Genre | drama |
---|---|
Running time | 60 mins (8:15 pm – 9:15 pm) |
Country of origin | Australia |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | 2FC |
Syndicates | ABC |
Starring | Peter Finch Neva Carr Glynn |
Written by | Max Afford |
Directed by | Dion Wheeler [1] |
Original release | 1 November 1940 [2] |
The Queer Affair at Kettering is a 1940 Australian radio drama by Max Afford starring his detective hero Jeffrey Blackburn and his wife Elisabeth. [3] Unlike many Blackburn adventures, it was not a serial but a one-off mystery. [4]
Afford was asked to write play quickly after the success of the earlier Jeffrey Blackburn serial Grey Face . Broadcast was pushed back from September to November. [5]
As with The Mysterious Mr. Lynch and Grey Face the two leads were played by Peter Finch and Neva Carr Glynn. The play was enthusiastically by audiences received. (However the next Blackburn serial, It Walks by Night had different stars in the leads which upset some listeners.) [6]
Reviewing the production, Wireless Weekly said "Mr. Afford compels admiration by the way he builds suspense and then allows it to dangle while he injects human interest. That tea-and-toast interlude, for instance. Very engaging. Peter Finch, as Blackburn, and Neva Carr-Glyn, as Beth, performed with their usual aplomb. But, in this case, the players are less important than the play. In brief: Fine fun." [7]
The play was produced again several times in Australia, including in 1943 [8] and 1946. [9]
The play was also produced for BBC radio in two different versions, one in 1945 starring Ivan Brandy and Lydia Sherwood, the other in 1946, starring Frank Allenby and Sherwood. [10]
According to a press release, "Elizabeth Blackburn took husband Jeffery — much against his will — down to Kettering Old House, recently rented by those inveterate practical jokers, Sally and Jim Rutland. Here they met Rutland's Aunt Florence; Lambert, the detective novelist; and Wishart, the financier. Here, too, they learned of the mysterious room— a room in which people vanished in the twinkling of an eye. Of course, it was all fantastic — until, one by one, the household began to disappear!" [11]
Afford adapted the script into a 1948 short story called The Vanishing Trick which appeared the magazine Detective Fiction. [12] Arthur Upfield was an admirer of the story. [13]
Awake My Love is a 1947 Australian stage play by Max Afford.
Jeffrey Blackburn was a fictional private investigator who was the hero of a series of stories by Australian writer Max Afford.
The Mysterious Mr. Lynch is a 1939 Australian radio serial by Max Afford. It starred Peter Finch as its detective hero, Jeffrey Blackburn.
The Resignation of Mr. Bagsworth is a stage play by Lionel Shave.
The Fantastic Case of the Four Specialists is a 1937 Australian radio play by Max Afford. The play was one of Afford's best known.
The Twelve Labours of Hercules is a 1938 Australian radio serial by Max Afford based on the legend of Hercules.
Silver from Satan is a 1937 Australian radio play by Max Afford.
Fly By Night is a 1937 Australian radio serial by Max Afford. It was his first radio serial featuring Afford's detective hero, Jeffrey Blackburn. In this serial he was not married to Elizabeth but they would be married for subsequent serials.
It Walks by Night is an Australian radio serial by Max Afford featuriing his detective hero, Jeffrey Blackburn.
Grey Face is a 1940 Australian radio serial by Max Afford featuring his detective hero, Jeffrey Blackburn.
The Laughing Woman is a 1934 British stage play by Gordon Daviot, a nom de plume for Elisabeth MacKintosh (1896-1955) who also wrote under the name Josephine Tey. It was based on the relationship between Henri Gaudier and Sophie Brzeska.
Blood on His Hands is a 1936 Australian novel by Max Afford. It was his first novel and featured Jeffrey Blackburn his detective hero. It was set in Melbourne during that city's Centenary celebrations. Afford wrote the novel for a competition held by John Long a publishers in London, submitted it in December 1934, then while waiting to hear back wrote a sequelo. John Long accepted it and offered a contract for three books. The novel was published in London before Australia.
The Dead are Blind is a 1937 Australian novel by Max Afford featuring his hero Jeffrey Blackburn. It was the third Jeffrey Blackburn novel.
Death's Mannikins is a 1937 Australian novel by Max Afford. It was the second Jeffrey Blackburn novel following Blood on His Hands.
The Night Watchman is a 1940 Australian radio series by Max Afford based on the story by W. Jacobs. It was an anthology series based on different stories by Jacobs, all narrated by a night watchman. The show replaced Afford's Grey Face.
Storm Over Everest is a 1939 Australian radio play by Gordon Ireland. It told of various attempts to climb Mount Everest.
Secret Informer is a 1941 Australian radio play by Gordon Ireland about fifth columnists working on Australian radio.
The Jackeroo is a 1937 Australian radio play by Richard Barry.
Sabotage is a 1940 Australian radio play by is a radio play by Catherine Shepherd. It imagines what it might be like to turn into a fifth column in Australia.
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.