. Fast. Good that the women characters, Fern and Val Leydon, had jobs. Depiction of Jewish businessmen. Dodgy plotting. It could be fun.

Complete text is here via Gutenberg or here via Austlit.  First performance with JC Williamsons although in an early session.  Done in conjunction with 2GB and Macquarie see here.

Ausstage is here. Austlit is here.

SMH review:

NEW AUSTRALIAN PLAY AT ROYAL
Smoother development of mystery and comedy make Max Afford’s “Mis- chief in the Air,” which was pioneered at the Theatre Royal last night, a more satisfying play than his “Lady in Danger.” In this latest play, which a capacity audience enjoyed, Mr. Afford is clearly over-sworn to intricacies of plot many of them neat and engaging rather than to plausibility of psychology In his characters. Mr. Afford makes the mistake of continuing his story too long after the real denouement so that there is complete anti-cllmax and no real “capping” at his final curtain. While the craftsmanship with which he has built up his suspense and a couple of most entertaining “red herrings” is admirable, it is also plain that the intricacy of his plotting has not left a great deal of theatre art to producer or cast. The producer, John Alden, would be wise not to allow his funny man, Edwin Finn, to be such a buffoon as to destroy the audience’s chances of taking him seriously at a time when he should be taken seriously. Mr. Finn’s prim, managerial character Is overdone; so, In rarer spots, is Edward Howell’s rather clever Jew. Alleen Britton and John Mccallum in the central roles are adequate, despite obvious limitation of gesture and expression to a standardised series of tricks.-L.B.

Daily Tele

TP anything was necessary for Max Afford to establish himself as an outstanding Australian playwright, he has produced it in his new comedy thriller, “Mischief in the Air,” current “five-thirty” show at the Royal. It is an ingenious, plausible tale, with smart, up-to-the-minute dialogue, suspense, continual surprise; a moment of horror. The story tells of the efforts of two discharged servicemen — one Australian, the other American — to establish a radio station, and the complications that ensue when an attempt is made to murder a National Security Officer sent to discover who is using the station to send messages to the Japanese. The cast is headed by pleasant- voiced John McCallum and attractive, competent Aileen Britton. Ed win Finn was more than excellent as the studio manager who is so upset by everything that he “wishes he had never left the ribbon counter.” Edward Howell was less happy as the “omen” — conscious sponsor — the type of refugee who, “given a door handle and a roller-blind, finishes up with a block of flats.” — N.K. ? 

Leslie Rees, Towards Australian Drama

 

Play review - Day Before Tomorrow by Ric Throssell

 

Accused of being communist propaganda here

First produced on stage in Canberra in April 1956. Review of that is here from Canberra Times and in Bulletin here.

Played in Melbourne during Olympic Drama Festival in 1956with two other Australian plays - Under the Coolibah Tree and Pacific Paradise. See here. Competition from Victorian Drama League.

 On ABC radio in June 1956 see here. Taken to France. See here.

The Cardiff University Players performed it in 1958 it is reviewed here. It was performed at Edinburgh Festival in 1960 see here. Also performed in Perth and Hobart see here.

The play was published in 1969 it is reviewed by the SMH here.  Review by Canberra Times here.

Plot - see here

It tells the story of a journalist, his wife and their young daughter who have survived an atomic war, and now live in a bomb-wrecked hovel, looking out over a desolate countryside. The fight for survival has reduced them to complete moral degradation. Jackson and his wife realise and accept the fact that their daughter Carolyn sells herself for the food which keeps them just alive. Their nearest neighbour is Raw-lings, once a successful and genial chemist, but driven insane by his exneriences. Then comes the first relief squad from the outside area untouched by the bomb blast, bringing supplies of food, and hope for the future. The rescuers are not able to understand properly the way the survivors think and react, for the;> have merely looked on at the horror without themselves experiencing it. It is not surprising, therefore, that almost immediately a piece of petty tyranny brings tragedy.

Reviews 

The Age called the radio play "just about as dull as it could be". Thie was "Airel" who disliked Australian writing. See here

Pacific Paradise by Dymphna Cusack (1955)

 Stage and radio play by Cusack.

