Archive for the ‘Articles – General (2009)’ Category

Star News
11 November 2009

FANS of Sea Patrol will be forgiven for thinking their favourite show resembles an All Saints reunion, with news that three former start for the axed hospital daram have signed on to the naval series.
Tammy McIntosh, Conrad Coleby and John Waters have all signed on for major roles in the new season, with Getaway reporter Jason Dundas and for Neighbours Danielle Horvat (Taylah) also making appearances.
Conformation has come through that Steve Bisley will not be returning for the new season being filmed on Queensland’s Mission Beach before moving to Cairns studio next month.

The new season of Sea Patrol is due back on Nine in the First Half of 2010.

Cairn’s Post
11 November 2009

JAKOB Phillips has not seen many episodes of Australian television drama Sea Patrol, but the 13-year-old is one of 15 Cairns navy cadets who will feature on the show next year.

The cast and crew from the blockbuster series yesterday wrapped up their ninth week of filming in the Far North before heading off to the Gold Coast for about 50 more days of shooting for series four.

Arriving to see the stars on set, the young men and women from HMAS Cairns’ navy cadet unit became unlikely actors after the show’s director included them in a scene.

The Sea Patrol stars were filming at HMAS Cairns on the back of eight weeks of shooting at Mission Beach for scenes at sea.

Jakob said he was stoked to be in the series.

“I’ve only seen the show a couple of times but I’ve loved the sea and boats all my life,” he said.

The next series will go to air on Channel Nine in June.

David Knox
TV Tonight
tvtonight.com.au
14 August 2009

The final shoot for the team at All Saints nears, bringing to a close 12 seasons over 11 years for the Seven medical soap.

In that time it has brought us many memorable actors including Georgie Parker, John Howard, Libby Tanner, Erik Thomson, Christopher Gabardi, Wil Traval, Joelene Anderson, Conrad Coleby, Chris Vance and the late Mark Priestley.

Judith McGrath remains the only cast member to have worked on the show from beginning to end.

Despite still delivering good ratings, the show is a victim of increased production costs, and being one of four in-house dramas at Seven that seemingly had to budge.

But with the end of its run, does it also signal the “death” of the long-running drama in Australian television? Notwithstanding our two surviving serials, is the one-hour prime-time drama now a casualty of shifting audience trends and network costs? Australian television, which has seen many long-running TV dramas is now left with one-hour dramas all less than 4 years old.

TV Tonight turned to critics and commentators to ask whether we will ever see another drama series that reaches such double figures? Should we now re-define the term “long-running drama” in the TV history books?

Richard Clune, from the Sunday Telegraph agrees that drama runs of the past are just that. He says viewers are embracing subscription TV and the net for entertainment and are becoming more ‘commitment-phobic.’

“Currently many dramas – whether they are local or imported – seem to wane after 4 or so seasons, a dramatic reduction when you look at the runs of the past – 12 seasons for All Saints, 13 for Heelers, 8 for McLeod’s.

“That said you may well see dramas hitting the 6 year mark – they just need to evolve with their audience. But I imagine six years would be the highest end for a dramatic run these days.”

Melinda Houston from The Sunday Age, concurs, saying, “We’re unlikely to see those long-running series again. I think a portion of the audience will always like the familiar, but its the nature of anything that we become habituated and I think its television execs as much as anything who are unwilling to tolerate steady performers or slow slides.”

The Australian’s Amanda Meade says the end of All Saints feels like the end of an era.

“It’s a little sad if we do lose the long running drama because the characters become so embedded in our minds and hearts and become part of our popular culture,” she says. “The longer they’re around the more familiar they are, but we also tire of them.

“Just as we need new genres and formats to excite audiences, perhaps we need new stories too, and shorter run series can offer this.”

James Manning of Media Week is reticent to write off long-running dramas just yet.

“I’m always reluctant to say we might have seen the end of anything because all series are different and their longevity is based on different factors you can’t measure, which is why so many things fail. Nobody knows how to produce the perfect show,” he says.

The Herald Sun’s Colin Vickery says no-one should underestimate the success story that All Saints has been.

“Police and medical dramas seem to have the best chance of being stayers – look at Law and Order (18 years and counting) and The Bill (25 years plus) and the just-finished ER (15 years).

“Most of the successful shows have been re-tooled at some stage. Sometimes that gives a show a new lease of life and sometimes it doesn’t.”

