The Evil Touch
The Evil Touch | |
---|---|
Created by | Mende Brown |
Directed by | Mende Brown Arthur Luddenham |
Starring | Various |
Music by | Laurie Lewis |
Country of origin | Australia |
No. of episodes | 26 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Everett Rosenthal |
Producer | Mende Brown |
Running time | 30 mins. |
Production companies | Amalgamated Pictures Austalasia, in association with Olola Productions Australia |
Distributor | Allied Artists Television Paramount Television |
Release | |
Original network | Nine Network |
Original release | 19 June 1973 9 June 1974 | –
The Evil Touch is an Australian television series, originally broadcast in Australia in 1973 and produced by Amalgamated Pictures Australasia in association with Olola Productions Australia. An anthology series, each episode had a self-contained story usually in a thriller or horror style, and often with a twist ending. Subjects explored included the occult, science fiction, murder schemes, and whodunits. Each episode had a new cast of guest actors playing new characters, although several guest stars appeared in more than one episode.[1]
Overview[]
The series was produced by American producer Mende Brown and partly funded by the Nine Network. A key feature was the involvement of internationally known actors. Some were lured to Australia to participate in the show by also being allowed to direct an episode. Supporting roles were filled by Australian actors. Although Australian television was still in black and white in 1973, to aid international marketability this series was shot entirely in colour, and on film.
Each episode was introduced by Anthony Quayle who appeared in a darkened studio surrounded by unearthly golden smoke imagery, frequently reminding viewers that there "was a touch of evil in all of us". He returned to provide the epilogue to each installment, always wishing viewers "pleasant dreams".
Cast[]
Each episode featured a new setting and characters and a different cast. Several name actors appeared, acting in multiple episodes as different characters:
- Mildred Natwick (Heart to Heart and Scared to Death)
- Julie Harris (Happy New Year Aunt Carrie and The Upper Hand)
- Leslie Nielsen (The Obituary and The Voyage)
- Darren McGavin (A Game of Hearts, George and Gornak's Prism)
- Vic Morrow (Murder's for the Birds and The Fans)
- Ray Walston (Dear Beloved Monster and The Trial)
- Robert Lansing (The Lake and Seeing is Believing)
- Kim Hunter (Dr. McDermott's New Patient and Wings of Death)
- Carol Lynley (Death by Dreaming and Dear Cora, I'm Going to Kill You)
- Harry Guardino (The Homecoming and They)
Morrow and McGavin each directed one of the episodes they acted in. Australian actors in supporting roles included Jack Thompson, Elaine Lee, John Morris, June Thody, Tony Bonner, Neva Carr Glyn, Janet Kingsbury, Mirren Lee, Reg Evans.
Filmink magazine called it "pure Rick Dalton territory".[2]
Broadcasts[]
The series was initially screened in Australia by the Nine Network in a prime time slot. The series was also screened in first-run syndication and later re-ran on TV Land in the US and ITV in the UK, with later airings in the 1990s on Bravo. In Australia it was repeated in a late-night slot several times up until the mid-1980s.
List of episodes with American irdates[]
- 1.The Lake (9/16/73)
- 2. Heart to Heart (9/23/73)
- 3.Dr. McDermitt's New Patients (9/30/73)
- 4.The Obituary (10/7/73)
- 5. Happy New Year, Aunt Carrie (10/14/73)
- 6.A Game of Hearts (10/21/73)
- 7.Seeing Is Believing (10/28/73)
- 8.The Upper Hand (11/4/73)
- 9.Murder Is for the Birds (11/11/73)
- 10.Marci (11/18/73)[3]
- 11. George (11/25/73)
- 12.Scared to Death (12/2/73)
- 13.The Homecoming (12/9/73)
- 14.Dear Beloved Monster (12/16/73)
- 15.Campaign '20 (1/13/74)
- 16.Faulkner's Choice (1/20/74)
- 17.Dear Cora, I'm Going to Kill You (1/27/74)
- 18.The Trial (2/3/74)
- 19.The Fans (2/10/74)[4]
- 20.Kaidaitcha Country (2/24/74)[5]
- 21. Gornak's Prism (3/3/74)
- 22.The Voyage (3/10/74)
- 23.Death by Dreaming (3/24/74)
- 24.Never Fool With a Gypsy Icon (3/31/74)
- 25.They (6/2/74)
- 26.Wings of Death (6/9/74)
References[]
- ^ "TOP STARS IN NEW TCN9 SERIES". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 41, no. 3. Australia. 20 June 1973. p. 10. Retrieved 3 January 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Vagg, Stephen (3 April 2020). "6 Productions Rick Dalton Might Have Wound Up Doing in Australia After Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood…". Filmink.
- ^ Marcie at AustLit
- ^ The Fans at AustLit
- ^ Kadaicha Country at AustLit
- Moran, Albert. Moran's Guide to Australian TV Series, Allen & Unwin, 1993. ISBN 0-642-18462-3 p 166-7.
External links[]
- Nine Network original programming
- Australian anthology television series
- 1970s Australian drama television series
- Australian science fiction television series
- Australian horror fiction television series
- Horror fiction television series
- 1973 Australian television series debuts
- 1974 Australian television series endings
- English-language television shows