Austlit here

Finalist in PAB competitoin. eric Portman considered it for TV. See here.

First produced at the Waterside Workers Theatre, Sydney, 26 November 1955 (reviewed here) and on ABC radio, January 1956.(Along with two other new Austrlian plays The Hermit Crab and The Bombora) Letters of praise to that here and here
ABC play was to be on Dec 1955 but postponed due to NSW election see here
 
Play was popular in China and Cusack was invited to tour there see here. Went for six months in 1957 see here.

In addition, by 1962 the play had been produced in New Zealand, the UK, Japan. Latin America, the USSR, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Germany, China, Albania, North Korea, Rumania, Bulgaria, Cuba, Iceland. 
 
Premise
 
The play tells of the island of Moluka in the South Pacific, where the enlightened inhabitants live an almost Utopian existence under the rule of a white man, Simon Hoad, to whose family the island was given by Queen Victoria a century ago.  Hoad is married to a native woman and has a daughter Laloma.

Their existence is threatened when they are informed that a new super-bomb is to be exploded on a neighbouring island and that they must be evacuated. 
 
Scientists and officers visit Moluka to put their case and bring pressure. Hoad refuses to leave and seeks to enlist the sympathies of people all over the world in his fight to be allowed to survive in his island paradise. 

ABC CAST  see here and here
Simon Hoad - John Tate
Clive Everett - John Meillon
Laloma - Wynn Nelson
Professor Nicholas - Edward Howell
Colonel Winterton - Joe McCormick
Niti - Margaret Christensen
Hon. Osbert Day - Moray Powell
Citole - Lola Brooks
Talua - Betty Lucas
K-ahru - John Bluthal
Batah - Keith Buckley
American Announcer - Richard Meikle
Narrator, Australian Announcer - Ric Huttor Producer: Eric John   

Review is here.
Play accused of being Commie propaganda by a moron on the ABC Weekly see here.


Propaganda Plays? DURING 1956 the A.B C. has broad- cast several plays, including Pacific Paradise and The Day After Tomorrow, which contain subtle Communist propa- ganda. The proof of this statement is to be found in Tribune, a Communist publication which recommends its read- ers to listen to these plays. What is of even greater significance, Pacific Paradise has been given a re- peat performance by the A.B.C. and 1 understand The Day After Tomorrow is to be repeated during August, owing to popular demand. This ‘‘popular demand” is created by Communist leaders instructing members and fellow-travellers to deluge the A.B.C with letters and ’phone calls expressing admiration concerning the plays referred to, and the A.B.C. has apparently fallen for this old manoeuvre. 
P. C. KENT. Cremorne, N.S.W. 
The A.B.C. Director of Drama and Features, Mr. Neil Hutchison, replies:— 
The description of these two plays as Communist propaganda is baffling. Paci- fic Paradise concerns the protest of an island community at being removed from their homeland, with the alternative of being wiped out by a bomb exploded 100 miles away—a wholly imaginative story of an imaginary island. Many serious-minded and responsible people fear that the atom bomb may not only result in horrifying genetical changes in those whom it indirectly affects, but also that it may eventually obliterate what we know as Western Civilisation. These people belong to all parties and cannot be described as Communists. Pacific Paradise is a good play, the characters are real and the development has integrity. The play was recently entered for a competition run by the Playwrights’ Advisory Board, was read by many qualified judges (some of whom are known to hold very strongly anti- Communist views), and reached the finals. No comment on these grounds was made by any of the readers. The Day After Tomorrow also con- cerned the hydrogen bomb, and tried to envisage the terrible result of its use, and how humanity, well nigh obliterated by its dreadful impact, might climb back slowly and painfully to dignity and self respect. I find it very hard to see the influence of Communist propaganda at work in these two Australian plays. It is perhaps germane to the issue to remark that holders of extreme political opinions habitually see their opponents as ex- tremists. I am not suggesting that Mr. Kent belongs to this category bur simply that he has cried wolf after having sighted a puppy dog.