But not everyone was happy with the revamp of All Saints this year, which added a Medical Response Unit headed up by Mike Vlasek (John Waters).

TV Week columnist and author of the comprehensive Super Aussie Soaps, Andrew Mercado says the All Saints revamp ’shortsold’ its audience.

“You can’t add a helicopter in the opening credits then downgrade it to a 4WD ambulance within a few weeks,” he says.

Others associate the death of the soap to cast changes.

“Blue Heelers wasn’t the same after Lisa McCune left,” says Vickery. “McLeod’s Daughters was another one hit by multiple cast leaving. ER was weakened when George Clooney left, CSI has been weakened by William Petersen moving on.

“Packed to the Rafters couldn’t survive Rebecca Gibney leaving and the loss of Jessica Marais, who has ambitions to work in the US, would be a big blow.”

Richard Clune agrees Rafters‘ life is tied to its central characters.

“It’s hard to predict its length but given the strong returns at the moment Seven will look to drain every last drop from it. It’s run, I feel, is also dependent on just how long Jessica Marais sticks around before heading for The States?”

Dianne Butler of The Courier Mail likens our commitment to TV drama to marriage.

“Time was, they lasted forever, on and on, years past their prime, long after everybody involved had lost interest in the outcome. The modern television show / relationship is shorter now, much shorter. Not necessarily any more satisfying though,” she says.

“There is no compulsion anymore to stick with something just because we should. Husband or TV show. Blame our seen-it-all ennui. As life has become more interesting, with more options, more money, more drama, television has become less enticing. We’ve either done it ourselves or watched other people do it – online and in real time.”

Green Guide (The Age) editor Nicole Brady says axing All Saints is a surprising move.

“I think it is fascinating that Seven is axing a drama that still comfortably pulls over a million viewers a week in a climate in which other local shows, indeed other networks, would walk over hot coals for such consistent figures,” she says.

“The decision to euthanise All Saints says a lot about the economic environment the networks are operating in at the moment and the fact drama is expensive to make. As such, time is not on your side if you are a weekly drama. The days of shows running for many years seem to be over.”

Even at the ABC the days of long-running, internal drama production are long gone.

“Long form drama ended on the ABC years ago when the broadcaster simply could no longer afford to keep a drama on air 40 weeks a year,” says Amanda Meade. “We will never see another GP. Now all the ABC does are short bursts of series, maybe renewing them a second time.”

Sunday Age’s Melinda Houston is a fan of short-run drama. “I don’t think it’s necessarily a bad thing. One of the reasons Oz drama is flourishing is thanks to a focus on quality rather than churning out hours and hours of the stuff purely to fulfill quota obligations. I have no problem with mini series and short runs for ongoing series – it provides time to develop ideas and scripts properly, among other things.”

Few commentators believed any of our newer dramas including such hits as Packed to the Rafters, Underbelly or City Homicide would come close to the run of All Saints.

“Packed to the Rafters might be around in 10 years, but many of the audience will be watching on their laptops, tablets or mobile phones,” says Media Week’s James Manning.

Concurrent with the end of the Seven soap is another network decision to cut the 40-week production runs of one-hour dramas to about 26 episodes a week. It signals another major shift in Australian drama.

Richard Clune observes, “Yes, the 40 episodes of drama per year is to become extinct. Budgets just can’t stretch to that length anymore and departments, eager to get as much out of the few dollars there are, are looking at shorter season runs. We’re competing with The States and ultimately we need to produce slick products that can stand-up to them – as such, the available money will be driven into fewer episodes to try and achieve this.”

Andrew Mercado says, “The future of the 40 hour drama does look rather bleak for now in favor of shorter run series. However, if Neighbours or perish the thought Home & Away ever got the axe, the network might have to return to the 40 hour drama model to make up their drama points.”

Colin Vickery says the producers of Rafters are clever to keep the quality up by having fewer episodes and to leave the public wanting more.

As All Saints ends its 13 seasons today, he remains respectful of its achievements.

“In this environment, any Australian drama that makes it to air – let alone lasts for years – is a massive achievement.”

