Wall to Wall (film)

Wall to Wall is an episode of the Australian anthology drama series Australian Playhouse.[3]

"Wall to Wall"
Australian Playhouse episode
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 6
Directed byEric Taylor
Teleplay byAnn Kinloch
Oriel Grey
Produced byDavid Goddard
Original air date23 May 1966[1][2]
Running time30 mins

It was written by Ann Kincloch and produced by Eric Taylor. It starred Gwen Plumb and was shot in Sydney.[4]

Plot

Elizabeth Fletcher reflects on her lonely life on her birthday. She remembers her one chance at romance, several years previously. She goes to a dance where a man pities her and takes her home, where he is "trapped" by her father.[5]

Cast

  • Heather Christie as Elizabeth Fletcher
  • Don Crosby as Mr Fletcher
  • David Yorston as the Young Man
  • Lyndall Barbour as Mrs Fletcher
  • Gwen Plumb as the next door neighbour Mrs Cooper

Background

The play had originally been written by Adelaide writer Ann Kinloch for a 1962 competition for Channel Nine drama. However it was not used, the studio making The Valley of Water instead.[6]

Reception

The Sydney Morning Herald thought "the dialogue is so soften stitled and at times too obvious and the author's intentions towards characters or actions are frequently obscure so that after a while one waits for the end in the hope - this time unavailing - that something can be made out of it all."[7]

The Age called it "a bad play... embarassing as it bellowed and whimpered through a predictable pattern of trite tragedies."[8] Another reviewer in the same paper called it "one of the poorest of the series. The script might have been written by a schoolboy."[9]

The Sunday Sydney Morning Herald said Gwen Plumg "gets out nod for the week's finest performance" for her work in the show.[10]

The Bulletin called the play "the silliest of all" the episodes of the series.[11]

gollark: ˙˙˙ ̇?˙
gollark: I assume it's the liberalism where you do things, and the things are liberalism.
gollark: ↑ Minoteaur 7.1
gollark: Discord servers and such work differently to real world politics because the stakes are way lower but the enforcement powers better.
gollark: I think the main thing this one has going for it is that it has some more people for ??? reasons, and R. Danny.

See also

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

References

  1. "TV Guide". The Age. 19 May 1966. p. 35.
  2. "TV Guide". Sydney Morning Herald. 23 May 1966. p. 17.
  3. "TELEVISION Helping selfidentification". The Canberra Times. 27 May 1966. p. 14. Retrieved 5 August 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  4. Vagg, Stephen (18 February 2019). "60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & '60s". Filmink.
  5. "Anguish in Suburbia". =The Age. p. 18.
  6. Heading, Rex (1996). Miracle on Tynte Street: The Channel Nine Story. Wakefield Press.
  7. "Suburban Troubles on TV". Sydney Morning Herald. 24 May 1966. p. 7.
  8. "Teletopics". The Age. 26 May 1966. p. 14.
  9. Monitor (28 May 1966). "Violence both real and synthetic". The Age. p. 23.
  10. Marshall, Valda (29 May 1966). "Showbusiness". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 72.
  11. Roberts, Frank (4 June 1966). "TELEVISION Neither Deft Nor Delightful". The Bulletin. p. 51.


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