Lord Arthur Saville postpones his wedding in order to commit a murder. Which of his many relatives is to have the honour of being the victim?
Polished comedian, sartorially spendid Terry Thomas, made his ITV drama debut on 3rd January 1960 in the "ABC Armchair Theatre" presentation "Lord Arthur Saville's Crime", which was based on a short story by Oscar Wilde.
A self-confessed Edwardian at heart, Thomas was in his element as the elegant Lord Saville in top hat and tails and using his own cigarette holder-a gold one with 42 diamonds that was insured for £2,000. Terry Thomas was supported in Gerald Savory's adaptation by June Thorburn and Robert Coote.
Arthur, the perfect gentleman, finds himself on the eve of his wedding to Lady Sybil (Thorburn) in a dilemma. A palmist has foretold that Arthur will commit murder, so he decides he must do this odious piece of work before he can consider himself morally free to marry. The fun arises from his efforts to accomplish this self-imposed task before his wedding date, which has already been postponed once-much to the annoyance of his fiancee's overbearing mother, Lady Julia (Ambrosine Phillpotts).
Aided and abetted by his butler, Baines (Robert Coote), Arthur's first concern is to select a "client." Arthur thinks he "should keep this sort of thing in the family" but as he is "endowed with relatives to the point of saturation" there is plenty of scope. So it remains for them only to arrange the details of the deed-which they do with great ingenuity-and for Arthur to pull off his crime.
"It is a period I adore," said Terry Thomas when interviewed by 'TV Times' magazine. "There was so much time to enjoy oneself, there was space and style and some jolly nice horses and carriages." There was also, he agreed, "a hell of a lot of advantages," but these he discounted ion favour of clean air and the lighter, more delicate sense of humour that he enjoyed.
This was Terry Thomas's first straight play for nearly five years. The ones before this-both at about the same time-were two other rivals, "Room For Two" at London's Prince of Wales Theatre and "Bird In Hand" on television. June and Terry had worked together before-in the film "Tom Thumb," when she played the Fairy Queen. It was Robert Coote's first appearance in an ITV play.
"Lord Arthur Saville's Crime" aired on ITV on Sunday 3rd January at 9.05pm and was followed by "Lawman" at 10.35pm. It also starred Ernest Thesigner, Eric Pohlmann, Arthur Lowe, Nora Nicholson, Kynaston Reeves and Michael Hitchman. It was directed by Alan Cooke and produced by Sydney Newman.
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