The Search Party

1951 - United Kingdom

The Search Party, which was broadcast on BBC Television on Sunday 8 July 1951 was adapted from a short novel by George A. Birmingham, the pen name of Belfast born James Owen Hannay, an Irisih clergyman and prolific novelist.

George A. Birmingham

The story, which was written in 1909 and is set 4 years previously, concerns itself with the village of Clonmore, on the west coast of Connaught (now Connacht) in Ireland - with the village stores - with the post office - with the Imperial Hotel - and also with the people; the young doctor heavily in debt and incurably optimistic and the ageing but incorrigibly flippant peer who inhabits Clonmore Castle (Wyndham Goldie). Into this scene come sinister foreigners. Mr Red (Paul Demmel) and his two attendants (anarchists in service of The Brotherhood) have rented Lord Manton's dower house where, unknown to His Lordship, they are making explosives. The young doctor, Lucius O’Grady (Richard Leech), a frequent guest at the Castle, strays into their clutches and is seemingly imprisoned. With O'Grady apparently having gone missing, his English fiancée, Miss Blow (Ursula Howells), comes hot-foot across the Irish sea to demand an explanation for his disappearance. She gets no help from the local Irish constabulary, and her experience of the people of Clonmore goes far beyond her worst expectations. She has made up her mind that Dr. O'Grady had been murdered; that everybody in the place knows the fact; and that, either through fear or an innate fondness for crime, no one will help to bring the murderers to justice. However, things take a turn for the worse when two (heavily satirised) visiting English M.P.s come to grief. However, nothing is as it seems on the face of it.

Wyndham Goldie and Richard Leech

The Search Party, broadcast live over 105 minutes was, as was customary at that time, repeated in a second live performance the following Thursday (12 July 1951). No telerecordings were made and so we can only rely on critic Austin Welland, writing in Television Weekly (edition published 13 July 1951) for a review:

"The Search Party fell considerably below the high standard of entertainment we have come to expect from producer Douglas Allen, mainly because the adaptor of George Birmingham's novel failed to discriminate between dramatic and literary values.

There were lines and situations that may have appeared credible when dressed up in the literary form, but which strained viewers' credulity."

Tony Quinn, Ursula Howells and John Kelly in a scene from 'The Search Party'

"Richard Leech was a devil-may-care penurious medico ; Wyndham Goldie a delightfully irresponsible lord of the manor ; Ursula Howells a very determined young lady ; and Tony Quinn and John Kelly a lovable pair of rascals in the real Irish tradition."

Published on April 19th, 2021. Written by Laurence Marcus (sources: Radio Times & Television Weekly) for Television Heaven.

Read Next...

A soldier returns to India to find the girl he loved but had to leave.

Also tagged Single Play

A young boxer's career is destroyed by a scheming woman in this one-off BBC play that also starred Sid James.

Also tagged Single Play

Long-running 1950s afternoon programme designed to help women improve their domestic skills with tips on everything they could wish to know about from cookery to soft furnishings and needlework to bringing up baby and doing their own DIY.

Also released in 1951

'ABC Armchair Thriller', although sometimes listed alongside the later 'Armchair Thriller' series (1978 & 1980), is a separate series from the later Thames productions, which it preceded by 11 years.

Also tagged Single Play

Six single plays linked by a common theme. The hero one week became the villain next week

Also starring Ursula Howells

Landmark TV series in which real-life cases were dramatized

Also released in 1951

Amos N' Andy had the distinction of being one of the longest running (since 1929) and most popular US radio shows of all time before it came to TV screens in June of 1951. It also aired in the UK on the BBC between 1954 and 1957, making it the first US sitcom shown on British television.

Also released in 1951

The earliest television version of Lewis Caroll's fantasy masterpiece was broadcast before most people in Britain had televisions...

Also tagged Single Play

Another 'lost' BBC play from the 1950s. A doctor who has an interest in criminal behaviour, embarks on a crime spree in order to satisfy his curiosity

Also starring Wyndham Goldie