Hunter (1967 TV series)
Hunter was an Australian espionage adventure television series screened by the Nine Network from Tuesday 4 July 1967 to March 1969. The series was created by Ian Jones and produced by Crawford Productions.[1][2][3]
Hunter | |
---|---|
Genre | Adventure (genre) |
Created by | Ian Jones Terry Stapleton |
Starring | Tony Ward Gerard Kennedy Nigel Lovell Fernande Glyn Ronald Morse Anne Morgan |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 65 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company | Crawford Productions |
Release | |
Original network | Nine Network |
Original release | 4 July 1967 – 5 March 1969 |
Cast
- Tony Ward as John Hunter
- Gerard Kennedy as Kragg
- Nigel Lovell as Charles Blake
- Fernande Glyn as Eve Halliday
- Anne Morgan as Julie Coleman
- Gordon Timmins as Doug Marshall
- Ronald Morse as Mr Smith
- Jack Hume as Vargon
- Rod Mullinar as Gil Martin
- Anne Charleston as Patricia French
- Gerda Nicolson as Marion Tolhurst
- Kevin Miles
- Maurie Fields
- Carmen Duncan
- Jill Forster
- Patricia Smith as Georgie Savage
- Kevin Sanders as title sequence narrator
Series synopsis
The title character, John Hunter, was an agent working for SCU3, a sub-division of the ASIO-like COSMIC (Commonwealth Office of Security & Military Intelligence Co-ordination). While it is mentioned in episodes that "Hunter" is a status level for agents (similar to the "Double-O" status of James Bond), with the title character being "Hunter 5"; he gives "Hunter" as his surname both in current scenes and flashback sequences. He was played by Tony Ward.
However, he was quickly overshadowed by the show's main antagonist, Kragg, an agent employed by the Australian operation of the CUCW (Council for the Unification of the Communist World). Played by Gerard Kennedy, Kragg became the show's breakout character, with Kennedy winning a TV Week Logie Award for Best New Talent for his portrayal of the character.[4]
SCU3 was the Melbourne-based arm of COSMIC, headed by Charles Blake (Nigel Lovell), with offices in the former National Mutual building or St Kilda Road. Blake's secretary was Eve Halliday (played by Fernande Glyn), who also acted as a field agent. Halliday was replaced for the second season by the recurring character of Julie Coleman (played by Anne Morgan), with real-life police detective Gordon Timmins appearing as agent Doug Marshall (Timmins played a character of the same name in Homicide, on which he also acted as police advisor, although the two roles were not the same character).[5][6]
The CUCW or simply the Council was overseen by Mr. Smith (Ronald Morse), with sinister overseas superiors appearing from time to time, notably the bearded Vargon (Jack Hume).
Production
Screenplays were written by Ian Jones, Terry Stapleton and Howard Griffiths, who reputedly had a background in British military intelligence before emigrating.[1] The line producer for the majority of the show's run was Allan Trevor, who also appeared occasionally as an actor. Most episodes were directed by Ted Gregory, a longtime Crawford studio director, with Jones supervising a lean and mobile film unit.
The series became extremely popular rating in the top-ten most popular programs in Australia for 1967, and had a run of 65 one-hour episodes. It also achieved a limited number of international sales.[4] It was produced in black and white, with interior scenes recorded on videotape in the GTV-9 Richmond studio and outdoor scenes shot on location on 16 mm film.[1]
Compared to Australian drama series of the day, the series featured an above-average quota of location-shot action footage, explosions and stunts. It was accompanied by a sophisticated, original jazz theme, fanfare and underscore by reed player and composer Frank Smith. The Melbourne-based show filmed some episodes in Sydney and in the Snowy Mountains in New South Wales, on the Gold Coast, Queensland, in South Australia, and overseas in Singapore.[4]
Initially stories were serialised over three and four-episode story arcs. Soon the decision was made to switch to stand-alone episodes. After episode 15 episodes largely featured a self-contained story, apart from two subsequent two-part stories. Notably, a first season arc, "The Prometheus File," was set at the high-security Woomera Rocket Range and featured actual footage of the Blue Streak launch, with the actors even allowed access to the tallest gantry for the climactic fight.[4]
Kevin Sanders, a GTV-9 news journalist and announcer, supplied the opening narration setting up the lead character and premise over the main title sequence. While the series was in early development, President Johnson made a tickertape motorcade through Melbourne in October 1966, which was opportunistically filmed as a backdrop to establish Hunter as a special agent in the large welcome crowd at Melbourne Town Hall for inserting in the first season intro.
Series evolution
As the series progressed the immense popularity of the villain Kragg presented several problems. Apart from apparently being more popular amongst viewers than the show's title character, in the stories the villain invariably had to defeat the ostensible hero in order to still be around for the next episode.[4] In a concession to the character's popularity, Kragg ultimately defected to the side of good after being wounded when his girlfriend was savagely killed. Series star Tony Ward had been somewhat dissatisfied with the direction his character was taking and the increased emphasis on Kragg, and late in the show's run suggested that the high output of episodes by this stage had outstripped the ability of the writers.[4]
Late in the show's run and after some disagreements with the show's producers, Ward left the series to pursue movie options - "John Hunter" was executed by a firing squad in an East European country after a mission went wrong (filmed in Old Melbourne Gaol). A new lead spy (Gil Martin) was introduced, portrayed by British import Rod Mullinar.[7] Mullinar completed eight episodes of the series before it was cancelled. Keen to retain the services of Kennedy, Crawfords decided that new police series Division 4 would be a better vehicle for his talents. They convinced the Nine Network to cancel Hunter and proceed with Division 4, which indeed emerged as a popular success.[4] Mullinar subsequently took the titular role of a private eye in another Crawford drama series, Ryan (1973).
The complete series was rerun in Melbourne a couple of times late night or Sunday afternoons before the introduction of color broadcasting in 1975.
Home Media
Title | Format | Ep # | Discs | Region 4 (Australia) | Special Features | Distributors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hunter (Collector's Edition) | DVD | Episode 01-04
Episode 06-14 |
04 | December 2018 | None | Crawford Productions |
References
- Moran, Albert. Moran's Guide to Australian TV Series, Allen & Unwin, 1993. ISBN 0-642-18462-3 } p 234-5
- Vagg, Stephen (31 December 2019). "Top Ten Australian James Bond Homages". Filmink.
- "Counter spying Aussie Style". The Age. 12 January 1967. p. 10.
- Storey, Don. TV Eye - Classic Australian Television, TV Eye - Classic Australian Television
- "Hunter".
- "Homicide2".
- "Hunter2".