Thirteen Against Fate

Thirteen Against Fate
Written by Based on 13 non-Maigret stories by Georges Simenon.
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 13
Production
Producer(s) Irene Shubik
Release
Original network BBC1
Original release 19 June 1966 (1966-06-19) – 11 September 1966 (1966-09-11)

Thirteen Against Fate is a British mystery thriller series, comprising thirteen individual stories by the French writer, George Simenon.[1] There are no links between each story, other than the original author, and no story features Simoenon's most famous creation, Maigret. Intended to be more of a psychological series than the usual British detective serial of the time, producer Irene Shubik remarked that "[t]hese plays are not for the squeamish. They are not light detective stories, but intense psychological studies of individuals deeply involved in the aftermath of murder or death.",[2] while The Daily Telegraph described the first episode as "[a]n intelligent television crime series that concentrates on the character of the criminal instead of the almost invariably successful process of detection is overdue."[3]

Episode list

The Lodger (transmitted 19 June 1966)
Writer: Hugh Leonard
Director: James Ferman
Principal Cast: Zia Mohyeddin, Gwendolyn Watts, Gemma Jones, Nicolas Chagrin, Clive Cazes, Neil Wilson
Based on the Simenon story "Le Locataire" (1934)

Trapped (transmitted 26 June 1966)
Writer: Julia Jones
Director: George Spenton-Foster
Principal Cast: Ronald Lewis, Keith Buckley, Sylvia Coleridge
Based on "Cours d’Assises" (1941)

The Traveller (transmitted 3 July 1966)
Writer: Stanley Miller
Director: Herbert Wise
Principal Cast: Kenneth J. Warren, Hywel Bennett, André van Gyseghem, Alan Lake, Kevin Stoney, Joan Young, Edward Burnham, Michael Hawkins, Jocelyn Birdsall
Based on "Le Voyageur de la Toussaint" (1941)

The Widower (transmitted 10 July 1966)
Writeript: Clive Exton
Director: Silvio Narizzano
Principal Cast: Joss Ackland, Henry Gilbert, Patricia Healey, Aimée Delamain
Based on "Le Veuf" (1959)

The Judge (transmitted 17 July 1966)
Writer: Hugh Leonard
Director: Naomi Capon
Principal Cast: Alexander Knox, John Ronane, Peter Howell
Based on "Les Témoins" (1955)

The Schoolmaster (transmitted 24 July 1966)
Writer: Alun Richards
Director: Peter Potter
Principal Cast: Stephen Murray, Helen Cherry, Cyril Shaps
Based on "L’Evadé" (1936)

The Witness (transmitted 31 July 1966)
Writer: John Hale
Director: John Gorrie
Principal Cast: Pamela Brown, Daphne Heard, Moultrie Kelsall
Based on "Le Haut Mal" (1933)

The Friends (transmitted 7 August 1966)
Writer: Anthony Steven
Director: Michael Hayes
Principal Cast: Jessica Dunning, Frederick Jaeger, Sandor Elès, Joby Blanshard, Michael Robbins, Edward Dentith
Based on "Chemin sans issue" (1938)

The Survivors (transmitted 14 August 1966)
Writer: Stanley Miller
Director: Rudolph Cartier
Principal Cast: Lila Kedrova, David Buck, Kathleen Breck, Terence De Marney, Hamilton Dyce, Jerold Wells, Michael Brennan
Based on "Les Rescapés du Télémaque" (1938)

The Son (transmitted 21 August 1966)
Writer: Jeremy Paul
Director: Waris Hussein
Principal Cast: Joan Miller, Simon Ward, Jack Woolgar, Clive Dunn, Lila Kaye, Alan Curtis, John Tillinger, Kevin Manser
Based on "Les Destins des Malous" (1947)

The Murderer (transmitted 28 August 1966)
Writer: Clive Exton
Director: Alan Bridges
Principal Cast: Frank Finlay, Michael Goodliffe, Annette Crosbie, Lyndon Brook
Based on "L’Assassin" (1937)

The Suspect (transmitted 4 September 1966)
Writer: Donal Giltinan
Director: Michael Hayes.
Principal Cast: Marius Goring, Mary Miller, Peter Halliday, David Garfield, Noel Johnson, Jon Rollason.
Based on "Les Fiançailles de M. Hire" (1933)

The Consul (transmitted 11 September 1966)
Writer: Leo Lehman
Director: John Gorrie.
Principal Cast: Jonathan Burn, Michele Dotrice, Jeannette Sterke. Based on “Les Gens d’en Face” (1933)

Archive status

Long thought largely junked, the entire series was recovered from the British Film Institute (three episodes) and the American Library of Congress (ten episodes) by 2010.[4]

References

  1. BFI Entry
  2. The Sun, 13 July 1967
  3. Daily Telegraph, 20 June 1966
  4. Recovered TV Drama
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