Call Me a Liar | |
---|---|
Based on | TV play by John Mortimer |
Directed by | William Sterling |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Running time | 80 mins |
Production company | ABC |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | 12 July 1961 (Melbourne, live) [1] 20 September 1961 (Sydney) 24 April 1963 (Brisbane) [2] |
Call Me a Liar is a 1961 Australian TV play. [3] It was shot in Melbourne in studio with some location work. [4] It was Channel 2's 49th live play. [5]
Sammy Moles lives in a world of make believe. For his employer's benefit he invents a wife and child and for his fellow lodgers he lies about his past, background and job. He meets a German girl called Martha. [6]
It was based on a TV play by John Mortimer which had been performed in England in 1958. [7] It was also adapted for Australian radio in 1961. The play was filmed again for British TV in 1963. [8]
William Sterling gave the lead to Jane Oehr, a 19 year old second year university arts student who was relatively inexperienced as an actor. She had been in Macbeth and Night of the Ding Don. David Mitchell has been in both those productions as well, along with Who Killed Kovali? , Shadow of Heroes and The Astronauts. [1]
The Sydney Morning Herald TV critic said the production "had the lightness of heart and the deftness of touch so necessary to such a whimsical part-comedy, part-sentimental drama." [4]
The White Carnation is a 1953 play by English playwright R. C. Sherriff. Its premiere production had a cast led by Ralph Richardson, but it was not revived until a 2013 Finborough Theatre production featuring Aden Gillett and Benjamin Whitrow.
Night of the Ding-Dong is a 1954 stage play by Ralph Peterson. It was this second play, following The Square Ring. It is a comedy set in Adelaide just after the Crimean War about the locals fearing a Russian invasion. It is based on a real incident.
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The Big Client is a 1961 Australian television play. It was directed by James Upshaw. It screened "live" on the ABC on 19 July 1961 and was recorded in Sydney Australian TV drama was relatively rare at the time.
The Road is a 1963 British television play by Nigel Kneale. It was broadcast as part of the BBC Television anthology drama series First Night. An Australian remake was aired the following year. No recordings of the production on either video or audio are known to exist. The script for The Road was published alongside those for Kneale's teleplays The Year of the Sex Olympics and The Stone Tape under the title The Year of the Sex Olympics and Other TV Plays in 1976.
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