Split Level (TV play)

Split Level is a 1964 Australian TV play directed by Ken Hannam and written by Noel Robinson.[2] It aired on 7 October 1964 and was shot in Sydney at ABC's Gore Hill Studios.[3]

Split Level
Written byNoel Robinson
Directed byKen Hannam
Country of originAustralia
Original language(s)English
Production
Production company(s)ABC
Release
Original networkABC
Original release7 October 1964 (Sydney)
14 October 1964 (Melbourne)[1]

Australian TV drama was relatively rare at the time.[4]

Plot

Stephanie is married to architect Mike, and they have two children, Hilary and Keith. Mike is having an affair.[5]

Cast

  • Diana Davidson as Stephanie Stewart
  • Leonard Teale as Mike Stewart
  • Jacki Weaver as Hilary
  • Elizabeth Pusey as Keith
  • Barbie Rogers as Rosemary
  • Ruth Cracknell as Alison
  • Judi Farr as Vonnie
  • Winifred Green as Mrs Stewart
  • Eve Wynne as Mrs Conlon
  • Julianna Allan as Carol
  • Muriel Hopkins as Mrs Brooke
  • Joan Morrow as Janet
  • Max Phipps as Louis
  • Pat Hill
  • Joan Winchester
  • Leonard Bullen
  • Jonathon Constable

Production

It was Noel Robinson's first original script produced for TV, although she had done a number of adaptations. Director Ken Hannam said "this is the best constructed TV play to come to me from a local author. I have no doubt Miss Robinson will become a most important writer in the next few years."[6]

Reception

According to the Sydney Morning Herald "as an exercise in how to make a very small amount of plot fill out an hour of television drama" the play "was technically a success" but "left a good deal to be desired" being "a soap opera transposed to the upper social scale with a faintly intellectual flavour of play-readings, feature walls and flower arrangements." The critic allowed that director Hannan "extracted welcome liveliness from plenty of scene and camera angle changes, and thus at. least kept the eye busy even when the mind tended to wander."[3]

gollark: Yes, and how are you meant to get that?
gollark: ... what happens if someone starts faking those?
gollark: Also, it's *so* weirdly arbitrary.
gollark: You can't fix problems just by banning things related to them, you need to find and solve root causes.
gollark: I don't really like this rule, seems very triangular.

References

  1. "Drama Sorts Out Domestic Rift". The Age. October 8, 1964. p. 13.
  2. "ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT When Will the Sleepy Giant Turn Over? Reassurance for an elderly relative". The Bulletin. 10 July 1965. p. 50.
  3. "TV Play on Channel 2". Sydney Morning Herald. 8 October 1964. p. 16.
  4. Vagg, Stephen (February 18, 2019). "60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & '60s". Filmink.
  5. "TV Guide". The Age. 8 October 1964. p. 26.
  6. "Sydney Woman Writer's Play". Sydney Morning Herald. 5 October 1964. p. 30.


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