The Multi-Coloured Umbrella (television play)

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Genredrama
Based onplay by Barbara Vernon
Written byGeorge F. Kerr
Directed byRaymond Menmuir
The Multi-Coloured Umbrella
Genredrama
Based onplay by Barbara Vernon
Written byGeorge F. Kerr
Directed byRaymond Menmuir
StarringKen Wayne
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducerDave Tapp
Running time60 mins
Production companyABC
Original release
NetworkABC
Release29 January 1958 (1958-01-29) (Sydney, live)[1]

The Multi-Coloured Umbrella is a 1958 Australian television play based on the stage play of the same name by Barbara Vernon.

It was broadcast on the first night the ABC aired from their new studios at Gore Hill, Sydney[2]

According to film reviewer Stephen Vagg "It took a genuine act of will to produce local stories for television and sometimes people were punished for doing so", giving Multi Coloured Umbrella as an example.[3]

Production

The play was broadcast live on 29 January 1958 on ABC's Sydney station from its studios at Gore Hill. It was broadcast on the night the Gore Hill Studios opened. The bulk of the play was done live with some prerecorded scenes shot on location at Bondi Beach.[4]

The play was selected by ABC's head of drama Neil Hutchinson.[5] It was chosen to broadcast on ABC the night the new £620,000 Gore Hill studios were opened. Chairman of the ABC Richard Boyer said "It is our greatest hope to contribute to Australian life and culture. We want to provide a medium to spread what is the genius of Australians."[6]

According to Filmink:

The shortened running time meant cuts had to be made, the most notable being the removal of the character of Eileen and the entire scene where she tells Kate about their father leaving their mother. This is one of those excisions that Kerr probably thought was okay because it doesn’t affect the story per se… but it was massive because the Kate-Eileen moments are crucial for fleshing out Kate’s character. It is through these that the audience can properly see Kate’s worldview, especially her feelings about Joe, marriage and sex – she can be honest with her sister in a way she can’t be with the Donnellys. Without those moments, her character’s actions don’t really make sense, and Kate goes from being the lead character to a support player in “The Ben and Joe Show”, throwing the whole play out of balance.[7]

Reception

It was advertised as "the exciting drama about present-day Sydney."[8]

The Australian Women's Weekly called it "an excellent production".[9]

According to Filmink

It’s a decent production, with an impressive set (bar the painted backdrops), interesting location cut-aways to Bondi Beach, well-choreographed fight sequences and very effective quiet moments. The best of the cast is Ken Wayne, who is superb as Joe, even if he’s too old for the part as written (Joe is meant to be aged 24 while the hard-living Wayne was a craggy-looking 33). Deryck Barnes, a fine actor, seems miscast as the swaggering, Burt Lancaster-y Ben – I get that there was a shortage of attractive, virile male actors in Australia at the time, but I kept wishing that, at the very least, Wayne had played Ben’s part and some younger, more obviously callow actor was cast as Joe.[7]

Political controversy

References

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