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Arrow to the Heart

"Arrow to the Heart"
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre episode
Episode no. Season 3
Episode 29
Directed by Rudolph Cartier
Written by Rudolph Cartier
Original air date 2 July 1952 (1952-07-02)

Arrow to the Heart is a British television drama, broadcast live twice by BBC Television in 1952, four days apart, and again in 1956. It was adapted from the German novel Unruhige Nacht by Albrecht Goes, published in 1950.

It was the first collaboration between director Rudolph Cartier and scriptwriter Nigel Kneale who were, according to television historian Lez Cooke, "responsible for introducing a completely new dimension to television drama in the early to mid-1950s."

Based on an incident from Goes's own experiences during World War II, the action of the story takes place over one night on the Eastern Front in Russia in 1943. A German Army pastor has been flown in to oversee the military execution of a convicted deserter. The pastor finds himself sharing a room with an officer who is due to be sent to fight with the German Sixth Army in the Battle of Stalingrad, virtually a death sentence itself. Through studying documentation surrounding the case, the pastor comes to realise that the deserter is in fact innocent, but his execution goes ahead as scheduled in the morning. The officer, however, earns a temporary reprieve as news comes through that the Sixth Army has fallen and the battle for Stalingrad has ended in defeat.

Rudolph Cartier had joined the staff of the BBC drama department earlier in 1952, after previously having worked in the film industry.Arrow to the Heart was his first television production for the BBC.

The Austrian-born Cartier adapted Goes's novel into script form himself, as well as directing the production. The BBC's Head of Drama, Michael Barry, felt that Cartier's English dialogue was not quite right, and assigned Nigel Kneale — a staff writer who had been working at the BBC since the previous year — to improve it, with Cartier's approval. Officially credited for "additional dialogue", this was Kneale's first major television drama credit.


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