Australian Playhouse
Australian Playhouse was an Australian anthology TV series featuring the work of Australian writers.
It ran for two series consisting of 40 episodes. Among the featured productions were works by Pat Flower who was the main writer having written 10 episodes, other writers included Tony Morphett, John Warwick, Barbara Vernon, Richard Lane, James Davern and David Sale
Background
Development
In August 1965 Talbot Duckmanton of the ABC announced that the ABC would increase its production of local drama, including a show called Australian Playhouse. This would not necessary consist of Australian plays and be "of an experimental nature".The series was the idea of producer David Goddard, father of actress Liza. Goddard worked on the show for nine months before it aired. He says he knew of a TV station which claimed it was going to so a TV series and asked for scripts, then claimed the scripts were not of standard; Goddard says the station never put on staff, and actually had no intention of making the show. "It was making a political gesture by saying it was trying to do something. It is absolutely scandalous that this sort of thing should have been going on here. And this is where the idea has been built up that there are no writers in Australia. As we shall prove, this is absolute rubbish."
Goddard said "There's a wealth of untouched and untapped gold in the Australian short story writer. The Australian is gifted with the ability to tell a story."
He said the show "will all be written by Australians and produced in Australia. And because they are written by Australians and aimed at television audiences primarily in Australia, they will reflect, comment on, or observe in a fictional way life in this country, as those writers see fit, know it, or have experienced it. In a word, it will be Australian drama."
Season One
In January 1966 Goddard announced that the ABC would make 39 episodes of 30 minutes each called Australian Playhouse. They would do 14 weeks "in all moods", then 12 "equally Australian dramas on a central theme", then 13 more. This would be in addition to the ABC's monthly dramas, and a comedy series.. Another 40 percent was fair average quality. The other half can be written off as good tries. Was the Playhouse series justified? In my view yes."It won a 1967 Logie Award for Contribution to the Industry.
Goddard said, "We have plenty of scripts and the future of Playhouse appears good. If there were to be any changes for next year it would only be a change in the time spot - perhaps later in the evening. We have some brilliant plays but they are only suitable for adult viewing."
In December 1966 the ABC reported it spent a million dollars on Australian drama since 1956. It said it produced 358 plays, 187 of which were written by Australians. Australian Playhouse cost a reported $55,000 for 37 plays.
The season was later described as 50% drama, 25% comedy, 25% fantasy.
Season 2
The budget tripled for the second series. However it ran for a shorter time.The series started on 12 June 1967 in Melbourne and then broadcast in Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Western Australia and then New South Wales on 24 July. By June all the episodes had been filmed and work had started on the 1968 season. Pat Alexander, executive producer, said over 1,000 scripts had been submitted. "The result has been much better material," said Alexander.
Only two scripts were by writers from the previous season. Fifty percent of the plays were comedies, forty percent drama, and ten percent fantasy of experimental.
The Sydney Morning Herald called it "an inconsistent thing but our own".
A Sunday issue of the same paper called the second series "the biggest flop" of the year.
Episodes
Season 1
Season 2
- The End Product written by Colin Free was intended for this series but not filmed until 1974 as a stand-alone play.
Episodes made but not broadcast
- Shameless Hussies by Peter Kenna - about two teenage heiresses have problems with pink hairdos and blind dates - announced April 1966 as part of the first series but not broadcast
- The Widow Thrum by Peter Finnane who also wrote The Pigeon - announced in April 1966
- Shadow on the Wall - directed by Chris Muir - filmed in April 1967 not aired until 10 April 1968
- The Stay at Home starred Sydney Conabere, Frank Rich, Gerda Nicholson
- Caught Napping with Peter Collingwood, Ethel Lang, Nancye Stewart
- The Black Infuriator by Alexander MacDonald with Terry McDermott, Elaine Plumb, John Godfrey
- The House by David Sale starring Tom Farley, Nancye Stewart, Juliana Allan, Alistair Smart
- Boy with Banner - announced in 1966 but seemingly not broadcast - it was directed by Christopher Muir and starred Patricia Kennedy, Norman Kaye and Julie Day
- The Captain and the Cox'n by Kenneth Hailes