The Human Jungle (TV series)
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (October 2015) |
The Human Jungle | |
---|---|
Genre | Psychological drama |
Created by | Ronald J. Kahn |
Starring | |
Theme music composer | Bernard Ebbinghouse |
Opening theme | Played by John Barry and his Orchestra |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 26 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producers | |
Cinematography | Bert Mason |
Running time | 49–51 minutes |
Production company | Independent Artists for ABC Weekend TV |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 30 March 1963 13 May 1965[1] | –
The Human Jungle is a British TV series about a psychiatrist, made for ABC Weekend TV by Independent Artists.
Starring Herbert Lom as Dr Roger Corder and Sally Smith as his daughter Jennifer, it comprised 26 50-minute episodes and ran for two series 1963–1965.
Outline
[edit]Most episodes focused on one patient, whose psychological ailment Dr Corder would treat using a humane yet idiosyncratic approach that mixed Freudian psychoanalysis with the contemporary methods associated with the then-fashionable theories of R. D. Laing.[1] Several psychiatric techniques, such as word association, group work, role-play and hypnotherapy, were featured in the series. Frequently, Corder's initial patient in a story would turn out not to be the character with the pressing mental health issue.
Because of the constraints of a 50-minute television episode, it was often suggested that Corder would continue to see his patients after the denouement.
Cast
[edit]Main
[edit]- Herbert Lom as Dr Roger Corder M.D., D.P.M.
- Michael Johnson as Dr Jimmy Davis
- Sally Smith as Corder's daughter, Jennifer
- Mary Yeomans as secretary, Nancy Hamilton
- Mary Steele as personal assistant, Jane Harris
Guests (in surname order)
[edit]- Gerald Andersen
- Rona Anderson
- Annette Andre
- Francesca Annis
- Yvonne Antrobus
- John Arnatt
- Ian Bannen
- June Barry
- Peter Bathurst
- Robert Beatty
- Douglas Blackwell
- John Boxer
- Faith Brook
- Terence Brook
- Avis Bunnage
- Alfred Burke
- Susan Burnet
- Blake Butler
- Eddie Byrne
- Cyril Chamberlain
- Frank Coda
- Joan Collins
- Jess Conrad
- George A. Cooper
- Rosalie Crutchley
- Peggy Cummins
- Allan Cuthbertson
- Bernard Davies
- Griffith Davies
- Stacy Davies
- Aimée Delamain
- Roger Delgado
- Arnold Diamond
- Peter Diamond
- Alan Dobie
- Fabia Drake
- Hamilton Dyce
- Donald Eccles
- Glynn Edwards
- Clifford Evans
- Edward Evans
- Tenniel Evans
- Derek Farr
- Janina Faye
- Catherine Feller
- Barbara Ferris
- Ann Firbank
- Harry Fowler
- Jimmy Gardner
- Susan George
- Philip Gilbert
- John Glyn-Jones
- Derek Godfrey
- Harold Goldblatt
- Walter Gotell
- Rosamund Greenwood
- Gerald Harper
- John Harvey
- Robin Hawdon
- Melvyn Hayes
- Ronald Hines
- Ursula Howells
- Walter Hudd
- Robin Hughes
- Inigo Jackson
- Gerald James
- Frank Jarvis
- Megs Jenkins
- Richard Johnson
- Edward Judd
- John Junkin
- Andrew Keir
- Cavan Kendall
- William Kendall
- Simon Lack
- Jenny Laird
- Lloyd Lamble
- Avice Landon
- Philip Latham
- Frank Lawton
- Bernard Lee
- Richard Leech
- Ronald Leigh-Hunt
- Mark Lester
- Roger Livesey
- Margaret Lockwood
- Justine Lord
- Dolores Mantez
- William Marlowe
- Zena Marshall
- Larry Martyn
- Francis Matthews
- David McAlister
- Ray McAnally
- Andrée Melly
- Jane Merrow
- Warren Mitchell
- Jeanne Moody
- André Morell
- Donald Morley
- June Murphy
- Patrick O'Connell
- Geoffrey Palmer
- Donald Pickering
- Frederick Piper
- Adrienne Posta
- Hana Maria Pravda
- Dennis Price
- Keith Pyott
- Lloyd Reckord
- Arnold Ridley
- Michael Ripper
- Flora Robson
- Mitzi Rogers
- Leonard Sachs
- Steven Scott
- Johnny Sekka
- Barbara Shelley
- Vladek Sheybal
- Jack Smethurst
- Jeremy Spenser
- Tony Steedman
- Dudley Sutton
- Sylvia Syms
- Tony Tanner
- Malcolm Tierney
- Ruth Trouncer
- Rita Tushingham
- Beatrice Varley
- Wanda Ventham
- James Villiers
- Russell Waters
- Gary Watson
- Moray Watson
- Margaret Whiting
- Pauline Yates
Production
[edit]The series was created by Ronald J. Kahn, credited on screen as "assistant to the producers", and produced by Julian Wintle and Leslie Parkyn.[2]
The theme music was composed by Bernard Ebbinghouse, and arranged and recorded by John Barry and his Orchestra.[3]
Several high-profile guest stars appeared in his surgery or as hospital patients, including Joan Collins, Margaret Lockwood, Flora Robson, Roger Livesey, Rita Tushingham and André Morell.[4]
The first series was filmed at Beaconsfield Studios, which closed down shortly after production ended; the second series was shot at the Associated British Studios in Elstree owned by ABC's parent company Associated British Picture Corporation.
