Monday, September 30, 2024

5. Garry Halliday (and the Flying Foxes)

Six episodes written by David Whitaker, based on characters created by Justin Blake (aka John Bowen and Jeremy Bullmore).

Pre-recorded ahead of broadcast 4 February — 11 March 1961; novelisation Garry Halliday and the Flying Foxes by Justin Blake published at 13s 6d by Faber & Faber, c. November 1965*, with jacket design by Leo Newman.

* Reviewed by Jean Ware, "Adventure unlimited", Daily Post (Merseyside edition), 24 November 1965, p. 8.

A rival charter airline is taking Garry Halliday's business. Garry soon discovers that the "Flying Foxes" — brother and sister Nigel and Vicky Fox — are involved in smuggling an anti-ageing drug stolen from a laboratory in Rome, on behalf of some dangerous villains...

Regular cast: Terence Longdon (Garry Halliday); Terence Alexander (Bill Dodds); Hector Ross (Jumbo Wiles); Audrey Nicholson (Vicky Fox); Frederick Treves (Nigel Fox); Harold Lang (Da Rica, eps 2-6); David Morrell (Luigi, eps 2-6);  Richard Dare (Berhman, personnel manager, eps 3-6); Jane Cavendish (Giuletta, eps 4-6); Michael Harald (Newspaper boy ep 4, BBC announcer eps 5-6). With Juno Stevas (Sonya Delamere, eps 1 and 4). Narrator (eps 3-6): Geoffrey Palmer.

Crew: David Whitaker (writer); Justin Blake (based on characters created by); Bill Munn (Film cameraman, eps 1-5); Keith Latham (Film editor, eps 1-5); Stewart Marshall (Designer, eps 1-5); Richard West (Producer). 

Flying and airport sequences by courtesy of Skyways Ltd.

1. A Bad Business (5.25 pm, Saturday 4 February 1961) — Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: John Forbes-Robertson (Traffic controller); Robert Young (Mr Sharples)

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "Going Broke"): The Voice is dead; a body and distinctive glasses are discovered out in the desert. Garry Halliday returns home — only to find that a rival charter airline working from the same airfield is undercutting his business. The "Flying Foxes" are also a three-person outfit operating a single Dakota aircraft: pilot Nigel Fox, his sister Vicky acting as stewardess plus a moustached man called Jumbo Wiles. 

Given Garry makes little profit, he can't understand how the Foxes can offer the same service for 25% lower rates. They must be running at a loss until he is put out of business. But then how are they funded?

In the control tower at the airfield, Garry watches the Flying Foxes' Dakota take off for Treviso. He's surprised to see it perform "a rather showy roll" (p. 12), which Bob the Chief Controller [an unnamed traffic controller on screen] says Nigel Fox always does. It seems Nigel is superstitious; another idiosyncrasy is that, when returning to the airfield, he always begins his approach run over the nearby Tonbridge Estate.

When Garry visits the Foxes to hand over documents relating to clients they have taken from him, he drops a pin to see if the superstitious Nigel will pick it up for good luck. He doesn't. When Garry asks about the Tonbridge Estate, Nigel says he likes to fly over it because his and Vicky's old nanny lives there. He is obviously lying.

Prompted by Garry, his own stewardess / secretary Sonya Delamere makes enquiries. Local shopkeeper Mr Sharples is among those who tells her that the Foxes pay for everything in cash. Having been questioned, Mr Sharples is suspicious of Vicky Fox the next time she comes into buy something. Vicky learns to her horror that Garry Halliday's people have been casting aspersions.

Vicky angrily confronts Garry, who coolly asks how the Flying Foxes can run an airline at such a loss. He asks if it involves something crooked. "My brother would never do anything really dishonest," insists Vicky (p. 20) — which, Garry notes, doesn't mean he's entirely honest. Garry asks about Jumbo Wiles and is told he is a "brilliant man" who earned a medal as a bombardier among the Dambusters. Realising she's said too much, Vicky rushes out. Garry deduces that the Foxes are using Wiles's skill to drop small parcels into the lake on the Tonbridge Estate before they land — it's a smuggling operation.

Jumbo Wiles is annoyed by Vicky having said too much. He has also annoyed Nigel by ringing someone called "Barstow", who Nigel normally deals with.

Hidden in the reeds by the side of the lake, Garry watches with binoculars as the Flying Foxes' Dakota begins its approach run — and yes, a "hat-box-sized" parcel (p. 24) drops from it, hits the lake and then sinks. Garry waits and waits, watching. But no one comes to retrieve it.

2. The Secret of the Lake (5.25 pm, Saturday 11 February 1961) — Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: John Harrison (Baristow); Jack Carlton (Airport manager); Winifred Hindle (Nanny)

Summary (based on the second chapter of the novelisation, "The Secret of the Lake"): "This is a chapter in which Bill Dodds shows enormous intelligence and perspicacity," says the novelisation (p. 25). Bill is preparing breakfast when Garry comes in having spent all night at the lake and explains what he's seen regarding the missing parcel [this recap may explain why there's no "narrator" credited in the listing for this episode]. Bill then goes for his bath, where he experiments with submerging his scrubbing-brush by loading it with different implements such as a nail-brush, razor and tube of shampoo. The point, as he then demonstrates to Garry and Sonya, is that one can load the scrubbing-brush in such a way as to make it disappear under the surface for a given amount of time before it pops back up again.

They assume that something similar is involved with the parcel dropped from the plane: it must contain something heavy to make it sink but which slowly dissolves in water, whereupon the parcel resurfaces. It's unlikely that the Foxes will retrieve the parcel during daylight when they might be seen so it has probably been rigged to resurface at dusk. Sure enough, Nigel Fox and Jumbo Wiles set off to the lake that evening, only to discover that their Landrover has a puncture. They fix it, then find a second wheel now damaged — they don't realise that both have been sabotaged by Bill Dodds. 

While they're distracted, Garry swims out in flippers and successfully recovers the parcel. It is full of drugs — but apparently of an innocuous sort.

"The neat packages contained in the canister were labelled 'penicillin', 'sulphananomide' and 'ascorbic acid concentrate', not 'morphine', 'heroin' or 'cocaine' ... Garry had carefully opened three of the packages, and taken out a little of the contents. He was no chemist ... but, by using himself as a guinea-pig and tasting a small quantity, he could be fairly sure that they weren't cocaine or anything like it." (pp. 33-34)

Garry presents his findings to Bob the Station Officer [on screen, the "Airport manager", a different character from the first episode], who asks Nigel Fox to come see him. With Garry there to witness proceedings, Nigel repeats his story about visiting his old nanny, who he phones up and asks to join them. Nanny convinces the embarrassed Station Officer that Nigel's story is true. Nigel denies having anything to do with the canister Garry found. 

"He examined the neat packets with great curiosity. He even opened one, tasted it, and made a face. 'Still,' he said, 'wherever you got these from, it's not illegal to have them. I mean, look at the labels. They're not poisons or addictive drugs or anything like — what's the word? — 'snow'? It doesn't say 'snow'. It says penicillin. You could get them anywhere." (p. 36)

The implication is that Garry had made up the whole story to frame the Foxes. Shaken by this encounter, Garry sends a small sample of drugs from two differently labelled containers in the parcel to Bill's chemist friend Les to analyse. Les confirms that the two samples, though differently labelled, are the same, unidentified substance. He will continue to investigate.

Nigel Fox thinks he has outwitted Garry Halliday; his "nanny" is really an out-of-work actor Nigel paid to play a role. But Jumbo Wiles suggests that it would be easier if Halliday were out of their way permanently. Nigel quickly assures the innocent Vicky that Jumbo didn't really mean this.

Garry is sure that a precision drop like the Foxes made must involve some specialist targeting equipment on the Fox's plane, of the sort used by the Dambusters. At midnight, he crosses the airfield to take a quiet look. There he is stopped by a man [Luigi] with a gun, who thinks Garry is "Mr Fox". Garry plays along.

[Note that the chapter doesn't feature "Barstow/Baristow" or "Da Rica", though they had credited roles in the TV episode.] 

3. Halliday Must Die! (5.25 pm, Saturday 18 February 1961) - Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Jack Carlton (Airport manager); Jennifer Schooling (Ruth Weyland); Jill Hyem (Vera Staple); Peter M Elrington (Cab driver)

Guest crew: Terry Baker (Fight arranged by)

Summary (based on the third chapter of the novelisation, "'Halliday Must Die'"): The man with the gun gives "Mr Fox" (ie Garry) new orders: he is to kill Garry Halliday by arranging an accident. Fox is also to telephone Barstow on a new telephone number that the gunman provides, to receive his next instructions.

Bill Dodds, meanwhile, has been "snogging with Sonya on the road to the village" (p. 46) but arrives back at the office on the airfield to find Jumbo Wiles has broken in. They fight. Garry arrives and they overcome Wiles. Garry tells Bill to go to the Flying Foxes' office to ask Nigel to join them; if Nigel refuses, Bill is to say that Garry will phone Barstow. That name should have the desired effect.

An angry Vicky joins Nigel at Garry's office, where Nigel tries to bluff it out — he's told Vicky that what they're smuggling is merely perfume. Garry tells them about the man with the gun and his order to kill Garry Halliday. Now Nigel rounds on Jumbo Wiles for getting them into this mess. 

Nigel agrees to call Barstow on the new number and a voice on the other end tells him to deliver his latest consignment of smuggled drugs to Parliament Square at 9 am on Wednesday morning. There he is to hail a taxi and go to 47 Saxon Street to deliver the canister. Having rung off, Nigel explains to Garry and the others that the person to whom he just spoke had a different voice to the man he usually dealt with. Garry gets Nigel to ring the old number for Barstow. The phone is answered by a "middle-aged woman with thick legs" (p. 56)  [suggesting TV viewers saw her] who informs Nigel that Mr Barstow has been murdered, his body found down by the railway.

Garry doesn't want to go the police because the Foxes will face prison. Instead, he offers them a chance to help expose the real villains. The Foxes and Jumbo Wiles agree. But first, says Garry, they must ensure that these villains think he (Garry) is dead: his friends must arrange an accident.

Meanwhile in an "undistinguished building not far from the Piazza Navona" in Rome (p. 58), a nervous, disgraced Personnel Officer [named "Berhman, personnel manager" in TV listings], who is originally from Detroit, reports to the Managing Director of Da Rica International — though Mr da Rica "liked to be called the Spider (p. 59). This Spider is angry that the people hired by the Personnel Officer for the smuggling operation — ie Barstow and now the Foxes — have proved to be unreliable. They will instruct Jumbo Wiles to kill Nigel Fox.

