Till Death Do Us Part is a 1959 Australian television play based on a stage lay that had been adapted for radio. The TV play was broadcast live in Melbourne, recorded, and was shown in Sydney. Australian TV drama was relatively rare at the time.
Premise
A man in Italy, Roberto, falls in love with Grazia, the wife of a gangster. He then discovers that the gangster wants to kill him.
Cast
Edward Brayshaw as Roberto
Maree Tomasetti as Grazia
Frank Gatliff as the gangster
Syd Conabere
Ken Goodlet
Edward Howell
Keith Hudson
Georgina Batterham
Kurt Ludescher
Robin Ramsay
Production
It was decided not to require the actors to use Italian accents. Director Muir said the play was of particular interest because "of the flashbacks, the movements in time and space and the exciting visual possibilities provided by the settings." It was the first contemporary European drama made by the ABC. Part of the play was shot at Sandringham Beach. This scene involved Edward Brayshaw and Maree Tomasetti.
A neat little idea for suspense, with a wry ironic twist, faltered, through common place writing and unsubtle acting...better writing, direction and acting could have pointed up this dilemma more grippingly, as the story moved forward through its half-dozen episodes—what might happen, what has happened, what does happen; all of it while the young man and the sardonic old scoffer wrangle quarrelsomely in a dingy street. Edward Brayshaw, as the young man, was the production's main weakness. The immaturity of the schoolboyish sarcasm in his anger was matched by the discomfort by which he approached the lyrically flowery love-talk allotted to him by the script: "From now on my life will write only your name," and other such nosegays of verbiage. Marie Tomasetti performed competently as the mystery woman, without suggesting (hat there could be depth and aches and necessities even in such a gangland woman. Frank Gatliff, using a rather big Shakespearean style with a Claude Rains bias, was the sardonic scoffer, but too monotonously in the one mood to be always appreciated as much as he Was at first. The dressing and the 'sets, so cramped in space that the characters could be allowed hardly any significant movement about the scene, were shoddy.