Burst Of Summer (television Play)
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''Burst of Summer'' is a 1961 Australian
television play A television play is a television programming genre which is a drama performance broadcast from a multi-camera television studio, usually live in the early days of television but later recorded to tape. This is in contrast to a television movi ...
based on the stage play ''
Burst of Summer ''Burst of Summer'' is a 1959 play by Oriel Gray. It won the 1959 J. C. Williamson's Little Theatre Guild Award, and was later adapted for radio and TV. It was Gray's last produced play. Plot In 1955, racial tensions erupt in a small to ...
'' by Oriel Gray. ''Burst of Summer'' was written by Gray and Rex Rienits and was released on 9 August 1961 in Melbourne, on 4 October 1961 in Sydney, on 11 October 1961 in Brisbane, and on 19 December 1961 in Perth. ''Filmink'' called it "a genuine landmark of Australian television".


Plot

Peggy is an Aboriginal woman who has just starred in an Australian feature film. She returns to the small town where she grew up and visits the milk bar where she once worked, accompanied by camera crew and a publicist, Mrs Blyth. The milk bar is owned by Joe, an immigrant from Italy, who employs an Aboriginal man, Eddie. Joe sacks Eddie and replaces him with a white man, Merv. Joe offers Peggy her old job back but she goes to work as a maid for wealthy Sally Blake. Peggy is reunited with a childhood friend, Don, who is working as a law clerk. Don is friends with a white journalist, Clinton, who is dating Sally Blake. Merv has a crush on Sally Blake, who becomes jealous of Clinton's friendship with Peggy. He is encouraged to cause trouble by Sally Blake. It results in Merv getting drunk and cutting Eddie's eyes with a beer bottle, permanently blinding him. Merv is arrested and Peggy leaves town with Clinton.


Cast

* Georgia Lee as Peggy Dinjerra * Wynn Roberts as Clinton Hunter *
Robert Tudawali Robert Tudawali (1929 – 26 July 1967), also known as Bobby or Bob Wilson, was an Australian actor and Indigenous activist. He is known for his leading role in the 1955 Australian film '' Jedda'', a role for which he was specifically chosen by ...
as Don Reynolds * Edward Howell as Joe *
Edward Brayshaw Edward John Brayshaw (18 October 1933 – 28 December 1990) was an Australian actor who worked in Australia and England. Australian career He was a Melbourne-based actor in the 1950s and 1960s and often appeared on television and stage. He le ...
as Mervyn Holmes *
Anne Charleston Anne Charleston (born 30 December 1942) is an Australian-born former actress prominent in television, radio and theatre, notable for her career locally and in the United Kingdom in both England and Ireland. She began her career on the stage in ...
as Sally Blake * Candy Williams as Eddie *Joan MacDonald as Mrs Blyth *Mort Hall as cameraman *Robert Hornery as his assistant *David Mitchell *Harry Williams *Berys Marsh *
Nancy Cato Nancy Fotheringham Cato (11 March 19173 July 2000) was an Australian writer who published more than twenty historical novels, biographies and volumes of poetry. Cato is also known for her work campaigning on environmental and conservation issu ...
*Ron Hescott *Peter Fitzgerald


Production

When the play was filmed it was one of a number of race-related dramas presented by the ABC around the same time. Filming took place at the ABC's Melbourne Studios in South Bank. Robert Tudawali was flown from Darwin to make his first appearance in a live television drama. He had already been seen in episodes of the filmed series '' Whiplash''. He was one of three aboriginal actors in the production, along with jazz singer Georgia Lee and rock singer Candy Williams. This was in contrast to the radio version of ''Burst of Summer'', which had been performed with an all-white cast. William Sterling said, "Apart from the fact that we had these excellent actors available, we felt it would destroy the whole social impact of the play if we cast white people in their roles." It was singer Georgie Lee's first straight dramatic role. Williams had appeared in '' The Sergeant from Burralee'' and Tudawali had made episodes of ''Whiplash''. Gray said, "I want to write about a sophisticated aborigine – the kind of person that aboriginies must look to in the future." Williams and Tudawali were both paid £160 each. However, because Tudawali was a ward of the Northern Territory government he was only allowed to keep part of his fee. Trevor Ling did the design. Les Bail was technical supervisor. ''Filmink'' argued a number of changes were made from the play which minimised the roles of the Aboriginal characters.


Reception

The TV critic from the Sunday ''Sydney Morning Herald'' called the production a "half-hearted stab" at writing a story on the problems of the aboriginal in a white society, despite some good acting from Georgia Lee and Edward Howell. She added, "One couldn't escape the feeling that the author had dashed it off after seeing too many American movies, rather than making a serious attempt to put the Australian colour problem into its own perspective. It's a pity this missed out, because there is a goldmine of material on the aboriginal waiting for a skilled, sensitive writer to tap it." Another critic from the daily ''Sydney Morning Herald'' said the show "argued an imepccable principle clumsily" which had "unreal or stereotyped characters and dialogue that was sometimes more stagey than convincingly laconic." The ''Bulletin'' called it "a depressingly incompetent technical exercise, and the characterisation was appalling." ''Filmink'' argued "it's absolutely fascinating and compelling to watch, a landmark in our cultural history... it's not what it could have been... uteven in its flawed state, ''Burst of Summer'' remains a fascinating piece of art." ''Filmink'' called it "a genuine landmark of Australian television" because it was:
The first Australian TV drama with not one, not two, but three major Aboriginal characters. The first with a sizeable role for a male and female Aboriginal actor. The first in a modern setting to have a scene between two Aboriginal characters without any white people in it. The last dramatic appearance from the legendary actor Robert Tudawali. And the sole acting performance from singer Georgia Lee.


See also

* List of live television plays broadcast on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1956–1969)


References


External links

* *
1961 TV adaptation
at
National Film and Sound Archive 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 ...

Complete TV script
at
National Archives of Australia The National Archives of Australia (NAA), formerly known as the Commonwealth Archives Office and Australian Archives, is an Australian Government agency that is the National archives, official repository for all federal government documents. It ...
{{William Sterling 1960s Australian television plays Australian Broadcasting Corporation original programming Australian English-language television shows Australian live television shows Black-and-white Australian television shows 1961 television plays Australian films based on plays