True Believers (miniseries)
The True Believers is a 1988 Australian mini series which looks at the history of the Australian Labor Party from the end of World War Two up to the Australian Labor Party split of 1955.[2]
True Believers | |
---|---|
Genre | Miniseries |
Written by | Bob Ellis Stephen Ramsay |
Directed by | Peter Fisk |
Starring | Ed Devereaux Simon Chilvers |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Stephen O'Rourke executive Matt Carroll Sandra Levy |
Running time | 8 x 1 hour |
Budget | $3.6 million[1] |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | 28 June 1988 – 1988 |
It was co-written by Bob Ellis who focused on three characters "Chifley, the unlettered man of great dignity; Menzies, who used to stand for something but eventually stood only for Menzies; and Evatt, the grand idealist... It's almost like Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1. It's a chunk of national history during Australia's great era of change after the war."[3]
Cast
- Ed Devereaux as Ben Chifley
- Simon Chilvers as H.V. Evatt
- John Bonney as Robert Menzies
- Rob Steele as Clyde Cameron
- John Derum as B.A. Santamaria
- Max Phipps as Sir Frank Packer
- Valerie Bader as Mary Alice Evatt
- Tracy Mann as Tess Ross
- Joan Bruce as Pattie Menzies
- Malcolm Robertson as Idris Williams
- John Ewart as Fred Daley
- Ray Meagher as Tom Burke
- Harold Hopkins as Edgar Ross
- Nick Tate as Les Haylen
- Gary Files as Fred Daly
- Diane Craig as Elsie
- Norman Kaye as Archbishop Daniel Mannix
- Ron Blanchard as Arthur Calwell
- Danny Adcock as Lloyd Ross
- Graham Rouse as Arthur Fadden
- Paul Sonkkila as Ron Tate
- Bill Young as Jim Cooper
- Bryan Marshall as Richard Casey
- Stuart McCreery as Allan Dalziel
- Mary-Lou Stewart as Joanna Malcolm
- Ken Radley as Bill Parkinson
- Dorothy St. Heaps as Elizabeth Chifley
- Jeff Ashby as Garfield Barwick
- Robin Bowering as Mr. Purcell
- Neil Fitzpatrick as H.C. Coombs
- Alan McQueen as Jim Healy
- Leonie-Martin Smith as Ethel Casey
- Bob Baines as Stan Keon
- Scott McGregor as Jim Comerford
- Hec McMilan as Sir William McKell
- Peter Corbett as John Dedman
- Gerry Duggan as Wally
- Ron Hackett as Les McConnan
- Michelle Marzo as Rosalind Evatt
- Bogdan Koca as Dr. Michael Bialoguski
- Wenanty Nosul as Vladimir Petrov
- Halina Abramowicz as Evdokia Petrov
- Anthony Ingersent as Charles Spry
- Richard Meikle as Ron Richards
- Stephen Leeder as Fergan O'Sullivan
- Alistair Duncan as Sir William Owen
- Redmond Phillips as Richard Windeyer
- Ron Gaist as Frederick Shedden
- Ken Gladstone as Frank Forde
- Philippa Baker as Dame Enid Lyons
- David Whitford as W.C. Wentworth
- Derek Amer as Clive Evatt
- Robert Spain as Reg Leydin
- John Michael Howard as Rupert Lockwood
Production
The idea for the mini series and the title came from Bob Ellis, who pitched it to Matt Carroll at Channel Ten. Carroll commissioned Ellis and Stephen Ramsey to write it, originally as a feature film. In October 1984 Ten announced they did not want to make it.[4]
The producers of The Petrov Affair reportedly tried to buy part of the script, but were turned down. Carroll took the project Sandra Levy at the ABC and she agreed to make it provided it was done on videotape. If it was shot on film the estimated cost would be $5.6 million but on video it could be done for $3.4 million. It would be shown on the ABC for the Bicentenary.[5] The project needed to be rewritten and Ellis and Ramsay refused. John Lonie rewrote the scripts.[1]
Filming took place in October 1987.[6]
Fred Daly watched the show and said "the bloke playing Chifley hasn't got the voice right but then nobody could get Chif's voice right."[7]
Reception
Jim McCelland said "whileI am prepared to concede that I may be an atypically political animal I have to report that I experienced not a moment of boredom in watching the eight hour mini-series... It pulls off that rare double-historical accuracy and rivetting entertainment."[8]
Fred Daly called it "an excellent production."[9]
References
- Ramsey, Alan. The Way They Were. UNSW Press. p. 454.
- Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p243
- THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN TONGUE Wanda Jamrozik Sydney Morning Herald 18 June 1987 p 13
- "Ten's No to Drama". Sydney Morning Herald. 14 October 1984. p. 61.
- Oliver, Robin (27 June 1988). "3 MEN AND A NATION". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 1.
- "Who's this back at Parliament House?". The Canberra Times. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 26 October 1987. p. 1. Retrieved 7 May 2020 – via Trove.
- "Fred's Seal of Approval". Sydney Morning Herald. 19 June 1988. p. 53.
- McCelland, Jim (26 June 1988). "TURBULENT ERA THAT MAKES COMPELLING TV". Sun Herald. p. 11.
- Daly, Fred (27 June 1988). "TELLING IT LIKE IT WAS". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 6.