Nigel takes the consignment of drugs (bar the samples Garry sent for analysis) to Parliament Square as instructed by the new "Barstow". Vicky is ready at a telephone booth with a view of 47 Saxon Street to observe who comes and goes. However, the taxi never gets there: it stops in a mews, where the driver tells Nigel to leave the parcel on the seat and get out. Delivery has been made without being observed.

However, da Rica soon learns that this consignment has been opened, some powder extracted and the contents resealed. He orders the Personnel Officer to bring him the inquisitive Nigel Fox, dead or alive, "or I will get you" (p. 62). When the Personnel Officer protests, da Rica presses a button and a huge net — "Spider's Web" — falls on him.

Garry and Bill, meanwhile, have flown to Oslo to collect a cargo of toys, a job Nigel passed on to them. On the journey home, they play out the "accident" by jettisoning the toys and a barrel of oil into the sea. Bill then bails out. From an inflatable raft, he waves up at the departing plane — and his "dead" friend.

[There's no mention in the novelisation of the characters Ruth Weyland or Vera Staple, who are listed in Radio Times. My best guess is that Vera Staple is the woman who answers the phone to Nigel. Ruth, who also features in the next episode, may be the TV interviewer who, in the opening of the next chapter, Bill tells about the "death" of Garry, given that there's no one else credited in the cast for this role. If so, this third episode must have ended with some part of the interview. But see notes on the next instalment.]

4. The Disappearing Rabbits (5.25 pm, Saturday 25 February 1961) — Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Jennifer Schooling (Ruth Weyland); Peter Myers (Les); David Lander (Dherio); Clive Cazes (Dherio's assistant)

Summary (based on the fourth chapter of the novelisation, "A Matter of Some Rabbits"): Bill appears on the live, real-life news programme Tonight to give an account of Garry's "death", which he says was caused by engine failure over the North Sea. [No interviewer is credited in the cast list; the novelisation says the interviewer is male and assisted by "a worried young woman" (p. 65), while Bill glimpses but does not speak to real-life host Cliff Michelmore.]

In Rome, the Personnel Officer reads out to da Rica the news of Garry's death, as published in the Times, Daily Mirror and Sun [the latter launched on 15 September 1964, so if newspapers featured in the TV broadcast it would have been the Herald]

Les the chemist reports to Bill on the powder that he's now fully analysed: it's an "anti-agathic" drug called BDM, manufactured in Italy. 

"It slowed the process [of ageing] down, helped the cells to renew themselves, and so actually prolonged life. That was the claim, anyway. The drug hadn't been going long enough for anybody to be sure exactly how well it worked." (p. 69)

BDM has been developed by an Italian pharmaceutical firm owned by Roberto Dherio and is licensed for sale in the UK by Hartford, Logue and Company. Bill phones Garry, who is now in Rome, to report this. Garry has just read a newspaper headline about a break-in at Dherio's laboratory with a quantity of BDM stolen worth 400 million lire or £200,000. He supposes that if the stolen BDM is to be sold in the UK, it will either be put into bottles that resemble those used by Hartford, Logue or the villains might offer to sell it to Hartford, Logue direct. Bill is dispatched to look over this company.

Garry, with the help of Giulietta — the daughter of the padrone at the pensione where he's staying — learns more about the theft and then visits Dherio's laboratory. Dherio is with his animals: test rabbits housed in 20 cages, marked A to J. Dherio's assistant [a girl in the novelisation, a man on TV] says, in Italian that Garry doesn't understand, that the rabbits in Batch J died [on screen, it is Batch 3]. But Dherio tells Garry, in English, that the rabbits in Batch J are fine, having been transferred elsewhere while their cage is being cleaned.

Vicky visits Harford, Logue and Company and meets the relatively young Mr Logue who had recently taken charge of the firm and has bold ambitions.

Garry returns to the pensione where Nigel Fox and Jumbo Wiles are waiting. As he already knows, their latest instructions are to collect an envelope in Nigel's name from the main Post Office in Rome; the key inside will open a particular locker at Central Station in which they'll find the next canister to be smuggled back to England. But while Garry was out, he collected both the envelope and the canister himself. He now tells Nigel and Jumbo to go to the Post Office and cause a fuss when the envelope can't be found there. He'll keep watch to see what happens next.

Concerned that everything goes smoothly so that he won't face further wrath from da Rica, the Personnel Officer is at the Post Office to observe Nigel and Jumbo collect the envelope. When they complain, loudly, that it has gone missing, it draws undue attention. The Personnel Officer decides to intercede and takes the two men to da Rica. Nigel and Jumbo introduce themselves to the Spider — this is the first time they've met in person. Luigi tells da Rica that this is not the Nigel Fox he met in England but Nigel recounts their meeting (having been given details by Garry). Da Rica says "with great sweetness" that anyone who can explain this strange mix-up will be gifted with their life.

Vicky, Bill and Les break into the laboratories at Harford, Logue where they find an old man who yawns repeatedly and then dies, with no sign of what may have killed him. But Vicky realises that this is Logue, the relatively young man she met earlier the same day.

[There's no Logue listed in the credits of the TV episode; perhaps the character was only seen in the next episode, but under the name "Henry Gardner".] 

5. The Secret of Batch 3 (5.25 pm, Saturday 4 March 1961) - Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Peter Myers (Les); David Lander (Dherio); Norman Pitt (Henry Gardner); Edward Jewesbury (Inspector Potter); Anthony Bate (Sergeant Jones); Fred Ferris (Inspector Butterfield); Hamilton Dyce (Meg's father); Jill Thompson (Meg)

Summary (based on the fifth chapter of the novelisation, "The Secret of Batch J"): Having seen Nigel Fox and Jumbo Wiles escorted from the Post Office (to go and meet da Rica), Garry returns to the pensione to wait. Jumbo comes to find him, with a gun-totting Luigi. While Nigel has opted to help Garry battle the villains, Jumbo has in fact not switched sides. Luigi wants the canister that Garry took from the locker in the Central Station. Garry doesn't have it on him and wonders aloud whether Luigi's fingerprints are on it. This causes Luigi some concern. Garry says he will swap the canister, fingerprints and all, in exchange for the safe return of Nigel. Luigi reluctantly agrees.

From England, Bill calls Garry and tells him all that has transpired. Garry thinks that Logue apparently ageing to death must be related somehow to the drug reputed to prevent ageing. He goes to see Dherio, who admits that the rabbits in Batch J died of old age. Dherio assures Garry that this particular experimental batch has not been released to the public but Garry points out that material was stolen from the lab. When Dherio realises that this includes material from Batch J, he agrees to provide the English authorities with an antidote to the effects of BDM — whether good or bad.

Bill tries to warn the UK authorities of the deadly risk from smuggled BDM. In the novelisation, Garry's friend Inspector Potter is away and there's a new Assistant Commissioner [Potter, played once more by Edward Jewesbury, is in the cast list of the TV episode]. Dherio then calls Scotland Yard from Rome and confirms the story. A grave warning about BDM is issued on BBC and ITV news every hour.

A young woman called Meg and her unnamed, elderly father don't have a television and the radio isn't on. Meg's father, who takes BDM regularly, thinks it must be made from monkey glands. He plans to take his next dose and then turn on the radio. As he and Meg talk, they miss the broadcast warning. But then, when they turn on the wireless set, the warning is repeated — so they are saved just in time.

Luigi arrives at the garden of the pensione to exchange Nigel for the consignment of BDM. It seems da Rica is keen to ensure Nigel is returned with all his possessions; Jumbo Wiles gives him back his overnight bag. When the exchange has been made without hiccup, Garry comments that he expected some trick, asking Nigel if he might have a bomb in his pocket. Nigel is suddenly conscious of the overnight bag. He runs out of the garden with it, shouting for everyone to keep back... and is killed in the ensuing explosion.

[In the broadcast version, Nigel doesn't die and remains a regular character in Garry Halliday for the rest of its run on TV.]

6. A Fall From Power (5.25 pm, Saturday 11 March 1961) - Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Hal Dyer (Waitress); Wilfrid Grantham (Italian police inspector)

Summary (based on the sixth chapter of the novelisation, "A Cure for What Ails You"): Vicky is numb with shock at the death of her brother. Garry coolly says that they now have a chance to get ahead of the crooks. He won't ask Giulietta to lie to the police about what's just happened, but if anyone else should enquire, he wants her to say that Garry, Vicky and Bill were all killed in the blast as well.

Sure enough, the Personal Officer [Berhman] arrives, posing as a journalist from the Milwaukee Courier who just happens to be passing. Giulietta tells him that three English men and one woman have been killed in an explosion. Garry and his friends listen in. When Giulietta says the police have been called, the Personal Officer hurries away. Garry and Bill follow him to the "tall building" off Piazza Navona where da Rica is based.

Vicky remains at the pensione, her job to explain to the police all that really happened. From a cafe with a view of da Rica's building, Garry and Bill phone Vicky to share what they have discovered — but she doesn't answer. Jumbo Wiles has arrived at the pensione and takes Vicky away at gunpoint. When the police arrive at the pensione soon after this, Giulietta is left to explain what little she knows. It doesn't sound very convincing. When Garry calls again, the inspector answers and becomes increasingly suspicious as Garry tries to explain. Realising this, Garry puts the phone down on him.

Bill and Garry then see Jumbo Wiles escort Vicky into da Rica's building. Inside, Vicky tells da Rica, Luigi and the Personnel Officer that her brother Nigel, Garry and Bill were all killed in the explosion. Da Rica thinks they should kill Vicky, too. The nervous Personnel Officer objects. Vicky then reveals that Mr Logue in England is also dead. The phone rings, the Personnel Officer answers — but it is a wrong number.

In fact, Garry made the call from the cafe across the road to confirm which office in the building da Rica and recognised the voice of the journalist from the Milwaukee Courier. Soon, Garry and Bill burst into da Rica's office, wielding guns. When Luigi tries to pull out his own gun, Bill shoots him in the wrist. But da Rica presses the button that releases his web — the huge net — on Garry, Bill and Vicky. Jumbo takes Garry's gun.

The boastful da Rica says he can't be beaten. He won't be like other noted criminals such as Al Capone who grew old and were superseded. Da Rica isn't just smuggling BDM; he is taking it himself.