Awake My Love (1947) and Dark Enchantment (1949) by Max Afford

Dark Enchantment (1949)

A young girl whose early fascination for a foreign ventriloquist leaves her with his doll, £1,000, and an accompanying "dark enchantment".'

Austlit here. First produced Minerva Theatre Sydney in 1949. His wife Thelma did costumes see here.

 then toured England in 1950. Hubert Woodward backed it see here. He rewrote it for Nora Pilbeam and is had a second provincial run see here.

Set in a London boarding house of 1895.

Adelaide News review here. The Truth review here. The Sun here. Another Daily Tele review here. Smiths Weekly here. Sydney Jewish News here. Bulletin review here.

Dail Tele review

 "Thriller" disappoints
Max Afford seems to have written his thriller, "Dark Enchantment," with an ear for the radio rather than an eye for the stage. This Australian author's play, which had its Minerva premiere last night, left most of its. thrills to explanatory— and trite — dialogue. Set in a London theatrical lodging-house of, 1895, “Dark Enchantment” clusters murder and mystery around the doll left by a dead ventriloquist. Max Afford failed to give his good, if derivative, thriller idea any sense of period character and atmosphere. He certainly created the sus pense in Act 2 when the ventriloquist’s doll became as frightening as the Monkey’s Paw of W. W. Jacobs. The cast handling this idea was mostly colorless and deficient in timing. Neva Carr-Glyn, whose seasoned technique carried the improbable gipsy role, Betty Duncan as the Victorian maid, and Charles Zoli in the obvious ‘role of the organ grinder, were the exceptions. Richard Parry as the ventriloquist. who should establish the mood in Act 1, was lament ably miscast. Producer Fifl Banvard failed to establsh both the essential points of the play and its latent melodrama. But the promise in “Dark En chantment” is strong enough to demand reconstruction by M& Atrora. — J.U’JN.

SMH review here.

First Night For A New Thriller  
Max Afford’s mystery thriller, “Dark Enchantment,” was pre- sented for the first time last night at the Minerva Theatre The author of “Awake, My Love,” has turned m this new play to the modest dimension of ;nclo dramg, in which he proves his ability to lease with suspense and to administer shocks of horror He can tell a story with macabre inventiveness and ingenious twists The tortures of Julie, to whom a sinister ventriloquist bequeaths a doll and a legacy of £1,000, are nicely calculated to communicate that tingling of the spine which, even in an uncomfortable world, is for many people a desired sensation Last night the cast performed gallantly with the help of improvised lamps-not, happily, altogether out of place in the gaslit interior of a London boarding-house in 1895 The producer, Fifi Banvard, served the dramatist well by excellent Timing, conscientious attention to detail, and robust speed of action Ihe players, proud to present Australian work, threw themselves into their parts with a gusto which was welcome io observe Richard Parry, who appears only in the first act, was haunting and formidable as the ventriloquist, Paul Kurtner Neva Carr-Glyn was first beguiling and, m the climax, frantic and ag- gressive is the fortune-teller, and Daphne Winslow and Georgie Ster- ling were effective as the mother and daughter upon whose lives the ‘ dark enchantment” of the doll is shed The weakness of Max Afford’s play fies in much of the dialogue, which is ui parts trite, and in other parts, as m the speech of the gipsy, not true to character His people-as, for instance, the ham actor, Orlando Partlett-are types who have flatness without depth If his inventiveness in action, which achieves a master stroke in the approach of whistling outside the window at the end of the last act, could be paralleled by origi- nality in character creation, he might make of this thriller a play of distinction and roundness com- parable with nhe work, in the crime department, of Dorothy Sayers - A.T.

Awake my Love (1947)

Rewritten from Colonel Light the founder, South Australian Centenary Prize-winning play, 1936. Read Austlit on that here.

Complete text of play here.

General Motors Theatre Awards

 Jan 1958 announced see here.