TV Week
15 August 2009

SEA PATROL’S MASS EXODUS
Last week we promised a Sea Patrol scoop – now we have three! Jeremy Lindsay Taylor (Buffer), Saskia Burmeister (Nav) and Jay Ryan (Spider) have all elected to sign off from active duty and won’t be around when season four of the naval drama hits our screens next year.
The shows’ creators released the news after Jeremy told reporters, including TV WEEK, that he had quit the show. And they admitted that despite knowing that Saskia was leaving early on, Jeremy and Jay’s exits came as more of a surprise. “We were able to make a brief reference to Nav moving on, but by the time Jeremy and Jay told us they wanted to leave, we’d already written and were shooting series three- so we couldn’t create storylines just for their departure,” they explain.
While their characters will be missed when the Hammersley returns to the seas, the show’s creators are confident that fans won’t stay upset for long.
“We’ve come up with some wonderful stories for next year – and some really exciting and intriguing new characters,” they promise. “There will be 16 episodes [up from 13], so there will be heaps to enjoy.”
Stay tuned for updates on what’s next for Jay, Saskia and Jeremy – and to see which new faces will appear when Sea Patrol returns.

JEREMY’S LA PLANS
Speaking exclusively to TV WEEK when we dropped by to visit his acting workshop from teens, Jeremy revealed the reason he left Sea Patrol was to finally try his luck in LA.
Jeremy plans to launch his assault on Hollywood early next year, after heading over to LA next month to meet with agents.
“I think I’m ready now,” he reveals. “I love telling Australian stories – I’ve had a great run and hope to continue having a great run in this country – but I’ve got to expand that now.”
Jeremy’s also filmed a guest role on Rescue Special Ops and has been teaching acting at Sydney drama school Screenwise all year. He reveals that if he hadn’t made it as an actor, he’d have pursued a career as a drama teacher.
“I always wanted to teach,” he says. “I want to be a director too, and courses like these are the best training to work with actors.”

Caroline Stewart and Helen Ynuk
TV Week
20 July 2009

At least one life will be lost, and many shocking truths uncovered in the season three finale

In this week’s first explosive episode, vital clues surface about ET’s mysterious death, while the second episode sees several Hammersley crew members under threat from oil thieves and viewer favourite Kate in dire straits.
The thieves have been siphoning black gold from a big oil rig, so the Hammersley is stationed near the underwater oil fields. When Mike (Ian Stenlake) loses contact with the guard at a nearby storage tank on Penfold Island, he sends a party, including Kate (Lisa McCune), ashore to investigate.
There, the crew discover the sentry has been slaughtered. Soon afterwards, they realise that their inflatable boat has been beached, and they’re forced to spend the night on the island, where they’re mercilessly stalked by the murderer. After fighting off the attacker, Kate later does battle with yet another shady character – and only one of them will survive. Lisa McCune, who plays Kate, gives TV WEEK all the dramatic details.

Why is Kate left alone?
Mike sends a bunch of the crew to the island to see what’s happened and they discover that a tracker has been killed. We know that whoever did it is still on the island – the person attacks Spider (Jay Ryan), but he gets away. Our maps were wrong, so our inflatable gets beached and we have to set up camp overnight knowing the murderer is out there. We also have a fire at our camp, making us ripe for the picking. When Buffer (Jeremy Lindsay Taylor), Swain (Matthew Holmes), Bomber (Kirsty Lee Allen) and RO (Kristian Schmid) go off to investigate a series of explosions, Kate gets attacked.

What happens?
She’s set upon, but manages to fight off the mystery attacker. At that point they reveal who the attacker is and that’ll surprise viewers, because it’s someone who the team knows, which is pretty terrible.

Does the attack have anything to do with ET’s death?
Yes, it’s connected to Nav’s (Saskia Burmeister) storyline involving her investigation of foul play; it completes the circle. It all locks together, and everything that’s been happening since ET (David Lyons) died makes perfect sense. The man she loves died, and she’s not been able to be at peace with it. She thought something wasn’t right since the beginning, and she refused to believe ET would make a mistake that would jeopardise the lives of the people he was working with. For the rest of the crew, this development cements what Nav has been saying all along, and it starts to emerge that it was all based around greed and oil. There’s a much more sinister force at work than they thought.

Does ET’s name get cleared?
I can’t say, but it all comes to a good end for Nav – there’s a moment for her when everything is more peaceful. The crew as a whole feel it was a horrible way for him to go, so everybody’s looking to move on.

What part do Matt and Simone Robsenn (Blair McDonough and Jessica Napler) play in it all?
For so long we thought they were an innocent young couple, but then it starts to emerge that they’re pretty power hungry. There’s more to them than meets the eye.

