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Max Afford
Max Afford
from Wikipedia

Malcolm R. Afford (8 April 1906 – 2 November 1954), known as Max Afford, was an Australian playwright and novelist. He created the fictional hero Jeffrey Blackburn.

Key Information

Biography

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Early years

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Afford was born in Adelaide, South Australia, the youngest son of Robert D. Afford of "Glenleigh", Stamford street Parkside, an inner suburb. He left school when he was 16, and started writing novels and plays.

Personal life

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After winning the centenary competition in Adelaide, he moved to Sydney in 1936, on contract to the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) as a playwright and producer in the Federal Productions Department.

Max married Thelma Thomas on 16 April 1938 at St Michael's church, Vaucluse, Sydney. Thelma, a costume designer whom he met on the set of Colonel Founder / Awake my Love two years earlier, was originally from Broken Hill,[1] then Adelaide, and had moved to Sydney to design the costumes for the New South Wales sesqui-centenary pageant. Max and Thelma did not have children.

Death

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Afford died of cancer on 2 November 1954 at Mosman, Sydney, and was cremated. Thelma Afford survived him until 1996.

Numerous condolence letters from his friends, colleagues and admirers were sent to his wife from around Australia and from overseas including the US, the UK and Hong Kong. Many are held in the Fryer Library at the University of Queensland and express sadness about his death, admiration for his literary achievement and regret for the great loss to the Australian literary world.

"Max was one of the sweetest, gayest and most endearing people I have ever encountered", Betty Roland wrote. Tom Inglis Moore said, "He was such an attractive person in himself, and he had outstanding gifts. As a writer he was at the top of the profession as a dramatic writer for radio, a first-class craftsman. His stage plays showed that if he had gone on, he would have become an important playwright. I felt that Max had the talent to have gone even further in achievement. He had such a vitality that it is very hard to realize the truth."

Then Chairman of ABC, Sir Richard Boyer, wrote,"Max was not only the most valued contributor to some of the best of our broadcasts, but was held in great respect and affection by all of us in the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Commission)." David Carver, the International Secretary and General Secretary of English PEN expressed gratitude for his contributions to Australian literary life: "The Sydney P.E.N. owed him a great deal for all the hard work and enthusiasm of his years as President." Ernest William Burbridge, Representative of the British Council in Australia, wrote that "(Max) was so devoted to his art, and had such passionate belief in the cause of Drama."

Professional life

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Beginnings in Adelaide

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Afford wrote three novels while in his twenties, which were later published in England and America. He worked as a reporter at the News and Mail from 1926 to 1931. His first story was published in Smith's Weekly in 1928. In 1936 he won the Advertiser's centenary play competition with William Light The Founder (later titled Awake My Love). His 'Jeffrey and Elizabeth Blackburn' novels included Blood on His Hands! (London, 1936) and Death's Mannikins (London, 1937). Many were dramatised for radio, variously starring Peter Finch and Neva Carr Glyn, Nigel Lovell and Lyndall Barbour or Peter Finch and Bettie Dickson[2] as the husband-and-wife detective team. Afford wrote eight crime novels, usually employing English settings, and more than sixty radio and stage plays, usually stories of crime involving the sifting of situations that ultimately uncover the perpetrators. He was considered somewhat of a pioneer of the "whodunit" in radio broadcasting. A science fiction story, The Gland Men of the Island, appeared in Wonder Stories in January 1931.

Afford as depicted in Wonder Stories in 1931

Career in Sydney

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Afford was one of the first contract writers to be engaged by the ABC. In 1936, he won three playwriting awards, and was appointed Staff Dramatist by the ABC, with whom he was contracted for six years. During this time he wrote 30 one-and-a-half-hour plays, 15 serials, more than 100 play adaptations, and produced a number of his own plays. From 1941 he wrote children's and adult radio serials including Hagen's Circus (800 episodes) for radio 2GB and 2UE.

In 1942, Afford resigned from the ABC and joined the radio station 2GB, for whom he wrote two long-running commercial serials: First Light Fraser (400 episodes), and Digger Hale's Daughters (208 episodes).