Dec 1958 winner announced.  202 entries. 1st prize Slaughter of St Teresa's Day by Peter Kenna. 2nd prize 'Anchor Nuggett' by Jon Holliday. 3rd prize - 'Fox in the Night' by Harry Pree and 'Heirs of the Dead Heart' by David Ireland. Commended plays: 'Cesare', 'Do It Yerself', 'Fifteen Yards for Eddie', 'Goodbye to No. 6'. 'Resurrection at Mathewtown', ''Shadow of a Bulldozer', 'Sing for St Ned', 'The Pub at Pelican Creek' (by Chris Gardner)

March 1959 - award presented by Gladys Moncrieff to Kenna at Theatre.

*April 1960 - announced more awards see here. Winners: Wal Cherry for A View from the Bridge, John Sumner for Moby Dick Rehearsed, and Hugh Hunt for Julius Caesar

 
*Feb 1961 - General Motors Holden theatre comp see here - no winner but four prizes, 'Donny Johnson' by Alan Seymour 'Zelda Trio' by Laurence Collinson, 'Hateful Face in the Mirror' by John Pinkney, 'Wish No More' by Marien Dreyer 

Sept 1962 invite entries for musical play in comp see here.

*Jan 1963 - Musical Theatre award given see here - first price Lesley Patching and C Phillips, The Captain's Ladies, 2nd prize Joyce Trickett and  Dulcie Holland for Jenolan Adventure, 3rd place John Chapman and Dennis Carroll for surfing musical

R Walker George Patterson at Vincent Report  

General Motors ran a General Motors Theatre Award through the Elizabethan Trust in Sydney. Last year it was run in connexion with plays; this year it is run in con-nexion with a musical comedy. The awards have just recently been made. I think that of about 260 plays we received, about four or five looked possibilities for television productions, but after reading them we found that they posed too man’y production difficulties. So that out of 260 we got virtually none. We are inclined to think now that it is better to commission writers to write plays, writers of known stature, than to invite people to sub- mit plays by way of competitions.

*July 1964 - no prize for  best play General Motors Holden Theatre see here

*Sept 1965 - General Motors Holden Theatre Award for Theatre design see here

Age 30 Sept 1965

Age 2 Apr 1960

SMH 3 Mar 1959

Age 25 Jan 1958

Age 23 Jan  1963


Script Competitions

*May 1940 Melbourne New Theatre Competition - won by Leslie Rees for play about Peter Lalor

*May 1945 PAB 1st Competition  - won by 'Son of the Morning' by Catherine Duncan

*Apr 1946 Playwrights Advisory Board 2nd Competition - equal first ‘Ha Ha Among the Trumpets,’ by George Landen Dann and ‘And the Moon Will Shine’ by Miss Lynn Foster

*Nov 1946 Wagga Play Competition (with PAB) - My Life is My Affair by Oriel Gray see here

*Dec1947 Playwrights Advisory Board 3rd Competition - won by 'The First Joanna' by Dorothy Blewett

 * Dec 1951 Commonwealth Jubilee Play Competition - won by 'Tether a Dragon’ by Kylie Tennan

*Sept 1955 Playwrights Advisory Board 4th Comp - won by The Doll and The Torrents see here

*Jan 1957 - 1957 First Annual Award by Journalist Club for works of Australian creative art - won by The Shifting Heart 

*Aug 1957 London Observor Play Competition  - The Shifting Heart came third - and Swamp Creatures in top 25.

*Oct 1957 Ballarat competition won by Oriel Gray Drive a Hard Bargain see here

*Dec 1958 General Motors-Holden Theatre Award - first prize Slaughter of St Teresa's Day see here

*March 1959 - Shell Australian TV Drama Prize - won by The Day Called Black by Robin Corfield

*Oct 1959 Melbourne Little Theatre Guild Competition (in association with JC Williamson) - won by Burst of Summer by Oriel Gray

*April 1960 - Journalist Club TV Play Prize - won by The Sergeant of Burralee and J Warner's World Without End.