Kate finds her life in peril towards the end of the episode. What happens?
It all comes to a very fiery end! Kate’s in deep danger. Actually, a few of the Hammersley team are at risk towards the end of the episode because of where they are and what could happen. But there’s also a nice twist where someone most at risk ends up in the arms of the person she loves most. I’m not going to tell you who, but I will say it’s a big ending!

Season 3 by numbers
14 Deaths in total
4 Dangerous explosions
4 Hostage situations
3 Scenes with Buffer sans shirt

ET’s killer unmasked!
David Lyons quit his role in Sea Patrol to follow his Hollywood dream, but did he like the way his on-screen persona ET was killed off?
“An actor will often find it hard to say goodbye to a character and to see them die, but… did I like it?” David ponders. “If you rephrase the question, maybe. I think that what it did was give Saskia Burmeister’s character such a beautiful emotional arc to play with – and, as an offering, that’s a great thing from the producers and writers.”
David says viewers will learn all the answers to the mystery surrounding his character’s death in the dramatic finale. “I know who killed ET,” he laughs. “Not happy about it!”

Caroline Stewart
TV Week
13 July 2009

Kate who? Last week, gossip that Buffer and Kate (Lisa McCune) were an item spread among the crew like wildfire. Now, it all seems well and truly in the past as the navy man locks lips with a sexy newcomer instead!
In the first of tonight’s two episodes, the Hammersley is confined to base for repairs, and Lieutenant Commander Cynthia Luxton (Adrienne Pickering, above) boards the ship to conduct training exercises for the crew. While the results of the ensuring fire drill are a complete disaster, with Cynthia being particularly scathing about Buffer (Jeremy Lindsay Taylor), our steamy picture shows that it’s a very different story when the pair get up close and personal later!
Is this just a one-night stand or could it be the start of something more serious?

Also tonight
The crew answer a distress call from Jila (Tasma Walton) and Brad (Ben Clements) who are trapped under the hull of their upturned yacht. Can they be rescued?

TV Week
29 June 2009
RE ep ‘Pearls Before Swine’

2Dads’ nasty rumour may become reality as the pair in question realise their feelings for one another!

After being reprimanded for negligence, 2Dads is so desperate to get revenge on his superiors, Kate and Buffer, that he starts a rumour the pair are dating. The hot gossip quickly spreads throughout the scandal-starved Hammersley crew and eventually winds its way to the top – leaving Kate’s former love Mike with little choice but to question the pair.

To find out if there’s any truth to the rumours, TV WEEK went straight to the source and asked Jeremy Lindsay Taylor, who plays Buffer, to spill the beans.

How does the rumour start?
The inflatable vessel the crew are in runs out of fuel while they’re chasing pearl poaches on jet skis. It had been 2Dads job to refuel, so he gets a good balling out from Buffer and Kate (Lisa McCune). Then, to deflect attention from himself, 2Dads (Nikolai Nikolaeff) spreads a rumour that they’re romantically involved. There’s no truth to the rumours initially, but it plants a seed in Buffer’s mind and he starts wondering, “What if?”

So there is some truth to it?
Buffer and Kate have a beautiful relationship. They’re very close and good friends, and they look after each other, but if something were to happen, it would wreck their working relationship – although, in my opinion, there is something between them, without a doubt.

Does the rumour spread quickly?
Yeah, of course! It’s a boat with 24 people working on it. Within 10 minutes, that rumour spread through the ship. It gets a bit out of control and Mike (Ian Stenlake) hears about it and pulls them into his office to find out what’s going on.

Is that awkward for all of them?
Yes. None of the crew knows there’s something there from Mike’s past with Kate, but Buffer can tell that it’s a bad situation. He knows you can’t have that behaviour on a ship.

Are Kate and Buffer embarrassed?
They’re a bit embarrassed, but they’re also questioning, “Would we make a good couple? Do I like you?” They’re both very determined and loyal to the Navy, but they really like each other, too, which becomes evident in a tender moment later in the episode while they’re guarding a boat together at night.

Do you hope they hook up eventually?
Yeah, why not? Make love not war! Everyone deserves a bit of romance; we all need a good hug! They’ve spent so much time together and looked after each other in so many life-threatening situations. They share a connection that’s so deep, and I don’t think that’ll ever go.

Yvette Chegwidden
TV Week
29 June 2009

A day of fun in the sun sends with one of the crew fighting for their life

This week, Buffer proves he’s worthy of his nickname when he trades his naval uniform for board shorts in order to learn karate from Cliff, a mystery man from Kate’s past. The intense training session takes place during the Hammersley crew’s shore break – but the situation quickly turns serious.

