14-403: Full Circle (previously Dear Charles ) is a play by Alan Melville adapted from "Les Enfants d'Edouard" by Marc-Gilbert Sauvajon and Frederick J. Jackson . It also was produced in 1944 with the title Slightly Scandalous , lasting only one week. The plot focuses on Parisian author Dolores who "decides it is time to legitimize her three grown children so she invites their three fathers to
28-569: A play from the 1950s is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Alan Melville (writer) Alan Melville (9 April 1910 – 24 December 1983) was an English broadcaster, writer, actor, raconteur, producer, playwright and wit. Born William Melville Caverhill in Berwick-upon-Tweed , Northumberland, England, he was educated in his home town and then a boarder at the Edinburgh Academy . Leaving school at 17, he started work in
42-586: A reunion party to decide which one she ought to marry." Yvonne Arnaud and Tallulah Bankhead appeared in productions of Dear Charles in 1950s. In 2004 Joan Collins toured the UK with a revival of this play directed by Patrick Garland . Sophie Stewart starred in a version of the play that was performed in Melbourne, Australia, in 1954 and went on to tour in Australia and New Zealand in 1955. This article on
56-653: A title for his autobiography. He took the leading role from Ian Carmichael in the play Gazebo at the Savoy Theatre . Moira Lister was his co-star. He moved to Brighton in 1951 and died at the age of 73 in December 1983 at the Royal Sussex County Hospital , Brighton, where he had been a patient since November. He was cremated in the Downs Crematorium , Brighton, on 12 January 1984. Castle in
70-588: A while until he met a composer called George McNeill. Together they turned out number after number, Melville writing the lyrics. In 1936 the BBC offered him a job as a scriptwriter in the variety department in London under Eric Maschwitz at £250 per year. After a three-month training course, he was sent to the Aberdeen radio station as features and drama producer. In the early part of World War II , he compiled daily instalments of
84-524: The Ambassadors Theatre . After its success, he was signed up on a five-year contract for London Films by Alexander Korda . Melville's collaboration with composer Charles Zwar began when they wrote "Which Witch?" for Sky High in 1942; they continued to work together for some of the numbers in Sweeter and Lower and for all of Sweetest and Lowest . After the war he wrote plays including Castle in
98-628: The Robinson Family serial about an ordinary family in London on the BBC's North American Service. In 1941 he enlisted in the RAF where he reached the rank of Wing Commander . He worked as a war correspondent sending regular dispatches to the BBC. His experience enabled him to write First Tide . He was with the Allied Invasion force of 1944 and took part in the Normandy landings , sending back reports to
112-471: The Saville Theatre in London in 1951, where it ran for 504 performances and starred Cicely Courtneidge , Lizbeth Webb and Thorley Walters . In 1951, Melville wrote the musical Bet Your Life , with music by Kenneth Leslie Smith and Charles Zwar and starring Arthur Askey and Julie Wilson . A few years later he wrote the musical Marigold based on the play by Francis R. Pryor and L Allen Harker ;
126-575: The Air (1949; filmed in 1952), Full Circle (1952, previously Dear Charles and adapted from Les Enfants d'Edouard by Marc-Gilbert Sauvajon and Frederick J. Jackson ), Simon and Laura 1954, which was later made into a film in 1955 , and the book and lyrics for the musical Gay's the Word (1950, music by Ivor Novello ). The musical premiered at the Palace Theatre, Manchester in 1950 and transferred to
140-729: The Air (play) Castle in the Air is a comedy play by the British writer Alan Melville , which was originally performed in 1949. It premiered at the Coventry Hippodrome on 20 September 1949 before transferring to London 's West End where it ran for 292 performances between 7 December 1949 and 17 August 1950, initially at the Adelphi Theatre before moving to the Savoy . The original London cast featured Jack Buchanan , William Kendall , Ewan Roberts , Coral Browne and Irene Manning . It
154-590: The BBC; then onto Brussels and in Germany for the surrender. He was sent back to London on embarkation leave, after which he should have gone to the Far East but was kept for an RAF pageant in the Royal Albert Hall , which he scripted and Ralph Reader directed with 1,500 RAF personnel. During the war years he wrote revues, Sweet and Low , Sweeter and Lower and Sweetest and Lowest , which ran in all for five years at
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#1732895145214168-560: The family timber merchants as an apprentice joiner. At the age of 22, he entered an essay competition in John O'Leary's Weekly with an essay entitled My Perfect Holiday and won the first prize; a return trip to Canada (1934). Soon afterwards he sent the BBC North Region six short stories called The Adventures of the Pink Knight (1934), which were accepted and used on Children's Hour . He
182-603: The score was composed by Charles Zwar and it starred Jean Kent , Sally Smith , Sophie Stewart and Jeremy Brett . Alan Melville became one of Britain's first television stars. He became chairman of The Brains Trust and a panelist in What's My Line? He wrote and appeared in many television programmes, among them A to Z , which ran for two years (1957–58) and played host to more than 400 guests including Bob Hope , Phil Silvers , John Dankworth and Dame Edith Evans . Merely Melville , one of his television programmes, he used as
196-419: Was required to read the stories himself, his first professional engagement. He continued to write from the timber yard, his short stories, poems, manuscripts sometimes being accepted by various publishers. He wrote his first novel, a whodunit called Weekend at Thrackley , which was accepted and published and later made into a film called Hot Ice . Melville left the timber yard and struggled on his own for
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