26 September 1973's episode of D4 was called 'Young Hennessy'. It was less worse than it might have been considering the somewhat unpromising storyline and other components (basically, Young Hennessy is an o-o-o-ld boxer who everyone thinks has a lot of money hidden somewhere in his house). The acting is stellar. There's Gus Mercurio actually playing a good guy, and get this, you really don't know if he is good, up till the end. There's Hilda Scurr, playing Mrs Hennessy and really making a meal of a role which is really not much more than a pissed-off old wife. Jeepers, even Simon Drake as a young boy called Luke isn't the terrible kind of child actor that most child actors are. Perhaps best of all - this is like a Logie contender performance, though I don't think it was one - is John Fegan as Young Hennessy. Fegan was four years out of Homicide by this stage, and while he was a compelling presence as Connolly in Homicide he wasn't exactly required to do anything more immense than deliver lines in a fairly pissed off and stern tone, a lot. Here he really puts in the time and gives such a committed performance well, I'm not sure if this is an example of good acting exactly, but... often you can't tell what he's saying. But you feel like you can.
Friday, March 14, 2025
Monday, April 18, 2022
homicide: what milk train?
These are some of the interesting (to me) elements of episode 83 of Homicide. I won't spoil the story for you in case you want to watch it. I will say this about Terry Stapleton's script which for me falls into the category of: could have been a movie, really. Straight up in the first 5 minutes he introduces us to I think four different groups of people (not counting the detectives), none of whom seem at all related, and instantly I thought 'this could get very clunky very easily - too many scenarios/situations'. But in fact it's a skilled piece of writing - the whole thing is quite streamlined. Of course, a lot of the relationships are basically red herrings for us, the viewer.
Everything I know about Tennessee Williams' The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore I know from the wikipedia entry that spends a lot more time on the play's various commercially disastrous iterations than it does on, you know, the play. But it doesn't seem to have a lot of relevance to this script, except for the element of trespass.
The discussion of the Milk Train comes into the story when the body of a private detective is found on the beach (at Frankston, they say) and this lighter is found nearby:
I am such a dweeb, looking for subtleties of fifty years ago to help me understand my cultuwal backgwound, that when the police interview James Fenn (Allan Trevor) about his whereabouts on the night of the murder and offer him a cigarette and he says 'no, thank you I don't...' and the detectives look at each other like 'aha!' my thought was, 'god, everyone smokes in this show, smoking is such a constant that when someone doesn't smoke they instantly think he's peculiar'. But of course... his comment that he doesn't smoke (easy thing to say, by the way) eliminates him from their list of suspects, or at least, makes him less likely. I mean I have a lighter, it's in the kitchen to light the stove. No-one's engraved anything on it. It's not a cigarette lighter I suppose but I bet you could use it as one.
But this is interesting. Early on in Homicide they used to tell us that interstate guests (I guess, actors) stayed at the California Motel. By the time of this episode, the chosen sponsor hotel was the Hotel Australia. But Crawfords seemed to have maintained their relationship with the California Motel, because this is prime product placement:
Now for some phone action. Here's Mac (Leonard Teale) on the phone to Inspector Connelly (John Fegan). Note what his phone looks like. I bet that thing stank and felt like it had water in it.
But look at the Ericofons they have at the station, eg the one Connelly is using. Light, stylish, easy to use. Doesn't take up a lot of space but the space it does take up wants to be taken up by it.
I do wonder sometimes if Ericsson only allowed them one Ericofon and they had to make sure it was in the scenes in both offices. Certainly you never see two together. And I think they are the same colour, although of course in this context, that is 'no colour'.
The Age 22 September 1965 p. 48 has her doing Midsummer Night's Dream at the Russell St Theatre then, she and Dixon start 1966 with a bang:
The Age 1 January 1966 p. 26. Then not much for most of 1966 until (below, with a bit of contextual sandwich) what seems like on the whole an extraordinary comedown (Age 13 October 1966 p. 41).
The irony is of course that in these three short scenes, Russell was probably seen by more people than she had been seen in all her stage performances put together! She's excellent as Audrey, and whereas some other actors in Homicide are hesitant, rote, more concerned with getting their words in the right order and getting out of there than creating any sense of a character, she is very much at home in this role.
Overall a really impressive actor. Somewhere in all the above she and Dixon were acting in George Mangiamele's 1965 Clay as well.
