You Can't Win 'Em All (1962 film)

Last updated

You Can't Win 'Em All
You Can't Win 'Em All (1962 film).png
Ad in The Age 5 Sep 1962
Genrecomedy-drama
Written by Alun Owen
Directed by Patrick Barton
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducerBernard Heron
Running time60 mins [1]
Production companyABC
Original release
Network ABC
Release5 September 1962 (1962-09-05) (Melbourne) [2]
3 October 1962 (Sydney) [3]

You Can't Win 'Em All is a 1962 Australian television play directed by Patrick Barton. Filmed in London, it was based on a play by Alun Owen which had been previously filmed by the BBC in 1962. [4]

Contents

Filmink called it "a light-hearted comedy adventure closer to a 1940s Humphrey Bogart movie at Warner Bros, complete with colourful support characters, sexy dames and a backlot third world setting." [5]

Premise

British wireless operator Corrigan Blake is stranded in Jamaica. In a bar, he receives an offer to help repair a radio for some revolutionaries in a South American company. Corrigan agrees on the proviso he is paid one thousand dollars.

Corrigan visits the revolutionary compound, under the command of Feliz and Feliz's sister Anna Maria.

Feliz is kidnapped by soldiers led by Manuel Selasco, who once loved Anna Maria. Corrigan decides to rescue him by pretending to be a traitor.

Corrigan succeeds in rescuing Feliz and capturing Selasco. Feliz decides not to kill Selasco in order to humiliate him. A delighted Anna Maria believes Corrigan has joined the revolution, but he tells her he would only let her down. [1]

Cast

Original Play

It was based on a play by Alun Owen, which aired on the BBC in February 1962. Jack Hedley played Corrigan Blake. The Guardian said it "never achieved reality" and had some "surprisingly dull dialogue." [6]

The lead character of the play, Corrigan Blake, featured in a TV series of the same name made by the BBC in 1963. [7] The Guardian said "it falls flat and hard". [8]

Production

It was the first TV play produced by Patrick Barton, an Englishman who had lived in Australia for two years. Most ABC drama in Melbourne until then had been done by William Sterling or Christopher Muir. Barton said the play was different in tone to other works by Owen. [9]

Kevin Bartlett was the designer. [2]

Other Australian TV plays set in South America included Last Call and The Strong are Lonely (1959). [5]

Reception

The quality of the production was criticised. [10]

The Age said "the production was racy to match the play and the hand of the producer, though firm, never intruded. One, however, cannot pass without congratulating actor Sydney Conabere for making the character of Corrigan Blake so completely Corrigan Blake." [11]

Filmink called it "a bizarre experience: all these Australian actors pretending to be South Americans in a backlot jungle, trying to stop their natural accents sneaking through, and Syd Conabere channeling Bogart/Alan Ladd/Dick Powell/John Payne... Indeed, I wish the play had embraced its junkiness to a greater degree: it could have done with more action/sex/tension and less chat. And Syd Conabere, fine an actor as he was, doesn't quite have the charisma the role requires." [5]

Related Research Articles

Jack Snowdon Hawkins, better known as Jack Hedley, was an English film, voice, radio, stage, character, theatre, screen and television actor best known for his performances on television. His birth name necessitated a change to avoid confusion with his namesake who was already registered with the British actors' trade union Equity.

The Shifting Heart is a play written in 1957 in Australia by Richard Beynon, it is an insight to the psychology of racism and its victims. In the background of 1950s Collingwood, Melbourne.

The One Day of the Year is a 1958 Australian play by Alan Seymour about contested attitudes to Anzac Day.

The Big Day (<i>Shell Presents</i>) 5th episode of the 1st season of Shell Presents

"The Big Day" is an Australian television film, or rather a live television play, which aired in 1959. The fifth episode of the Shell Presents presentations of standalone television dramas, it originally aired 11 July 1959 on Melbourne station GTV-9, a video-tape was made of the broadcast and shown on Sydney station ATN-7 on 25 July 1959.

<i>Uneasy Paradise</i> 1963 Australian TV series or program

Uneasy Paradise is a 1963 Australian television film directed by William Sterling. It is a 60-minute drama set in Melbourne about a gambler married to Sally. He loses much money at a club run by Paolo.