Garry yawns. He continues to yawn as he explains what happened to Logue: the stolen BDM included some from Batch J, which killed the test rabbits by speeding up the ageing process. Bill confirms that Logue aged to death and that the old man was yawning.

Da Rica yawns. When his henchpeople react in horror, he tries to protest — and yawns again. The Personnel Officer yawns. Garry tells them to turn on the radio. The Personnel Officer tunes into the BBC, just in time for the hourly news. They hear the news announcer repeat the warning about the dangers of BDM. Da Rica is now convinced he is dying. Garry produces a small phial which he says contains the antidote, which he trades for the villains' guns.

The waitress at the cafe is able to tell the police inspector where Garry and Bill went. The police arrive at da Rica's office to find him held at gunpoint by Garry. In fact, da Rica was never really poisoned; Garry explains that yawning is infectious. Da Rica and his people are taken away. Jumbo Wiles goes to prison. 

On the last page of the novelisation we learn that Sonya Delamere (who hasn't featured much in this story) is "tired of adventures", so she and Bill Dodds leave the charter airline and go off to be married. Garry is left with a vacancy for a stewardess. But after all she's gone through, Vicky doesn't know if she'd like to take the job. She asks for time to think it over. Garry is left pondering his relationship with Vicky, and supposes that if he were to get married he'd have to give up his adventures, too.

"... and he wasn't sure he could do that." (p. 120)

Production notes

As detailed in the entry on the previous serial, producer Richard West recalls in his memoir The Reluctant Soldier & Greasepaint and Girls that Rome was chosen as the setting for the fifth Garry Halliday story quite by accident. 

Probably around the spring of 1960, West had taken advantage of the relationship that the Garry Halliday team had built up with Silver City Airways over the preceding year to fly a small crew to Tripoli. As well as West himself, there was star Terence Longdon, Silver City's press officer Anthony Good acting as cameraman, writer Jeremy Bullmore and West's assistant Jean Hart. The idea was to capture some atmospheric shots as they came to hand, from which Bullmore and co-writer John Bowen would then devise a story. 

When this trip was abruptly cut short, West and his team hastily arranged flights home via stop-offs in Malta and then Rome, with a night spent in the latter. 

"Our hotel was near the Piazza di Spagna and the Spanish Steps, a very Roman landmark that we thought most suitable for filming. I telephoned the BBC Rome representative to tell him of our intentions. He said that he had no prior warning of our arrival (not surprisingly), and that it was absolutely impossible to film in Rome without prior notice."

West went ahead anyway, his guerrilla unit quickly grabbing what shots they could during the morning before the flight back to London that afternoon.

"We set up the camera on the Spanish Steps, and got excellent footage of Halliday running down them, running up them, and looking suspicious in a local trattoria. All of which, Jeremy Bullmore said he could weave into a script." (Kindle ref. 3302-06) 

As the memoir makes clear, West knew Rome very well. He first visited while serving in the army during the war, where he met and courted an English woman working in the theatre there who became his first wife (Kindle ref. 1486). His memoir cites numerous visits to the city in subsequent years. Given this, I suspect that the Garry Halliday filming was a little more planned than he makes out in his memoir, even if the correct permissions weren't in place.

As detailed in the previous entry, once back in England writers Bowen and Bullmore spent the summer of 1960 working on storylines and scripts for what was now a double-length series of Garry Halliday, comprising a seven-episode story partly set in Tripoli to be followed immediately by a six-episode story partly set in Rome. At the same time, they wrote a novelisation of the first Garry Halliday serial, published by Faber & Faber on 21 October. They also submitted ideas for a further 13-episode run on TV.

A report in the Kentish Express in April 1960 says that Garry Halliday was due to begin its new run on TV that October. If so, this double-length series was initially scheduled for the 13 weeks up to the end of the year, where it would have been something of a fixture in the schedule. With a second extended run in the offing, too, we can see why Anthony Good, who'd been part of the trips to Tripoli and Rome, felt confident enough in the future of Garry Halliday to quit his job as publicity officer at Silver City Airways to become "technical adviser" on the TV series. (Source: "Leaving Silver City Airways", Kentish Express, 14 October 1960, p. 10.) 

Unfortunately, things didn't work out as planned. As we saw last time, when Bowen and Bullmore delivered their scripts for the fourth Garry Halliday story, probably in August, staff in the BBC script department didn't feel the dialogue was of sufficient quality. The writers were instructed to stop work on the fifth story altogether; in-house writer Richard Wade would instead write up the six scripts from their storyline. By 8 September, it had been agreed that Bowen and Bullmore would complete the six scripts themselves, for a full fee, but that the BBC (ie Wade) would then be free to rewrite them as they wished. (Source: memos as referenced in previous entry, but especially RG Walford, Head of Copyright, to Gareth Wigan, Esq, 8 September 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1) 

By the time this had been agreed, Richard Wade seems to have completed rewrites on the first three episodes of the fourth story, as it was now agreed that he would receive 30 guineas per script for rewriting episodes 4-7. The plan was to then pay him at the same rate for rewrites on the fifth story once Bowen and Bullmore delivered their scripts. (Source: Script Organiser, Television [Robin Wade] to H.Cop [RG Walford], "GARRY HALLIDAY SERIES", 7 September 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1) 

The rewritten fourth story was in production by the end of October and began transmission on 5 November. Six days later, BBC script organiser Robin Wade confirmed receipt from Bowen and Bullmore of scripts for episodes 8 to 13 of the fourth series — that is, the Rome-set fifth story. (Source: Script Organiser, Television [Robin Wade] to Miss Rose, Copyright Department, "GARRY HALLIDAY: BOWEN AND BULLMORE", 11 November 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1)

The following week, Robin Wade proposed that another BBC staff writer, David Whitaker, be engaged to co-write with Richard Wade the 13 episodes of the fifth series — that is, the sixth and seventh Garry Halliday stories, to be produced 1961-62. The first of these new adventures was to be based on a storyline already purchased from Bowen and Bullmore, while the second would be an original scenario devised by Whitaker and Richard Wade. Robin Wade forwarded a copy of this memo to producer Richard West, with a handwritten note asking to be informed when the Voice had been killed off. (Source: Script Organiser, Television [Robin Wade] to Miss Ross, copy to Richard West, "GARRY HALLIDAY (5th series)", 17 November 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1, a copy also held in Whitaker, David, Copyright File 1, 1958-1962, WAC RCONT1) 

That note suggests that rewrites were still under way on the seventh and final episode of the fourth story. This was very late in the day. If, as on previous Garry Halliday serials, episodes were pre-recorded in the same week of broadcast, the fourth episode of the story was in production that same week. But things may have been even more advanced, as the opening episode of the fifth story was recorded almost four weeks ahead of broadcast (see memo of 10 January 1961, below). Whatever the case, writer Richard Wade was clearly under considerable pressure to complete his rewrites on the fourth story, and then had a further six-part serial still awaiting his attention. At some point, responsibility for rewriting the fifth Garry Halliday adventure was passed to Whitaker, the sole credited writer on the episodes when broadcast.

David Whitaker (1928-80) had been an actor in rep and on radio. After more than a year of submitting ideas to the BBC, he sold a play especially written for television: A Choice of Partners, broadcast in June 1957. By the end of that year, he'd taken a three-month contract in the script department and was still there three years later. His duties included reading submissions from would-be writers, revising work to make it suitable for production, ensuring copies of scripts were retained by the BBC's internal library, and writing his own work. As with a lot of staff writers, that work was prolific and wide-ranging. At the time he wrote for Garry Halliday, Whitaker was script editor of the BBC's light entertainment output, writing continuity scripts for the hosts of numerous variety shows, as well as his own one-off broadcast plays and pitches and pilot scripts for unmade series. I've written a biography about him: David Whitaker in an Exciting Adventure with Television (Ten Acre Films, 2023).

Little paperwork survives, so we don't know exactly when Whitaker took over from Richard Wade on the fifth Garry Halliday story or how extensive his rewrites might have been. As we can see from the synopses given above, the titles of the six episodes as broadcast are very similar to the chapter titles in the novelisation, suggesting that the outline was broadly the same. But cast lists for the TV episodes include several characters not featured in the novelisation at all, and the novelisation kills off Nigel Fox when on TV he remained one of the regular cast members in subsequent stories.

Some changes were made for practical reasons: the 20 cages of rabbits labelled Batches A to J in the novelisation became a less costly three batches on TV. According to the BBC paperwork quoted above, the perceived need for rewriting was due not to the storyline but to the quality of dialogue. It's ironic, then, that Bowen and Bullmore duly criticised the quality of Whitaker's work.

On 31 December 1960, Bullmore wrote a stiffly worded letter to producer Richard West that is no longer known to survive but is referred to in later correspondence (see below). My guess is that this letter voiced dissatisfaction at the broadcast version of the fourth story, rewritten by Richard Wade, which concluded on TV on 17 December, as Bowen and Bullmore did not receive Whitaker's rewritten scripts for the fifth story until 9 January 1961. 

But the receipt of these scripts only compounded their dissatisfaction, not least because they were given no time to object. The first episode was pre-recorded using the BBC's Ampex system on Sunday, 10 January, the day after those scripts were received. That means the writers were probably sent the final "camera" scripts, after amendments to dialogue and staging had been made in the process of rehearsals. Bowen and Bullmore quickly phoned Richard West to ask for their name (ie "Justin Blake") to be taken off the credits. West told them that the credits could not be amended without re-ampexing the episode but agreed to have a correction spoken over the credits during broadcast. The writers sent a formal complaint in writing to Owen Reed, the Head of the Children's Department for BBC Television. (Source: Jeremy Bullmore to Mr [Owen] Reed, 10 January 1961, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1)

Donald Wilson, the Head of Script Department, responded to this. In a letter to Bowen and Bullmore's agent, he pointedly said he would not comment on Bullmore's letter to Richard West of 31 December or comments made elsewhere, suggesting that there had been other, heated things said. Instead, Wilson focused on the practical ways forward from this point. The two writers would be paid for the storylines they'd supplied for the next 13 episodes / two stories, though Wilson said it was unlikely that either of these would now be used. New storylines would be sent to Bowen and Bullmore in due course and they could then decide on the appropriate credit. Wilson also admitted that work on the fifth story had been carried out in something of a rush and referred to it by the title The Flying Foxes(Source: Donald Wilson, Head of Script Department, Television, to Gareth Wigan, Esq at John Redway & Associates, 12 January 1961, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File T48/103/1)

Up until the end of this story, all episodes were broadcast as "Garry Halliday" followed by an individual title for that particular instalment. But Wilson's letter shows that, internally, the BBC used overall titles for each distinct story of six or seven episodes, and these these match the titles used on the later novelisations.

