Celluloid_Heroes_(play)

<i>Celluloid Heroes</i> (play)

Celluloid Heroes (play)

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Celluloid Heroes is a play by David Williamson about the Australian film industry. It was written to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Nimrod Theatre and is not one of his highly regarded plays.[1][2]

Quick Facts Celluloid Heroes, Written by ...

Williamson later called it:

A bad play which didn't create characters that were complex enough to last the distance after interval. Part of the problem was that I felt I was writing to order... and I was supposed to be writing something light and bright and happy, but my feelings about the film industry were anything but light and bright. I think I let my personal bile about the indignities writers suffer in the film industry, and how basically shoddy it all is, spill over into the play. I wasn't sufficiently objective and I made the characters overly evil or two-dimensional... [it] was simply social satire dipped into crude farce. Not one of my best efforts... It's the only time I've worked to a commission and it's the only time I've been ashamed of the final product.[3]

He later wrote about the Australian film industry far more successfully in Emerald City.[4]


References

  1. "An ephemeral but cutting Williamson satire". The Canberra Times. Vol. 55, no. 16, 516. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 14 December 1980. p. 8. Retrieved 4 October 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  2. Cochrane, Peter (14 March 1997). "Williamson's World". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 15.



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