"Afternoon of a Nymph" | |
---|---|
Armchair Theatre episode | |
Directed by | Philip Saville |
Teleplay by | Robert Muller |
Original air date | September 30, 1962 |
Afternoon of a Nymph is an episode of the British Armchair Theatre series made by the ITV franchise holder ABC Weekend TV and first broadcast by the ITV network on 30 September 1962.[1] It was written by Robert Muller and features Janet Munro and Ian Hendry in the lead roles. It was directed by Philip Saville and produced by Sydney Newman.[2]
The production was precorded at a time when plays were typically broadcast live. The script was published.[3]
Premise
[edit]A young woman, Elaine, wants to be an actress but struggles against the demands of the profession.
Cast
[edit]- Janet Munro as Elaine
- Ian Hendry as David Simpson
- Peter Butterworth as Ronnie Grimble
- Patrick Holt as Rogers
- Jackie Lane as Ginger
- Aubrey Morris as Joe, make-up man
- Jeremy Lloyd as Lord Tony Bright)
Production
[edit]Afternoon of a Nymph was Muller's first play.[4] Sydney Newman recalled that Muller, a showbiz columnist, "thought he would like to try his hand at a TV play about the grind of an unknown curvy actress trying to succeed in the cutthroat showbiz world of randy men. I sicced Peter Luke onto Robert and eventually we got a dandy script, which, again, Philip Saville directed most imaginatively. "[5] Muller had interviewed a young Shirley Bassey in November 1958; according to her biographer John L. Williams, who described the interview as "exceptionally revealing" and Afternoon of a Nymph as "a damning account of the explotation of a starlet", "it’s not hard to imagine that some of the inspiration for the play may have come from this encounter with a clearly troubled young Shirley."[6]
Reception
[edit]The second of Muller's seven plays for Armchair Theatre, Mark Duguid writes: "Although it lacks the cynical bite of, say, Alexander Mackendrick's The Sweet Smell of Success (US, 1957), Muller's script convincingly evokes the sordid shallows of showbiz."[1]
A contemporary reviewer, Maurice Wiggins in The Sunday Times described the play negatively as being "a pretentious affair".[7]
Variety wrote the "trouble with the script was that Muller cleverly and sharply drew the background and witty dialog, but he couldn't win much sympathy for Elaine."[8]
Hendry and Munro married in 1963.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Duguid, Mark (2003–14). "Afternoon of a Nymph (1962)". BFI Screenonline. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
- ^ Vagg, Stephen (6 January 2024). "Girl-next-door or girl-gone-bad: The Janet Munro Story". Filmink. Retrieved 6 January 2024.
- ^ John Russell Taylor (ed.), Anatomy of a Television Play (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1962), 138-9 and 175-203.
- ^ Joseph, Michael (1980). 25 Years on ITV. London: Independent Television Books Ltd. p. 85. ISBN 0 900727 81 0. Retrieved 19 July 2025.
- ^ Newman, Sydney (2017). Head of drama : the memoir of Sydney Newman. p. 324.
- ^ Williams, John (2010). Miss Shirley Bassey. pp. 193–197.
- ^ White, Leonard (2003). Armchair Theatre: The Lost Years. Tiverton, Devon: Kelly Publications. p. 69.
- ^ "Armchair Theatre". Variety. 17 October 1962. p. 37.
External links
[edit]- "Afternoon of a Nymph" at IMDb
- Afternoon of a Nymph at BFI Screenonline