Sky Mangel

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Sky Mangel

Stephanie McIntosh as Sky Mangel (2007)
Neighbours character
Portrayed by Miranda Fryer (1989–91)
Stephanie McIntosh (2003–07)
Duration 1989–91, 2003–07
First appearance 1 February 1989
Last appearance 3 August 2007
Created by Ray Kolle
Introduced by Don Battye (1989)
Ric Pellizerri (2003)
Classification Former, regular
Profile
Occupation Student at Erinsborough High (2003–05)
Waitress (2003–07)
Cartoon writer (2004–05)
Student at Eden Hills University (2006–07)
DJ (2006)
Telemarketer (2006)
Home Port Douglas

Sky Mangel (née Bishop) is a fictional character from the Australian soap opera Neighbours, mainly played by Stephanie McIntosh. She made her first on-screen appearance on 1 February 1989, played by Miranda Fryer. McIntosh took over the role on 13 August 2003 when the character returned to the show. Sky made her final appearance on 3 August 2007.

Casting

Miranda Fryer was cast in the role of an infant Sky after being spotted in a supermarket.[1] When the character was brought back in 2003, Stephanie McIntosh was cast in the role.[2] McIntosh told Heather Gallagher from The Age that she had completed a term of Year 12 when she was offered the part of Sky. She made the decision to leave school because the role was "just too good to refuse."[2] McIntosh made her first screen appearance as Sky on 13 August 2003.[3]

On 24 December 2006, Fiona Byrne from the Herald Sun reported that McIntosh was to leave Neighbours. McIntosh told the show's producers that she wanted to move on when her contract expired in early 2007.[4] McIntosh commented that she was sad about leaving, but added "I kind of feel it's been a really great four years, but I'm ready for new challenges."[5]

Development

Characterisation

McIntosh described Sky as being "a lot of fun, intrigued about life and very positive."[2] She said that Sky was "pretty out there", more than herself, but could not ask for a better character to portray.[2] The actress also thought that a lot of viewers could relate to Sky, who had endured the tragedy of her mother's death and bullying at school.[2] McIntosh added "She's shown you can stand up for yourself and that's OK."[2] For the role, McIntosh, who is a natural blonde, had to cut her hair short and dye it black and blue.[2] The actress told Gallagher that she hated Sky's hair and it made things difficult for her in real-life, saying "A couple of times I walked into a shop and people watched me, waiting to see if I was going to steal anything."[2] Sky's hairstyle later became long and blonde, which McIntosh revealed had come from her, but it was also in keeping with the character's evolution.[2]

Same-sex kiss

In 2004, Lana Crawford (Bridget Neval) was introduced to Neighbours. She was the soap's first ever openly lesbian character.[6] Sky was seen by viewers becoming friends with Lana and they later shared Neighbours' first on-screen lesbian kiss.[7]

After the kiss was shown in the G-rated timeslot, the storyline was attacked by radio callers and conservative groups for "making homosexuality look cool".[7][8] Peter Stokes, chief executive of Christian group Salt Shakers said "It just saddens me that we give our young people the message that these relationships are OK".[7] Ric Pellizzeri, Neighbours' executive producer, said the show was reflecting reality by becoming more contemporary. He said "We are not condoning or promoting homosexuality...ultimately, we're telling a story about tolerance".[7] Pellizzeri also added that the kiss was as far as the show would go, but it would not be "dissuaded from telling stories about homosexuality".[7]

Storylines

Backstory

Sky was born in 1987 to Kerry Bishop (Linda Hartley-Clark) and Eric Jensen (John Ley). Kerry wanted to settle down, but Eric decided he was not ready to commit to a family and left to continue being a hippy. When Sky was two, Kerry decided to take her to Erinsborough to meet her grandfather, Harold Bishop (Ian Smith). Kerry had been estranged from her father for a number of years. Harold was initially shocked to see Kerry and Sky, but Harold was happy to have a granddaughter. He invited Kerry and Sky to move in with him and his wife, Madge Bishop (Anne Charleston).

