The Bastard Country
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''The Bastard Country'' is a 1959 Australian play by
Anthony Coburn James Anthony Coburn (10 December 1927 – 28 April 1977) was an Australian television writer and producer, who spent much of his professional career living and working in the United Kingdom. He is best remembered for writing the first ''Doctor ...
. It was also known as ''Fire on the Wind''. The play was a finalist in the 1957 London ''Observer'' playwriting competition. Anthony Coburn, an Australian who lived in London since 1950, says he deliberately picked the title because "I wanted something to catch the judges' attention." It was performed by the
Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust The Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust is a theatre and performing arts company that was founded in September 1954, with the aim of establishing drama, opera and ballet companies nationally. Founding In 1954 the Australian Elizabethan Theatre T ...
in 1959. It was the third play of the season that year. Director Robin Lovejoy called it "probably the most violent play in plot and language that has been seen in Sydney for many years. Many people think it an unreal picture of Australian life. But all the violence grows inevitably out of the characters as people, not because they are specifically Australian." Grant Taylor played the key role. The play was toured around the country along with two other Trust productions ''Man and Superman'' and ''Long Day's Journey into Night''. For this run it was retitled ''Fire on the Wind''.


Adaptations

It was adapted for radio in 1960.


Plot

John Willy is a violent man who owns a farm in northern Victoria and has a mistress, Connie. He is visited by Greek Nick Diargos, who intends to kill John raping and murdering Nick's wife in Greece with John was a soldier. However he falls for John's daughter Mary.


Original cast

*
Neva Carr Glyn Neva Carr Glyn or Neva Carr Glynn (born Neva Josephine Mary Carr Glyn, 10 May 1908 – 10 August 1975) was an Australian stage, film and radio actress born in Melbourne to Arthur Benjamin Carr Glyn (died 16 January 1923), a humorous baritone and ...
as Connie Naismith *Patricia Conolly as May Willy *Neil Fitzpatrick as Possum Willy *
Ron Haddrick Ronald Norman Haddrick (9 April 1929 – 11 February 2020) was an Australian actor, cricketer, narrator and presenter. In 2012, he received the Actors Equity Lifetime Achievement Award for his long and distinguished career in media, spanning s ...
as Doctor Gorman *Rodney Milgate as Billy Willy *Desmond Rolfe as Jim Richards *Grant Taylor as Nick Diargos *Frank Waters as John Willy


Reception

The ''Sydney Morning Herald'' said "the play is built so that its situations will hit hard and sensationally but it is not play which much to prove beyond the simple collisions of its plot." It praised the direction and the acting, saying Taylor gives "probably the finest performance of his career." The ''Sydney Tribune'' said the 1959 production featured "one of the finest performances that this reviewer has seen on the Elizabethan stage— that of Grant Taylor's portrayal of Nick Diargos, the. vengeance-seeking Greek. He invests Diargos with an awe-inspiring strength and yet with gentleness and dignity and his performance is one of the main reasons for the play's great impact on the audience."


British productions

The play made its British debut at the Birmingham Repertory Company in August 1960. The cast included
Brian Blessed Brian Blessed (; born 9 October 1936) is an English actor, presenter, writer and mountaineer. Blessed is known for portraying PC "Fancy" Smith in ''Z-Cars'', Augustus in the 1976 BBC television production of ''I, Claudius'', King Richard IV i ...
. ''The Guardian'' called it "a good play... a close fresh direct look at people."
Kenneth Tynan Kenneth Peacock Tynan (2 April 1927 – 26 July 1980) was an English theatre critic and writer. Making his initial impact as a critic at ''The Observer'', he praised Osborne's ''Look Back in Anger'' (1956), and encouraged the emerging wave of ...
in the ''Observer'' said it was "a fierce, crude, ham-fisted play reminiscent of O'Neill" where "the last act swoops disastrously into melodrama" but added "a long time had passed since I saw a play that cried out more vociferously for movie treatment in the grand, outdoor manner." The production was not financially successful. The play was produced in Manchester in 1964 and Stoke on Trent in 1966.


References


External links


Production details
at
AusStage AusStage: The Australian Live Performance Database is an online database which records information about live performances in Australia, providing records of productions from the first recorded performance in Australia (1789, by convicts) up unt ...

Play information
at
AustLit AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource (also known as AustLit: Australian Literature Gateway; and AustLit: The Resource for Australian Literature), usually referred to simply as AustLit, is an internet-based, non-profit collaboration betwee ...

Original program
at the Trust {{DEFAULTSORT:Bastard Country 1959 plays 1950s Australian plays Australian plays presented by the Elizabethan Theatre Trust