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Rod Kinnear Rod Kinnear i(A91775 works by) (a.k.a. Rodney Scott Kinnear)
; Died: Ceased: May 2006
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 form y separately published work icon Summer of the Seventeenth Doll Ray Lawler , ( dir. Rod Kinnear ) Melbourne Australia : Melbourne Theatre Company Seven Network , 1979 Z898054 1979 single work film/TV

Roo and Barney are Queensland canecutters who have spent the off-season in Melbourne with their girlfriends for sixteen years. Each summer, Barney ritualistically presents his girl Olive, a barmaid, with a kewpie doll. But the seventeenth summer is different; time has begun to take its toll. The themes of faded dreams, idealism, disillusionment, and the determination to live bring out a quintessential Australian boisterous flavour while portraying what happens when the values of the outback hero conflict with urban domesticity.

1 form y separately published work icon Barley Charlie Alan Hopgood , Ronald Chesney , Ronald Wolfe , ( dir. Rod Kinnear ) Melbourne : Nine Network , 1964 Z1832708 1964 series - publisher film/TV

A sit-com that follows the misadventures of two sisters who unexpectedly inherit, from an uncle, a rundown garage in the small town of Frog's Hollow, Barley Charlie shows Joan and Shirley Muggleton's attempts to make the garage saleable, a plan foiled by the presence of lazy mechanic Charlie Appleby.

According to Don Storey, in his Classic Australian Television, 'GTV went to great lengths to ensure Barley Charlie would be successful. An enormous set covering 900 square feet was constructed - it comprised a full-scale garage, mechanic's store room, cafe and kitchen, and was complete with electricity, gas and water.' They also went to the expense of importing British script-writers Ronald Chesney and Ronald Wolfe, hoping the two could replicate their success with British sit-coms such as The Rag Game.

Barley Charlie was successful both in terms of ratings and with the critics, but a second series was never made, largely due to the unavailability of key actors Eddie Hepple and Sheila Bradley. Of the program's significance to early Australian television, Storey notes that 'Most contemporary reports (and all of the GTV-9 publicity) credited Barley Charlie as being the first Australian produced situation comedy. This was not strictly correct, as Crawford Productions made a weekly 15-minute comedy series, Take That, for HSV-7 in 1957, although admittedly it was a live-to-air programme and was only screened in Melbourne.'

1 1 form y separately published work icon Manhaul Osmar E. White , ( dir. Rod Kinnear ) Melbourne : Channel 7 , 1962 9292892 1962 single work film/TV

'Set in an Australian outpost in the Antarctic, the play opens when the seven members of the expedition, who have served 12 months at the base, learn that they are to be marooned for another 12 months because the relief ship is unable to get through. Tension mounts and one of the men is murdered.'

Source: [Television guide], The Age, 6 September 1962, p.7.

1 1 form y separately published work icon The One Day of the Year John Sumner , ( dir. Rod Kinnear ) Australia : Seven Network , 1962 7190729 1962 single work film/TV

A television adaptation of Alan Seymour's play.

1 1 form y separately published work icon Man in a Blue Vase Tom Kirkwood , Richard Beynon , Melbourne : Australian Broadcasting Commission , 1960 8131023 1960 single work film/TV

A man's removal of his wife's housekeeping money from its blue vase causes conflict in both his marriage and his extended family.

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