Australian Television Scrapbook 1957-1968
George Béla Havrillay

Introduction

Bobby Limb, surrounded by 'thugs': Photo by George HavrillayGeorge Havrillay played a significant role in the formative days of Australian television as a set designer; Graham Kennedy's In Melbourne Tonight, The Delo and Daly Show, the BP Super Show, Bandstand, Video Village, The $6000 Question, one-off dramas, and the Miss Australia Quest to name a few.

This was at a time when variety shows were staple fare, and contributing set builders, painters and craftspeople dealt with the demanding logistical problems of daily live television.

In 1957, television was new in Australia - very new.  Remember that those behind the scenes were still learning about the limitation of black-and-white transmissions.  My father once told me a fascinating story of a simple backdrop painted in pink and light blue that completely vanished on camera during a live show.  After some frantic head-scratching they realised that both colours had exactly the same grey-scale value.  At least the studio audience appreciated it. George quickly made himself a 'colour wheel' with grey-scale equivalents.

I have chosen articles and photos from George's scrapbook to reflect the print media's recognition of his contribution to early Australian television.  (My mother's handwriting is on few of them.) There are some interesting references to the turmoil that followed GTV9's sale to the Packer empire, and how the balance shifted between Melbourne's only two commercial TV rivals in the early 1960's.

Articles and photographs have been credited where possible.

Garry Havrillay  May 2004

View articles, photos and set designs

1957-1960 (GTV 9)  |  1961-1963 (HSV 7)  |  1964-1968 (HSV 7)

Garry Havrillay
Broadcaster & Sound Engineer
Music
Video
 
George Béla Havrillay
Visual Artist & Designer
Australian Television Scrapbook
Paintings