AustLit logo

AustLit

person or book cover
Script cover page (Crawford Collection at the AFi Reserch Collection)
form y separately published work icon The Curse of the Bangerang Prince single work   film/TV   crime  
Issue Details: First known date: 1975... 1975 The Curse of the Bangerang Prince
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.

AbstractHistoryArchive Description

The role of the Bangerang people in the environment of Matlock is built into the premise of the program. The Matlock Police show 'bible', held in the Crawford Collection, includes the following information under 'History':

'The first occupants of the country that is now Matlock and district were the people of the Bangerang tribe, a branch of the proud and warlike Murray race. Reminders of their thousands of years of occupation can be found in "canoe trees" in the river forest, "kitchen middens" or campfire sites along the river and round the lake, and in the several hundred half-caste Aboriginal people who still live in varying states of de-tribalized poverty in Matlock and its outskirts.'


The script for this episode held in the Crawford Collection in the AFI Research Collection contains the following character notes (excluding regular characters):

'ALBY FORBES: (50s) "The Bangerang Prince". A quiet, somewhat mysterious aborigine [sic].

'EDGAR: (Established character).

'ALFRED NOBLE: (50s) A very distinguished Melbourne lawyer, believed missing, possibly murdered.

'GRANT: A somewhat sardonic Homicide detective, up from Melbourne to investigate Noble's disappearance.

'MILKINS: A comical farmer.

'CLERK (male): (18)

'SHIRL: (Established character)

'PUBLICAN-ALF: (Established character)

'MARK: Biology teacher, and expert on snakes.

'SMITH: Plumber.

'JUNKER: Drinker at pub.

'RATLAND: Drinker at pub.

'MRS. SLICK: Lives nextdoor [sic] to the police station. Non-speaking role.

'PRETTY GIRL: Non-speaking role.

'MOTORCYCLIST: One scene. Non-speaking role.

'MAN IN PARK:

'SOLO 4 VOICE OVER:

'DRINKERS EXTRA 2 ONLY.

'UNI. POLICE CONSTABLES EXTRAS - 2'.

Notes

  • This entry has been compiled from archival research in the Crawford Collection (AFI Research Collection), undertaken by Dr Catriona Mills under the auspices of the 2012 AFI Research Collection (AFIRC) Research Fellowship: see The Writer in Australian Television History.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

      1975 .
      person or book cover
      Script cover page (Crawford Collection at the AFi Reserch Collection)
      Extent: 51p.
      (Manuscript) assertion
      Note/s:
      • The Crawford Collection includes two copies of the script, one printed on white paper and one on pink paper, and both labelled 'Episode No. 04522' on the cover page. Neither copy gives any indication of to whom these copies of the scripts were designated.
      • The copy on white paper is the original, amended throughout with liquid paper and white stickers, which have then been typed over. Some annotations in black ink, mostly underlining of words (see, for example, pages 10 and 11). The amendments are at a copy-editing level: corrections of mis-typed words rather than alterations to dialogue or stage directions.
      • The copy on pink paper shows no signs of annotations.
      • The file contains a number of records relating to the production of this episode, access to some of which is restricted. This ancillary material includes:
        1. Cast list
        2. Casting call sheets

      Holdings

      Held at: AFI Research Collection
      Local Id: SC MAT : 228
    • Melbourne, Victoria,: Crawford Productions ; Network Ten , 1976 .
      person or book cover
      Screen cap from opening credits
      Extent: 48 min. 46 secs (according to the script)p.
      Note/s:
      • The script's cover page identifies Barningham as the director and DeFriest as the first assistant director.
      Series: form y separately published work icon Matlock Police Terry Stapleton , Ian Jones , Everett de Roche , Ian Jones , Terry Stapleton , Keith Hetherington , Patrick Edgeworth , Tom Hegarty , Douglas Tainsh , Graeme Koetsveld , Peter A. Kinloch , Sonia Borg , Don Battye , Robert Caswell , George T. Miller , Gwenda Marsh , Cliff Green , Vince Moran , Luis Bayonas , David William Boutland , Phil Freedman , Keith Thompson , Denise Morgan , C.F. Barnes , Robert Bruce , Alan Cram , Vern Perry , Martin Robbins , John Dingwall , George Mallaby , Jim Stapleton , Simon Wincer , Melbourne Australia : Crawford Productions Network Ten , 1971-1976 Z1638563 1971 series - publisher film/TV detective crime

      The Matlock Police series (originally simply titled Matlock) was commissioned from Crawford Productions by ATV-0, in response to the popularity of rival-network police dramas such as Homicide and Division 4. Crawford's was initially reluctant to create another police series, but ATV-0 pressured the company for some time. Eventually, Ian Jones and Terry Stapleton devised the concept of a regional (Victorian) police series to provide viewers with something different. The more relaxed atmosphere of the country-town setting also allowed the writers to delve into the private lives of the main characters, rather than focusing heavily on big-city organised crime. In this respect, the series was situated somewhere between Homicide/Division 4 and Bellbird. The series did, however, cover typical rural policing, including such issues as break and enters, domestic issues, itinerant workers, brawls, petty crime and robberies, road accidents, the occasional homicide, and cattle rustling. On other occasions, the Matlock police also assisted Melbourne police in locating criminals on the run (among other problems). The idea behind the show was to reflect the causes of crime in a small community and show the effects on both the community and the officers themselves.

      The fictional town of Matlock (loosely based on Shepparton in Victoria) is situated inland on the Central Highway, approximately 160 kilometres north of Melbourne. Although the town's population is only seventeen thousand, this increases to around seventy-five thousand when the district is included. The Matlock Police Station is typical of a Victorian country town, with a Uniform Branch and a Criminal Investigation Branch (CIB). The CIB is headed by Detective Sergeant Vic Maddern, who grew up in the Matlock district and is an accomplished bushman. Second in command is Detective Allan Curtis, aged in his mid-twenties. Previously from Melbourne, Curtis has just been sent to his first country posting (against his will) when the series begins. Head of the Uniform Branch is Sergeant Bert Kennedy, an Englishman who migrated to Australia in 1950. A thorough but also easy-going man with a good sense of humour, Kennedy is married to Nell and enjoys the country life in Matlock, so much so that he has knocked back promotion to avoid moving to Melbourne. Several constables are attached to the Uniform Branch, but the most prominent is a motorcycle cop, Constable Gary Hogan, who performs a wide variety of duties. Hogan is about thirty, a friendly, easy-going person who grew up in the country and is always willing to help in whatever work is going.

      Number in series: 228
Last amended 30 May 2013 15:42:53
X