Other radio plays included Lazy in the Sun and Out of This Nettle, and the long-running 1951 A.B.C. serial, Stranger Come In, which explored the subject of immigration.

In 1945, Afford created an all-time record in Australian theatrical history by having two three-act plays presented professionally by the J. C. Williamson theatre company at the Theatre Royal, Sydney. These two plays were Lady in Danger and Mischief in the Air, and were presented within two months of one another – a significant feat, as prior to the production of Lady in Danger, Williamson had not presented a locally written play for 20 years.

Afford's play Lady in Danger (1942), successfully produced at Sydney's Independent Theatre[3] by Doris Fitton, was then staged by J. C. Williamson Ltd and was staged in the US, adapted to American tastes by Jack Kirkland.[4] The Broadway production received poor reviews and closed after 12 performances. He also wrote Mischief in the Air and co-wrote with Ken G. Hall the story for the Columbia Film Corporation's film, Smithy (1946), based on the aviator Sir Charles Kingsford Smith.[5]

Afford was president of the Sydney PEN Club in 1950. His play, Dark Enchantment, toured England's provincial theatres in 1950.

In 1952, Afford signed a contract with the A.B.C. engaging his services as a radio writer for 26 weeks, during which time he was to write five 15-minute installments based on immigration, as a serial on 5 days of the week, twice per day if required.

Recognition in Australia

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  • Winner of The Advertiser's centenary play competition, organized to mark the 1936 Adelaide Centenary, for Colonel Light the Founder (later Awake My Love).
  • First prize in the ABC's All-Australian Play Competition, in 1936, for Merry Go-Round.[6]
  • Equal first prize for libretto of Spruhan Kennedy's Pas de Six in the ABC's Operetta Contest, 1936.
  • The Biographical Encyclopedia of the World included Afford in their 1948 edition of Who's Important in Literature.
  • His portrait, by Brian Crozier, was (unsuccessfully) entered for the 1951 Archibald Prize.
  • At her death, Thelma Afford established a fund for a Max Afford Playwrights' Award.

International recognition

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Afford's radio plays and serials have been re-broadcast in Canada, England, South Africa, New Zealand, Poland, and Egypt. His radio plays have been produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, as well as by BBC London, by Lux Radio Theatre in South Africa, by the National Broadcasting Service in New Zealand, and also in Cairo.

The BBC, for example, bought his serial Fly By Night and his radio plays Labours of Hercules, Oh, Whistle When You're Happy, The Four Specialists and For Fear of Little Men.[7] Lady in Danger was the second play by an Australian dramatist ever to be performed at a Broadway theatre in front of an American audience.

Consulting Room was broadcast in South Africa in 1954, in both English and Afrikaans, by the Lux Radio Theatre. It is a one-actor serious play about the love between the young couple who try to commit suicide. It Walks By Night was also broadcast in English and Afrikaans. In 1937, the Geneva Conference selected The Four Specialists for translation into Polish to be broadcast by Polskie Radio.

Critical reception

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  • Colonel Light the Founder / Awake My Love

The South Australian Tourism Commission said of its presentation during the Adelaide Centenary, 1936: "This play was a great success... completely accurate historically." The Bulletin called it "Dramatic dynamite." Sydney Morning Herald labelled it "a significant milestone for Australian drama." The Sun called it "An outstanding contribution to Australian literature."

  • Consulting Room

Lux Radio Theatre, in South Africa, wrote to Afford in 1954 expressing their pleasure at his play Consulting Room, and asked him for more of his radio plays.

  • Jeffrey Blackburn serials

The Blackburn serials found such popularity in Australia that 2UE decided to experiment with the structure of radio serials. They changed the typical structure of half an hour once a week, to 12-minute episodes four nights per week, and found listeners preferred not having to wait a whole week for the next instalment.