*April 1960 - General Motors Holden Theatre Award - Wal Cherry for a View from the Bridge (see here - I think just for direction)

*Feb 1961 - General Motors Holden theatre comp see here - no winner but four prizes, 'Donny Johnson' by Alan Seymour 'Zelda Trio' by Laurence Collinson, 'Hateful Face in the Mirror' by John Pinkney, 'Wish No More' by Marien Dreyer

*June 1961 - ATV Play Competition - won by No Decision 

*March 1962 - Adelaide Comp won by Wall to Wall

*April 1962 - Journalist Club Prize - won by When the Gravediggers Come and The Tower - see here

*Jan 1963 - General Motors Holden Musical Theatre award given see here - first prize Lesley Patching and C Phillips, 'The Captain's Ladies',

*May 1964 - Journalist Club Prize - won by Bandicoot on Burnt Ridge by Marian Dreyer,

 

Playwrights Advisory Board

Playwrights Advisory Board was founded in 1938 by Leslie Rees, Rex Rienits and Doris Fitton, with the object of fostering Australian theatre. 

It negotiated productions with both professional and amateur theatres, acted as an intermediary in the nomination and collection of royalties, and advised both theatres and playwrights on scripts. Rees was chairman of the Board. It was instrumental in securing publication of Australian plays. 

In 1955 its play competition was won by Summer of the Seventeenth Doll by Ray Lawler, and The Torrents by Oriel Gray.

After 1963 the Board ceased operations, its functions having been taken over by various commercial agencies and by the Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust.

Ausstage listing here 

 Nov 1938 - formed in Sydney - see here - Leslie Rees chairman, Rex Rienits vice chairman, Doris Fitton honorary chairman, Betty Ward honorary treasurer

April 1939 piece here - read 25 plays - they liked Red Sky at Morning by Dymphna Cusack and Touch of Silk by Betty Roland so asked those writers to contribute. Getting queries for Wives Have Their uses by Gwen Meredith see here

Lesley Rees article July 1939 here - talks about putting on Red Sky at Morning by Cusack, Daybreak by Catherine Shepherd, Wives Have Their Uses by Gwen Meredith ("first Australian attempt at comedy of manners", Seapiece by Catherine Duncan

Aug 1939 - organised performances of several plays see here including Leading Lady by Sydney Tomholt, Morning by Betty Roland, Shallow Cups by Dymphna Cusack, The Woman Tamer by Louis Esson

Dec 1939 - report that year had received 35 long plays and 39 short ones and said was responsible for putting on 5 long plays and 5 short plays see here

March 1940 - PAB recommends 31 plays

1941 - PAB arranges for publication of Red Sky at Morning, Daybreak, Touch of Silk by Betty Roland and Interval by Sumner Locke Elliot see here - later arranged for publication of  Quiet Night by Dorothy Blewett and Fountains Beyond by George Landen Dann 

May 1944 - first comp announced see here

Mar 1945 - prizes for PAB compa awarded... Catherine Duncan wins for Sons of the Morning' Gwen Meredith comes second with 'Positions Vacant' then Dymphna Cusack third with 'They Also Serve  high commended inc 'Portrait of a Gentlemen' by George Farrell and 'The Gentle Warrior' by John Williamson  - Rees quoted on it here - also here

April 1946 - prizes for second PAC comp here - George Landen Dann and Lynn Foster share it Equal first - ‘Ha Ha Among the Trumpets,’ by George Landen Dann and ‘And the Moon Will Shine’ by Miss Lynn Foster
Second prize - ‘Stand Still Time’ by Dymphna Cusack
The following plays were commended by the panel of nine judges:
‘Time Shall Be No More’ by Mr. Linus Donnelly, of Hobart; ‘The Countless Hours’ by Mr Frederick Glover of Sydney; ‘First Fruit.’ by Mr. Arthur Moorhead of Melbourne; and ‘The Dark Soldier,’ by Miss Betty Roland.
Seventy-eight plays were received by the board from all Australian States and from New Zealand.