1989–91

A few months after moving into Ramsay Street, Kerry marries Joe Mangel (Mark Little) and Sky gains a father and a brother, Toby (Finn Greentree-Keane; Ben Guerens) when Joe and Kerry officially adopt each other's child. During a picnic with Harold and Kerry, Sky is bitten by a Redback spider. She is rushed to hospital, where luckily she survives. A few months later, Madge is knocked unconscious while she is looking after Sky, and a chip pan catches fire. Sky and Madge are saved by the family's pet dog, Bouncer, who answers the telephone and barks into it for help. In 1990, a pregnant Kerry is killed by a stray bullet while protesting against duck hunters. Sky was too young to realise exactly what had happened to her mother.

Shortly after Kerry's death, Eric shows up wanting custody of Sky. Joe fights Eric for Sky, but the court awards custory to Eric. Joe takes Sky and Toby, but realises that he cannot live his life on the run and returns Sky to Eric. Eric later allows Sky to return to Joe. Sky gains a mother figure in the form of Joe's new wife, Melanie Pearson (Lucinda Cowden). Joe, Melanie and Sky move to the countryside. Joe and Melanie later divorce and Sky grows up without a mother figure.

2003–07

Joe gets engaged to his new girlfriend after she discovers she is pregnant and Sky has difficulty coping with the new additions to the family. She decides to go to Erinsborough to visit Harold. Harold believes Sky is a burglar, when she lets herself in through his back door. He barely recognises her as she is now a teenager. However, Sky reveals her true identity and Harold invites her to stay. Harold grew concerned when he thought he smelt Cannabis in Sky's room, but Sky tells Harold that she had just been burning incense. Sky was hurt that Harold suspected her of taking drugs and he tried to make it up to her. Harold decides to introduce Sky to Boyd Hoyland (Kyal Marsh). Sky and Boyd bond and begin hanging out together.

Sky has a hard time settling in at Erinsborough High School as her blue hair and dress sense make her stand out. Erin Perry (Talia Zucker) bullied and teased Sky about her appearance. Erin and her friends later knock over a portable toilet that Sky is in at the school formal. Sky and Boyd's friendship caused embarrassment for him at school and he once denied he was friends with her. Sky was hurt, but Boyd kisses her in front of the school. Sky and Boyd eventually lose their virginity to each other.

Sky's uncle David (Kevin Harrington), his wife Liljana (Marcella Russo) and their daughter Serena (Lara Sacher) move in with Sky and Harold, while their new house is being built. Sky tries to stop Serena sneaking out to a night club, but ends up going with her. Sky and Serena argue and Sky is followed by a guy who tries it on with her. Sky runs home and is caught and grounded by Harold, while Serena watches. Sky comes face to face with John Swan (David Murray), the duck hunter who shot her mother. Sky follows him to the wetlands to confront him. David goes with her and she attacks John. John explains that he does not hunt anymore and returns to the wetlands to remember Kerry. Sky then changes her image and reverts to her blonde hair.

Lana Crawford begins working at the Coffee Shop and enrolls at Erinsborough High. Sky and Lana fight and they are placed in detention together. Sky and Lana gradually get to know each other better and they become friends. During a sleepover one night, Lana, having read too much into Sky's friendly feelings for her, kisses Sky. Sky is shocked and Lana runs away. Lana later admits to Sky that she is a lesbian. They later create a cartoon strip together and sell it to an underground gay magazine. When Lana tells her she is leaving, Sky impulsively kisses her. Boyd finds out about the kiss and dumps Sky. They get back together with the help of Serena. Lana leaves for Canada, but stays in touch with Sky.

Sky and Boyd's relationship breaks down when Sky finds out that Boyd kissed Serena. Sky then begins dating Dylan Timmins (Damien Bodie). Sky and Dylan begin working together to stop corporate giant Affirmacon from turning Erinsborough into a giant shopping mall. Sky joins Dylan, David, Liljana and Serena in a joy flight to celebrate twenty years of Lassiters. While the plane is crossing the Bass Strait, a bomb goes off and the plane goes down. Sky and Dylan survive, but David, Liljana and Serena are killed.