The script editor was John Kruse.[5] The advisor on psychiatric content was Dr Hugh L. Freeman, on behalf of the National Association for Mental Health (now Mind).[4]
Episode list
[edit]Series one
[edit]Air date is for ABC Weekend TV.[6] ITV regions varied date and order. Episode order is given as per the Network DVD release.
Episode No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Vacant Chair" | James Hill | Bill MacIlwraith | 30 March 1963 | |
Stars Ronald Leigh-Hunt, Lloyd Lamble, Keith Pyott, Geoffrey Palmer, Edward Evans, Hamilton Dyce and Jonathan Burn | |||||
2 | "The Flip Side Man" | Sydney A. Hayers | Robert Stewart | 6 April 1963 | |
Stars Jess Conrad and Michael Ripper | |||||
3 | "Run with the Devil" | Vernon Sewell |
| 13 April 1963 | |
4 | "Thin Ice" | John Ainsworth |
| 20 April 1963 | |
5 | "The Lost Hours" | John Ainsworth | John Kruse | 27 April 1963 | |
Stars Leonard Sachs, Ursula Howells, Frank Jarvis, Larry Martyn, Robin Hawdon, Stacy Davies and June Murphy | |||||
6 | "A Friend of the Sergeant Major" | Don Sharp | Lewis Davidson | 4 May 1963 | |
7 | "14 Ghosts" | Sydney A. Hayers | Leo Leiberman | 11 May 1963 | |
8 | "Fine Feathers" | Vernon Sewell | Robert Stewart | 18 May 1963 | |
Stars Jane Merrow and Philip Gilbert | |||||
9 | "The Wall" | James Hill | John Kruse | 25 May 1963 | |
10 | "A Woman with Scars" | James Hill | Robert Stewart | 1 June 1963 | |
11 | "Time-Check" | Alan Cooke | Lewis Davidson | 8 June 1963 | |
Stars Melvyn Hayes, Gerald James, Fabia Drake, Warren Mitchell, John Arnatt, Douglas Blackwell and Mitzi Rogers | |||||
12 | "The Two Edged Sword" | Vernon Sewell | Bill MacIlwraith | 15 June 1963 | |
13 | "Over and Out" | Vernon Sewell |
| 22 June 1963 | |
Stars Ian Bannen, Eddie Byrne, Zena Marshall, June Barry, John Boxer, Simon Lack and Gerald Andersen |
Series two
[edit]Air date is for Associated-Rediffusion.[7] ITV regions varied date and order. ABC Weekend Television was broadcast two days later. Order as for the Network DVD release.
Episode No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Struggle for a Mind" | Sydney A. Hayers | John Kruse | 18 February 1965 | |
2 | "Success Machine" | Sydney A. Hayers | John Kruse | 25 February 1965 | |
3 | "The 24-Hour Man" | Robert Day | Robert Stewart | 4 March 1965 | |
4 | "Solo Performance" | Roy Baker | Bill MacIlwraith | 11 March 1965 | |
5 | "Ring of Hate" | Charles Crichton |
| 18 March 1965 | |
6 | "Conscience on a Rack" | Roy Baker | Bill MacIlwraith | 25 March 1965 | |
7 | "The Quick and the Dead" | Roy Baker | John Kruse | 1 April 1965 | |
8 | "The Man Who Fell Apart" | Roy Baker | John Kruse | 8 April 1965 | |
9 | "Dual Control" | Roy Baker | Anne Francis | 15 April 1965 | |
10 | "Skeleton in the Cupboard" | Roy Baker | Bill MacIlwraith | 22 April 1965 | |
11 | "Wild Goose Chase" | Vernon Sewell | Marc Brandel | 29 April 1965 | |
12 | "Enemy Outside" | Roy Baker | Bill MacIlwraith | 6 May 1965 | |
13 | "Heartbeats in a Tin Box" | Roy Baker | Robert Stewart | 13 May 1965 | |
DVD
[edit]The complete series was released in November 2012 as a 7 DVD (Region 2) boxset with accompanying series guide by Andrew Pixley.[8]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Mark Duguid "Human Jungle, The (1963–65", BFI screenonline, retrieved 21 November 2012
- ^ series guide by Andrew Pixley in the DVD set, p.4
- ^ Pixley, p.9
- ^ a b "BFI Screenonline: Human Jungle, The (1963-65) Credits". www.screenonline.org.uk.
- ^ "The Flip Side Man (1963)". BFI. Archived from the original on 20 September 2018.
- ^ Before 1968, ABC was broadcast weekends in the Midlands and in the North. See History of ITV
- ^ Before 1968 Associated-Rediffusion was broadcast Monday to Friday in the London region. See History of ITV
- ^ "Human Jungle (The): The Complete Series: Network DVD". 5 February 2012. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 11 June 2024.
External links
[edit]- The Human Jungle at the BFI's Screenonline
- The Human Jungle at IMDb
- 1963 British television series debuts
- 1964 British television series endings
- 1960s British drama television series
- Black-and-white British television shows
- British English-language television shows
- ITV television dramas
- Television shows produced by ABC Weekend TV
- Television shows shot at Associated British Studios