Posthumous publications

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  • Negotiation

In early 1960, Thelma Afford endeavoured to obtain a Commonwealth Literary Fund (CLF) grant to support posthumous publication of a book of Max Afford's stage plays. Tom Inglis Moore, who was in charge of the negotiation of its guarantee, was from 1945 to 1971 a member of the Fund's advisory board. He championed the cause of hundreds of authors and numerous literary journals, and acted as an advocate for left-wing writers in the 1950s.[8] Freddie Howe, head of HarperCollins,[9] proposed the CLF sponsor a collection of three plays and submitted it to W. R. Cumming, Secretary of the CLF, along with the manuscripts. The amount required for guarantee varies from about £80 to £100 for small works up to £500 or more for very large works, while Thelma thought of a guarantee from £200 to £300. Howe was doubtful about publishing the plays since the amount of publishing and preadvertising costs had been far heavier than his expectation. Moore, however, considered it practical and beneficial as CLF had just approved a new scheme of helping publishers with literary, not commercial, books. Collins should not lose out for the publication. Thelma then gave a book of Afford's radio plays to Sam Ure Smith, an Australian arts publisher and promoter, just in case Freddie was disinclined to publish the stage plays. At this stage, Thelma insisted on both volumes (the stage plays and the radio plays produced on the ABC) be published. In May, Howe agreed to go ahead with a book of stage plays providing he can obtain the Commonwealth of Australia's sponsorship. With this promise, Thelma decided to drop the attempt to publish radio plays with Sam Ure Smith. In June, Collins brought forward this collection of stage plays with two purposes in mind: First, to present a prestige book as a memorial to the late Max Afford, who won outstanding success as both stage and radio dramatist; Second, to make the plays available in published form for the repertory theatres. Howe submitted the proposition to CLF. The proposition is "quite unacceptable", said Tom Inglis Moore, "Lowe's guarantee request of £1114 is far too high and cannot be entertained. The size of the edition is too large at 2,500 and the retail price too high at £35." He recommended altering the proposition either by omitting Dark Enchantment to cut down the volume and the costs and to give a better balance of light and serious plays, or by replacing the collection with a series of single volumes suitable for the repertory societies to perform.

  • Outcome

An agreement was finally reached: a volume of only three plays: Lady in Danger, Awake My Love and Consulting Room plus an Introduction from Leslie Rees and a Foreword from Sir Richard Boyer. Thelma as the owner of the copyright waived her royalties, which represented a reduction of £437 on the publishing costs; and a less ambitious edition of only 1400 copies.

Works

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Stage plays

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Novels and short stories

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  • The Gland Men of the Island, Wonder Stories pp. 828–843, January 1931.
  • Blood on His Hands!: A Detective Novel. London, England: John Long, 1936. (also published as An Ear For Murder.)
  • Death's Mannikins: Being a Sober Account of Certain Diabolical Happenings not Untinged with the Odour of Brimstone which Befell a Respectable Family Living at Exmoor in This Present Year. London, England: John Long, 1937. (also published as Dolls of Death.)
  • The Dead are Blind: A Jeffrey Blackburn Adventure. London, England: John Long, 1937.
  • Fly By Night: A Jeffrey Blackburn Adventure. London, England: John Long, 1942. Broadcast in seven 30-minute episodes by the BBC in 1939. (Also published as Owl of Darkness NSW Bookstall Co., 1944)
  • Sinners in Paradise. Sydney: Frank Johnson, 1946.
  • The Sheep and the Wolves. Sydney: Frank Johnson, 1947.
  • The Vanishing Trick, Detective Fiction 1.1, December 1948.

Radio plays

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Many of these were revived or rebroadcast years later, possible with a different title. Dates shown are the earliest found (using Trove) under that name.

Radio serials

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  • Fly By Night: A Jeffrey Blackburn Adventure 1937
  • Grey Face, 1940 broadcast on 2FC and 3AR
  • It Walks By Night, 1941
  • The Golden Scorpion; A New Jeffrey Blackburn Adventure (n.d.)
  • The Blackburns Take Over (n.d.)
  • Double Demon: A New Jeffrey Blackburn Adventure, 1941–1949. (a newspaper called it the fifth)
  • Murder's Not For Middle Age, 1953– (same newspaper called this the sixth)