Dec 1947 - The First Joanna by Dorothy Blewett wins third script competition - other plays also commended 60 entries
First prize  “The First Joanna” by Dorothy Blewett
No other prize money was award-d, but the judges specially commended “Untimely Ripped” by Lloyd Ross.
They also commended “Hearts Were High” by Madge Parkin,  The Mortal Garden by Phyllis Napper
Rees, said yesterday that “The First JoAnna” was a play of professional competence that could be given on any stage. “Some other plays had notable literary quality or-excellent, base material, but in the view of the judges were ‘crude ore’ from a play-ing point of view”

March 1948 - helps sponsor The First Joanna 

Dec 1950 arranged Welsh production of Fountains Beyond see here

Jan 1953 - reported here During the past 14 years the board has read hundreds of drama MSS. submitted for technical criticism, negotiated over 150 stage productions of Australian plays and collected royalties on behalf of the authors (less 10 per cent, expenses deduction), sponsored the pub- lication of many Australian plays, mostly full-length, and conducted competitions for full- length stage plays. 

Members of the board are: Leslie Rees, Gwen Harrison, George Cassidy, Beatrice Tildesley, lan Maxwell, May Hollinworth, O. D. Bisset, James Pratt and Josephine O’Neill.
 

Full-length Australian plays available include: “Tether a Dragon,” by Kylie Tennant; “The House That Jack Built,” by George Farwell; “The First Joanna” by Dorothy Blewett, “Mischief in the Air,” by Max Afford; “Invisible Circus,” by Sumner Locke-Elliott; “Awake, My Love,” by Max Afford; “Ned Kelly,” by, Douglas Stewart; “Lady in Danger,” by Max Afford ; “Granite Peak,” by Betty Roland; “Sing for St. Ned,” by Raymond Mathew; “No Incense Rising,” by George Landen Dann; “Over to Mother,” by Phillip G. Mann. Also: “Hail Tomorrow,” by Vance Palmer; “Sons of the Morning,” by Catherine Duncan; “Caroline Chisholm,” by George Landen Dann; “Morning Sacrifice,” by Dymphna Cusack ; “Daybreak,” by Catherine Shepherd; “Red Sky at Morning,” by Dymphna Cusack; “Interval,” by Sumner Locke-Elliott; “The Touch of Silk,” by Betty Roland ; “Wives Have Their Uses,” by Gwen Meredith; “Quiet Night,” by Dorothy Blewett; “Fountains Beyond,” by George Landen Dann; “The Explorers,” by John Sandford; “Sky Without Birds,” by Oriel Gray ; “Over- proof Spirits,” by A. Ashworth and P. Kelly ; and “Portrait of a Gentleman,” by George Farwell.   

Nov 1954 announced would have 4th competition see here - more details given in Jan 1955 see here

Sept 1955 - competition awards prize to The Torrents and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll see here - runner up was Pacific Paradise by Dymphna Cusack, Flood by Eugene Hanger, Cornerstone by Gwen Meredith see here. We Find the Bunyip received honorable mention.  Plays were adapted in a week of Australian plays on ABC radio in 1956 see here.

Apr 1956 - present Cornerstone by Gwen Meredith at Independent Theatre see here.

Jan 1957 - PAB Comp won by The Shifting Heart

 Records at State Library NSW see here

  


 1951 Commonwealth Jubilee Play Competition

First prize - ‘Tether a Dragon’ by Kylie Tennant - about Alfred Deakin
Second prize - ‘The House that Jack Built’ by George Farwell about Bligh and MacArthur
Three other plays praised - “Granite Peak,” by Betty Roland,  “Sing for St. Ned,” by Raymond Matthew,  and “History of Burke and Wills,” by John Sandford,

The Jubilee Federal Arts Sub-Committee organised the competition. A total of 230 plays was submitted from writers in all States. The judges were Professor Keith Macartney, of Melbourne University, Mr. Lindsey Browne, “The Sydney Morning Herald” drama critic, and Mr. Frank Harvey, senior drama producer for the Australian Broadcasting Commission.

See here. Mentioned here


Noel Robinson (1928 - ?)

ABC Weekly Aug 1959

 

ABC Weekly Jun 1958

 

 Born in Melbourne. Spent two years studying in the US at Columbia

IMDB page is here

1958-1962 may have been doing book reviews for SMH see here. Did them again in 1985-86 see here.

