The Sergeant from Burralee

The Sergeant from Burralee is an Australian television play written by Phillip Grenville Mann.

The Sergeant from Burralee
Advertisement from 14 Jun 1961
Written byPhillip Grenville Mann
Directed byRaymond Menmuir
Country of originAustralia
Original language(s)English
Production
Running time75 mins[1]
Production company(s)ABC
Release
Original networkABC
Original release22 March 1961 (live, Sydney)[2]
14 June 1961 (Melbourne)[3]

The play was also broadcast by the BBC and screened for West German television.[4]

It was one of the few original Australian TV dramas of the time.[5] Australian TV drama was relatively rare at the time.[6]

It was turned into a radio play in 1970.[7]

Plot

In the 1830s an aboriginal is charged with the spearing of a white settler, but was about to be released by the Captain convinced of his innocence after questioning him. But, during a party that night, a drunken officer shoots and kills the prisoner, and is charged with his murder.

Thomas Morland, the acting Attorney General, is sent from Sydney to Newcastle to investigate.

Captain Alcot wishes to keep on the good side of the land-hungry Carlton so they attempt to defend the drunken lieutenant who has shot a native. Neither believe the prisoner Jacko had anything to do with the murder of a white settler, since he was captured 60 miles away from the crime. So they bribe Sergeant Constantine, who arrested Jacko, into saying that the place of arrest was close to Newcastle.

At a trial in Sydney, the lieutenant is charged with murder by the Acting Attorney-General. False testimony by Constantine brings a verdict of not guilty; but the playwright makes it clear that it is as much a victory as a defeat—"people will have second thoughts" about molesting aborigines after this.

Cast

  • Alistair Duncan as Thomas Morland, the acting Attorney General
  • Deryck Barnes as Sgt Constantine
  • Gordon Glenwright as Captain Alcot
  • Candy Williams as Jacko
  • Stewart Ginn as Nathaniel Carlton
  • Fernande Gynn as Constantine's wife
  • Hugh Stewart as Robert McDonald
  • John Gray as Sgt Lane
  • Fernande Glynn as Bessie
  • Reg Lye as Joshua Beer
  • Keith Buckley as Jack Salisbury
  • Noanie Roathsay
  • Edward Hepple
  • Jon Dennis as Newton
  • Douglas Bladen as Sentry
  • Lance Bennett as Taylor
  • Noanie Rothsey as Martha
  • Phillip Ross as Gaoler
  • Edward Herple
  • Max Meldrum as the lieutenant
  • Nigel Lovell
  • Moray Powell

Production

The play was based on a real life trial in the 1830s when a soldier was charged with the murder of an aboriginal.

It was written by Philip Grenville Mann, an Australian writer who was living in England. He got the idea for the play after reading historical records at Australia House in London. He wrote it originally under the title The Sergeant from Lone Pine.[8]

The play won equal first prize in the 1959 New South Wales Journalists' Club Award out of 250 entries.[9] (The other winner was J.V. Warner's World Without End.) President of the Journalists' Club was Kenneth Slessor and the judges, representing each of the three Sydney television stations, were Brett Porter (ATN-7), Raymond Menmuir (ABN-2) and Peter Benardos (TCN-9).[10][11]

Mann returned to Australia in 1961 after six years in England and replaced Rex Rienits as the ABC's drama editor. He would later write the historical ABC drama series The Patriots.[8]

It was shot live at the ABC's studios in Sydney. Alistair Duncan was an English actor who had recently settled in Australia and had played Captain Bligh's secretary in Stormy Petrel. Sets and costumes were by Geoff Wedlock.[12]

Reception

The Sydney Morning Herald wrote that "it is an admirable play, dealing searchingly with the impulses, compulsions and motives of a gallery of characters...The production... was quite gripping; the play itself, most notably in the courtroom scenes, showed how telling a medium TV can be... this play was one of the best the A.B.C. has done."[13]

Val Marshall from the Sunday edition of the Herald said it "let me with that rather unsatisfactory feeling of a good piece of material well handled, but which could have been a great deal better than it was" saying that "it got first rate treatment from Raymond Menmuir" but felt 90 minutes was too long and Duncan was miscast."[14]

1961 BBC Version

In May 1960 the BBC announced they would film the play, then known as The Sergeant of Lone Pine.[15] The play was filmed by the BBC in 1961 as The Attorney General It was directed by Harold Clayton.[16]

Cast

  • John Clements as Thomas Morland
  • Andre Van Gyseghem as Nathaniel Carlton
  • Olive McFarland as Bessie Constantine
  • Anthony Bate as Sergeant Lane
  • Norman Mitchell as Sergeant Constantine
  • James Sharkey as Lieutenant Ned Louden
  • Richard Vernon as Captain Alcot
  • Michael Danvers-Walker as James Newton
  • Leonard Cracknell as Frank Taylor
  • Sonny Pillay as Jacko
  • John Wilding as The Sentry
  • Ronald Adam as Robert MacDonald
  • Christopher Hodge as John Sanders
  • Robert Cawdron as Joshua Beer
  • Carole Ann Ford as Martha Salisbury

Radio

It was also adapted for radio.[17]

gollark: - it is bad- it is not applicable
gollark: Where do file management controls go?!!!!!!!!!!!????!?!?!!
gollark: Anyway, le, what do I do?!?!?!?!?!
gollark: Well, it's the easiest platform for me to deal with, and I don't want to write 1201284 mobile applications.
gollark: Yes.

See also

  • List of television plays broadcast on Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1960s)

References

  1. "TV Guide". Sydney Morning Herald. 20 March 1961. p. 18.
  2. "Television". Sydney Morning Herald. 22 March 1961. p. 27.
  3. "TV Guide". The Age. 14 June 1961.
  4. Marshall, Valda (3 September 1961). "TV Merry Go Round". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 92.
  5. "LIVE DRAMA AND MUSIC ON ABC TELEVISION". The Canberra Times. 11 December 1962. p. 27. Retrieved 15 March 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  6. Vagg, Stephen (18 February 2019). "60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & '60s". Filmink.
  7. Radio play information at AustLit
  8. Marshall, Valda (19 March 1961). "TV Merry Go Round". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 86.
  9. "Murder in the Colony". Sydney Morning Herald. 20 March 1961. p. 17.
  10. "Two Share £500 TV Award". Sydney Morning Herald. 19 April 1960. p. 16.
  11. "Two Share £500 Prize for Best T.V. Play". The Canberra Times. 34 (9, 578). Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 18 April 1960. p. 6. Retrieved 20 February 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  12. "TV Guide". The Age. 8 June 1961. p. 31.
  13. "Live televison [sic?] play By A.B.C.". Sydney Morning Herald. 23 March 1961. p. 17.
  14. Marshall, Valda (26 March 1961). "TV Merry Go Round". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 86.
  15. "Title Australian Prize Play For B.B.C.". The Times. 18 May 1960. p. 18.
  16. The Attorney General at IMDb
  17. "Walter Sullivan in historical role". The Age. 20 July 1961. p. 12.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.