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Wards of the Outer March

1932 novel by Kay Glasson Taylor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Wards of the Outer March is a 1932 Australian novel by Kay Glasson Taylor. It was the tale of a convict in colonial New South Wales.[1][2][3][4] The book had been serialised by the Australian Woman's Mirror in 1930 under the pseudonym Daniel Hamline, with illustrations by Percy Lindsay.[5][6]

Proposed film version

Charles Chauvel bought the film rights.[7]

In the 1950s he and his wife Elsa wrote a film script of the novel for Warwick Pictures.[8] In April 1956 Warwick announced the film would be made as The Broad Arrow as part of a three-year slate of films worth $17 million.[9]The film was scheduled for filming in August 1956 under the title The Broad Arrow.[10] However it was not made.[11] In November 1956 Chauvel said he could not accept the script which Warwick sent him. "I consider that the title The Broad Arrow is an affront and the new script a grave mis-statement of Australian history and sentiment," said Chauvel.[12]

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References

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