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Eternal Night

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James Workman (1912 – 28 March 2001) was a Scottish-born actor and writer who mostly worked in Australia.

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6-483: Eternal Night is a 1954 Australian play by James Workman . It was directed by Gordon Grimsdale who directed Workman's scripts on radio for the thriller season Thirty Minutes to Go . Workman said ""My play shows just what happens, and just what is said, as the three men break down under the strain of being shut up together. I haven't pulled any punches — in the dialogue or otherwise — to achieve complete realism. The play will definitely make audiences sit up." The play

12-411: A brutal plot and the play's three equally violent characters. But Mr. Workman is by profession a radio writer, well known for his action-packed suspense thrillers. To some extent, he has unwisely used much of his radio technique in this stage production." The Sydney Morning Herald said "It is shrill, raw, and vehement, overstated and overlong, unhclpcd by the absence of relaxed and gentle moods, so that

18-425: Is physically stronger than the two weather observers. When his drunkenness is blamed for the party not being able to board the relief ship for Melbourne, his insanity and class hatred combine to make him a murderer. He kills Aaronson by cunningly fixing a fuel stove, then he decides to rule the weather station. He insists Donkin call him God." The Daily Telegraph said Workman had "pulled no punches in providing

24-525: The cast... go at it hammer-and-tongues." James Workman (writer) A 1955 article called him "One of the finest scripters in the game, a writer with a hatred of the obvious, a constant seeker after new ideas." Workman was born in South Africa, and worked as a sailor and a policemen. He lived in South Africa, working for in radio before going to Australia for his wife's health. In Australia he worked as an actor at first, mostly on stage, before becoming

30-517: The unrelenting violence of the wrangling becomes a little palting at times - but, for all that, Mr Workman keeps shrewd control of his suspense, and draws three very formidable characters despite the way all of them occasionally lapse into uncharacteristic talk." The Daily Mirror said the play "was weighted down with action and violence, and the dialogue rarely got above the level of the average radio commercial serial." The Bulletin called it "a first-rate opportunity for tight-as-a-drumhead drama, and

36-561: Was scheduled to open on 15 July 1954 at the Independent Theatre. It would that theatre's 25th Australian play. The opening was postponed due to the illness of the cast. "An imaginary weather station on Maundy Island in the Antarctic is the setting... The cast consists of three men —Donkin (Barrie Cookson) and Aaronson (Gordon Glen wright), weather observers, and a paranoiac, illiterate roustabout Matty (Ron Whelan). Matty, though ignorant,

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