Sources

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  • Papers of Max and Thelma Afford, 1912–1987, UQFL184, Box 1, Folders 1–4, Fryer Library, University of Queensland Library:
  • - "Awake My Love, by Max Afford." Drama and the School, Issue 21, 1960.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from Egyptian State Broadcasting. 19 July 1939.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from B. H. Richardson, BBC London. 6. December 1944.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from S. A. Kaye, Biographical Encyclopedia of the World. 21 October 1946.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from S. A. Kaye, Biographical Encyclopedia of the World. 8 September 1947.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from W. C. D. Veale, Town Clerk of Adelaide (1948). 14 October 1948.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 26 February 1952.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from Lulu Lloyd-Jones, J. Walter Thompson Company Ltd. 8 July 1954.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from Lulu Lloyd-Jones, J. Walter Thompson Company Ltd. 26 July 1954.
  • - Letter to Max Afford from Roger Pethebridge, J. Walter Thompson Company Ltd. 21 September 1954.
  • - Letter to the general manager of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, from Max Afford. 4 June 1946.
  • - Letter to the South African Broadcasting Corporation, from Max Afford. 17 February 1945.
  • - Condolence correspondence to Thelma Afford from Betty Roland. 4 November 1965.
  • - Condolence correspondence to Thelma Afford from Tom Inglis Moore. 3 November 1965.
  • - Condolence correspondence to Thelma Afford from the Australian Broadcasting Company. 16 November 1965.
  • - Condolence correspondence to Thelma Afford from the International P.E.N. Club. 16 November 1965.
  • - Condolence correspondence to Thelma Afford from Representative of the British Council in Australia. 4 November 1965.
  • - Letter between Thelma Afford and Tom Inglis Moor regarding the Commonwealth Literary Fund's possible Support of a Book of Max Afford's Stage Plays, 1960.
  • - Freddie Lowe's Report to the CLF enclosed in the letter to Thelma Afford from Tom Inglis Moore, 15 June 1960.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Max Afford is an Australian playwright, novelist, and radio dramatist known for his pioneering contributions to Australian radio drama and detective fiction during the mid-20th century. Born Malcolm Afford on 8 April 1906 in Adelaide, South Australia, he began his career as a journalist before becoming a prominent figure in broadcasting and literature. Afford worked as a reporter in Adelaide during the late 1920s and early 1930s before transitioning to radio writing and production. In 1936, he joined the Australian Broadcasting Commission as a staff playwright and producer, where he produced numerous radio serials and plays that entertained audiences across the country. His work helped shape early Australian radio entertainment, blending mystery, adventure, and dramatic storytelling. As a novelist, Afford gained recognition for his detective stories, including titles such as The Dead are Blind and Owl of Darkness, which featured intricate plots and the recurring character Jeffrey Blackburn. He also contributed to film and theatre, with credits including screenplays and stage plays like Lady in Danger. Afford remained active in creative writing until his death on 2 November 1954 in Sydney, leaving a lasting legacy in Australian popular culture.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Max Afford was born Malcolm Afford on 8 April 1906 at Parkside, Adelaide, South Australia. He was the fifth surviving child of Robert Daniel Afford, who worked as a grocer, and his second wife Mary Ann (née Crundell). Afford spent his childhood in Parkside, an inner suburb of Adelaide, during the early years of the 20th century.

Education and early writing

Max Afford was educated at Parkside Public and Unley High schools in Adelaide. During his youth, he developed a strong interest in writing and journalism. This early passion for writing manifested in his pursuit of a career in the field after holding various jobs, leading him to take up a position as a reporter in 1926.

Journalism career

Reporter in Adelaide

Max Afford began his professional journalism career in Adelaide, where he worked as a reporter for The News and The Mail from 1926 to 1931. This role marked his entry into print media, providing him with hands-on experience in news reporting and feature writing during the late 1920s and early 1930s. While employed as a reporter, Afford also pursued creative writing and published his first short story in Smith's Weekly in 1928. This early publication signaled the start of his parallel literary efforts alongside his daily journalism duties.

