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The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett 27.12.1975. SNT.(Saturday Night Theatre) Helen Worth/Violet Carson
Private Lives By Noel Coward 20.12.1975. SNT. Paul Scofield/Patricia Routledge
Wobble To Death By Peter Lovesey 6.12.1975. SNT. Sydney Tafler/Timothy Bateson/William Eedle.
For the uninitiated, wobblers are speed walkers. We don't see so many of them these days.
The Hideous Silence By Michael Robson 29.11.1975. SNT. John Pullen/Jane Wenham/Lockwood West
Package From Berlin By Simon Masters 22.11.1975. SNT. Douglas Blackwell/John Forrest
Omegapoint By Bruce Stewart 18.10.1975. SNT. Dinsdale Landen/Sydney Tafler.
Fascinating decryption of a transmitted message, and working out the plot which it conceals.
The Gabriel Hounds By Mary Stewart 11.10.1975. SNT. David March/Emily Richard/Ian Liston
The Dark Windows Of A Room By William Keenan 6.9.1975. SNT. Brian Trueman/Geoffrey Banks/Jane Knowles
Night Of The Wolf By Victor Pemberton 9.8.1975. SNT. Vincent Price/Coral Browne.
Vincent Price tracks a shadowy monster in the search for his missing son. Gothic horror.
The Light Of A Thousand Suns By James Follett 26.7.1975. SNT. Manning Wilson/John Rye/Ian Thompson/Sion Probert.
The ultimate weapon, and world peace. But what if it malfunctions?
Balance Of Power By Alan Melville 19.7.1975. SNT. Jean Anderson/Robert Lang/Edward Hardwicke/Sandra Clark
Light comedy.
No Fear Or Favour By Henry Cecil 5.7.1975. SNT. Paul Daneman/Srah Badel/Peter Sallis
Pegasus....1975
by Eric Saward. Produced by Roger Pine. 28 May 75.
In 1890 London a bomb explodes in an East End alley. The police ask thespian Richard Mace to help with the case. Rpt BBC7, 14-15 Feb 05. Cast:
Richard Mace......................................Geoffrey Matthews
Roundtree............................................Leonard Fenton
Insp. Maitland........................................William Eedle
Sgt. Bound............................................John Baddeley
Prof. Gutman.........................................Ronald Herdman
Marlin.................................................Ralph Lawton
Todd.................................................George Woolley
Asst. Commissioner....................................Jack Holloway
Sir Robert Stealwell...................................Simon Carter
Steward................................................Laurence Rew
Alibi For A Judge By Henry Cecil 24.5.1975. SNT. Andrew Cruickshank/Amanda Grinling/Aubrey Woods
The Chiltern Hundreds By William Douglas-Home
The Terrible Connexion By Michael Robson 19.4.1975. SNT. Nigel Stock/Liane Aukin/Anthony Hall
The U-Boat That Lost Its Nerve By James Follett 22.2.1975. SNT. Nigel Lambert/David Ryall/Michael Deacon
Fire, Burn ! By John Dickson Carr 8.2.1975. SNT. Michael Denison/Rachel Gurney/Marjorie Westbury/John Westbrook
The Heaven Tree By Edith Pargeter 18.1.1975. SNT. Meg Wynn Owen/William Squire
THE MAN BORN TO BE KING....1975
Recorded 20 Nov 74; broadcast 19 Jan 75. A cycle of 12 plays on the life of Jesus Christ, by Dorothy L. Sayers,
adapted & produced by Raymond Raikes.
Music composed by Roberto Gerhard. English Chamber Orchestra, conductor: R. Jenkins.
1. Kings In Judaea
Cast:
Peter Marinker,
Michael Kilgarriff,
Norman Shelley,
Gabriel Woolf,
June Tobin ,
Robert Eddison ,
Jo Wilson ,
James Thomason ,
Denise Bryer ,
Trevor Martin ,
Denys Blakelock ,
Nan Marriott-Watson ,
James Dale ,
Paul Danquah ,
Daniel Rose.
A 2007 comment from the BBC7 messageboard on the production: (edited for clarity)
The use of variations on the same theme for the music was subtle and evocative, a real support for the text. Remember this is an
adaptation of Dorothy L.Sayers' adaptation of the gospels. D.L.S. generally pleases in all she did: think of Lord Peter W., or her heroic translation of much of Dante into an English poetic Terza Rima.
That the series so far disappoints us, I think must probably be the responsibility of the 1970s adaptation
- I think D.L.S would have more temerity than to swap the word "shoe laces" for "sandals" when referring to J.Baptist not being worthy to meddle with the Messiah's feet.
Remember this was at the threshold between the mostly stilted radio drama style of the 1960's and the more realistic style which we have now.
More (mainly negative) 2007 comments about the production followed:
..........Sorry to all you good folks and please don't do me any worse harm than tarring and feathering for my treason, but having only just come round to listening to the first of my recordings I do not know what to make of it. The nearest I get is seeing it as a rendition of the story as written by Terry Pratchett and performed by the Dead Ringers team. If this is not meant to be a parody (it was broadcast in the panto season, wasn't it?), what is it? (AB)
.........I'd always defend the voice of Gabriel Woolf (John "ba" Zebedee). The guy who played the voice of Jesus came over convincingly biblical. Yes, many of the others were stuck in the stilted sixties style but things age, don't they? (FI)
.........Am I dreaming or do I detect the seeds of "The Life of Brian" h.re? I'd be prepared to bet this was the inspiration for the Monty Python film. So much so that I listened in two states of mind; seeing the scope for spoof and enjoying the plays for what they are - masterful popularizations of the Gospels.
A CD of the twelve plays, and a book about production, cast and the context (Vicars complaining about late arrivals of the faithful to service caused as audiences stood glued to their radio sets unable to tear themselves away... bishops complaining to Churchill about how preposterous it was that a woman should dare to write about the gospels etc.) would make an excellent Christmas gift. Here's a potential money spinner if ever there was one.(T)
.........I can think of a better money spinner - Nick Warburton's 5 plays based on the gospel of Luke. (NS)
Compiled by Nigel Deacon / Diversity website
Above plays known to exist in VRPCC collections
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