Let The Blood Run Free
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (January 2007) |
Let The Blood Run Free is an anarchic Australian spoof soap opera set in St Christopher's Hospital and created by comedy collective, The Blood Group. It was originally conceived as a live weekly event for the upstairs venue Le Joke of the Melbourne comedy venue The Last Laugh. Tory McBride, then the associate producer of comedy at the Last Laugh, came up with the concept and the title and in association with comedy director, John Thomson, put together the team which was to become The Blood Group. The show was very loosely scripted and then improvised on stage, with 2 planned storylines depending on live audience voting. The live Le Joke version, which had a continuous weekly run for about a year, was a wild success with addicted audience members returning every Thursday evening to see the next hilariously melodramatic episode. Before long, it had become too big for the 100-seat Le Joke theatre, and was moved downstairs for several seasons on the main stage of the Last Laugh. It was subsequently picked up for television and 26 episodes were produced using a number of the storylines developed during the stage shows. They aired in Australia from August 20, 1990 to January 22, 1994 and in the UK on Channel 4 from August 29, 1992 to January 7, 1995. The show featured the original cast including Kath & Kim actor Peter Rowsthorn in the early role of hospital orderly Warren Cronkshonk. It is thought to be the first interactive television comedy ever made - in keeping with the live version, at the end of each episode the viewers could vote by telephone to decide the direction the storylines would take. It was also unusual in its lack of respect for television conventions, breaking the fourth wall by turning to the camera and directly addressing the viewers. The stories were as over-the-top as the acting; Pam and Ray discovering they are brother and sister - just after they get married and Pam announces her pregnancy; Effie being run over by St Christopher in a VW campervan and squashed flat, only to be brought back from the dead in Series 2 by Ray and her boyfriend Warren; Matron Dorothy Conniving-Bitch teaming up with her long-lost axe-murdering lover Bill Schwarzenhameneggenberger to destroy Pam and Ray's relationship; the vampire Carla Laboumdier falling for Ray, meanwhile stalking the staff, until her eventual staking by Ray. A two-disc DVD set of Series 1 is currently available in Australia.
[edit] Characters names
In keeping with the spoof nature of the series each character had a name that was either a pun or extreme.
- Nurse Pam Sandwich - who became Pam Good-Sandwich on marrying Ray and Pam Good-Lovechild-Sandwich on marrying Richard - as played by Jean Kittson
- Dr. Ray Good as played by Brian Nankervis
- Dr. Richard Lovechild as played by David Swann
- Matron Dorothy Conniving-Bitch as played by the late Lynda Gibson
- Warren Cronkshonk as played by Peter Rowsthorn, who also played axe-murderer Bill Schwarzenhameneggenberger
- Inspector George Slabb - pronounced Slab-ub, because of the double "b" - as played by Mark Cutler. Cutler originally played Richard in the stage version, but was unavailable for the start of the TV series, hence the casting of Swann in the role.
- Nurse Effie Shunt as played by Helen Knight, who also played Dr Angie Travers and Matron's long-lost daughter Moon Unit.