The Pearl Fishers (film) explained

Director:William Sterling
Company:Australian Broadcasting Commission
Runtime:115 minutes
Country:Australia
Language:English

The Pearl Fishers is a 1963 Australian television production based on the opera Les pĂȘcheurs de perles by Georges Bizet.[1] It was filmed in Sydney at the ABC's Gore Hill studios and marked the one hundredth anniversary of the first performance of the opera.[2] The Pearl Fishers originally aired on 3 April 1963 in Sydney and later on 29 May 1963.[3]

Cast

Keene and Jackson appear in the production, but not McDonald; Edward Brayshaw mimes and lip-synchs the role of Nadir.

Reception

The critic from the Sydney Morning Herald wrote that, "it may be that producer William Stirling doubted that the music could hold the viewers' interest should the action flag for a moment, for his sets were distractingly cluttered up at times. He also used such film techniques as flashbacks, and in the love duel the closeup was excessive. The flames in which Ronal Jackson expired at the end of the opera were a further innovation; such an impressively elaborate production obviously cried out for colour television."[4]

The production sold widely overseas.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Vagg . Stephen . February 18, 2019 . 60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & '60s . Filmink.
  2. News: James . Dawn . 10 April 1963 . Spine-Tingling Opera . 25 November 2017 . . Australia . 19 . Trove, National Library of Australia . 30 . 45.
  3. News: 23 May 1963 . Behind the Set View of a TV production . . 11.
  4. News: 4 April 1963 . Opera . . 16.
  5. News: 1 December 1966 . Opera earning us a TV reputation . The Age . 15.