Genre | drama play |
---|---|
Running time | 60 mins (8:00 pm – 9:00 pm) |
Country of origin | Australia |
Language(s) | English |
Syndicates | ABC |
Written by | George Farwell |
Recording studio | Sydney |
Original release | 14 July 1940 |
Portrait of a Gentleman is a 1940 Australian radio play by George Farwell about Thomas Griffiths Wainewright. It was the first time Wainewright's life had been dramatised. [1]
It was subsequently adapted into a stage play. [2]
The original radio production was on the ABC. [3] It won first prize in a 1940 ABC radio play competition. [4] A 1941 article called it one of the most popular plays ever broadcast by the Commission. [5]
The radio play aired again in 1941 (starring Peter Finch), 1946, [6] 1951 [7] [8] 1952 and 1956. [9]
The play was published in a 1946 anthology of Australian radio plays. [10]
Hal Porter also adapted Wainewright's life into a radio play, called The Forger .
Farwell himself wrote "In my play the theme was an inner conflict, the dual nature of Wainewright; put simply and melodramatically, good versus evil." [11]
ABC Weekly c alled it "no ordinary play. Mr. Farwell has got inside the character of Wainewright the Poisoner, and has presented the queer feeling such gentry have, that the world doesn’t understand them; that everything they do is right, and that, if the world only understood the circumstances, it would see that there was no other way for a Superior Person to act." [12]
Leslie Rees called it "a convincing and stylish hour-long radio drama, in which a bizarre character was strongly projected but kept believably human." [13]
The Melbourne Advocate said "This successful play has quality beyond question; but I think that it furnishes a misreading of Wainewright's character. Further, it is too long." [14]
ABC Weekly reviewed a 1946 production calling it "an expertly constructed and excellently written factual." [15]
The Bulletin said "remarks revealing the quirks of an abnormal character are the best portions of the play. The character itself, interesting enough, is static. Background good, but commonplace." [16]
In 1941 Leslie Rees listed the play as among those radio dramas "clearly written for radio and could not, in their present shape, be used elsewhere." [17]
However a stage play version was announced in 1941 as a possible production at Alec Coppel's Whitehall Company in Sydney for 1942. [18] This production did not appear to take place.
The stage play was highly commended in a 1945 playwriting competition held by the Playwrights' Advisory Board. [19] However it appears to have not been produced.
According to ABC Weekly, "Farwell tells the extraordinary story of Wainewright. London dandy, writer and artist, who was suspected of poisoning three of his near relations and was transported to Van Diemen’s Land, not for these unproven misdeeds but on a charge of forgery. Mr. Farwell has realised a portrait of sinister interest and has attempted an explanation of Wainewright's complex personality. The story starts when the brilliant young Thomas VVainewright comes to live with his rich and ailing uncle near London. Somehow that uncle does not live long. Thomas, the man of the world, ever in need of funds, persuades his innocent sister-in-law to insure her life for a large sum; misadventure follows the signing of the policy." [20]
It added, "The last scenes, showing Wainewright in the Hobart penal colony,teaching painting to the daughters, fat, ignorant settlers’ wives at five shillings an hour, have grim, stark, ironical qualities." [21]
Joseph George McParlane, known as Joe Valli, was a Scottish-Australian actor who worked in vaudeville and films. He had a long-running vaudeville partnership with Pat Hanna as "Chic and Joe".
The Invisible Circus is a 1946 Australian stage play by Sumner Locke Elliott set in the world of commercial radio drama, a field that Elliott knew well from many years writing for George Edwards. Elliott is represented in two characters, the idealistic Brad and the more jaded Mark.
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.
Awake My Love is a 1947 Australian stage play by Max Afford.
The Remittance Man is a 1939 Australian radio play by Richard Lane. It was one of the most acclaimed Australian radio plays of the 1930s.
Spoiled Darlings is a 1940 Australian romantic comedy radio play by Edmund Barclay that was broadcast nationally on the ABC.
Jeffrey Blackburn was a fictional private investigator who was the hero of a series of stories by Australian writer Max Afford.
A Rum Affair is a 1940 Australian radio play by Alec Coppel.
Alexander Turner (1907–1993) was an Australian poet, playwright, and theatre and radio producer. He was one of the leading Western Australian writers of the twentieth century.
The Explorers is a 1952 Australian radio play about the Burke and Wills expedition by John Sandford. It was Sandford's first play.
With Wings as Eagles is a 1943 Australian radio play verse drama by Edmund Barclay and Joy Hollyer about three airmen in World War Two.
The Mysterious Mr. Lynch is a 1939 Australian radio serial by Max Afford. It starred Peter Finch as its detective hero, Jeffrey Blackburn.
The House of a Thousand Whispers is a 1936 Australian radio play by Edmund Barclay.
A Sirius Cove is a 1935 Australian comedy play by Lionel Shave.
The Queer Affair at Kettering is a 1940 Australian radio drama by Max Afford starring his detective hero Jeffrey Blackburn and his wife Elisabeth. Unlike many Blackburn adventures, it was not a serial but a one-off mystery.
Secret Informer is a 1941 Australian radio play by Gordon Ireland about fifth columnists working on Australian radio.
The Starlit Valley is a 1940 Australian radio play by Catherine Shepherd.
John Ross, King of Cocos Islands is a 1940 Australian radio play by John Morgan about John Ross of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands. It was the first play from Morgan, a New Zealander who lived in Sydney and worked as the manager of a firm.
Richard Bracken-Farmer is a 1943 Australian radio play by John Horner.
The Watch on the Headland is a 1940 Australian radio play by M. Barnard Eldershaw, the name for Marjorie Barnard and Flora Eldershaw. It was their first radio play.