The Set (film)
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''The Set'' is a 1970 Australian drama film directed by Frank Brittain and produced by David Hannay and adapted from the unpublished novel by Roger Ward. The film depicts
homosexuality Homosexuality is romantic attraction, sexual attraction, or sexual behavior between members of the same sex or gender. As a sexual orientation, homosexuality is "an enduring pattern of emotional, romantic, and/or sexual attractions" to pe ...
in Australia, and was the first feature film in Australia to have homosexuality as a main theme.


Plot

Paul Lawrence is a working-class man who dates Cara, sells shirts at a Sydney department store, and dreams of attending art school. Cara leaves for London and Paul becomes the protege of designer Marie Rosefield. Through this he enters the 'set', the world of Sydney art society. Rosefield is friends with Mark Bronoski, an artist who commissions Paul to design a set for British stage director, John L. Fredericks. Paul is helped by art student Tony Brown, who is dating Paul's cousin, Kim Sylvester. Paul and Tony begin a homosexual affair. Kim's mother Peggy has an affair with Boronoski. Paul and Tony break up and Paul attempts suicide. He is reunited with Cara.


Cast


Production

The script was based on an unpublished novel, written during the sixties, by Australian actor Roger Ward. It was based on diaries he had kept since 1954 reflecting on sexual mores in Australia.'The Set: An Interview With Roger Ward', ''Spike Magazine'', 15 August 2011
Retrieved 11 September 2012
The original title of the novel was 'You can never please a people' and was based on Ward's experience in the theatrical world, using the lives of friends of his and his own experiences as a basis. Indeed, the character of John L. Fredericks was based on
Sir Robert Helpmann Sir Robert Murray Helpmann Order of the British Empire, CBE ( Helpman, 9 April 1909 – 28 September 1986) was an Australian ballet dancer, actor, director, and choreographer. After early work in Australia he moved to Britain in 1932, where he j ...
. The actor who played him, Michael Charnley, when told who he was playing, said "My God, I haven't seen Bobby since he lifted me in Swan Lake!". Ward showed the manuscript to
Ed Devereaux Edward Sidney Devereaux (27 August 192517 December 2003), better known professionally as Ed Devereaux, was an Australian actor, director, and scriptwriter who lived in the United Kingdom for many years. He was best known for playing the part of ...
who suggested Ward take it to American producer Frank Brittain, who had just made '' Journey Out of Darkness'' (1967) and wanted to direct Australian films. Brittain asked Ward to rewrite the material and emphasise the homosexual content. It had not been Ward's goal to have the film made with an emphasis on the gay elements of the story. The original novel was not intended as a gay novel per se, but depicted gay characters as part of wider everyday life. It was the producer's 24-year-old third wife, Dianne Brittain, who upon reading the book pertaining to the purchase of film rights,noted the presence of homosexual characters and told Brittain he would have to buy it as "This guy describes two men making luuurve". According to Ward, the script was rewritten by Dianne Brittain as well as novelist
Elizabeth Kata Elizabeth Colina Katayama (nee McDonald; 9 October 19124 September 1998) was an Australian writer known by the pseudonym Elizabeth Kata, best known for ''Be Ready with Bells and Drums'' (1961), made into the award-winning film ''A Patch of Blue'' ...
. Finance was reportedly obtained from a Newcastle industrialist, Richard Mawson. The film was shot in early 1969. No sets were used, with filming taking place in private houses on Sydney's north shore and in Paddington. Production was highly publicised, in part due to a nude appearance by TV personality Hazel Phillips.Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, ''Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production'', Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 246. Roger Ward later said he was unhappy with the experience:
I was devastated to see the ruination of a previously polished and highly tuned script and spent my short time on set leaping in front of the cameras yelling, "Cut! That is not the dialogue". It got to the stage that the actors were ignoring the director and coming to me in a clandestine manner to ask for interpretations and the correct lines to say. Understandably the director was angered by this and I was packed up and sent out of town on a phony publicity tour so a lot of the film went through without my input or salvaging and ended up in what I thought at the time was a 'cringeworthy state'. So the risks I faced at that time, and they were real risks and they did eventuate, was one of being a laughing stock, of being embarrassed for creating such a badly written script.
The cast of the film was eclectic, featuring professional actor
Rod Mullinar Rodney Mullinar (born 1942) is a British Australian actor, noted for his roles on Australian television. He emigrated to Australia with his first wife, casting agent Liz Mullinar in 1969. Career Mullinar took the leading role in Australian es ...
, who had an extensive track record in the Crawford stable of productions including '' Homicide'', ''
Division 4 ''Division 4'' is an Australian television police drama series made by Crawford Productions for the Nine Network between 1969 and 1975 for 301 episodes. Synopsis The series was one of the first dramas to follow up on the enormous success o ...
'' and ''
Matlock Police ''Matlock Police'' is an Australian television police drama series made by Crawford Productions for the 0-10 Network (now known as the 10 Network) between 1971 and 1976. The series focused on the police station and crime in the Victorian town o ...
'' and went onto appear in Against the Wind, Prisoner and Against the Wind. Well-known TV personality Hazel Philips was cast as lead character Peggy Sylvester by producer Frank Brittain, but was not the first choice of writer Ward, who wanted
Carol Raye Carol Raye (17 January 1923 – 18 June 2022 as Kathleen Mary Corkrey and also billed as Carole Raye) was a British-born Australian actress of film, television, radio, theatre and revue, comedian, singer, dancer, and radio and television prod ...
for the role. On casting, Ward said:
Frank chose Hazel Phillips. A non-actress at the time, she was a trier and today, 30 years later, her performance stands up ok, but then, i thought she was a disaster. The lead guy who plays Paul, was an unknown called Sean McEuan, 21 years old, soft, sensitive. I hated him. But looking back he was marvellous. To this day he was a great actor.Micheal Charnley was great, but others were hopeless. Non actors were used when strong actors were needed to deliver such dialogue.
Other casting of note were cameo appearances from Sydney 'gay icons' Ken 'Kandy' Johnson and Tracey Lee. Lee (real name Maxwell Ritchie) was a cabaret artiste and female impersonator who had been active on the Sydney club scene as a female impersonator since 1953. He created the persona of Tracey Lee in 1959. Johnson, who started drag performances at parties in the early 60's, became a Sydney club entrepreneur in Sydney's 'camp' scene, first opening Kandy's Garden of Eden in Enmore, became a partner in night club The Purple Onion, and opened Ken's Karate Klub, the sauna which became Ken's of Kensington, before closing in 2012.


