The Strong Are Lonely Explained

Genre:historical
Based On:play by Fritz Hochwälder
Director:Raymond Menmuir
Country:Australia
Language:English
Runtime:75 mins
Company:ABC
Network:ABC
Released: (Sydney, live)
Released2: (Melbourne, taped)

The Strong Are Lonely is a 1959 Australian television play produced by Ray Menmuir and starring John Alden.[1] [2] It was one of several plays set in South America.[3]

Plot

The struggle by Spanish Jesuits to establish themselves in Paraguay. At a Jesuit mission, a state official arrives from Madrid, because Spanish slave owners are upset at Indian labourers are fleeing to the mission where they can live freely and in communities.

Cast

Production

The 1942 play written by Fritz Hochwälder was originally performed in German as Das heilige Experiment, then translated into French then English. Donald Wolfit had starred in a 1956 British TV and radio version.

According to one report, "With 16 speaking roles and extras numbering 23, The Strong Are Lonely will have the largest cast to appear in a “live” Australian TV drama."[4]

Five Indian students from Sydney University were among the 23 extras.[5]

It was advertised as "the ABC's 56th live TV play, with an all-Australian cast... acclaimed in London, Paris and Rome as an outstanding contribution to contemporary drama."[6]

Reception

The Age said Alden contributed some "very fine acting" and that the play was "a cut above the TV dramas offered us in recent months."[1]

The Bulletin said "Ray Menmuir won considerable acclaim" for the production.[7]

The Sydney Morning Herald called it "an absorbing live-play" where "the author's skilful working of the big issues involved being _matched in vital places by acting forceful and sizable enough to ensure safepassage for his arguments." The critic felt both Alden and Hutton were "a little undecided from time to time as to whether a stage-acting or a film-acting technique was required of them. But, with television acting being such a difficult combination of both kinds of playing, they were fortunate to have the guidance of a producer like Raymond Menmuir, and the net outcome of the production, though finally a little flat and disappointing, was an entertainment of stature, substance and challenge."[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: The Age. Acting lesson. 2 July 1959. 13.
  2. Stephen. Vagg. 60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & ‘60s. Filmink. February 18, 2019.
  3. Web site: Filmink. Stephen. Vagg. Forgotten Australian TV Plays: You Can’t Win ‘Em All. November 24, 2020.
  4. ABC Weekly. 31. May 20, 1959. All the TV Programmes .
  5. News: Sydney Morning Herald. May 18, 1959. ALDEN TO STAR IN "LIVE" PLAY. 19.
  6. News: Advertisement. 18 March 1959. 18.
  7. The Bulletin. 14. September 23, 1979. Personal ITEMS .
  8. News: Sydney Morning Herald . May 21, 1959. TV Parallel Of Christ And Pilate . 9.