Archive for the ‘Articles – General (2006)’ Category

Volume 49, No. 20, November 02, 2006
By Barry Rollings 

lisahammersleyHMAS Ipswich has gone under cover, all in the name of Navy’s strong commitment to the new television series Sea Patrol. 

Like something from the pages of fiction, the Fremantle Class patrol boat has “disappeared”, if only temporarily, to re-emerge as HMAS Hammersely in the new $15m, 13-hour mini-series expected to screen on Channel Nine in the second half of 2007.

Complete with new sideplates bearing the name HMAS Hammersley, new ceremonial life rings and a new pennant number – 202 – HMAS Ipswich/Hammersely is about three weeks into a six-week schedule of shooting six days a week off Queensland’s Dunk Island.

The series, starring Lisa McCune, is being produced by husband and wife team Hal and Di McElroy for McElroy All Media Pty. Ltd.

Ipswich’s CO LCDR Darren Grogan said his crew were enjoying very much the opportunity to showcase “what we do aboard a patrol boat”.

There was a great deal of non-speaking, non-scripted participation by Ipswich’s complement of 25 (most will be featured when the series airs) with all the professional and operational tasking such as craft navigation, launching a vessel for a boarding party and man-overboard recoveries done by his team.

LCDR Grogan sees it as a great opportunity to assist with recruiting and retention, as well as raise community awareness and understanding of the great diversity of roles that Navy fulfils and the diversity of careers that it offers.

“The crew is excited about the show because not many people get to see what we do out here – sometimes in a fairly volatile environment – and this provides an innovative opportunity to advertise the outstanding job that the Patrol Boat Force does in defending our national interests,” LCDR Grogan said.

“I think we are lucky to be working with such a skilled production team, led by Hal and Di, in a very professional organisation.

‘Their team and mine have melded together well in quite a dangerous and difficult work environment to deliver one of the biggest, if not the biggest, drama series produced in Australia.’ – LCDR Darren Grogan

Individual scenes were being shot to make the most of the assets now at sea and would be assembled later into their appropriate episodes. 

The rest of the filming will be conducted at HMAS Penguin in Sydney using another Fremantle Class patrol boat, the former HMAS Wollongong.

The series also had opened up opportunities to other Navy assets transiting through the area. The Fremantle Class HMAS Townsville had been involved in some filming, with the frigates HMAS Newcastle and Darwin set to find their niches on the small screen in filming within the next few weeks. 

Having another 30-odd people on board virtually doubled the crew of Ipswich/Hammersely which had added to the challenges, LCDR Grogan said.

“We have had to manage all those issues closely and safely,” he said.

“The whole process is being watched closely by all involved in Navy and everyone is working hard because we want to ensure this is a successful project.”

From McElroy All Media, producers Hal McElroy and Di McElroy (Water Rats, Blue Heelers, Going Home) are set to create another landmark Australian series, Sea Patrol, for the Nine Network. This is an action drama with a mystery element threaded through 13 hours of high-end, primetime television. It is the story of ordinary heroes doing an extraordinary job, the men and women of the Navy Patrol Boat Service who battle the elements and the odds to defend our borders and enforce the economic zone.

Directing the show are George Miller (Man from Snowy River) and Chris Martin-Jones (Always Greener, McLeod’s Daughters), and the writers are Jeff Truman (The Alice, Last Man Standing, Stingers, McLeod’s Daughters), Michaeley O’Brien (McLeod’s Daughters, High Tide), Tony Morphett (Kings in Grass Castles, The Shiralee, Blue Heelers and Water Rats) and Sarah Smith (McLeod’s Daughters).

‘This is a big vote of confidence in the return of the maxi mini-series in primetime. We are excited to be back in that territory and look forward to a great audience response to this show,’ said Hal McElroy.

by Alex Murdoch October 09, 2006

AUSTRALIA’S television executives are banking on a return to locally produced drama to deliver them ratings gold in coming months. Channel Nine is touting its $15 million Sea Patrol, which stars Lisa McCune, as its next big hope.