I mean Homicide is a melange, where the sometimes wooden (but I don't blame them - I don't think the writers/producers were really comfortable giving them backstories or complicated dialogue) 'main characters' often find themselves taking the backseat to experienced, sophisticated actors with a lot more freedom to inhabit characters and take up the challenge of making them memorable in situations where their screen time is limited but their motivations/situations often compelling and intriguing. By the way, just as an aside, George Dixon (who only died five years ago, aged 93; I can see no record of Russell's death but she'd have to be 101 if she's still alive, not impossible btw) seems to have done almost no television, and only a couple of films - Clay and Beyond Reason, both Mangiamele productions.
You will have noted above that the second birthday status of this episode was noted in the Age listing and it even got its own article in the TV Radio Guide (I wonder if this was even then a 'green guide'? It was typically printed on special green paper, but I don't know when this started) with a little mention of the locations for the show - which seem to be a reason for people to tune in, and see places they could easily go and look at themselves IRL, on the TV.
My initial response to the idea of the playwright Russell Oakes was that his name really sounded like a made-up name for a play promoted by and starring Lola Russell but I was wrong, he was real, and according to the three-sentence bio inside the published version of the play he wrote many plays and magazine articles, and served with the army in New Guinea.
Wednesday, March 23, 2022
fcuwm6: homicide 'end of class'
This is a mildly interesting episode of Homicide apparently first broadcast 16 August 1966. The pictures I took have uploaded in reverse order but that doesn't really matter to me. First, a picture of Leslie Dayman who just seems every bit as perfect in a Homicide regular detective role as Leonard Teale - he has the appropriate cragginess but also a guppy spark.
Brian Hannan and Chris Christensen received a Logie that year in the category of 'men closest in age to be cast in father and son role'.Here's Leslie Dayman as Bill Hudson rescuing the schoolboy Gary (Hannan) from the fey but malevolent killer schoolboy Alan (Roland Heimans). Good water work guys.
I couldn't find much about Heimans although he is in another Homicide episode, from the following year, I'm guessing playing another troubled youth:
Possibly the most interesting thing about this clipping is that it's treating Homicide episodes as 'plays'. Anyway, looking forward to 'The Destroyer', but back to 'End of Class'. The sea arrest/rescue above takes place after an exchange in a beach box at which Alan reveals he killed Lorraine by pushing her off the roof because she made him angry. The conversation in the beach box is funny because it has to be contrived to be in a beach box because outside scenes in Homicide couldn't be filmed with sound (the sound is overdubbed often very unconvincingly). So Alan has to say to Cheryl, 'let's go to the beach box, I have something to tell you' or similar. But there was no reason I could see that he couldn't tell her on the beach itself, no-one else was around. This was an odd scene, with Lorraine's father calling the police to tell them he wasn't going to pay for her funeral because he'd disowned her at the age of 12 and that was that. William J. Adams plays 'Mr. Purvis'. I hope for his sake this was not a good angle. Imagine if this was his best. The inclusion of this little scene is presumably intended to remind us that girls like Lorraine, who tell multiple men/boys that they have made her pregnant and have to marry her, are not born bad but made bad by shitty fathers like Mr. Purvis. I just liked the notion that Purvis assumed the police took care of people's funerals, though now I come to think of it, for all I know back then they did everything.
These are probably the best things in this episode. Alan made a bunch of drawings which he gave to Lorraine. We see quite a few of them, the only one that the detectives are interested in is the first in the series which we see twice in the show, but this is the last in the series and oddly we don't really see it at all - the camera catches it but the edit is so fast it's only because I photographed it using the 'live' function of my phone that we can now see it in all its glory.
This one does not fit in with any cats and dogs metaphor I've ever heard, but carry on Alan.
So this is the drawing that makes Lorraine go up to the roof. I just want to say that the only reason that she is enabled to go up to the roof during class time, and her killer to follow her there, is that the teacher unexpectedly leaves the room. This is a serious plot fault.
The detectives interviewing Cheryl Reade, a fairly uninteresting schoolgirl character played by Joy Mitchell an actress with a very impressive body of work up till more or less the present day. Mitchell and Roland Heimans had both been members of the University of Melbourne's Union Theatre in the early 60s (as had Sheila Florance, just by the by).
Exciting
Lorraine and Cheryl in class.
Sometimes, when Homicide eps are particularly deep social issue ones, they'll get John Fegan to introduce with a kind of pipe-in-the-hand chat. In this case it's all about how today's teenagers face problems never before known and need some understanding and empathy from parents. What I don't get is whether this is meant to be John Fegan, or Inspector Jack Connolly? He never says 'in tonight's episode', or 'here our assembled players present a tableaux within which...'
a new wings compilation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
'WINGS is the ultimate anthology of the band that defined the sound of the 1970s. Personally overseen by Paul, WINGS is available in an ...
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As a child, naturally enough, I watched a lot of television and it being the early 1970s when I was a child, I watched a lot of what is no...