Return to Eden

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This article is about the television show, For other uses, see Return to Eden (disambiguation).


Return To Eden
Format Drama
Created by Michael Laurence
Starring Rebecca Gilling
James Smillie
Wendy Hughes
James Reyne
Peta Toppano
Daniel Abineri
Megan Williams
Peter Cousens
Country of origin Australia
No. of episodes 25
Broadcast
Original channel Ten Network
Original run 19831986
External links
IMDb profile

Return to Eden was an Australian mini-series and subsequent weekly television series starring Rebecca Gilling, James Reyne (who was also a singer with pop band Australian Crawl), Wendy Hughes and James Smillie. The miniseries aired on Network Ten in 1983 whereas the weekly series aired in 1986.

Contents

[edit] Mini-series Synopsis

Stephanie Harper (Gilling), a dull, "plain jane" heiress, marries a handsome but unscrupulous tennis pro, Greg Marsden (Reyne), who promptly begins an affair with Stephanie’s best friend Jilly Stewart (Hughes). Greg and Jilly then plot to murder Stephanie and lay claim to her fortune. Greg pushes Stephanie into a crocodile-infested river, and watches as she is apparently mauled to death. However, Stephanie survives and is found washed up on a beach. She meets Dr. Dan Marshall (Smillie), a brilliant plastic surgeon who uses his talents to repair her face and body. After the bandages are removed, Stephanie has been transformed into a beautiful woman. Using the alias Tara Welles, Stephanie returns to Sydney and becomes a glamorous supermodel, whilst plotting her revenge on Greg and Jilly and take back what is rightfully hers, particularly her beloved house “Eden”.

[edit] TV Series

Such was the enormous success of the original mini-series that Return To Eden returned as an ongoing regular series in 1986. The series premiered on 11 February 1986 and had a run of 22 one-hour episodes. The events of the series took place seven years after the end of the mini-series. The opening episode featured Jilly's release from prison and ongoing storylines dealt with her ongoing rivalry with Stephanie, and Stephanie's continued attempts to keep control of the family company, Harper Mining Ltd. Rebecca Gilling and James Smillie returned to reprise their roles from the original mini-series, while Peta Toppano took over the role of Jilly, playing her as a manic, petulant, scheming superbitch, much in the style of Dynasty's Alexis. In the series it was revealed that Jilly was actually Stephanie's half-sister, whilst her partner in her villainous schemes, Jake Sanders, was ultimately revealed to be the brother of the late Greg Marsden.

[edit] Series ending

The final episode screened in Australia concluded with a cliffhanger ending in anticipation of a second season. Closing scenes featured Dennis being knocked unconscious by an unseen assailant. Meanwhile, upstairs at Stephanie's mansion while a party went on down stairs, Jilly pulled a gun on Stephanie in yet another attempt to murder her. As Jake attempted to wrest the gun from Jilly it fired, fatally wounding Jake, and he careened into the hallway and down the stairs to die in view of the shocked party guests. Jilly slipped the gun into Stephanie's hands and as they ran out to check on Jake she announced to the assembled guests that Stephanie had shot Jake.

The show's ratings had not been high enough to justify a renewal so this cliffhanger was never initially resolved for Australian audiences. The actors playing Stephanie, Jilly and Dennis were later brought back to film a hasty conclusion to the various unresolved story threads. Dennis' abductor, revealed as his half-brother and Stephanie's long-lost son Chris, quickly abandoned his plan to hold Dennis to ransom when he learned Stephanie had been arrested for Jake's murder. Chris had in fact been following Stephanie so had witnessed the shooting incident, and what's more had photographs that proved what had happened. He quickly cleared Stephanie who was released while Jilly was arrested for murder. This new ending was never seen in the original Australian run and only included in the version of the last episode that was sold internationally. Network 10 repeated the series twice in the 1990s and at least one screening contained the revised ending.

Return To Eden was screened in the UK on ITV where it was a huge hit during the summer of 1986. The 1986 transmission also ended with the original cliffhanger, as did the 1989 repeat screening. However, the newer ending was screened many years later when the series was repeated on UK satellite television.

[edit] Analysis

The 1986 series of Return To Eden was clearly intended as an Antipodean answer to the glamorous American "supersoaps" Dallas and Dynasty, with the requisite ostentatious fashions, boardroom struggles, bedroom romps and outrageous storylines. It is fair to argue that Return To Eden successfully delivered all the stock soap pleasures with the Australian setting giving the show a certain ironic distance.

[edit] DVD Release

Both the mini-series and weekly series have been made available on DVD in Australia.

Kaleidoscope Film has released the original 1983 mini-series as two "Region 0" discs. Unfortunately, even though the packaging states "Digitally Enhanced", the picture quality of the discs leaves a lot to be desired and certainly is reproduced from many generations of copies down from the master. Bonus extras on the discs include interviews with Rebecca Gilling and James Reyne in 2001.

The 1986 series was released as a six disc set by MRA Entertainment. Marked as “Region 4” on the packaging and discs, it is actually encoded as "Region 0" and consequently will play on any PAL DVD player. Although the picture quality is generally better than the mini-series, various episodes seem to have been taken from different sources (as the different end boards show) and there is some tape distortion on some of the series. The set does not include the extra ending to tie up the loose ends – leaving the last episode with the unresolved original cliffhanger ending.

[edit] Starring Cast

[edit] With

[edit] Remake

Bollywood remade the miniseries into a feature film in Hindi with the title Khoon Bhari Maang (1988).

[edit] See also

[edit] External links