A 1966 piece said she had been writing plays for radio and TV for ten years see here.

Jan 1966 represents Australia along with pat Hooker at Berne Convention see here

Credits 

*Let's Visit Rum Jungle, Let's Visit Darwin, Let's Visit a Cattle Station (1957) - training film 

*Mystery at Piltdown (Mar 1958) - radio feature

*The Case of Sacco and Vanzeni (June 1958) - radio feature

*Voyage of the Lady Augusta (Apr 1959) radio play see here and here

*Death Out of Season (Jun 1959) radio play set in Florence-  here and here

*His Enchanted Rectory (Jun 1959) - radio feature see here 

*Last of the Paddlewheelers (Jul 1959) - article

*Who Killed the Revered Hall (Aug 1959) radio feature here

*Of Men and Monkeys (Oct 1959) - radio feature 

*A Man of No Great Family (Feb 1960) - radio feature about Gov Philip 

*An Infinite Debt (Feb 1960) -radio play about Hungarian who moves to Australia see here - played 1966

*The Second Mrs Stevenson (Aug 1962) - radio play

*My Three Angels (Dec 1962) - adaptation 

*Flowering Cherry (Feb 1963)  - adaptation

*An Invitation to Dinner (Jun 1963) - radio play about Matthew Flinders captivity - also played in 1964, 1972, 1978

*The Hot Potato Boys (Aug 1963)

*The Fighting Cock (Sept 1963) - adaptation

*The Queen and the Laurete (Nov 1963) - radio feature about Tennyson

*The Long Sunset (Nov 1963) - adaptation TV play

*A Man  for all Seasons (Jan 1964) - adaptation

*On Approval (Mar 1964) - adaptation

*The Late Edwina Black (Sept 1964) - adaptation

*Split Level (Oct 1964) - orig TV play - praise from Ken Hannam here

*The Tower (Dec 1964) - adaptation

*Romanoff and Juliet (Jan 1965) - adaptation

*A Time to Speak (Apr 1965) - original - radio adaptation in 1968, 1979

*The Big Killing (1965) - adaptation

*A Death out of Season - radio play - at UQ here

*Love Story - The Weather House 91965) 

*The Titled Screen (1966)

*Hans Christian Anderson Slept Here (Dec 1966) radio play here

*Dr Finlay's Casebook - Advertising Matter (1967)

*Sanctuary - A Cup of Tea with the Fullers (1967)

*All Out for Kangaroo Valley (1969)

*W Somerset Maugham - The Fall of Edward Barnard (1969)

*Detective-  The Tea Leaf (1969)

*The Bridesmaid (Jul 1970) - review here and here

*Brother and Sister (Aug 1970) - mentioned here

*Mrs Davenport (Oct 1970) - mentioned here

*Trespasser (1970)

*The Shopper (1971)

*Concussion (1971)

*Before Paris (Jul 1972)

*Glasstown (Jul 1973) stage play review here - play about Brontes - reviewed by SMH here

*The Liberation of Eileen (Jan 1974) - review here - also did radio play in OZ 1983 and 1987 - about a writer of romance novels

*Love Story - Second Partner (Jan 1974) - review here

*Internship at Trial Bay (Sept 1979) - radio feature - also played in 1984

*Sam's Luck (Feb 1980) - 6 part Australian kids series all written by Robinson see here - review is here

*Mr Elvey's Friday Nights (Oct 1980) - TV play for ABC see here

*Intrudcers (Sept 1983) - ABC radio play 

*Odd Feet (May 1984) - ABC radio play

*Baked Avocado (Sept 1985) - ABC radio play  - also 1991

*Self Portrait (Nov 1986) - ABC radio play - also in 1989

*The Bartons (1988) - episode of ABC kids series see here

*Hills End (Apr 1989) - ABC kids TV series see here  

*The Paradise Room (Nov 1994) - ABC radio play

*Sun on the Stubble (1996) - TV series - won an Awgie - article on it here

According to NLA she was Noel Stafford Robinson and born in 1915.

AWG Sept 1965 Bulletin