Move to Sydney

Freelance writing and transition to radio

After concluding his tenure as a reporter for the News in Adelaide in 1931, Max Afford pursued freelance writing, contributing short stories and articles to publications such as Smith's Weekly, the Bulletin, and other Australian journals. During this period he also engaged with the emerging medium of radio, mastering its early technology in what he described as the "ear-phone and cat's whisker days" and writing his first play for broadcast, a macabre piece that marked his initial foray into the form. In 1935 Afford joined Adelaide radio station 5DN as a producer and continuity writer, gaining hands-on experience in radio scripting and production that represented his formal transition from print journalism. Around this time he created the detective character Jeffrey Blackburn, who would later feature in his fiction and radio works. The following year, Afford moved to Sydney on contract with the Australian Broadcasting Commission as a playwright and producer, solidifying his shift to professional radio writing.

Radio career

Work with the ABC and serial production

Max Afford joined the Australian Broadcasting Commission in 1936 upon moving to Sydney, where he secured a contract as a playwright and producer. In this role with the national broadcaster, he focused on writing and producing radio plays and serials, contributing to the output of original dramatic content during the medium's formative years in Australia. His early tenure involved a prolific schedule of scriptwriting, including many thrillers and dialogue-heavy pieces, though by 1939 he expressed fatigue with the constant demand for such material. Afford left the ABC in 1941 to freelance, supplying children's and adult serials to commercial stations such as 2GB and 2UE. He later rejoined the ABC, motivated by his view that radio offered greater personal intimacy than the stage and more manageable scope than cinema. During this second period with the organization, he produced radio plays set in Australia, including Lazy in the Sun and Out of This Nettle, and created the serial Stranger Come In (1951–1954), which addressed themes of immigration through the experiences of English and Polish migrant families. Afford's ongoing work as playwright and producer supported the ABC's efforts to present Australian-oriented dramatic programming and serial formats.

Jeffrey Blackburn radio serials and other notable series

Max Afford's most enduring creation was the detective hero Jeffrey Blackburn, who first appeared in novels starting in 1936 (including The Dead are Blind) as a clever, resourceful sleuth tackling intricate mysteries and crimes in an Australian context. The character was adapted into radio serials starting in 1937 with Fly By Night, blending suspense, deduction, and adventure to captivate audiences through clever plotting and a charismatic lead. ) Afford produced a wide range of other notable serials, particularly during his freelance period from 1941 for commercial stations 2GB and 2UE, where his adult and children's programs achieved significant popularity. Hagen's Circus stood out as a long-running series (reportedly up to 800 episodes from 1941–1949), drawing large audiences with its circus-themed adventures. His mystery-adventure serial Fly By Night gained international recognition, becoming the first such work by an Australian radio playwright sold to the BBC by 1939, alongside sales to stations in South Africa, Cairo, Canada, and Poland. Other prominent series included The Blackburns Take Over (1942), Murder's Not for Middle Age, The Mysterious Mr. Lynch, Silver Ridge, Space Explorers, and Danger Unlimited, which contributed to his reputation as a prolific and commercially successful radio dramatist whose name appeared on billboards and hoardings due to the broad appeal of his work.

Theatre career

Stage plays and major productions

Max Afford's contributions to Australian theatre included several comedy-thriller and dramatic works that achieved professional productions in Sydney and occasional international exposure during the 1940s and early 1950s, a period when local plays often struggled against a preference for overseas imports. His early stage writing included the historical play William Light—The Founder (later retitled Awake My Love), which won the Advertiser's centenary play competition in Adelaide in 1936. Afford's most prominent stage success came with Lady in Danger, a comedy thriller that premiered at Sydney's Independent Theatre under Doris Fitton's direction in March 1942. It received a subsequent production by J. C. Williamson Ltd in 1944 and was published in Sydney in 1944 and New York in 1945. The play advanced to Broadway with a tryout in Detroit before opening at the Broadhurst Theatre in New York in 1945, though it closed after only twelve performances amid negative reviews. He followed with Mischief in the Air, another successful comedy mystery set in a radio station, which premiered at the Theatre Royal in Sydney in October 1944. Later, Dark Enchantment toured England's provincial theatres in 1950 while Afford studied television in London with the BBC.

