Genre | Mystery serial |
---|---|
Running time | 30 mins [1] (8:30 pm – 9:00 pm) |
Country of origin | Australia |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | 2UE |
Starring | Frank Thring |
Written by | Morris West |
Directed by | Walter Pym |
Produced by | Morris West |
Recording studio | Melbourne |
Original release | 4 August 1953 [2] – March 1954 |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 52 [3] |
Opening theme | William Flynn [4] |
Man of Two Tribes is a 1953 Australia radio serial based on the stories of Arthur Upfield about Detective Inspector Napoleon "Bony" Bonaparte. Morris West adapted several of Upfield's stories. [5] [6]
The Adelaide Mail said "the plot developed along exciting lines. The actors were good. Unfortunately any listener who hadn't solved the mystery by the time 'Boney' announced his intention of going to Adelaide to further his investigations must have been on some other station." [7]
The Brisbane Sunday Mail wondered why Bony was "played so pompously? Never met an Australian aborigine yet who didn't have a lively sense of humour, but the scriptwriter and actor between them make the inspector sound like the biggest stuffed shirt of all time. A pity. Apart from that, the series is quite a fair example of 'whodunits' and better written than most." [8]
"In answer to a report of a murder which comes via the Flying Doctor radio service, Bonaparte flies to the Kimberley Ranges in the heart of Australia's cattle country an I finds an unusual set of circumstances involving some of the worst characters in the area." [9]
ABC Weekly called it "The central character is Detective-Inspector Napoleon Bonaparte, a most vivid personality. Bonaparte, or “Bony,” as he is commonly called, is the son of an Aboriginal mother and a white father. He is a University graduate, with all the veneer of the white man, plus an intimate knowledge of bush lore, the science of black-tracking, and the possession of a strange sixth sense inherited from his primitive ancestors." [10]
constructed attempt to enable a wanted man to disappear." [21]
Arthur William Upfield was an English-Australian writer, best known for his works of detective fiction featuring Detective Inspector Napoleon "Bony" Bonaparte of the Queensland Police Force, a mixed-race Indigenous Australian. His books were the basis for a 1970s Australian television series entitled Boney, as well as a 1990 telemovie and a 1992 spin-off TV series.
Detective Inspector Napoleon "Bony" Bonaparte is a fictional character created by Australian novelist Arthur Upfield (1890–1964). Bony is a biracial Aboriginal Australian detective with a reputation for solving difficult cases by finding subtle clues. Upfield introduced the character in his 1929 novel The Barrakee Mystery. 29 novels featuring the character were published.
Lady in Danger was a play by Australian writer Max Afford. It was one of the few Australian plays to be produced on Broadway. It was also adapted for radio and television.
Janette Craig is an Australian actress best known for her performance as Bubba in Summer of the Seventeenth Doll (1959).
The Bone is Pointed (1938) is a novel by Australian writer Arthur Upfield. It was the sixth of the author's novels to feature his recurring character Detective Inspector Napoleon 'Bony' Bonaparte. It was originally published in the Australia by Angus & Robertson in 1938, and subsequently serialised in The Herald newspaper in Melbourne between September and November 1938, under the title Murder on the Station.
As Ye Sow is a 1937 Australian radio serial by Edmund Barclay. It told the story of six generations of Australians in early colonial Australia.
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With Cain Go Wander is a 1953 Australian original radio play by Edmund Barclay.
Ralph Rashleigh and the Bushrangers is a 1953 Australian radio play by Edmund Barclay based on an 1840s novel by James Tucker.
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Spiegel the Cat is a 1952 Australian radio play by David Martin. It was adapted from Spiegel the Cat, a story from the Swiss writer Gottfried Keller.
Secret Mountain is a 1953 Australian radio serial by Morris West. It told "The story of a group of people snowbound In a tiny chalet in the heart of the Austrian Tyrol, under the shadow of a towering peak." Another account said the hero was "an ingenious young tourist, Paddy Geoghegan, who find's himself caught up in the tangle of lives of his six companions."
Double Demon is a 1951 Australian radio serial by Max Afford featuriing his detective hero, Jeffrey Blackburn. He wrote it after returning to Australia following a long trip to England, whereupon he signed a long-term contract with the ABC. This serial was one of the first results of that new arrangement.
Grey Face is a 1940 Australian radio serial by Max Afford featuring his detective hero, Jeffrey Blackburn.