The day after Wilson wrote his letter, permission was given for David Whitaker, as an in-house staff member based in room 4016 of Television Centre, to co-write a new, seven-episode Garry Halliday story with Richard Wade, for broadcast in the autumn. Whitaker was to be paid 60 guineas per episode. Wade was described as an "outside contributor", ie not on staff at the BBC. (Source: AG Finch, Television Establishment, to Script Organiser [Robin Wade] through Ch.P.O.Tel, "'GARRY HALLIDAY': MR DAVID WHITAKER (B/74624)", 13 January 1961, Whitaker, David, Copyright File 1, 1958-1962, WAC RCONT1) 

That may mean Wade's experience on the fourth story had led to him leaving his staff job. Or there may have been some confusion over exactly who was involved in the new story. When this new commission was ultimately broadcast a year later, it was credited to Whitaker and another outside contributor, Michael Harald — who was also in the cast of the fifth story.

Harald was, by turns, an actor, director and tour guide. In the latter role, he'd lived and worked in Rome and escorted American tourists across Europe. His time as an "aircraftman" during the war was also good experience to bring to Garry Halliday. While stationed in Alexandria, he'd taken the leading role in Night Must Fall by Emlyn Williams, where producer Richard West first met him. After the war, West employed Harald as actor and director in repertory productions in Newquay (where the cast included a young Kenneth Williams) and Scarborough; in the latter, Harald played the Devil in Tobias and the Angel. West's memoir provides a vivid sense of the man and his busy love life. 

"He subsequently married a nymphette typist from the office. He wrote plays for television. The first two were successfully screened, but the third, which dealt with the fall of Mussolini, was thrown out of a train window by the enraged nymphette." (Kindle ref. 2406)

West cast Harald in two roles in the fifth Garry Halliday story: the newspaper boy seen in episode 4 and the BBC radio announcer heard warning of the effects of BDM in episodes 5 and 6. Presumably, once he was part of the company Harald heard from his friend the producer about the woes involved in scripts and offered to help deal with the crisis. Yet, given the impression we get of Harald from the memoir, he hardly seems the most appropriate candidate to bring order to proceedings. 

He wasn't the only old friend West cast in this story. The sense is of a repertory company, like the ones where West had been director of programmes after the war, with the same actors playing different roles each week. Audrey Nicholson and Frederick Treves had both been in the serial St Ives, directed by West and broadcast in the summer of 1960. Treves had also played a character called Andre in three episodes of the second Garry Halliday serial.

Edward Jewesbury reprised the role of Inspector Potter for a single episode. Hamilton Dyce, playing Meg's father in one episode, had been Henry Riggs in the first Garry Halliday serial and Sir Charles Logan in the second. Richard Dare, as Berhman, had previously played Jakob in the first serial, a clerk in the second and Professor Mundt in the third. John Harrison, here as Baristow, had been a passenger in the first serial, Sergeant Eustace and a schoolmaster in the second, a police sergeant in the third and a passenger (again) in the fourth story. Peter Myers as Les, Jill Hyem as Vera Staple and Peter M Elrington as the cab driver had been, respectively, Smith-Clayton, the Swiss clerk and Mappin in the third serial.

Howard Lang, playing the villainous da Rica, was a new member of the Garry Halliday company, with the unenviable task of replacing Elwyn Brook-Jones as the Voice. Lang was brought up in the East End of London, left school at 14 and was expected to become a cabinet maker but instead went to RADA where, in 1942, he won a gold medal for his acting. The 35 year-old, blond and young-looking actor was not an established name. A month after completing work on Garry Halliday, he appeared in an episode of the BBC arts programme Monitor, which featured his work as a tutor to acting students at the Central School of Speech and Drama. This, said one newspaper, made him "a TV personality overnight". The same piece noted that Lang also wrote and produced plays, had collaborated on a book ignored by critics, and had recently returned from India where he'd been teaching on behalf of the British Council. (Source: "Monitor put 'dunce' on road to top", Evening Telegraph, 14 April 1961, p. 8.) This all implies Lang wasn't already a known quantity. Another report suggested he was known to the public because of his role in Garry Halliday, noting how different his appearance on Monitor had been to the "particularly nasty drug smuggler". (Source: "About Mr Lang the teacher..." Hampstead News, 14 April 1960, p. 18.) 

That, at least, suggests he was a memorable and effective villain. But going from the novelisation, da Rica isn't particularly chilling, not least because he makes a series of threats that then seem to be forgotten. The net that falls from the ceiling of his office is a fun gimmick but not one that bears much repeating. The real tension in the story, I think, comes from Nigel and Vicky Fox as largely good people caught up in something bad, and the switching loyalties of their partner Jumbo Wiles.

Hector Ross, as the untrustworthy Jumbo, may have been the suggestion of writer David Whitaker — Ross had taken the lead role of Harry Ashworth in Whitaker's first script for television, A Choice of Partners. Perhaps the name of shopkeeper Mr Sharples owed something to Whitaker's close friend of the time, comedy writer Dick Sharples, though the name also appears in the novelisation so may have originated with Bowen and Bullmore. As "Ruth Weyland" in two episodes of the TV version — and not featured in the novelisation at all — Jennifer Schooling was surely Whitaker's suggestion. They seem to have been romantically involved at the time and Whitaker at some point "got engaged to Justine Lord", the name by which Schooling was later known. (Source: interview with Whitaker's first wife June Barry in Jeremy Bentham, Doctor Who — The Early Years (WH Allen, 1983), p. 60)

Given this connection, Whitaker may well have attended rehearsals and studio recording, where he would probably have encountered assistant floor manager Douglas Camfield. The two men would work together again on Doctor Who.

The novelisation may also provide some hints about the production of this story. On page 83, the garden of the pensione in Rome is described as having "a smack of Eastbourne" about it, which may be an in-joke about where these scenes were really filmed. What's more, Bowen and Bullmore provide a brief but vivid sense of life inside the BBC. When Bill Dodds arrives at Television Centre for his interview, he is quickly ushered into a waiting room:

"Life in the Centre seemed to be mainly a matter of moving from room to room" (p. 64)

He's then taken to Lime Grove Studios, where Garry Halliday itself was recorded, and briefed by a nervy interviewer and,

"a worried young woman (because they all seemed to worry [in the studio]; they lived in it like fish in a tank)" (p. 65)

Everyone at the BBC, we're told, drinks gin and tonic; when Bill asks for lager, they have to send out for it. Besides noting the nervy, boozy nature of live TV production, Bill spies the real-life Cliff Michelmore across the Tonight studio. Perhaps Michelmore made an uncredited cameo in the episode as broadcast, or perhaps this is another in-joke about him not appearing on screen.

Photo of Terence Longdon as airline pilot Garry Halliday in the cockpit
Radio Times preview
2 February 1961, p. 5.
Whatever the problems behind the scenes with this story, there was clearly a renewed effort to promote Garry Halliday. For the first episode, Radio Times boasted a quarter-page preview of the story and photo of Garry in his cockpit. The listing used the credit agreed with Bowen and Bullmore a month earlier: 
"A new serial in six episodes by DAVID WHITAKER Based on characters created by JUSTIN BLAKE" (Source: Radio Times, 2 February 1961, p. 5) 
But, given the letter of 10 January, this wasn't the credit as broadcast. At least on this first episode of the new story, Blake and Whitaker presumably shared billing as writers, with a voiceover correcting the error.

The Birmingham Evening Mail also previewed the new story, providing a name for it not used in broadcast:

“The title of the serial is Garry Halliday and the Flying Foxes and during location filming, Longdon enjoyed a new experience—underwater swimming with mask and flippers. What he did in this outfit will be seen in episode two.” (Source: The ‘Mail’ Man, "Adventures of a charter pilot", Birmingham Evening Mail, 2 February 1961, p. 34.)

The Evening Post featured a photo of new guest star Audrey Nicholson to promote the first episode. (Source: "Looking and Listening with AJ Webber", Evening Post, 4 February 1961, p. 6.) The Newark Advertiser noted that star Terence Longdon had been a pupil at nearby Southwell Minister Grammar School (Source: "NAMES in the NEWS', Newark Advertiser, 8 February 1961, p. 16.) It referred to Longdon's local connection again later the same month, this time in relation to him playing Drusus in the new movie Ben Hur, but with a mention of Garry Halliday, too. (Source: "NAMES in the NEWS", Newark Advertiser, 22 February 1961, p. 16.)

Oddly, the previews don't mention the story being set in Rome, whereas location filming abroad had been part of the sell of previous adventures. Indeed, it's odd that Rome doesn't feature at all in the opening episode, with the previews instead citing Garry's swim in a lake in Kent (in episode 2).

No film cameraman or editor were included in listings for the final episode of the story, which may suggest it did not feature any pre-filmed inserts. However, there's also no listing for designer Stewart Marshall, so the absence may just be due to lack of space on this particular page of Radio Times.

Tantalisingly, something of the location filming survives. The BBC Film Library holds four sequences of black-and-white 35mm film, all titled "Rome: Architecture" in its internal catalogue, all lasting 9m 15s and all with the same programme number, "SFLP056W". The repetition suggests that these are four versions of the same film material, though the description for each item in the catalogue lists different shots of Roman buildings and street scenes. As with other surviving film clips, these seem to be fragments without star Terence Longdon or specific to the plot, retained for reuse in other programmes.

The descriptions mention both Garry Halliday from 1960 (ie from this story) and also "Christopher Wren", broadcast 4 July 1961. The latter is a reference to a documentary film, The Miracle of Youth, but it's not clear whether what's held is surviving footage from both Garry Halliday and the documentary or material shot for Garry Halliday that was then reused in the documentary. 

Another surviving sequence, again listed as relating to Garry Halliday, is an undated shot of the undulating sea, which lasts for some minutes. My best guess is that, from all of Garry Halliday to choose from, this might have been used at the end of the third episode of this story, when Bill Dodds is left in an inflatable raft on the North Sea. It may be that the closing credits rolled over this sequence.

Sadly, from this point onwards, Garry Halliday is a lot less tangible. There are no further novelisations from which to lift the plots of these missing episodes. There's less BBC paperwork to help us make sense of production. It's all much harder to piece together the story...

