I Killed the Count
1937 play by Alec Coppel / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dear Wikiwand AI, let's keep it short by simply answering these key questions:
Can you list the top facts and stats about I Killed the Count?
Summarize this article for a 10 year old
I Killed the Count is a 1937 play by Alec Coppel. Its success launched Coppel's career.[1]
I Killed the Count | |
---|---|
Written by | Alec Coppel |
Date premiered | 10 December 1937 |
Place premiered | Whitehall Theatre, London |
Original language | English |
Setting | London |
Cast
- Eric Maturin as Count Victor Mattoni
- Athole Stewart as Viscount Sorrington
- Alec Clunes as Detective Raines
- Anthony Hollesas Samuel Diamond
- Kathleen Harrison as Polly
- George Merritt as Divisional Inspector Davidson
- Meriel Forbes as Renee La Lune
- Barbara Francis as Louise Rogers
- Edward Petley as Johnson
- Hugh E. Wright as Mullet
- Anthony Bushell as Bernard K. Froy
- John Oxford as PC Clifton
- Frederick Cooper as Martin.
A novelisation of the play was published in 1939.[4]
The play was adapted for Australian radio in 1941. Max Afford did the adaptation.[5][6]
It was also adapted for BBC radio in 1938, 1945,[7] 1950 (with Jack Hulbert), and 1962.
A second adaptation I Killed the Count was made by the BBC in 1948.[8] It was directed by Ian Atkins.
- Freda Bamford as Polly
- Philip Leaver as Count Victor Mattoni
- Frederick Bradshaw as Detective Sergeant Raines
- Frank Foster as Detective Inspector Davidson
- Erik Chitty as Martin
- Diarmuid Kelly as P.C. Clifton
- Olga Edwardes as Louise Rogers
- Mildred Shay as Renee la Lune
- Val Norton as Samuel Diamond
- Howard Douglas as Johnson
- Arthur Goulett
- Guy Kingsley Poynter as Bernard K. Froy
- Bruce Belfrage as Viscount Sorrington
The play was adapted by ITV in 1956.[9] The cast included Terence Alexander and Honor Blackman.
The play was also adapted by Francis M. Cockrell and directed by Robert Stevens as a three-parter on TV's Alfred Hitchcock Presents.[10][11]
The play was adapted for Belgian TV in 1959.[12]
- Stephen Vagg, "Alec Coppel : Australian playwright and survivor", Australasian Drama Studies, 56, April 2010, 219-232
- "I Killed the Count". IBDB. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
- Review of 1942 Broadway production at Variety
- "I KILLED THE COUNT". Barrier Daily Truth. Vol. XXXIII, no. 9888. New South Wales, Australia. 21 February 1941. p. 6. Retrieved 11 June 2016 ā via National Library of Australia.
- Hal Erickson. "I Killed the Count (1939) - | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related". AllMovie. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
- I Killed the Count (1939) at AllMovie
- I Killed the Count adaptations at AustLit
- Who Is Guilty? (1940) at AllMovie
- I Killed the Count at the British Film Institute[better source needed]
- I Killed the Count at IMDb
- I Killed the Count at AusStage
- Who is Guilty? review at Motion Picture Daily
- Who is Guilty? review at Film Daily
- Original play at AustLit