I've found some references to it ...
[Snip]
When he was 25, my father wrote a radio play satirising over-explanatory wireless dialogue. It was called This Gun That I Have in My Right Hand Is Loaded. It's almost certainly the silliest thing he's ever done - adapted for radio by H and Cynthia Old-Hardwicke-Box, it contains some classic radio-speak ("A whisky? That's a strange drink for an attractive auburn-haired girl of 29") and cliches that have since become old friends of the family ("It's not a pretty sight - it's been in the water for some time", "Come now doctor; blackmail's an ugly word" and the classic "Is he ... ?" "I'm afraid so").
This Gun is still used in good drama schools to illustrate the pitfalls of the genre, but listening to the odd Afternoon Play, it's possible to conclude that writers have taken it as a blueprint rather than a cautionary tale. Good radio writing is a real art. I think a good radio play is better than any other sort of play, but by the same token, a bad one is so much worse. Radio is the most unforgiving medium, more revealing of untruth than any other. Nothing distracts you from whether you believe the reality of what you are hearing.
[EndSnip]"Fathers and Sons" Samuel West
According to this site, it is included in "The Writer's Handbook - Guide to Writing for Stage & Screen" - edited by Barry Turner - contributions from James Roose-Evans, Kate Rowland, Timothy West, Hugh Whitemore and Mal Young
... and also in here, "Writing for Stage and Screen (Writer's Handbook Guides)
by Barry Turner ... although one review pans the book.
I can only assume that it is still in copyright as it doesn't seem to be online anywhere.
K
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