Further reading

Written by and (c) Simon Guerrier. Thanks to Paul Hayes, the BBC's Written Archives Centre, the British Newspaper Archive and Macclesfield Library.

Friday, September 13, 2024

4. Garry Halliday (and the Sands of Time)

Seven episodes written by Justin Blake [aka John Bowen and Jeremy Bullmore]

Pre-recorded ahead of broadcast 5 November  17 December 1960; novelisation Garry Halliday and the Sands of Time published at 10s 6d by Faber & Faber, September 1963*, with jacket design by Leo Newman.

* The Daily Post had a review copy by 30 September 1963, when it was listed among the "books received" (p. 6).

Criminal mastermind the Voice is never seen, even by his own henchpeople. In the brief time that he was held captive (in the previous adventure), 10 people saw his face. Now, one by one, they disappear for a week and then return with no memory of him  or much else. Garry Halliday, his co-pilot Bill Dodds and their friend Inspector Potter from Scotland Yard are among those who saw the Voice, so are at risk of the same sinister fate. They decide to find the Voice before he finds them and follow a trail of clues to the oil-rich state of Balakesh near Tripoli, for a final showdown...

Regular cast: Terence Longdon (Garry Halliday); Terence Alexander (Bill Dodds); Elwyn Brook-Jones (The Voice); Juno Stevas (Sonya Delamere, eps 1, 3, 6-7); Murray Kash (Leo, eps 1-2, 4-5, 7); David Lyn (Sergeant Schlumpieter, eps 1-3); Jennifer Jayne (Martha Blair, eps 1-2, 4-5); John Hollis (Dr Klaus, eps 2-7); Gordon Sterne (Viner, eps 2-7); Edward Jewesbury (Inspector Potter, eps 2-7); Ivan Craig (Mustapha, eps 2, 4-7); Anthony Sagar (McPhee, eps 4-6); Victor Lucas (Sheik of Ballakesh, eps 4, 6-7); Edward Evans (Assistant Commissioners, eps 5-7). Commentator (ep 2) and narrator (eps 3-7): Geoffrey Palmer.

Crew: Justin Blake (writer); Bill Munn (film cameraman); Keith Latham (film editor); Stewart Marshall (designer); Richard West (producer); Terry Baker (fight arranger, eps 3, 5, 7); Geoffrey Manton (director, eps 4, 6-7). Title music composed and conducted by Lawrence Leonard (ep 1). 

Flying and airport sequences by courtesy of Silver City Airways, Ltd.

Spine, cover and blurb for Garry Halliday and the Sands of Time (1963) by Justin Blake, design by Leo Newman.

1. The Man Who Forgot (5.25 pm, Saturday 5 November 1960)  Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: John Harrison (Passenger); Bettine Milne (Passenger's wife); Mike Hall (Jack Fawcett); Dorothy Gordon (Mrs Fawcett); Denis Goacher (Inspector Lacoste); Jay Denyer (Roy Jenkins)

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "The Man Who Forgot"): A year after The Voice was arrested and then escaped Pentonville Prison, Garry Halliday is piloting a plane through a storm. Co-pilot Bill Dodds walks through the cabin reassuring nervous passengers and is surprised to recognise "Old Chris Fawcett" ["Jack Fawcett" in the Radio Times listing], the pilot who flew The Voice back to London from Switzerland, following his arrest. Yet Fawcett has no memory of this — or of Dodds. Mrs Kathleen May Fawcett explains that her husband suffered a breakdown four months previously.

Meanwhile, Swiss police inspector Etienne Lacoste [perhaps meant to be the same "Swiss inspector" played by Frederick Steger in two episodes of the previous serial] gives directions to a pretty Canadian young woman — "she was the kind of girl who can wear trousers" (p. 23) — driving a convertible. He live in the direction she is going and he is about to finish work for the day so he offers to show her the way and gets into the car.

Halliday speaks to a Mr Jenkins, former prison officer at Pentonville, who has also recently lost his memory. He is, like Mrs Fawcett, embarrassed by his predicament and unwilling to go to the police. It also  turns out that police files and photographs of the Voice have all vanished, and now two of the 10 people who would be able to recognise him on sight have lost their memories. Halliday reasons that if the Voice had killed them, questions would have been asked, but the stigma of mental breakdown means the authorities have not been alerted. Halliday, Dodds and their old friend Inspector Potter at Scotland Yard are among the 10 people who saw the Voice, so assume they are at risk. Halliday is soon booked to fly to Basle in Switzerland, and says that while there he will check in on one of the others who saw the Voice: Inspector Lacoste.

Lacoste, meanwhile, is the prisoner of the pretty Canadian woman, Martha Blair, and her "bruiser" companion, Leo. On the instructions of a "Mr Benedetti", Lacoste is injected with a solution that knocks him unconscious. Before the villains fly him out of the country, "Mr Bendetti" assumes another identity, swapping his white wig for bandages and dark glasses. He will travel under the name "Mr Vox", the Latin for Voice.

2. The Counterfeit Sergeant (5.25 pm, Saturday 12 November 1960) - Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: none.

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "A Doctor in Balakesh"): Dr Konstantin Klaus works in a small, private hospital in the middle-eastern state of Balakesh, where he is medical adviser to the local sheikh while also pursuing his own research. He is supported by Mr Vox, who knows Klaus wants "only to do good in the world" (p. 31) despite the scandal and lawsuit Klaus was once involved in. Together, they aim to sooth disturbed and dangerous minds by using drugs to destroy memories that affect personality. Their latest patient is a murderer, the so-called "butcher of Basle"; in reality, it is Lacoste.

Halliday and Dodds arrive in Switzerland to find that Lacoste has vanished. The local police sergeant, Schumpieter [he is just "Sergeant" in the Radio Times listings for the first two episodes, but "Sergeant Schlumpieter" — with an L — in the listing for ep 3], calls in Martha Blair, the Canadian woman who he saw give Lacoste a lift in her car. Blair, apparently eager to help and playing with a pencil as she answers, tells Halliday that she dropped off Lacoste at the turning for Lac Bleu, near his home. When asked about Lacoste's mood, Blair says he seemed nervous — "I thought he might be screwing up his courage to make a pass at me" (p. 34). Halliday asks "What about the Voice?" and the pencil snaps in Blair's hand. Innocently, Halliday, says he was asking about Lacoste's voice, since the man seemed so nervous. Blair, recovering herself, says he just seemed a bit husky.

Afterwards, when Blair has gone, Halliday notes her shocked reaction to him mentioning the Voice. Sergeant Schumpieter agrees to keep her under surveillance. She leaves Switzerland for Italy and then Yugoslavia, where the authorities lose her.

Back in England, Halliday and Dodds discover the fate of more of the 10 people who saw the Voice. Two Swiss gendarmes and their sergeant, plus another Pentonville prison officer, went missing for a week to 10 days and then returned with no memory. That makes a total of six people who have had a breakdown, in addition to the missing Lacoste. Halliday, Dodds and Potter are the last three people to remember what the Voice looks like. Fawcett and Jenkins (from the first episode) are persuaded to enter a sanatorium under the charge of Sir Walter Munsell [perhaps the psychologist seen on screen in the next episode] to see if the process can be reversed.

Then Potter receives a message from Sergeant Schumpieter to say that Martha Blair has been seen again in Switzerland. Potter flies out to question her.

The Sheikh of Balakesh has grown very wealthy in the three years since leasing the country's oil wells to a company based in Tripoli. He himself will "have no dealings with foreigners" (p. 38), so his brother Sharif [presumably Mustapha in the TV version] acts as intermediary, managing a range of interests. Sharif is advised by a disgraced accountant, Viner, who is in the employ of Mr Vox who Viner refers to as "Voice". Viner tells the Voice that their operative Martha now knows that the two men who interrogated her in Switzerland were the Voice's old enemies, Halliday and Dodds. The Voice answers coolly that he has plans for the two men, but first wants to test the latest improvement Dr Klaus has made to his memory-deleting drug. They will do so on Inspector Potter.

3. The Two Halves of the Coin (5.25 pm, Saturday 19 November 1960) — Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Denis Goacher (Inspector Lacoste); Jane Cavendish (Ruth); Peter Halliday (Peter Grainger); Alan Stuart (Police sergeant); Graham Suter (Psychologist).

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "The Two Halves of the Coin"): Inspector Potter is met in Switzerland by Sergeant Schumpeiter — who then knocks him out. [On screen, this may have happened at the end of the previous instalment, given the title of that episode.]

Back in England, Halliday and Dodds realise they're the only two people left on the list. Meanwhile, psychologist Sir Walter Munsell is still no closer to reversing the loss of memories in the other victims.

Dr Klaus is told that Potter is a pyromaniac who accidentally killed three people and is overcome by guilt, so that erasing his memory would be a kindness. Having applied the process to Potter, and with Mr Vox's encouragement, Klaus tests the effectiveness of the newly revised treatment by leaving matches near the patient's bed. When Klaus, who is keen to publish his work, leaves the room, Vox calls Potter by his real name and gets no response. The man only responds to the new identity he's been given — "Simon Crabtree". He does not recognise The Voice.

A man called Pete Grainger visits the Halliday Charter Company to book a flight to Berlin and convinces Dodds that they're old friends from BOA days. Halliday isn't fooled and catches out Grainger with a trick question. They fight, Halliday overpowers Grainger and searches him. In the novelisation but presumably not on TV, that means making Grainger strip naked so that they can check the labels in his clothes. The only clue is found inside the lining of his pocket: a small coin with Arabic writing.

Halliday and Dodds are due to fly to Basle, where Lacoste is recuperating having been found in south France. Rather than delay their flight, they lock Grainger in a cupboard and phone the local police to tell them to collect him. In the novelisation, they reach the sergeant who responded to the death of Abraham Perry in the second serial. [That was Sergeant Eustace, played by John Harrison, who played a different role as a passenger in the first episode of this serial.] This sergeant arrives after Halliday and Dodds are in the air; he finds Grainger, who overpowers him and escapes.

In Basle, Lacoste can't even remember the names of local Swiss towns put to him by a local doctor. Dodds calls his fiancé Sonya Delamere, who is running London office of the charter company. She says she's had various potential customers seeking flights to different destinations: Berlin, which is where Grainger wanted them to go, Tripoli and Turin. Dodds puts these options to Halliday, who opts for Turin as their next job.

