The Case of Private Hamp | |
---|---|
Based on | the novel King and Country by James Lansdale Hodson |
Directed by | Colin Dean |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Running time | 55 mins |
Production company | ABC |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | 17 October 1962 (Sydney) [1] 28 November 1962 (Melbourne) [2] 1 January 1963 (Brisbane) [3] |
The Case of Private Hamp is a 1962 Australian television film which aired on the ABC. Despite the wiping of the era, a copy of the presentation exists as a kinescope recording. [4]
It was based on a 1955 novel by James Lansdale Hodson which was turned into the 1964 film King and Country . The novel had been adapted for radio in Melbourne in 1957. [5] [6]
The court martial of Private Arthur Hamp who was accused of desertion in Passchendaele, France, 1917. He is defended by Hargreaves.
Designer Jack Montgomery created trenches by mixing bran with black earth. The cast was all male. Ric Hutton had just appeared in a TV production of Madam Butterfly. [7]
Hepple called it "a marvelous play about what I consider to be legalised murder. It should bring tears to the eyes of anyone who watches it." [3]
The TV critic for the Sydney Morning Herald said it featured "capable acting" [8]
The Sunday Sydney Morning Herald critic called it "a first rate piece of drama, with a case and a quality of acting that was well-nigh flawless." [9]
The Woman's Weekly called it "one of the strongest and most moving plays yet presented on TV." [10]
King and Country is a 1964 British war film directed by Joseph Losey, shot in black and white, and starring Dirk Bogarde and Tom Courtenay. The film was adapted for the screen by British screenwriter Evan Jones based on the play Hamp by John Wilson and a 1955 novel by James Lansdale Hodson.
Stormy Petrel is an early Australian television drama. A period drama, the 12-episode serial told the story of William Bligh and aired in 1960 on ABC. It was the first live TV serial from the ABC.
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