No Dogs on Diamond Street
No Dogs on Diamond Street is a 1966 Australian television play that aired as an episode of Australian Playhouse.[3]
"No Dogs on Diamond Street" | |
---|---|
Australian Playhouse episode | |
Episode no. | Season 1 Episode 5 |
Directed by | Storry Walton |
Teleplay by | Marion Ord |
Produced by | David Goddard |
Original air date | 16 May 1966[1] |
Running time | 30 mins[2] |
Guest appearance(s) | |
Plot
A watchman is murdered at Norm Hutton's place of work. He relies on his daughter Patti to provide an alibi.
Cast
- Ed Devereaux as Norm Hutton
- Helen Morse as Patty Hutton
- Margaret Christensen
- Beverley Kirk
- Don Reid
Production
It was written by Marion Ord, who lived in a property near Parkes. In 1965 she attended at TV school at Orange held by the University of Sydney Adult Education Department, and started writing Do Dogs as an exercise for the course.[4]
It was made by the same team who had produced a TV version of My Brother Jack including star Ed Devereaux, designer Jack Montgomery and producer Storry Walton.[3]
Reception
The Sunday Sydney Morning Herald called it "flimsy and amateurishly constructed at times but balanced by exceptionally fine acting performances from Ed (My Brother Jack) Devereux, Margaret Christensen and Helen Morse. "[3]
The Sydney Morning Herald praised Helen Morse and said "the other actors were all full capable of making the characters live, but the ragged effect of both dialogue and events in the story were against them."[5]
The Age said it "showed a more than expert craftsmaship than was to be found in the last two episodes of the series. The acting was good and the setting was adequate."[6]
The Canberra Times said "why is it that Australian playwrights seem to connect drama with crime, and that plays about suburbia are made to work with a stiff lacing of larceny, murder or prowlers? Now that these themes have been more than sufficiently covered in four of the five Monday night plays, we must keep our fingers crossed that a reasonable part of the remainder; will deal with problems and complications that the rest of the population are facing from day to day... The play... will do nothing for the reputations of Ed Devereaux or the others in the cast."[7]
See also
- List of television plays broadcast on Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1960s)
References
- "Local Play". The Age. 12 May 1966. p. 13.
- "TV Guide". Sydney Morning Herald. 16 May 1966. p. 13.
- Marshall, Valda (22 May 1966). "Two Hits One Miss". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 44.
- Robinson, Harry (16 May 1966). "Signs of Life in Homicide". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 8.
- Constantino, Romola (17 May 1966). "The Actors were good". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 15.
- Monitor (21 May 1966). "Truth and realism in TV". The Age. p. 63.
- "TELEVISION Crime... punishment". The Canberra Times. 17 May 1966. p. 15. Retrieved 5 February 2016 – via National Library of Australia.