Dodds still has the coin they took from Grainger. The Arabic writing gives Halliday an idea and they see whether Lacoste responds to names of places in the Middle East. As before, they get no response — until they mention Tripoli, and Lacoste turns his head. He then recognises the coin as a piastre, despite having never left Switzerland prior to this recent disappearance. Sergeant Schumpieter reminds Halliday and Dodds that Lacoste was found in the south of France and responds to the name of a town there, Menton, to which Lacoste agrees eagerly. But Halliday decides to call Sonya back and take the job to Tripoli.

Grainger reports to the Voice (who is still wearing bandages and dark glasses); though annoyed by Grainger's failure, the Voice has another job for him.

Halliday and Dodds have been hired to deliver pumping equipment to the Balakesh Oil Company in Tripoli. Halliday's only plan when they get there is to see if the customs and immigration people recognise photographs of Potter and Lacoste, or have seen anyone muffled or bandaged, which may have been how the two police inspectors were brought into the country. 

Crabtree (the brainwashed Potter) tells Dr Klaus he is feeling better after treatment, as though there is now one man in his head rather than two. He is keen to recover fully and then be of use to Mr Vox.

Viner reports to the Voice what he has heard from Martha Blair: Halliday is on his way. The Voice produces a small coin, his own piastre. Everything is as he has planned.

4. Come Into My Parlour (5.25 pm, Saturday 26 November 1960) - Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Norma Parnell (Secretary); George Little (Airport official)

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "Come Into My Parlour"): Sharif [ie Mustapha in the TV version?] reports to the Voice that, as instructed, he has created a situation in which the Balakesh Oil Company's under-manager, a westerner, has insulted a local religious leader, with the result that offended Arab workers have now gone on strike. To Sharif's surprise, the Voice is angry. He doesn't want Halliday to be dealt with in Tripoli, so close to where the Voice is operating. Instead, the mastermind  wanted Halliday to visit briefly, fail to find anything and then leave on a sabotaged plane.

At the Oil Company HQ in Tripoli, Halliday and Dodds meet with Scottish manager (and cultural stereotype) MacPhee, who explains that the strike affects the airfield and means they are effectively grounded. Halliday hopes to appeal to the local sheikh to resolve the situation but MacPhee tells him the sheikh is, 

"a very prejudiced, bigoted wee man ... with a strong streak of colour prejudice. In this case, he doesn'na care for Europeans." (p. 59)

MacPhee says they have more hope with the sheik's brother, Sharif. In describing the brothers' relationship and business interests, such as the private hospital, MacPhee mentions that Sharif is rumoured to take advice from a European 'mystery man'. Halliday is intrigued, suspecting that this might be the Voice, and decides to investigate this private hospital. He tells Dodds to continue showing photographs of Potter and Lacoste to staff at Tripoli airport. Dodds duly does so, to no avail. Then he spots two arrivals on a flight in from Milan: Martha Blair and Leo. Martha sends Leo on with her luggage, then pretends to be relieved that Dodds has found her.

Halliday arrives in Balakesh and meets Sharif. He asks to meet Sharif's western advisor and to see the new hospital. To his surprise, Sharif agrees.

Martha Blair tells Dodds that she wants to escape the Voice but no one can help her. Dodds assures her that he can. They agree a plan: Blair will return to Leo and see if they've received further orders that might indicate the Voice's plans or location. She'll then report back to Dodds. They agree to meet at the Green Parrot.

Halliday meets the sheikh's western advisor — it is Viner, rather than the Voice. Together, they tour the hospital, where Halliday spots one patient reading a book in English. He rushes over, but the patient is an old Arab man. After they've gone, Crabtree (the brainwashed Inspector Potter) emerges from another door and wonders why the old Arab is reading his book.

Meanwhile, Dodds arrives at the Green Parrot and walks headlong into a trap. Martha Blair delivers him to the Voice's other henchpeople.

5. A Message from a Stranger (5.25 pm, Saturday 3 December 1960) — Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Norma Parnell (Secretary); Desmond Llewellyn (Psychiatrist); Michael Bilton (Old Arab); Michael Peake (Loti); George Fisher (First Arab); Jack Cooper (Second Arab)

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "A Message from a Stranger"): Psychologist Sir Walter Munsell [on screen, an unnamed psychiatrist, and not played by the same actor billed as the unnamed psychologist in ep 3] explains to the Assistant Commissioner that he has still found no way to reverse the brainwashing process. Meanwhile in Tripoli, Halliday learns from Macphee that Dodds has vanished and was last seen in the company of a young woman. Halliday deduces that this was Martha Blair, in the employ of the Voice. Sonya calls from England to find out how things are going; Halliday stalls her, without revealing the truth.

Once again, the Voice is unhappy with his minions, this time because they have taken Dodds prisoner which will draw attention to the vicinity. The Voice orders Martha Blair and Leo to let Dodds escape. In a comic sequence, Dodds is too wary of Leo's increasingly obvious feints. At last, Dodds takes the initiative, and when he hits Leo and the others they thrown themselves across the room. With new confidence, Dodds locks them all in the room where they held him prisoner and hurries away.

Prompted by Halliday, Macphee questions Viner about the extra money apparently needed to quell local unrest and keep the oil flowing. When Viner is gone, Halliday says the Voice is playing "the oldest game in the world" (p. 83) in extorting more money from Macphee's oil company. He also realises that the guided tour he received from Viner was all a trick. Dodds then reaches Halliday and they return to the Green Parrot — but Leo and the others have escaped. An Old Arab appeals to them for money. In exchange for some bank notes, he directs them to Loti the jewel-seller in the bazaar. They follow this tip, and while haggling with Loti over the price of a bangle, the brainwashed Inspector Potter passes them and drops a note, which Halliday recovers.

That evening, Halliday and Dodds prepare to fly home. At the last moment, as promised in the note, Potter joins them. But once they're airborne, the brainwashed inspector pulls a gun on his friends.

6. The Last of the List (5.25 pm, Saturday 10 December 1960) - Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Philip Howard (Sergeant); Minush Thuillier (Arab girl)

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "The Last on the List"): Viner is also aboard and instructs Halliday to change course. Dodds manages to radio the start of a message that they are in trouble but Viner cuts him off. This is all according to Viner's plan, as the authorities will now think the plane has crashed,

In Balakesh, the Voice welcomes Halliday and Dodds, and tells them they will soon be brainwashed. The process begins by drinking a certain solution. Halliday, Dodds and Potter are placed in a very hot cell with a waiting carafe of cold, drugged water — how can they resist? In fact, Dodds resists the impending onslaught by going over his own memories, reciting aspects of his life history including his old school register. Halliday has an idea and asks Potter/Crabtree what he remembers of his own school days. When Potter is distressed to find that he can't remember, Halliday pushes further and gets him to recite his own school register. Potter begins, with names leading up to "Potter". Halliday and Dodds repeat the list of names, then Halliday calls out the names and to each one Dodds responds "Here, sir!" When Halliday reaches "Potter?", Potter gives the response.

Meanwhile, Macphee meets with Sharif and demands to know why further payments are necessary. The sheik overhears and confronts Sharif. When the Voice learns of this, he tells Sharif that they will have to dispose of the Sheikh. He also instructs Dr Klaus that he has two further patients.

Halliday has a plan to escape but it involves allowing himself to be drugged. Dodds can then copy his behaviour to convince their captors that they have both succumbed, helped by Potter (pretending to still be brainwashed) saying they both drank the water. Once the unconscious Halliday and Dodds are transferred from their cell to the hospital ward, Dodds can escape and get help. This he does,

"with his face and body blacked with cork, and stripped down to a single garment (not in the hope of being taken for an Arab but simply so as to to make it more difficult for anyone to see him)" (p. 105)

Thus attired, he climbs out of the window on knotted sheets. Time passes, the novelisation providing what is in effect a montage of the different characters in the story.

7. Strong Poison (5.25 pm, Saturday 17 December 1960) — Genome/Radio Times

Guest cast: Sally Douglas (Arab girl)

Summary (based on the first chapter of the novelisation, "Strong Poison"): In the small hours of the morning, the blacked-up Dodds finds a radio set and calls Tripoli — but receives no answer. Meanwhile, the Voice tells Sharif that they are to meet with the sheikh, and will serve him poisoned coffee. Sharif objects that they might be arrested before his brother drinks it; the Voice says they will stall for time by blaming everything on Halliday and Dodds.

Leo catches Dodds and returns him to the hospital ward. After Leo has gone, Dr Klaus arrives to see his new patients and is horrified to learn that Potter has broken the conditioning. Potter tries to convince the terrified doctor that he is not a dangerous arsonist. With a shot of adrenalin, they wake the drugged Halliday to confirm this. When Klaus still wavers, Halliday asks if the doctor is allowed to publish the results of this apparently benevolent work. Klaus says "Mr Vox" wants to wait until they are closer to perfecting the process. Halliday suggest that Klaus should tell the people here that he has mailed a paper to be published and gauge the reaction. Klaus does so, Viner is furious and Klaus realises the truth. He will no longer brainwash people. Halliday tells Viner that, with the game up, the Voice will flee — as ever, abandoning his henchpeople. Viner accepts this and to save his own skin tells them what the Voice has in store for the sheikh.

Halliday can get to the room where the sheikh is being served poisoned coffee by climbing along an exterior ledge. This is precarious enough but Klaus warns that the shot of adrenalin he gave Halliday will last only another 30 minutes before Halliday collapses. Halliday makes the perilous journey and bursts in on the sheikh. This seems only to confirm what the Voice has been saying about Halliday being a dangerous spy. Dodds is brought in, still blacked-up. The sheikh orders that Halliday and Dodds face the local system of justice and should be taken away and beheaded. As they are dragged out, Halliday warns that the coffee is poisoned. The sheikh gives his cup to Sharif, who drinks it — but doesn't swallow. When the sheikh order him to swallow it, Sharif does... and drops dead.

Beaten, the Voice flees the scene. Halliday collapses. He wakes 48 hours later, back in the hospital ward. The Assistant Commissioner (who has flown in from England) says that Viner, Leo and Martha Blair will all do time, while Klaus has been able to help the brainwashed victims recover their memories. Halliday then asks about the Voice. The sheikh tells him that the Voice escaped — but will not get far.

