A Country Practice

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Country Practice

Main title caption
Genre Drama
Running time 48 minutes
Creator(s) James Davern
Starring Shane Porteous
Helen Scott
Brian Wenzel
Joyce Jacobs
Gordon Piper
Syd Heylen
Lorrae Desmond
Joan Sydney
Penny Cook
Grant Dodwell
Shane Withington
Anne Tenney
Wendy Strehlow
Josephine Mitchell
Maureen Edwards
Kym Wilson
Judith McGrath
Georgie Parker
Country of origin Australia
Original channel Seven Network
Original run 19811993
No. of episodes 1058
IMDb profile

A Country Practice was one of the longest-running Australian television drama series. Though sometimes considered a soap opera, the storylines of the two one-hour episodes screened over any one week formed a self-contained narrative block (However many storylines did develop as minor sub plots for several episodes before becoming the focus of a particular week's narrative block). It ran on the Seven Network for 1,058 episodes from November 18, 1981 to November 22, 1993. It was produced in ATN-7's production facility at Epping, Sydney. It also ran from April to November 1994 for 29 episodes on Network Ten.

In addition to being broadcast in Australia, it also ran on ITV in the United Kingdom, as well as in many European countries and Hong Kong. It was estimated that at its height, the show received a worldwide audience of five to six million each week. It was also carried (initially, daily, then ultimately twice weekly, to show all episodes) in the Metropolitan Detroit area from the late 1980's to the mid-1990's, on the Windsor, Ontario station owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. This was due to the Border Protection Agreement between the United States and Canada, under which Detroit television stations cannot show Canadian network programming and Canadian stations cannot show American network programming. The programming carried by the nationwide schedules but which cannot be showed in Detroit/Windsor has to replaced by something else, and most of the something else comes from Britain and Australia. [1]

The show followed a medical practice in the small fictional New South Wales country town of Wandin Valley. The show's stories focused on the staff of the practice and the hospital and their families, and through weekly guest characters - frequently patients served by the practice - various social and medical problems were explored. The series frequently examined such topical issues as youth unemployment, suicide, drug addiction, HIV/AIDS, terminal illness as well as Aborigines and their place in modern Australian society.

Contents

[edit] Cast list

[edit] Seven Network series

[edit] Network Ten series

  • Dr. Harry Morrison - Andrew Blackman
  • Matron Maggie Sloan - Joan Sydney
  • Esme Watson - Joyce Jacobs
  • Ian McIntyre - Paul Gleeson
  • Claire Bonacci - Claudia Black
  • Danny Sabatini - Vince Colosimo
  • Jess Morrison - Jane Hall
  • Georgie Wilks - Laura Armstrong
  • Sarah Wilks - Alyce Platt
  • Fred Bates - Katherine Murray
  • Miles Ferdenbach - Chris Lyons

[edit] DVD release

A Country Practice is available on DVD (Region 4, Australia). Two box sets, entitled "series one" (containing all 14 1981 episodes) and "series two" (containing only the first 30 1982 episodes) were released on 3 April 2006.

[edit] UK ITV transmissions

A Country Practice was shown regionally on the ITV Network with the majority of regions starting to screen the series weekly from spring 1983 on Wednesdays at 1.30pm in the original hour-long format. Central Television did not start the show until 1988. Yorkshire Television chose to break away from the main Network transmission in 1984 and were the first television station in the world to break the programme into two half-hour episodes screening on Mondays and Tuesday at 3.30pm. This would lead them into difficulties with the screening of the series as whenever a public holiday occurred (usually on Mondays), the 3.30pm slot would be unavailable for A Country Practice. This led to Part one of an episode starting on a Tuesday with viewers having to wait until the following Monday to conclude it.

Over time all 14 of the ITV regions screened the show at their own pace after breaking from the Network Thames Television pattern. All regions eventually adopted the Yorkshire Television method of splitting the episodes into two. Carlton Television, who superseded Thames Television, became the first to conclude the series followed by Anglia Television in their daily 1.50pm half-hour slot. Anglia Television then commenced a short repeat of the first 40 or so episodes shortly after reaching the end.

Due to the content of the episodes, a substantial amount of episodes were withdrawn from transmission by certain regions as the content was considered unsuitable for daytime viewing. This led to various regions skipping considerable chunks of the story.

The series also ran on Sky Channel satellite channel in the mid-to-late 80s, and for a brief time in 1997 on the cable channel Carlton Select.

[edit] North American Broadcasts

The entire series was broadcast, from start to finish, by the CBC Television affiliate in Windsor, Ontario, CBET, Channel 9, which serves the Metropolitan Detroit-Windsor-Toledo area. Two episodes were broadcast daily, Monday through Friday, starting in the late 1980's, until they were caught up to contemporary episodes in the early 1990's.

Detroit, Michigan in the United States and Windsor, Ontario in Canada are twin cities on the north and south banks of the strait called the Detroit River. Because they are part of the same advertising market, they are subject to the North American Border Protection Rule - under which Detroit television stations cannot carry programming licensed for broadcast in Windsor, and Windsor stations cannot carry programming licensed for broadcast in Detroit. Historically, 40% of Canadian network programming has been American content, none of which could be broadcast in Windsor. Only so much programming can be repeated, and only so many times - and no network produces programming to air on only one station - so, most of the American programming that cannot be broadcast in Windsor is replaced by programming imported from Britain and Australia. Many Australian soap operas, A Country Practice among them, have thus found loyal audiences in the Metro Detroit area, while they otherwise remain unknown in North America.

[edit] External links

In other languages