The Devil Makes Sunday

The Devil Makes Sunday is a TV play about a convict break out on Norfolk Island by Bruce Stewart, who had just written Shadow of a Pale Horse. It was based on the real life Norfolk Island convict mutinies.

It was filmed for British, US and Australian TV.

It was also adapted for radio.[1]

Plot

In 1840 on Norfolk Island, convicts rise up against their guards.

1960 British TV Version

The Devil Makes Sunday
Written by Bruce Stewart
Music by Bobby Midgely
Production
company
ABC Weekend Television
Associated Television (ATV)
Associated-Rediffusion Television
Distributed by ITV
Release date
31 July 1960
Running time
60 mins[2]
Country UK
Language English

The play was filmed in Britain as part of ITV Sunday Night Drama.

Cast

  • Alfred Burke as Clay
  • Clifford Earl as Corporal
  • André Morell as Major Childs
  • Toke Townley as Stukely
  • Sally Home

1961 US TV Version

The Devil Makes Sunday
Directed by Tom Donovan
Written by Joe Palmer Jr.
Based on play by Bruce Stewart
Starring Dane Clark
Production
company
Theatre Guild
Release date
25 January 1961
Running time
60 mins
Country USA
Language English

The episode was filmed in the US as part of the US Steel Hour.[3][4]

Plot

On the penal colony of Norfolk Island one Sunday afternoon, a convict, Prendergast, rests during working hours. He is flogged to unconsciousness.

Cast

  • Dane Clark as Clay
  • Martyn Green as Childs
  • Brooke Hayward as Dora Childs
  • Fritz Weaver as Silverwood
  • Chris Wiggins as Stukely
  • Frank Conroy as Dr McCombie
  • William Hansen as Graves
  • James Valentine as Barnaby
  • Jack Dengel as Prendergast
  • Tom Clancy as Quill

1962 Australian TV Version

The Devil Makes Sunday
Directed by William Sterling
Written by Bruce Stewart
Production
company
ABC
Distributed by ABC
Release date
1962
Running time
60 mins
Country Australia
Language English

The play was filmed for Australian TV in 1962.

Cast

  • Syd Conabere as Clay
  • Mark Kelly as Jack
  • Robert Peach as Prison Governor
  • Carole Potter as Dora

Production

It was shot in Melbourne.[5]

Reception

The TV critic from the Sydney Morning Herald thought the production was "chiefly remarkable for the briskness of its violence" listing the "five deaths by shooting, one by strangulation and one by public flogging. Even a hardworking Elizabethan playwright of the most bloodthirsty kind would have thought this a respectable tally." He added "Stewart's principal characters were merely mouthpieces for a set of ethical attitudes. Because they were so obviously pieces on a moralistic chessboard and because their dialogue dealt in words like good and evil without once making these seem more than black and white abstractions, their predicament was almost totally unmoving." He also felt producer (director) William Sterling "was busy enough with his properties and cameras...but he seemed actually to have encouraged the actors playing the prison commandant and the chaplain to emphasise the intrinsic hollowness of their dialogue." However the performance of Sydney Conabere was praised.[6]

References

  1. "Advertising". The Canberra Times. 35, (9, 984). Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 5 August 1961. p. 17. Retrieved 30 March 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  2. Radio and TV Programmes The Irish Times (1921-Current File); Dublin, Ireland [Dublin, Ireland]30 July 1960: 4.
  3. "Episode Guide for US Steel Hour". Classic TV Archive.
  4. News of TV and Radio by Val Adams, New York Times (1923-Current file); New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]01 Jan 1961: X9.
  5. "TV Guide". Sydney Morning Herald. 12 March 1962. p. 16.
  6. "Convict Play on ABN". Sydney Morning Herald. 15 March 1962. p. 7.
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