F. W. Thring
Australian film director

F. W. Thring

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Australian film director
Gender:
Male
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Birth:
2 December 1883(Wentworth)
Death:
1 July 1936(South Yarra)
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Biography

Introduction

Francis William Thring (2 December 1883 – 1 July 1936), better known as F. W. Thring, was an Australian film director, producer, and exhibitor.

Career

Thring was born in Wentworth, New South Wales, the son of a labourer, William Frances Thring, and Angelina Thring (née McDonald). He worked as a conjurer in the outback and as a bootmaker in Gawler, South Australia, as well as starting Biograph Pictures in Tasmania. In 1911, he became a projectionist at Kreitmayer's Waxworks in Melbourne, Victoria. He thrived in the cinema trade and opened the Paramount Theatre in 1915 and became managing director of J.C. Williamson Films in 1918, which eventually merged to become Hoyts in 1926.

Efftee

In 1930, Thring sold his interests in Hoyts to Fox Film Corporation and went into film production, establishing Efftee Studios (based on his initials). Over the next five years, Efftee produced nine features, over 80 shorts and several stage productions, including the Australian musicals Collits' Inn and The Cedar Tree. Notable collaborators include C. J. Dennis, George Wallace and Frank Harvey.

Thring visited Britain in 1932-33, where he sold Efftee's entire output: seven features, nine shorts and a series about the Great Barrier Reef made with Noel Monkman.

In 1932 Thring became the leader of a campaign for a quota for Australian films. In 1934, he suspended Efftee's operations, announcing that resumption would depend upon the introduction of an effective quota system in Victoria.

In 1935, Efftee obtained licence to broadcast from the then-new broadcasting station 3XY which was owned by the United Australia Party (and later the Liberal Party. 3XY originally broadcast from studios in the former ballroom at the top of the Princess Theatre, Melbourne.

After New South Wales passed its Cinematograph Films (Australian Quota) Act in September 1935, Thring resumed production in February 1936, in Sydney, becoming chairman of directors of Mastercraft Film Corporation Ltd while remaining managing director of Efftee Film Productions. In March he sailed for Hollywood in search of scriptwriters and actors. and returned in June but died soon after.

Olive Thring (Philip Alexius de Laszlo, 1933)

Thring died of cancer on 1 July 1936, aged 52, in East Melbourne and was buried in Burwood Cemetery. He was survived by a daughter from his first marriage to Grace Wight (Viola, known as Lola; 1911–71), his second wife, Olive, née Kreitmayer whom he had married on 25 April 1921, and their then 10-year-old son, the future actor Frank Thring.

Lola dated the future Prime Minister Harold Holt but she ultimately rejected him only to marry his divorced father, her father's business partner. Harold Holt thus acquired a step-mother who was three years his junior.

It was estimated Thring lost over ₤75,000 of his own money on his filmmaking and theatrical ventures.

Selected filmography

  • The Haunted Barn (1931) – short
  • A Co-respondent's Course (1931) – short
  • Diggers (1931)
  • The Sentimental Bloke (1932)
  • His Royal Highness (1932)
  • Harmony Row (1933)
  • A Ticket in Tatts (1934)
  • Sheepmates (1934) – abandoned during shooting
  • Clara Gibbings (1934)
  • The Streets of London (1934)

Unmade films

  • adaptation of Redheap by Norman Lindsay
  • Pick and Duffers – meant to follow His Royal Highness
  • adaptation of Collitt's Inn
  • Ginger Murdoch from the novel by William Hatfield with George Wallace
  • The Black Sheep – meant to star George Wallaca
  • A Sweepin' in the Deep with George Wallace
  • "AUSTRALIAN FILMS.". The Daily News. Perth: National Library of Australia. 24 March 1932. p. 9 Edition: HOME (FINAL) EDITION. Retrieved 8 August 2012. 
  • "Notes on the Screen.". The Argus. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 10 January 1934. p. 5. Retrieved 10 August 2012. 
  • "AUSTRALIAN FILMS.". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 31 January 1934. p. 8. Retrieved 9 August 2012. 
  • "AUSTRALIAN PRODUCTIONS.". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 14 July 1933. p. 2. Retrieved 9 August 2012. 

Selected theatre credits

  • Clara Gibbins (August 1933) – Garrick Theatre, Melbourne
  • Rope (1933)
  • Collits' Inn (1933)
  • The Streets of London (1933)
  • Children in Uniform (1933–34) – Garrick Theatre, Melbourne with Coral Browne
  • Mother of Pearl (1934)
  • The Beloved Vagabond (1934)
  • Jolly Roger (1934)
  • The Cedar Tree (1934)
  • Her Past (September 1934)
  • Peter Pan (December 1934, December 1935)
  • Crazy Nights Revue (1935) – with George Wallace
  • S.S. Sunshine (1935)
  • The Oojah Bird (1935)