Sky attends art classes at Eden Hills University and becomes attracted to her art teacher, Jean-Pierre Valasco (Steven Cabral). She sleeps with him and Dylan finds out. The couple break up. This leaves Sky depressed and sleeps with Dylan's brother Stingray (Ben Nicholas). Shortly after, she discovers that she is pregnant. Sky realises that the baby could be Stingray's. Sky asks Dylan if they can get back together. Dylan tells his girlfriend, Elle Robinson (Pippa Black) that he is thinking of getting back together with Sky. Elle then fakes an illness, so Dylan stays with Elle until he discovers the truth.

Sky is scared as she is lying about the baby's father. Dylan tells Sky he loves her and they kiss. Dylan later asks Sky to marry him and she accepts. Sky faints and is taken to the hospital. She tells Dylan the truth about the baby and Dylan ends their engagement. Dylan then gets back together with Elle. While Sky is in hospital, she shares a room with Carmella Cammeniti's (Natalie Blair) cousin, Teresa (Hannah Greenwood). Teresa plans to steal Sky's baby after she is born to replace the baby she lost. Sky gives birth to a daughter, who she names Kerry after her mother. Teresa sets fire to the hospital and Sky is moved to another wing. Sky realises that Kerry is missing. However, it emerges that Stingray took Kerry and passed out because he was drunk. Dylan finds them and he takes Kerry, but Elle returns her to Sky anonymously.

Karl tells Sky that Kerry is more developed than he thought and that there is a chance that Dylan is her father. It is later proven that Dylan was Kerry's father and Sky considers reporting Karl to the Medical Board. Sky and Dylan become friends again. Sky begins a relationship with Stingray. Kerry is diagnosed with leukaemia and Stingray is a bone marrow match. Sky has visions that Stingray is going to die and she organises a commitment ceremony for them. Stingray later dies at his mother's birthday party, from an aneurysm.

Sky starts seeing spiritualist, Terrence Chesterton (Scott Johnson), who is running a scam with his partner, Charlotte Stone (Rachel Gordon). Sky becomes suspicious about Terrence and tells him a fictional story about Stingray. Terrence responds as if it really happened and Sky discovers the truth. She confronts him and as he grabs her, she hits him over the head. He falls unconscious and Sky runs off. Charlotte finds Terrence and kills him, framing Sky. Sky is jailed for murder. Sky is freed from jail after Boyd tricks Charlotte into confessing the truth about Terrence. Sky meets the recipient of Stingray's heart, Caleb Maloney (Nick Russell) and she grows close to him. Sky decides to move to Port Douglas, so that Kerry can be closer to Dylan. Boyd decides to go with her and they depart together. Harold later mentions that Sky is 6 months pregnant.

Reception

For her portrayal of Sky, McIntosh received a nomination for Most Popular New Female Talent at the 2004 Logie Awards.[9] The following year, Boyd and Sky were nominated for Best Couple at the Inside Soap Awards.[10] In 2006, she received the Fave Female Hottie award at the Nickelodeon Australian Kids' Choice Awards.[11]

Upon Sky's return, Robin Oliver from The Sydney Morning Herald quipped "Watching Neighbours since way back? You may recall Sky, the cheeky young daughter of the greenie martyr Kerry Bishop (who was killed during a duck hunt). Sky is now a rebellious teen (Stephanie McIntosh) and drops in on her grandfather, Harold (Ian Smith), and Lou (Tom Oliver)."[3] Larissa Dubecki from The Age praised McIntosh and said "I also love that her alter ego Sky accessorises her 1980s-wear with miscellaneous bits of material, wears coloured hair extensions in her knotty blonde locks and is a bit of a proto-feminist in the Erinsborough High yard, the kind of forthright suburban bogan with a heart of gold who is destined to break the heart of new bad boy Dylan."[12] Dubecki thought Sky was the "perfect antidote" to Delta Goodrem and added that "the fabulous Sky" would probably get to the bottom of Paul's latest plot.[12]