"The Voice bought a map, which was no map. He bought a jeep with ten cans of petrol, but in eight of the cans there was sugar. I told you, Captain Halliday, we have our own justice in Balakesh. The desert will punish him. Not in your way. In ours." (p. 126)

The novel ends with the Voice out in the desert, abandoning his now useless jeep and continuing on foot,

"his last and never-to-be-repeated escape, the last escape of all which is to nothingness" (p. 127)

Production notes

On Tuesday 5 April 1960, actor Terence Longdon flew in a Silver City Airways Dakota over Romney Marshes in Kent, while being filmed from another plane. A report three days later in the local paper included a photo of Longdon in costume alongside a bomb. Readers were told that the actor had taken some time off from filming to play a round of golf at Rye, had a handicap of 3 and that the filming was for a new series of Garry Halliday, to start in October. (Source: "Garry Halliday Adventure in Kent", Kentish Express, 8 April 1960, p. 12)

In fact, the new serial began in November 1960. Given that (as we'll see) the episodes were pre-recorded in studio in the same week as transmission, filming was undertaken a very long time in advance. Producer Richard West explains in his memoir, The Reluctant Soldier & Greasepaint and Girls, why this was. But, as is often the case with memoirs, what he remembered years after the events described doesn't quite match other available sources. I'll endeavour to piece together what happened.

According to West, filming Garry Halliday with Silver City Airways provided facilities for travel, and on the second serial "the cast thoroughly enjoyed" filming in Paris. 

"I also discovered that they had a once weekly flight to Tripoli, Libya, that I, ever searching for fresh ideas and new locations, would be able to take. No sooner had I arrived there, when I was urgently summoned back, in order to direct a six-part serial adaptation of St Ives by Robert Louis Stevenson." (Kindle ref. 3270)

This serial, adapted by Rex Tucker and starring William Russell, Audrey Nicholson and Frederick Treves, was broadcast from 12 June to 17 July 1960. BBC productions often had an eight-week lead time, on which basis West would have joined St Ives around Monday, 18 April. The implication is that West's brief stint in Tripoli was before this, around the same time as Longdon and the crew filmed sequences in Kent. 

According to West, after completing work on St Ives he was still keen on a middle-eastern setting for a Garry Halliday story— perhaps informed by his own wartime service in Tripoli, detailed in the earlier part of his memoir. He says he put this to co-writer Jeremy Bullmore, who replied that he had no ideas for a story but suggested that they fly out to Tripoli with lead actor Terence Longdon and film some atmospheric shots. Bullmore would then weave a plot around whatever they captured.

"Jeremy and I set off on the flight to Tripoli, taking Terence Longdon with us, together with my assistant [probably Jean Hart], and Tony Good [the public relations officer at Silver City Airways] as cameraman. We hired a car and set off the next day for the countryside, found a suitable location, and started filming. Alas, it was Ramadan, and the Arabs took mostly unkindly to our efforts, and started throwing rocks at the camera. … This made excellent film." (Kindle ref. 3281)

If West remembered right about it being Ramadan, this can't have been after he completed work on St Ives, as the Ramadan following broadcast of that serial ran from 17 February to 17 March 1961, after this fourth Garry Halliday had been completed and broadcast. Perhaps West misremembered and it wasn't Ramadan at all. But the previous Ramadan, running from 28 February to 28 March 1960, would come close to the date on which West and his crew filmed in Kent. 

My best guess to rationalise this is that West scouted locations in Tripoli a whole year before he was assigned to St Ives; he was there with Jeremy Bullmore in the summer of 1959, as per the BBC memos relating to Bullmore's expenses, detailed in the production notes for the second serial. Then, within weeks of completing the third Garry Halliday serial on 20 February 1960, the lead actor and minimal crew flew to Tripoli to capture suitably atmospheric material from which Bullmore (and Bowen) could devise a plot. This was done through Silver City Airways and, around the same time, they filmed material involving the airline's planes over Kent. As detailed in the newspaper report of the latter, the team already knew at this stage that the new serial would not be broadcast for another six months; I think because Bullmore and Bowen needed time to write it. While the writers got on with that, West was assigned — not reassigned — to St Ives. (As we'll see, elements of that production informed the fifth Garry Halliday serial.)

It's an unusual way of planning a new serial but the issue of Bullmore's expenses for the research trip shows that production of Garry Halliday didn't always follow normal BBC practice. In fact, West makes the shoot in Tripoli sound quite a wild adventure. As well as having rocks thrown at the camera, he and his team were apparently arrested outside the US Wheelus airbase, where they had no prior permission to film. Only the fact that a US sergeant was impressed to learn that Terence Longdon had been in a film with Lana Turner got them out of this bother, but they were instructed to fly home, abruptly curtailing the shoot. With no direct flight back to the UK, they stopped first in Malta and then Rome, and in the latter filmed more shots (again, without permission) for the writers to weave into a plot. Indeed, the fifth serial Garry Halliday serial is partly set in Rome. 

West's memory is that shortly after filming in Tripoli, Jeremy Bullmore,

"became Managing Director of J Walter Thompson, and had to give up scriptwriting. So Halliday never did get to Africa after all.” (Kindle ref. 3303)

Again, that's not quite right: Halliday did get to Africa in the fourth serial, and Bullmore wasn't managing director at JWT. According to the timeline on the Best of Bullmore website, he joined the advertising company in 1954 as a trainee copywriter, was Copy Group head from 1961 to 1964 and Creative Group Head from 1962; he was then Deputy Chairman 1975-76 and Chairman 1976-87. And West makes it sound as if Bullmore stopped writing Garry Halliday due to these commitments to his full-time job. Other sources suggest that what happened wasn't nearly so amicable.

In fact, despite West's recollection, the overseas filming trip proved very profitable, with Bullmore returning home with ideas for two new adventures. He and John Bowen were commissioned for both at once: a double-length fourth "serial" (as it was referred to in BBC paperwork) of 13 episodes comprising two distinct stories: one of seven episodes partly set in Tripoli, immediately followed by a six-part story partly set in Rome. If that was planned to start transmission in October (as per the report in the Kentish Express), it was surely intended to run up until Christmas 1960. 

Writing kept Bowen and Bullmore (the latter with a full-time job) through the summer of 1960. As well as scripts, they were also writing a novelisation of the first TV serial: Garry Halliday and the Disappearing Diamonds was published by Faber & Faber on 21 October. (Source: list of books to be published, The Bookseller, 15 October 1960, p. 1,638.) John Bowen had already published three original novels for adults with Faber: After the Rain (1958, The Centre of the Green (1959) and Storyboard (1960) - the latter, about a marketing agency, dedicated "For Jeremy and Pamela", ie Bullmore. Garry Halliday was very different to this kind of thing but we can see why the publisher would take on this children's adventure: the new TV episodes would effectively promote the book, released just in time for Christmas.

They seem to have delivered scripts for the first, seven-episode story and a storyline for the second six episodes around mid August. Then things started to go awry. On 24 August, the BBC's head of copyright, Richard Walford, wrote to script organiser Robin Wade about progress on Garry Halliday and Wade replied the following day. These memos no longer survive but are referenced in Walford's follow-up on 1 September, in which he said Bowen and Bullmore had been instructed to stop all work on the second block of six episodes - ie the Rome-set story - and hand over the storylines for the remaining episodes to BBC staff writer Richard Wade.

The reason given was that the BBC didn't think the dialogue was good enough in what had been delivered. Richard Walford relayed this, but it's unlikely that he - as head of copyright - had any say in such editorial decisions. The judgment must have come from someone in the BBC's script department.

Years later, Bowen recalled that Garry Halliday "was reckoned successful" but that after he and Bullmore delivered what he called "G.H. and the Sands of Time",

"the BBC decided that this was a property with potential and brought in a script editor. Shortly afterwards, Jeremy and I left and, shortly after that, the whole enterprise collapsed. The BBC has not changed. Script editors still abound." (Source: p. 603 of John Bowen, "The familiar most frightens when it assumes an unfamiliar aspect," The Listener, 3 May 1980, pp. 603-604)

If so, staff writer Richard West was surely the script editor assigned to the series, and on receiving the scripts felt that he could better write Garry Halliday than its creators. He was then backed in this view by others at the BBC, including script organiser Robin West and head of copyright Richard Walford. As we've seen on previous serials, others had voiced concerns about the quality of the writing on Garry Halliday, so the decision didn't come out of the blue. Even so, given the perceived success of the three preceding Garry Halliday serials, one can see why the decision might have rankled with the two writers.

According to Walford's memo, Bowen and Bullmore suggested that they finish work on the scripts for the six-episode story, completing the run of 13, which could then be reworked by Wade. Walford warned that a clause in the writers' contracts might complicate matters: were the BBC to formally accept Bowen and Bullmore's scripts, they could refuse rewrites. Indeed, this would be an issue with the Rome-set story, which we'll come to in due course.

Bowen and Bullmore also proposed that, once they had completed work on the scripts for these six episodes, they would submit a storyline for a further run of 13 episodes, presumably comprising two stories, which the BBC would be free to adapt as they wished using other writers, on condition that the episodes were till credited to them, ie to Justin Blake. This seemed to satisfy the different parties and Walford suggested that Bowen and Bullmore receive a fee for such storylines plus a quarter of their usual fee for each script. He thought Richard Wade should receive 30 guineas for reworking each episode of this fourth serial, and between 50 and 60 guineas for writing each episode beyond that from the storylines provided. (Source: Head of Copyright [RG Walford] to Script Org.Tel [Robin Wade], "GARRY HALLIDAY SERIES", 1 September 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1)

Script organiser Robin Wade accepted this proposal. Indeed, his memo suggests that Bowen and Bullmore had already provided storylines for a second run of 13 episodes, for which they'd been paid a quarter of the usual fee for writing the script of each episode. The BBC now had a free hand to revise the plot and characters of these storylines, subject to an additional small fee being paid to Bowen and Bullmore. Richard Wade, meanwhile, would now be contracted to revise episodes 4, 5, 6 and 7 of The Sands of Time, for 30 guineas per episode. The same fee would apply if he rewrote the second set of six scripts, but if he were employed to write scripts for the second batch of 13 episodes, based on Bowen and Bullmore's storylines, his fee would increase to 50 or 60 guineas. (Source: Script Organiser, Television [Robin Wade] to H.Cop [RG Walford], "GARRY HALLIDAY SERIES", 7 September 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1) 

Walford confirmed this arrangement in a letter to the writers' agent the following day. If the BBC decided not to proceed with the second run of 13 episodes, Bowen and Bullmore would keep the quarter fee they'd already been paid. If the BBC did proceed, and used other writers to produce the scripts, Bowen and Bullmore would receive and additional fee. Walford concluded that the storylines Bowen and Bullmore had provided were not very detailed and suggested Bowen and Bullmore's extra fee be just eight-and-a-half guineas per episode. (Source: RG Walford, Head of Copyright, to Gareth Wigan, Esq, 8 September 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1) 

The writers were duly paid full fees for all 13 storylines and the first seven scripts of this bumper fourth series, suggesting these scripts had been delivered by mid September at the latest. (Source: Payment slip, 19 September 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1) By 11 November, they'd delivered the remaining six scripts, for the Rome-set story. (Source: Script Organiser, Television [Robin Wade] to Miss Rose, Copyright Department, "GARRY HALLIDAY: BOWEN AND BULLMORE", 11 November 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1)

Whatever the issues over the perceived quality of scripts, the intention was clearly for Garry Halliday to run and run. That no doubt explains Anthony Good's decision to leave his job as publicity officer at Silver City Airways after five years to become "technical adviser" on Garry Halliday, which a news report erroneously referred to as a "film series" - that is, entirely made on film rather than, in reality, recording in a TV studio with the addition of pre-filmed inserts. (Source: "Leaving Silver City Airways", Kentish Express, 14 October 1960, p. 10.) 