Novels and detective fiction

Jeffrey Blackburn novels and other books

Max Afford's contributions to detective fiction in print form centered on a series of novels featuring the amateur sleuth Jeffrey Blackburn, a character who originated in his radio serials. These novels, published primarily in the 1930s and 1940s, showcased intricate mysteries solved by Blackburn, often with the assistance of his wife Elizabeth and in collaboration with Chief Inspector William Read of the Victoria police. The series began with Blood on His Hands! (1936), published by John Long in London, in which Blackburn investigates the murder of High Court Judge Sir Merton Tenison Sheldon in Melbourne after being summoned by Chief Inspector Read. This was followed by Death's Mannikins (1937), also from John Long, where Blackburn probes a string of deaths linked to eerie mannikins resembling the inhabitants of Rochester House, home to an occult scholar; the book appeared under the alternative title Death Plays with Dolls in some editions. The Dead Are Blind (1937) continued the series as the third novel, maintaining the focus on complex crimes solved by Blackburn's deductive skills. Later entries included Owl of Darkness (1942), an adventure mystery involving Blackburn in darker, more intricate plots. The Sheep and the Wolves (1947) marked another installment, extending the character's exploits into the postwar period. In addition to the novels, a posthumous collection of his short fiction titled Two Locked Room Mysteries and a Ripping Yarn includes stories featuring Blackburn and other mysteries. Some of these works have seen modern reprints by publishers such as Ramble House, preserving Afford's place in Australian detective literature.

Personal life and death

Marriage to Thelma Afford

Max Afford married Thelma May Thomas, a costume designer, on 16 April 1938 at St Michael's Anglican Church, Vaucluse, Sydney. The couple remained childless and resided in Sydney for the duration of their marriage. They had known each other in Adelaide as colleagues in the theatre scene and reconnected in 1937 on a train to Sydney, where they grew close and became engaged. Following their marriage, Thelma continued her professional work as a costume designer in Sydney, including at the Minerva and Independent theatres. Their shared background in Adelaide's creative community facilitated their partnership, and Thelma designed costumes for several of Max's plays, including the 1947 Independent Theatre production of Awake My Love.

Illness and death

Max Afford died of cancer on 2 November 1954 at his home in Mosman, Sydney, at the age of 48. He had been ill for only a short while before his death. Afford was cremated following his passing. At the time of his death, he remained attached to the Drama and Features Department of the Australian Broadcasting Commission.

Legacy

Posthumous publications and influence

Following his death in 1954, several of Max Afford's dramatic works continued to be broadcast and adapted by the Australian Broadcasting Commission, reflecting their ongoing popularity in Australian media. The ABC maintained serialization of his radio serial It Walks by Night after his passing. In 1959, the ABC produced a television version of his comedy-thriller play Lady in Danger, originally staged in 1942. In 1974, a selection of Afford's radio and stage plays was collected and published in Brisbane as Mischief in the Air by the University of Queensland Press, making his dramatic writing available to new readers and preserving his contributions to Australian theatre and radio. These posthumous broadcasts, adaptations, and the 1974 collection sustained interest in Afford's output during the decades after his death, underscoring his role in shaping popular radio drama and detective storytelling in Australia.

Contemporary recognition

Max Afford's legacy in Australian playwriting endures through the Max Afford Young Playwrights Award, a biennial prize endowed by his widow Thelma Afford through the Thelma Afford Trust. Administered by Australian Plays Transform and managed by Perpetual as trustee, the award offers $30,000 plus a development workshop to support playwrights aged 18 to 40. The prize continues to foster emerging talent, with the 2024 recipient being Amy Sole for their play Nan's Place, unanimously selected by judges for its distinctive voice. Entries for future cycles remain active, underscoring the award's ongoing role in honoring Afford's contributions to the field. His work is further preserved for contemporary study in the Max and Thelma Afford Papers at the Fryer Library, University of Queensland. The collection includes personal and business correspondence, manuscripts, and other materials reflecting Afford's career from the early 1930s to the late 1950s. This archive enables scholars and practitioners to access his scripts and related documents, sustaining research into his dramatic output.
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