A BBC Online writer stated that Sky's most notable moment was "Coming face to face with John Swan – the man who killed her mother."[13] Describing Sky, a writer for media company Virgin Media said "As Harold's eccentric granddaughter, Sky Mangel spent her time on Ramsay Street dating Boyd Hoyland, becoming an artist and having a baby with Stingray Timmins. Phew."[14] In a separate feature, Sky's 2003 return to the show was placed at number Ten on Virgin's "Soap Comebacks" list.[15] In 2007, readers from the Herald Sun placed Lana and Sky's kiss at number nine on thee list of Neighbours Top Ten moments.[16] A reporter said "It's rare that Neighbours attracts the attention of the shock jocks around the country, but that's what happened when Sky Bishop, played by Stephanie McIntosh, gave Lana, played by Bridge Neval, a kiss. Sky was exploring her sexuality and the scene was one of the most talked about ever in the press. Lana left Erinsborough and Sky has gone on to be an unmarried mum".[16]

In 2010, to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Neighbours, a reporter for Sky profiled 25 characters of which they believed were the most memorable in the show's history.[17] Sky was included on the list and the reporter commented "Sky was a classic soap child who left for a few years and came back far more attractive. It's little wonder that she became the focus of a teen brigade including Dylan, Stingray, Boyd and Serena, not to mention that brief lesbian period with Lana. With her beloved Grandpa Harold on hand to dispense advice when she variously lost her family, got pregnant, and lost the father of her baby, Stingray, she brought sunny confidence to her regular visits to the funeral home".[17] To celebrate Neighbours' 6000th episode in August 2010, TV Week put together a list of the top 25 Neighbours characters. Sky was included in the list and a writer for the magazine commented "With a teenage pregnancy, a penchant for activism and a same-sex affair, Sky was never boring".[18]

References

  1. Morrison 1991, p.15.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Gallagher, Heather (29 May 2005). "Stephanie McIntosh". The Age (Fairfax Media). Retrieved 24 July 2013. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Oliver, Robin (11 August 2003). "TV previews". The Sydney Morning Herald (Fairfax Media). Retrieved 24 July 2013. 
  4. Byrne, Fiona (24 December 2006). "Shake-up on Ramsay St". Herald Sun (The Herald and Weekly Times). Retrieved 17 July 2010. 
  5. Rigden, Clare (10–16 March 2007). "Steph's Big Move". TV Week (ACP Magazines): 24–26. 
  6. "Galleries: Decades of Neighbours". Courier Mail (Queensland Newspapers). Retrieved 24 June 2010. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Nguyen, Kenneth (27 September 2004). "Soapie kiss sparks outcry". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 12 June 2010. 
  8. "Take 2: Neighbours lesbian scene". The Daily Telegraph. News Limited. 13 May 2009. Retrieved 12 June 2010. 
  9. "2004 Logies nominations". The Age (Fairfax Media). 16 April 2004. Retrieved 17 July 2010. 
  10. "Support your favourite stars!". Inside Soap (Hachette Filipacchi UK) (31): 44. 6–12 August 2005. 
  11. DeMott, Rick (16 October 2006). "Simpsons Are Top Toon at Nick’s Australian Kids' Choice Awards". Animation World Network. Retrieved 17 July 2010. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 Dubecki, Larissa (19 May 2005). "Critic's view – Monday". The Age (Fairfax Media). Retrieved 24 July 2013. 
  13. "Character: Sky Mangel". BBC. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 14 August 2012. 
  14. "Neighbours ruined my life – Stephanie McIntosh – Sky Mangel". Virgin Media. 2009. Retrieved 28 April 2010. 
  15. "Soap comebacks". Virgin Media. Retrieved 17 July 2010. 
  16. 16.0 16.1 "Your all-time favourite moment". Herald Sun (The Herald and Weekly Times). 11 July 2007. Retrieved 11 June 2010. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 "Neighbours: 25 Top Characters". Sky Digital (BSkyB). 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2010. 
  18. "Top 25 Characters". TV Week (ACP Magazines): 5. 23–27 August 2010. 

External links

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