Bellbird (TV series)

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Bellbird
Genre Serial
Created by Barbara Vernon
Country of origin Australia
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 11
No. of episodes 1562
Release
Original network ABC
Original release 28 August 1967 –
23 December 1977

Bellbird was an Australian soap opera set in a small Victorian rural township. The series was produced by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation at its Ripponlea TV studios in Elsternwick, Melbourne, Victoria. The opening title sequence was filmed at Daylesford, Victoria.[1]

The series was produced between 28 August 1967 and December 1977. It was Australia's first successful soap opera; the show's ratings were modest but it had a devoted following, especially in rural Australia. During its 10-year run, 15-minute episodes of Bellbird screened from Monday through to Thursday nights during the lead in to the 7 pm evening news bulletin. In 1976 the series was screened as one one-hour episode each week, before switching to three half-hour installments per week during its final season.[2]

Synopsis

The show's storylines followed the lives of the residents of the small country town that gave the show's title.

Cast

Principal cast members included Maurie Fields (John Quinney), Carl Bleazby (Colonel Jim Emerson), Lynette Curran (Rhoda Lang), Elspeth Ballantyne (Lori Chandler), Gerda Nicolson (Fiona Davies), Peter Aanensen (Jim Bacon), Carmel Millhouse (Marge Bacon), Moira Charleton (Olive Turner), Terry Norris (Joe Turner), Robin Ramsay (Charlie Cousens), Penne Hackforth-Jones (Ginny Hill), Ian Smith (Russell Ashwood), Anne Phelan (Kate Murray), Dennis Miller (Constable Des Davies), Michael Preston (Father John Kramer), Gabrielle Hartley (Maggie Emerson), Tom Oliver (Tom Grey), Sean Scully (Ron Wilson), Brian James (Ian Bennett), John Stanton (Leo Hill), Rod Mullinar (Scott Leighton), Maggie Millar (Georgia Moorhouse), Sheila Florance (Dossie Rumsey), Brian Hannan (Roger Green), Anne Charleston (Wendy Robinson), Louise Philip (Christine Jackson), Patsy King (Kate Andrews), and Alan Hopgood (Matthew Reed). Tristan Rogers also acted in the serial.

In 1979, two years after Bellbird ended its run, Elspeth Ballantyne, Patsy King, and Sheila Florance would work together once again in the iconic series Prisoner playing guard Meg Jackson Morris; prison governor, Erica Davidson and inmate Lizzie Birdsworth, respectively. Gerda Nicolson and Maurie Fields would also join Prisoner in the later years of the series as Governor Anne Reynolds and corrupt guard Len Murphy, respectively.

Ian Smith and Anne Charleston would go on to appear as long term characters in the Australian TV show "Neighbours" as Harold and Madge Bishop.

International screenings

Episodes of Bellbird were screened in the UK in 1972. After the initial 52 episodes had been screened, Actors Equity in Australia intervened and insisted the ABC increase the price of the episodes so as to pay more to the actors. As a result of this price increase the UK broadcaster purchased no further episodes.[3]

In 2004 it was reported that the ABC taped over the series mastertapes,[3] something which series cast member Alan Hopgood had complained about in a TV Times article in 1976: "They are just wiped off and another episode run over them... This failure to preserve the program is criminal, to my way of thinking".[4]

Episodes

An extensive selection of surviving episodes, apparently found during the closure of the ABC's Gore Hill studios, is stored in the Australian National Archives.

One complete black and white episode is available to be viewed at the Australian Mediatheque at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image in Melbourne, while several colour episodes are known to exist in the hands of private collectors.

Film

A feature film version, Country Town (1971), focused on Bellbird's problems during a severe drought. The movie's script was also novelized.

See also

References

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  2. Albert Moran, Moran's Guide to Australian TV Series, AFTRS 1993 p 77
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. TV Times, 11–17 December 1976, p.10: "Home-Truths From Bellbird"

External links