Co-producer and creator Hal McElroy said the drama, which began filming off the coast off Mission Beach in far north Queensland late last week, centres around a Royal Australian Naval patrol ship protecting the nation’s borders. “Each episode has a self-contained plot that may involve illegal fishing, people smuggling, rescues, bizarre happens etc, and there’s also a mystery that unfolds over the 13 episodes,” he said. McElroy, who also created Water Rats, said the show capitalised on the same national preoccupation with security that saw the rise of Border Security.

by Barry Rollings – Volume 49, No. 18 , October 05, 2006

02-signing-shotNavy’s coming out of television dry dock to play a pivotal role in a new $15m 13-hour mini-series called Sea Patrol to star Lisa McCune and expected to screen on Channel Nine in the second half of 2007.

Reminiscent of, but in no way connected to Patrol Boat, which starred Andrew McFarlane, and screened on the ABC in the 1970-80s, Sea Patrol will employ HMAS Ipswich when it shoots at Dunk Island and Mission Beach south of Cairns, and the former HMAS Wollongong in Sydney.

Many of the crew of HMAS Ipswich and perhaps some of those at Sydney’s HMAS Waterhen and their platforms will be featured in the dramas that will unfold around the fictional command NAVCOM. 

Lisa McCune, famed for her role as Constable Maggie Doyle in Blue Heelers, will play executive officer Kate McGregor to Ian Stenlake’s (formerly of Stingers) commanding officer. 

The 60-minute episodes, already titled and scripted with technical advice from the Navy, will have self-contained stories but will feature the continuing thread of a mystery introduced at its debut and not solved until the final instalment.

Melbourne-born, and now Sydney-based husband and wife co-producers, Hal and Di McElroy, are the veterans of 24 productions (among them Blue Heelers, Water Rats, Return To Eden, Picnic at Hanging Rock and The Sum of Us) in their 34 years in the business, including about 1000 hours for television.

They said it was not a sequel to, nor the next series of, the old show but rather a brand new series about the RAN patrol boat service. They hope to do at least three series.

Mr McElroy described it as a drama of character, action and warmth with some lighter moments. 

Though the target audience would be men and women of 25-49 years, he said it would have broad appeal, a family show expected to attract both young and old. 

“I think it [Patrol Boat] first went to air in 1979, so that was a long, long time ago,” Mr McElroy said. 

“Understandably, Navy is proud of the original series and sees the similarities but that was 27 years ago so we began anew because Navy has changed a lot since then.” 

At officer level, crews were now mixed and tasking was very different in an environment of genuine threats at all sorts of levels. 

“Let’s be honest; it was a much more benign environment back in the late 70s and early 80s,” he said. 

“Today, the tasking of the patrol boat service is very difficult and necessarily, therefore, our stories are very different. Frankly, they are much more dramatic than they were back in the earlier days.”

Not surprisingly, the series will deal with issues such as illegal fishing and immigration, boat people, drug-running, people-smuggling and a whole range of other issues.

The McElroys decided it was pointless doing such a series without Navy’s approval. They approached the then CN VADM Chris Ritchie, who was enthusiastic from the outset and agreed with their instincts that it should be about a small platform such as a patrol boat.

“We thought that the series should be about a small ‘family’,” Mrs McElroy said.

“The important thing for me is seeing how this ‘family’ of people operates on a patrol boat.”

“Its all about Navy’s heroes; not about flawed heroes with feet of clay,” Mr McElroy added. “We really want to show audiences what it’s like to live and work on one of these boats, in extremely arduous conditions on a small platform of 42m and 24 people, in the tropics, 24/7, in any weather.

“Our stories will show good young honest Navy people doing a dangerous, difficult, very tough job, not getting paid fabulous money, but loving it. 

“That’s a pretty remarkable thing all in a pressure cooker in which the cast all become friends for life against the backdrop of political and media scrutiny and the need for scrupulous ethical behaviour.

Patrol Boat began filming with the Attack Class craft and progressed to the Fremantle Class.

The Director of Navy Reputation management CMDR Richard Donnelly, who has liaised with the McElroys on the series, sees a “nice synergy” going from the Fremantle Class, hopefully to the Armidale Class in future series.

PICTURE: Chief of Navy Russ Shalders, AO, CSC, RAN, signs up with TV producers Hal and Di McElroy.

Extract from the article:

SEEMS we are being inundated with movie and TV stars, the latest a 60-person cast and crew of Sea Patrol descending on Mission Beach to shoot a $15 million mini series next month from a Navy patrol boat. It is being described as an action/mystery/drama set mainly on the water with Dunk Island as a backdrop and involves illegal fishermen and illegal immigration. This follows news of Warner Bros decision to shoot big budget movie Fool’s Gold at Etty Bay, just south of Cairns, next year.