Michael Plant (1930–1965) was an Australian screenwriter, actor and producer best known for co-creating Whiplash.
According to Filmink "Michael Plant’s career was truly comet-like. An industry professional by the age of 19, a veteran of London, New York and Hollywood by the time he was 30, dead by the age of 35. He had a play on Broadway, TV credits in the US, England and Australia, and was head of the show that revolutionised Australian television. And he never saw 36. It was a remarkable life, awe-inspiring in its achievement, tragic in its brevity."[1]
The Bulletin said on his death in 1965 that Plant "had left as big an impression on Australian viewing habits as any one man in the industry's brief history."[2]
Biography
editPlant, the son of Major-General Eric Plant, was educated in Canberra and at The Scots College, Sydney. Plant started writing and producing radio plays while still at high school.[3] According to one obituary, "At 15, and still in short pants, Michael Plant presented himself at the office of a Sydney radio producer, insisting that he wanted to be a scriptwriter. He was given a script outline to work on and returned the next morning with a story which is still remembered as "brilliant".[2] He worked for Grace Gibson as a writer, actor and producer then moved to London. A play he co-wrote Miss Isobel was performed on Broadway. He wrote for several American television series before returning to Australia in 1964. According to Filmink "Despite his overseas success, Plant continued to return to Australia for work throughout his career; indeed, he did this with far more regularity than most Australian expat writers at the time. I’m unsure whether this was motivated by patriotism, money, greater independence, family ties, enjoying being a bigger fish in a small pond and/or a simple preference to not stay in the one place too long – my guess it was a combination of all the above."[1]
His final job was as executive producer over 28 episodes of the Mavis Bramston Show. Barry Creyton recalled, "He had a wicked sense of humour and understood precisely the nature of topical and political satire. ATN kept a bunch of lawyers vetting everything we did for libel and slander, but Michael always managed to stay one step ahead of the threatened lawsuits, always with stinging wit. He was a great talent." [4]
Death
editHe died age 33.[5][6] Police were told that he had been working up to 80 hours a week on the production of the show, and that there were no suspicious circumstances to his death.[7]
Plant was gay. According to Barry Creyton, Plant's partner of several years had died in a football accident shortly before his death.[1]
TV select credits
edit- The Veil (1958) – writer episode "Jack the Ripper"
- One Step Beyond (1959) – writer
- Men into Space (1959–60) – writer
- Bourbon Street Beat (1960) – episode "Find My Face"
- The Detectives (1960) – episode "Floating Face Down"
- The Barbara Stanwyck Show (1961) – episode "High Tension" – story
- Whiplash (1960–61) – co creator, story editor, writer
- Jonah (1963) – story editor, writer
- The Mavis Bramston Show (1965) – producer
- Adventure Unlimited (1965) - writer[8]
Other writing
edit- Rube Knew All About Art (1949) – winner ABC radio short story competition[9]
- They Lied to Henry Wilson (1950) – radio producer[10]
- Miss Isobel (1957) – play
As actor
edit- Dear Charles (1955) theatre
References
edit- ^ a b c Vagg, Stephen (14 November 2021). "Forgotten Australian TV Screenwriters: Michael Plant". Filmink.
- ^ a b "National Notebook". The Bulletin. 24 July 1965. p. 9.
- ^ "Boys To Produce Radio Plays". The Daily News (HOME ed.). Western Australia. 17 January 1947. p. 11. Retrieved 4 May 2020 – via Trove.
- ^ Vagg, Stephen (11 October 2020). "Barry Creyton Live!". Filmink.
- ^ "Television producer found dead". The Canberra Times. 13 July 1965. p. 4. Retrieved 4 May 2020 – via Trove.
- ^ "Death of producer unsolved". The Canberra Times. 14 July 1965. p. 13. Retrieved 4 May 2020 – via Trove.
- ^ "Post Morteum on Producer of Mavis Bramston Show". Sydney Morning Herald. 13 July 1965. p. 7.
- ^ Vagg, Stephen (6 May 2023). "Forgotten Australian TV Series: Adventure Unlimited". FilmInk. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
- ^ "Rube Knew All About Art". ABC Weekly. 20 August 1949. p. 17.
- ^ "Radio Plays for Next Week A.B.C". ABC Weekly. 23 December 1950. p. 27.
External links
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