Eye of the Night | |
---|---|
Genre | thriller |
Written by | Kay Keavney |
Directed by | Christopher Muir |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Running time | 75 minutes [1] |
Production company | ABC |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | 24 February 1960 (live, Melbourne) [2] |
Release | 6 April 1960 (Sydney, taped) [3] |
Eye of the Night is a 1960 Australian television play. It was written by Kay Keavney and directed by Christopher Muir. [2] [4]
It was broadcast live on the ABC from Melbourne on the night of Wednesday 24 February. In Sydney on the same night the ABC were doing a live broadcast of the play The Turning Point . These two were the first in a series of ten plays made by the ABC in 1960 using local writers, others including The Astronauts and The Slaughter of St. Teresa's Day . (Other plays possibly included Close to the Roof , Dark Under the Sun , The Square Ring , Who Killed Kovali? , and Swamp Creatures .) [5] [6]
A man breaks into homes at night and terrorises women. He eludes police for two years. In the Melbourne suburb of Sunshine, a woman, Ruth Arnott, fears that a man in her own house, a man oppressed by his mother, may be the attacker. The opening scenes take place at Victorian Police Headquarters with the rest at a house in Sunshine. [7]
Early Australian TV drama production was dominated by using imported scripts but in 1960 the ABC was undertaking what has been described as "an Australiana drive" of producing local stories. [8] This was based on an original script by Kay Keavney an experienced writer for radio as well as TV series like The Story of Peter Gray .
To prepare for the production, Muir visited the police department to study criminal detection techniques and meet psychologists. According to The Age Beverly Dunn "has a difficult role to play, involving several emotional scenes". [2]
Neva Carr Glyn or Neva Carr Glynn was an Australian stage, film and radio actress born in Melbourne to Arthur Benjamin Carr Glyn, a humorous baritone and stage manager born in Ireland, and Marie Carr Glyn, née Marie Dunoon Senior, an actress with the stage name "Marie Avis". She had one half-sister Gwendoline Arnold O'Neill and two half-brothers Sacheverill Arnold Mola and Rupert Arnold Mola. She was named "Neva" after a great-aunt, who was a contralto of some quality. Both spellings of her surname appear in print roughly equally and apparently arbitrarily.
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