Release

The censor demanded a dozen cuts before the film was passed for export. The producers appealed and in the end, only four words were deleted. The film was refused registration as an Australian quota production under the quality clause of the New South Wales
Film Quota Act The Film Quota Act, full title the New South Wales Cinematograph Films (Australian Quota) Act was an act of legislation passed in September 1935 that came into force on 1 January 1936. Under the Act it was compulsory that in the first year of opera ...
. The film was not a success at the box office. However, it has since come to be regarded as a cult movie in part because of its depiction of homosexuality. Ward's original novel was finally published in 2011. He claimed he was working on a sequel. Home Entertainment Release The Set was given its first home entertainment release on DVD and VOD, shortly after its 50th anniversary by Bounty Films. The DVD included extensive interviews with the remaining cast and crew, a PDF of Ward's novel, never been before cut and bonus scenes and a 32-page booklet with original newspaper articles and ads from Roger Ward's personal collection.


References


External links

*
''The Set''
at
Australian Screen Online The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (NFSA), known as ScreenSound Australia from 1999 to 2004, is Australia's audiovisual archive, responsible for developing, preserving, maintaining, promoting and providing access to a national c ...

''The Set''
at Oz Movies {{DEFAULTSORT:Set, The 1970 films 1970 drama films Australian drama films Australian LGBT-related films 1970 LGBT-related films LGBT-related drama films 1970s English-language films