It Isn't Done | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ken G. Hall |
Produced by | Ken G. Hall |
Written by |
Frank Harvey Carl Dudley |
Based on | original story by Cecil Kellaway |
Starring |
Cecil Kellaway Shirley Ann Richards |
Music by | Hamilton Webber |
Cinematography | George Heath |
Edited by | William Shepherd |
Production
company |
|
Distributed by |
British Empire Films (Aust) MGM (UK) |
Release date
|
February 1937 (Australia) 1938 (UK) |
Running time
|
90 minutes (Australia) 77 mins (UK) |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
It Isn't Done is a 1937 Australian comedy film about a grazier (Cecil Kellaway) who inherits a barony in England.
Hubert Blaydon, an Australian farmer, inherits a baronial estate and moves to England with his wife and daughter Patricia to collect it. He finds it difficult to adapt to upper class customs and faces snobbishness from Lord Denvee and difficulties with his butler Jarms. Patricia falls for a writer, Peter Ashton, who is next in line for the title and the estate.
Hubert misses Australia. He eventually contrives evidence that Peter is the legal heir and bonds with Lord Denvee over the fact that both their sons died on the same day in World War I. Hubert and his wife return to Australia with Jarms while Patricia and Peter are married.
The film was based on an original story by Cecil Kellaway which he had written in between acts while performing in White Horse Inn on stage. Hall liked the basic idea but said Kellaway was unable to put it down to paper.
Hall originally imported American writer Carl Dudley to adapt it into a feature film script. He then had it worked on by playwright and actor Frank Harvey, who had recently joined Cinesound as a dialogue director. Harvey went on to write all of Ken G. Hall's films for Cinesound. Hall says he had considerable input to the film as well.
"If anything, the English will get more knocks than the Australians", said Hall at the time. "But there will be hits at both sides-nothing malicious; just a good-humoured conflict of ideas." Cecil Kellaway later claimed the lead character was based on a real grazier from New South Wales:
I've enjoyed portraying this role, because I know him so thoroughly. I've stayed on his property, I've studied his mannerisms. He is the jovial, lovable person who is symbolic of the democratic carefree spirit of a sunny land.... To me, he is typical of so many of our countrymen. In many of his scenes I have endeavoured to give something that hopes for a laugh and faintly suggests a tear. I sincerely hope I have succeeded.
The film marked the feature debut of Shirley Ann Richards who was a graduate of Cinesound's Talent School, run by Harvey and George Parker. Although she was not very experienced, she proved a natural and was enormously popular. She was signed to a long-term contract with Cinesound and went on to appear in several of their films.
Although mostly set in England, the film was entirely shot in Australia, at Cinesound's Bondi studios and Camden. Shooting took place in October and November 1936. Hall used rear projection equipment to show English backgrounds. The backgrounds were filmed for Cinesound by British International Pictures.