Jump to content

Claybourne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bensin (talk | contribs) at 20:10, 17 May 2020 (unknown end date). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Claybourne
Running time5-6 minutes per episode
Country of originNew Zealand
Language(s)English
Home stationNewstalk ZB
Starringsee below
Written byJim McLarty & William Davis
Produced byAndrew Dubber and Belinda Todd
Original release1 June 1998 –
unknown
No. of episodes96
Websitehttp://claybourne.bandcamp.com/

Claybourne is a 1998 radio drama in 96 episodes with elements of science fiction, supernatural thriller, and soap opera. The series was produced by Andrew Dubber and Belinda Todd of Pronoun Productions after the production of Ashley's Worlds.

Plot

After a breakup, American Thompson is on holiday from his work for Koestler Industries and arrives in Claybourne. He starts to investigate the death of behavioural psychologist Helen, working for Koestler on a secret project with commercial as well as military applications. He teams up with Mata and Mike of the Te Whenua o Te Irirangi-people and local bartender Karen.

Cast

Production

The sound was designed by Andrew Dubber and Sean James Donnelly. The music was performed by Victoria Kelly and Joost Langeveld.

The show was designed with a story arc spanning a full year in mind, but was cancelled after six months and ending the show on a cliffhanger. In 2006, Dubber sketched what he remembered of how the writers and producers imagined it may have continued.[1]

Airing and later release

The show aired four days a week just after 15:00 and with a repeat at 01:00.

Andrew Dubber later released the work under a Creative Commons license (by-nc 2.0) on Bandcamp as free download around 2006.[1]

Awards

Claybourne won "Best Dramatic Production of the Year" at the 1999 New Zealand Radio Awards.

References

  1. ^ a b Andrew Dubber. "The End of Claybourne", Andrew Dubber's blog, May 2006. Retrieved 5 March 2014.