Frank Brown Frank Brown i(A120633 works by) (birth name: Francis Paterson Brown) (a.k.a. Francis Brown)
Born: Established: 13 Nov 1888 Berwick, Narre Warren - Berwick area, Melbourne Outer South East, Melbourne, Victoria, ; Died: Ceased: 26 Nov 1928 Melbourne, Victoria,
Gender: Male
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 1 Andeganora Louis Esson , Frank Brown , 1937 single work drama
— Appears in: Best Australian One-Act Plays 1937; (p. 1-12) Louis Esson : Plays 1 : Terra Australis 1999; (p. 253-261)
1 Mates Louis Esson , Frank Brown , 1923 single work drama
— Appears in: Louis Esson : Plays 1 : Terra Australis 1999; (p. 239-251)
1 13 y separately published work icon The Drovers : A Play in One Act Louis Esson , Frank Brown , 1919 (Manuscript version)x401122 Z333220 1919 single work drama

"Life in the bush is hot, hard and not for the faint-hearted. Under the extreme sun of Northern frontier country a pack of itinerant drovers thrive in the land they call home. A freak stampede brings ‘Briglow’ Bill and his mates face to face with mortality and their masculinity and mateship are tested. All the while, Pidgeon, a young Aboriginal boy, watches the white fellows. He sees something the drovers cannot speak of and, for Briglow, this silence is as stifling yet as familiar and as comforting as the heat that surrounds them all.

The Drovers is a bush drama that is rich with tension, grim stoicism and heightened masculinity of the, notably, all-male characters. Clipped sentences and straight-talking speak of the no-nonsense attitude necessary to survive in the remote bush of the 1920s. The play draws us to the campfire where, in light and heat, we see the relationships the drovers experience: between each other, between white man and Aboriginal man, between man and land and, finally, the ultimate and unavoidable relationship: a man’s connection with life and death."

Source.

1 Victor Streich i "Lower him down, softly there, matey.", Frank Brown , 1905 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Sun (Kalgoorlie) , 23 April 1905;
X