In the meantime, Richard Wade presumably worked on the initial, Tripoli-based scripts during October 1960, ahead of the start of rehearsals leading up to recording the first episode on the morning of Tuesday, 1 November. We know the recording date from a preview of the new serial in an undated clipping from an unknown publication, which I found offered for sale on eBay

"A new character on the scene is an adventurous Canadian girl called Martha. She will be played by Yorkshire-born Jennifer Jayne. Viewers first got to know her as Hedda, or Mrs William Tell, in the famous ATV series, but Jennifer has also appeared as a singer, dancer and commere (sic). ... Garry Halliday is being tele-recorded on Tuesday mornings. That is why London's Cambridge Theatre can spare Jennifer from its current production, Billy Liar."

Radio Times listings also referred to Jayne appearing in Billy Liar. The eBay clipping and a preview in The Birmingham Evening Post on 3 November (p. 10) both mention returning cast members Terence Longdon, Terence Alexander and Elwyn-Jones, and the wording is similar so was probably adapted from a BBC press release. 

On the evening before the first episode of this serial was broadcast, the Kentish Express ran a photo of Longdon and Alexander in character, looking over what seems to be a chart or map. Though mentioning the start of the new serial the next day, the piece focused on the forthcoming "Children's Day" in Ashford, where the stars would make a special, in-character appearance - for more of which, see below. (Source: "Children's Day for Dec. 7", Kentish Express, 4 November 1960, p. 8.)

I've found no other publicity for the launch of the new serial; Radio Times did not highlight the return of Garry Halliday beyond the listing for cast and crew.

Neither this nor the previews I've found mention changes to the regular cast. The character of Jean Wills, sometimes referred to as Halliday's girlfriend, had been in every episode to date (played in the first serial by Ann Gudrun and in the second two serials by Jennifer Wright). There was no replacement air stewardess, suggesting that the writers had no use for the role. Juno Stevas reprised her role as Sonya Delamere, but in only four of the seven episodes. Despite the introduction of Jennifer Jayne as Martha Blair (also in four out of seven episodes), it's a very male-dominated serial. Nicholas Meredith did not return as Inspector Potter; but he was replaced in the role by Edward Jewesbury.

It's not clear if Inspector Lacoste (Denis Goacher) is meant to be the same character as the unnamed "Swiss inspector" played by Frederick Steger in the previous serial. Nor is clear if the Arab Girl in the seventh episode of this serial, played by Sally Douglas, was meant to be the same character as the Arab Girl in the previous episode, played by Minush Thuillier. Most if not all the Arab characters in the story were played by white actors in make-up, which suggests that Bill Dodds blacking up as part of his escape plan was a kind of in-joke - for all that writers Bowen and Bullmore denied this in the novelisation. It's not simply that this was a story of its time; as we've seen, the first serial had been criticised in the press for the way it represented foreign people and cultures. 

The character "Roy Jenkins" in the first episode may also have been an in-joke, since he shared his name with the well-known real-life MP for Birmingham Setchford who was later Minister for Aviation (1964-65) and then Home Secretary.

The series also boasts two actors who'd later be quite well known. A year after his one-episode role here as a villain, Peter Halliday was in the acclaimed A for Andromeda. As a result, when he returned to Garry Halliday for an episode in its eighth "serial" (comprising standalone episodes), Radio Times referred to him as the "guest star".

Meanwhile, the unnamed psychiatrist seen in the fifth episode of this serial was played by Desmond Llewellyn, three years before he began his decades-long run as Q in the James Bond films. Canadian actor, DJ and manager Murray Kash, playing Leo in this serial, was later a Bond villain, playing no. 11 in Thunderball (1965), while John Hollis, here playing the kindly, misguided Dr Klaus, was Bond's nemesis Blofeld in For Your Eyes Only (1980).

Geoffrey Manton was credited as director on three of the episodes, presumably to ease pressure on Richard West - still credited as producer - who was overseeing two serials at once. I've not been able to find any other credits for Manton as a director. Indeed, these episodes are his only credits of any kind in Genome/Radio Times. In the 1970s, he was credited as a production assistant on several BBC series, including episodes of Dixon of Dock Green, Blake's 7 and Secret Army. He was then production manager on the 1982 Doctor Who story Earthshock. Perhaps he was production assistant or had some similar, uncredited role on Garry Halliday and took on more responsibility in this one instance.

Once the serial was under way, there was some press interest. The evening before the third episode went out, the Evening Telegraph ran a profile of 43 year-old Elwyn Brook-Jones, revealing a much more animated performance in Garry Halliday than is evident from the sole surviving episode:

"He shouts, he raves, he sweats, he sits barking orders behind a screen while minions do his bidding." (Source: "The Voice:, Evening Telegraph, 18 November 1960, p. 9.)

Originally trained as a concert pianist in Caerphilly, Brook-Jones revealed that at 14 he "got bored" and switching to acting instead. Over his 25-year career (ie from the age of 18) he regularly played "nasty characters [which] he loves". The piece referred to his role as a "Soho gang leader" in stage musical The Crooked Mile and said that, "In January, he hopes to do a TV musical with red-haired Jeannie Carson" - which doesn't seem to have happened. We also learn that Brook-Jones bred St Bernard dogs, had five at the time of writing and five cats, too.

The following week, the Birmingham Post found the novelisation Garry Halliday and the Disappearing Diamonds both "fanciful" and "ingenious" in a review of books of the type. (Source: TW Hutton, "Adventures for Boys", Birmingham Post, 22 November 1960, p. 21.) The book was "full of pace and irresistible" according to a review in the Daily Telegraph quoted on later novelisations.

On Wednesday 7 December, between broadcast of the fifth and sixth episodes, stars Terence Longdon and Terence Alexander were the celebrity guests as "Children's Day" in Ashford, Kent. Longdon was in uniform as Garry Halliday and had written some "light-hearted dialogue" for himself and Alexander to perform in character, "which they rehearsed as they drove down from London by car." This seems to be the first - but not last - occasion on which Longdon wrote for his own character. The dialogue concluded with Alexander (as Bill Dodds) pressing a switch to turn on the lights on the town's Christmas tree. The two stars were then kept busy signing autographs. (Source: "Ashford a Town of Fairy Lights for Children's Day", Kentish Express, 9 December 1960, p. 9.)

There's one more notable entry in the listings for this serial: on the first episode alone, there was a credit for the theme music composed and conducted by Lawrence Leonard (1923-2001). It's not clear if Leonard provided a theme for all episodes of this serial, or whether this was a different theme to that used on previous and subsequent Garry Halliday episodes - as we've seen, stock music was used for the opening and closing of the sole surviving episode of Garry Halliday (episode 3 of the third serial). Lawrence Leonard was quite a coup: in his teens before the war, he'd been a cellist with both the London Symphony Orchestra and London Philharmonic Orchestra. After the war, as a conductor, he co-founded the Goldsbrough Orchestra which, the same year he was credited on this episode of Garry Halliday, became the English Chamber Orchestra. He was also assistant conductor of the BBC Northern Orchestra around this time and later published his own adventure story for children, The Horn of Mortal Danger (1980).

There's also one more notable item in surviving BBC paperwork relating to the serial. On 17 November 1960, between the recording and broadcast of the third episode, BBC script organiser Robin Wade copied a memo related to the next story to producer Richard West, adding a handwritten note asking to be informed when the Voice had been killed off. (Source: Script Organiser, Television [Robin Wade] to Miss Ross, copy to Richard West, "GARRY HALLIDAY (5th series)", 17 November 1960, John Bowen Drama Writer’s File, WAC T48/103/1)

Perhaps he merely wanted to know when revisions to the scripts for this serial had been completed. But the way it's worded makes me wonder if killing off the Voice was a new and very late development. That might explain the slightly abrupt ending to the novelisation.

The irony is that, on TV, the Voice didn't really die - he'd be seen again. But the novelisation of this serial was published in 1963, by which point Garry Halliday had finished on TV - the last original episodes broadcast a year previously, the repeats concluded that summer, and a replacement adventure serial due to start in November that would all but eclipse Garry Halliday in the public mind. Actor Elwyn Brook-Jones was also dead, and the novelisation begins by telling us that this story is Garry Halliday's last adventure involving him.

According to the book, after this encounter Halliday was able to track down some details about the man behind the Voice. He'd been well known in the English village where he grew up, the son of a respected brigadier, and was once "a clever, diligent boy, a hard worker" (p. 9), head of his House at school, captain of rugger and then a captain in the army by 19. A major during the war, he was captured by the Japanese and had "broken down under the threat of torture, and told everything he knew." When he and a young lieutenant from the Ninth Gurkhas escaped, the young major feared anyone learning of his shameful behaviour, so shot the young lieutenant to silence him. In fact, the lieutenant lived, telling the major's family that he'd died with honour, but later confessing to Halliday what really happened. The major was listed as missing believed killed on 12 June 1944. Ashamed, he'd hidden away, cut himself off from his past and become a new person without a name or face, just a Voice. We never learn his name.

The same introduction tells us that Sonya and Bill Dodds now have two kids (p. 11); Dodds does not narrate this adventure, having handed over the responsibility to Justin Blake himself. But Bill and Sonya still had one more adventure with Garry Halliday to come...

Further reading

Written by and (c) Simon Guerrier. Thanks to Paul Hayes, the BBC's Written Archives Centre, the British Newspaper Archive and Macclesfield Library.