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[[Category:Australian films]]
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[[Category:1962 television plays]]





Revision as of 17:32, 11 June 2017

Fury in Petticoats
Produced byChristopher Muir
Production
company
Release date
24 October 1962
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

Fury in Petticoats is a 1962 TV play broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. It was directed by Christopher Muir.

It was based on a play which had been filmed by British TV the year before.[1]

Although fictional the plot is based on a historical incident in 1836 when naturalist Charles Darwin brought to England four natives from the island of Tierra del Fuego near South America.

Plot

A native girl, Fuegia (played by Kay Kelton) goes to live in an English country vicarage.

Cast

  • Lola Brooks as Anne
  • Michael Duffield as Rev. William Dill
  • Norman Kaye as Charlies Darwin
  • Mark Kelly as Edward
  • Fay Kelton as Fuegia Basket
  • Elizabeth Wing as Mrs. Dill

Reception

The Sydney Morning Herald wrote that:

[It] was an oddly contrived story produced in that stilted solemn atmosphere to which "period" plays often conform. The fact that Charles Darwin once brought a few sad and sorry natives from Terra del Fuego to England could possibly be the basis for a seriously realistic glimpse of early colour problems, or else, perhaps, be artificially brightened into a spirited comedy.: . English television playwright Elaine Morgan attempted to provide humour and also facile generalisations in a play which neither illuminates nor 'sparkles. The native girl, played by Fay Kelton, unconvincingly combined the antics of a savage monkey with an unlikely capacity for sophisticated, fluent reasoning, and the reactions of the prim ninteenth century vicarage were equally unconvincing and lacking in continuity. The actors did not do much to enliven their pasteboard parts, with the exception of Lola Brooks, who managed to bring a sensitive and natural manner to her part as the vicar's daughter.[2]

References

  1. ^ Fury in Petticoats 1961 TV version at IMDB
  2. ^ "Drama Reviews". Sydney Morning Herald. 25 October 1962. p. 8.