<i>The Duke in Darkness</i> 1942 psychological drama play

The Duke in Darkness is a 1942 play by Patrick Hamilton. A psychological drama set during the French Wars of Religion, it was first staged on 7 September 1942 at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh. It ran for 72 performances at the St. James Theatre, London, and had a brief run on Broadway in 1944.

Outpost is a 1959 Australian television play about Australian soldiers in New Guinea during World War Two. It was written for television by John Cameron.

"The Paradise Shanty" is the 30th and the finale television play episode of the first season of the Australian anthology television series Australian Playhouse. "The Paradise Shanty" was written by Kevin McGrath and directed by Patrick Barton and originally aired on ABC on 7 November 1966.

"Objector" is the 25th television play episode of the first season of the Australian anthology television series Australian Playhouse. "Objector" was written by Tony Morphett and produced by Brian Faull and originally aired on ABC on 3 October 1966.

<i>Shell Be Right</i> 1962 Australian television play

She'll Be Right is a 1962 Australian television play which aired on the ABC.

My Three Angels is a 1962 Australian television adaptation which marked the acting debut of champion swimmer Murray Rose.

Eye of the Night is a 1960 Australian television play. It was written by Kay Keavney and directed by Christopher Muir.

Everyman is a 1964 Australian television play. It screened on the ABC and was directed by Christopher Muir, who filmed the whole script.

Wild Life and Christmas Belles is a 1958 Australian television revue. It was shown on New Year's Eve, running from 10:55 pm until a few minutes before midnight. It was filmed in ABC's Melbourne studios but was shown in Sydney and Melbourne simultaneously. The cast included Barry Humphries, who played Mrs Norma Everage. The sketch had Mrs Everage enter a special model school for the "Lovely Mother" quest.

The End Begins is a 1961 Australian television play shot in ABC's Melbourne studios. Like many early Australian TV plays it was based on an overseas script. It was a rare Australian TV play with a science fiction theme and a black lead actor, although no recordings are thought to have survived.

Patrick Barton is an Australian TV director best known for his productions in the 1960s.

The Hot Potato Boys is a 1963 Australian television play.

"Romeo and Juliet" is a 1967 Australian TV play based on the play by William Shakespeare. It was presented as part of the Love and War anthology series on the ABC.

Sydney Leicester Conabere was an Australian actor. He was notable for his work in theatre, film and television drama in a career spanning more than fifty years. In 1962 Conabere won the Logie award for Best Actor, for his performance in the television play The One Day of the Year. He worked prolifically as a stage actor from 1938 to 1989, particularly with the Melbourne Theatre Company and Melbourne Little Theatre, sharing the stage with Irene Mitchell in, for example, Lilian Hellman's The Little Foxes.

<i>The Devil Makes Sunday</i> (1962 film) 1962 Australian TV series or program

The Devil Makes Sunday is a 1962 Australian television play by New Zealand-born author Bruce Stewart. It was broadcast live from Melbourne, and taped and shown in other cities at a later date.

References

  1. 1 2 "New Plays by Welsh Author". Sydney Morning Herald. 24 September 1962. p. 13.
  2. 1 2 "TV Guide". The Age. 30 August 1962. p. 33.
  3. "TV Guide". Sydney Morning Herald. 1 October 1962. p. 26.
  4. "Corrigan Blake". Action TV.
  5. 1 2 3 Vagg, Stephen (24 November 2020). "Forgotten Australian TV Plays: You Can't Win 'Em All". Filmink.
  6. Crozier, Mary (5 February 1962). "Television". The Guardian. p. 7.
  7. Corrigan Blake at IMDb
  8. Crozier, Mary (16 May 1962). "Television". The Guardian. p. 7.
  9. "ABV-2 Tries Out a New Producer". The Age. 30 August 1962. p. 13.
  10. "Australian TV production 'Blasphemous'". The Canberra Times . Vol. 37, no. 10, 390. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 23 November 1962. p. 13. Retrieved 21 February 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  11. "Teletopics". The Age. 13 September 1962. p. 14.