AustLit logo

AustLit

y separately published work icon Best Australian One-Act Plays anthology   drama  
Issue Details: First known date: 1937... 1937 Best Australian One-Act Plays
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Contents

* Contents derived from the Sydney, New South Wales,:Angus and Robertson , 1937 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
The Development of Australian Drama, William Moore , single work criticism (p. xix-xxvii)
Andeganora, Louis Esson , Frank Brown , single work drama (p. 1-12)
Easter : A Morality Play, Dulcie Deamer , single work drama (p. 13-25)
The Fourposter : A Fantasy in One Act, Dora Wilcox , single work drama (p. 27-49)
The Rustling of Voices, Lloyd Ross , single work drama (p. 51-74)
Garden Fantasia, John Wheeler , single work drama (p. 75-86)
The Pioneers, Katharine Susannah Prichard , single work drama

Set in the interior of a hut in the Gippsland forest, in the 1850s, the play has six characters. Donald Cameron, an honest dour Scot, and Mary, his wife, whom he picked off the boat at the wharf, are pioneers sharing a strange, strong love. Thad McNab, the double-crossing shanty keeper, and McLaughlin, a trooper, pursue two escaped convicts, Dan and Steve. Mary befriends them during Donald's absence. Donald, McNab and McLaughlin return. Mary successfully conceals the fact that the convicts have been at the hut from all but Donald. He cannot understand her charity and humanity, but admires her strength of character. (Abstract adapted from The Campbell Howard Annotated Index of Australian Plays 1920-1955)


Characters

The Pioneers: 

DONALD CAMERON

MARY CAMERON his wife


Escaped Convicts:

DAN FARRELL 

STEVE


Shanty keeper:

THAD M'NAB


The trooper: 

M'LAUGHLIN

(p. 87-115)
Variations on a Printing Press, Charles Porter , single work radio play
A printer suffers a nervous breakdown.
(p. 117-135)
Dampier's Ghost : A Comedy in One Act, Henrietta Drake-Brockman , single work drama humour (p. 137-154)
Searchlights, Sydney Tomholt , single work drama (p. 155-174)
Ancestors, Vance Palmer , single work drama (p. 175-194)
"Gib It Tshillin'", Montague Grover , single work drama (p. 195-210)
Anzac Reunion, Edgar Holt , single work drama (p. 211-239)
Sending Grannie Off : A Radio Play Send-off for Grannie, Morris Hay Simpson , single work radio play

Described in the Maitland Daily Mercury as 'a whimsical comedy of farm life' ('Radio Drama Week,' p.8), Simpson 'introduces a fine character in Grannie, a vigorous old matriarch, ruling a large and sprawling country family with an unbending authority' ('Australian Radio Drama Week,' p.6).

(p. 231-252)
The Trap, Stewart Macky , single work drama (p. 253-273)
Hester Siding, Alexander Turner , single work radio play

Alexander Turner provides a glimpse into the lives of a married English couple who go on the land after arriving in the country.

(p. 275-292)
Note: With title Hester Siding : A Radio Play.
Sub-Editor's Room, Leslie Rees , single work drama (p. 293-309)
Morning, Betty M. Davies , single work drama

Set in a log cabin in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales during the early goldrush era, Burton and Lucy are two runaway convicts who have hewn out a primitive existence in the harsh bushland. The story begins in the morning, shortly after Lucy has given birth to a son. Burton, a quiet, strong and apparently educated man is tending to the house and his 'wife'. As they consider the impact of the child on their already meagre lives, a prospector, lost during the course of a drunken spree, wanders into their lives. They feed him from their limited supply of food while he gloats about the gold he has found, showing them the nuggets. Each has been named after the use he will put them to. As he sobers up the stranger becomes wary and suspicious of the couple and rightly guesses who they are. He leaves, and shortly afterwards is followed by Burton, armed with his rifle.

Writing of the play in the Australian Women's Weekly following its publication in Best Australian One-Act Plays, Leslie Haylen writes: 'It succeeds on its dramatic situation, the texture of its writing and its craftsmanship. In some respects it is not a "nice" play and is probably all the better for that. It has an ugly ending, in the tragic manner, uses the convict theme, and no doubt if produced someone would want to ban it. Still, it is a brilliant play in every way' (18 September 1937, p.30).

(p. 331-333)
Stampede, Bernard Cronin , single work radio play
Set in a selector's kitchen during a drought.
(p. 335-349)
At Dusk, M. S. Armstrong , single work drama
Sisters Lily and Amy return home to the farm at dusk to find Amy's husband Jim out. Upset having seen Bert, a man 'whose unwelcome attentions had been tormenting her for four years', Lily dies of fright when the wind blows the door open. Jim returns home to reveal he had been following buggy tracks that lead him to discover Bert's overturned buggy and that Bert too had died at dusk - from p.8-9, Campbell Howard Index (1993).
(p. 351-366)
X