“Cliff (Bren Foster) is in the Navy and has joined the crew for additional training,” explains Jeremy Lindsay Taylor, who plays Buffer. “Kate doesn’t remember him at first, but they went to the Defence Academy together and it’s obvious there’s a romantic thing there between them.

“Cliff’s also a martial arts expert,” Jeremy adds, “so during their time off, he teaches Buffer some moves.”

But when Kate (Lisa McCune) is kidnapped by a crazed gunman, it looks like Buffer will need to use his new skills sooner than expected!

Yvette Chegwidden
TV Week
22 June 2009

A dangerous rescue operation exposes the Hammersley crew to deadly radiation.

This week, a helicopter goes down on Victory Day Island, a former 1950s British nuclear test site. When the mayday call comes through, Mike (Ian Stenlake) sends a team to investigate. The aim of the mission is to get in and out as quickly as possible to minimise exposure to the toxins, but the crew are thwarted as, one by one, they fall prey to deadly situations.

The first obstacle comes when a crash survivor – documentary maker Nelson Walker (Ron Kelly) – reveals a young woman named Jessica (Brooke Harmon) was also onboard. Now, a second search must be carried out deeper into the island, increasing the risk of radiation poisoning.

On the way to find Jessica, RO (Kristian Schmid) pursues a strange figure and is caught in a snare and left for dead. The rest of the crew do find the woman – who is crippled by a broken ankle – but as they prepare to evacuate her, disaster strikes again.

Bomber (Kirsty Lee Allan) plunges into a crater lake where the radiation is at its most intense! Without hesitation, Swain (Matthew Holmes) risks his own life and abseils to her side.

Can the crew get off the island before the deadly toxins take their toll?

Yvette Chegwidden
TV Week
15 June 2009

When RO discovers a plot to blow up a nuclear waste ship, he places the crew in the line of fire.

What begins as a night of drunken revelry ends with RO discovering a terrorist plot to blow up a nuclear waste ship scheduled to pass through a major shipping lane.
The crisis unfolds while the Hammersley crew is on shore leave for the night. As the alcohol flows freely, the normally subsided RO finds himself in a compromising position with a glamorous bar girl called Danielle (Lap Pham). But his amorous intentions soon do an about-face when “Danielle” turns out to be a “Danny”!
“RO’s definitely taken aback by the turn his romantic evening takes,” says Kristian Schmid, who plays the drunken sailor. “New character 2Dads (Nikolai Nikolaeff) is squarely responsible for what goes on – he’s a bit of a prankster – but RO really shouldn’t drink. Every time he lets his hair down, something happens. Last season he wound up with a guy trying to kill him. Now, he ends up with someone who isn’t who RO thought he or she may be!”
But it’s while RO’s making his escape from Danny’s eager clutches that things go from amusing to deadly serious, with the young radio officer stumbling upon a group of men unloading explosives and discussing a plot to bomb nearby nuclear waste ship the Rokkasho. The men spot him as he tries to flee, and RO’s night goes from bad to truly awful when he ends up returning to the ship with an order to pay a $3000 damages bill.
But before the embarrassed seaman can take 2Dads to task over his boozy prank, a bomb is discovered onboard the Hammersley – from there, it’s a race against time to save the crew from a lethal blast.
“Once the terrorist plans are uncovered, we’re charged with protecting the Rakkasho’s passage,” Kristian says. “But we discover a bomb has been placed on our own ship, which compromises not only the Hammersley but the nuclear waste vessel as well. The bomb has to be dismantled – it’s extremely intense.”
While RO and 2Dads painstakingly try to dismantle the explosive device, Mike (Ian Stenlake) orders everyone to take to the inflatable lifeboats for their own safety and also to maintain the exclusion zone around the Rokkasho.
“Everyone fears for their lives and the environmental disaster that would occur if the bomb went off. The shipmates work in a tough and violent situation, so there’s a chance someone will die,” Kristian says.
As tension mounts, the terrorists attack the waste ship and the Hammersley’s lifeboats come under heavy fire.
It soon becomes clear that the terrorists’ leader intents to detonating the bomb remotely and, in spite of Kate’s “Lisa McCune) valiant attempts to stop him, a deafening explosion is soon heard from the Hammersley’s direction.
Have RO and 2Dads failed?