Series: | First Night |
Season: | 1 |
Episode: | 2 |
Director: | Christopher Morahan |
Runtime: | 55 minutes (missing) |
Airdate: | (UK) |
The Road is a 1963 British television play by Nigel Kneale. It was broadcast as part of the BBC Television anthology drama series First Night. An Australian remake was aired the following year. No recordings of the production on either video or audio are known to exist. The script for The Road was published alongside those for Kneale's teleplays The Year of the Sex Olympics and The Stone Tape under the title The Year of the Sex Olympics and Other TV Plays in 1976.
It is the late 18th century. A small English village is haunted by ghostly apparitions. Sir Timothy Hassall, accompanied by his friend Gideon Cole, investigate.
"The Road", initially presented as a ghost story, has a science fiction twist ending, making it ultimately a story of science fiction horror. The original 1963 BBC production has been called "one of the great missing masterpieces of British television."[1] Having been wiped by the BBC, it is unknown if a copy of the play exists.
Director: | Patrick Barton (Australia) |
Country: | Australia |
Language: | English |
Runtime: | 75 mins (missing)[2] |
Company: | ABC |
Released: | (Melbourne) |
Released2: | (Sydney) |
Released3: | (Brisbane)[3] |
The play was filmed the following year for Australian TV. As with the original British production, all recordings are thought to have been destroyed after transmission.
Australian TV drama was relatively rare at the time and only occasionally produced science fiction. Other examples of Australian science fiction on TV include The End Begins (1961), Tomorrow's Child (1957) and The Stranger.[4] [5]
Of the play, director Patrick Barton said "the utopian rationalism of Cobb matched against the semi credulous tumbling semi scientific mind of Hassall are an example of two forces alive in the 18th century."[6]
The Sydney Morning Herald review complained that the story was "too feeble to stand up to scrutiny".[7]
A BBC Radio 4 audio adaptation, written by Toby Hadoke and directed by Charlotte Riches, aired on 27 October 2018. The production starred Mark Gatiss as Gideon Cobb, Adrian Scarborough as Sir Timothy Hassall and Hattie Morahan as Lady Lavinia Hassall.[8]