Great Southern Television

Great Southern Television is an Australasian film and television production company with offices in Auckland and Sydney. The company specialises in drama, factual, and comedy and also produces light entertainment and reality shows. It was launched on June 1, 2002, and is owned by Philip Smith and Sir David Levene. Smith is a former journalist on the London Financial Times and is the GSTV management executive. Sir David Levene is a former retail magnate and a New Zealand Rich Lister.

Shows in production in 2013 include factuals Coast Australia for Foxtel's History Channel and starring Neil Oliver, Shearing Gang for Prime, and Drug Bust for TV3. The drama Agent Anna, for TVNZ, screened in 2013, gaining 422,000 viewers per episode, making it the most successful sitcom launch in NZ TV History. It has been commissioned for a second season.

GSTV is also in pre-production of the $3m movie, the Kick, which is funded by NZ on Air, and relates to the All Blacks winning the World Cup.

In August 2013 the Russian Channel Rossiya 1 announced it had commissioned a remake the GSTV drama "the Cult", a series devised by Smith, which originally screened on New Zealand's TV2. It will be produced by Star Media.

In 2010 the company received 12 nominations in the Qantas Film and Television Awards. In August 2009 Great Southern received 22 nominations. In the categories of Best Film; Best Comedy and Best Light Entertainment, Great Southern had two of the three nominations in each category. The company won six Qantas Awards on the night.[1]

Smith was named NZ Television Producer of the Year by the NZ Screen Industry Association, Spada, in 2008, along with colleague Rachel Gardner, who is an international film and drama producer. Gardner produces Agent Anna for GSTV.

The factual series, The Lion Man, has sold globally to 133 countries via distributors All3Media, London. Factual series, Remarkable Vets, has been broadcast on the National Geographic Channel and Million Dollar Catch has been sold to 13 countries.

The company has created and produced eight different comedy series in the past six years. Its show, Eating Media Lunch, won the best comedy award in 2008 after eight seasons on air.

Its light entertainment and reality team has made Who Wants to be a Millionaire, the Apprentice and the Singing Bee.

In 2008, two movies were released under the Great Southern Films title, Apron Strings and Show of Hands. Apron Strings was selected for the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival. Show of Hands was selected for the Montreal Film Festival. The company has three films currently in funded development with the New Zealand Film Commission.

The company has close distribution relations with DRG London via Zeal and Portman Film; Beyond Distribution; Verve Australia; and format deals with Mark Burnett Productions; DRG; Sony and Nordisk Film.

GSTV broadcasters include TVNZ, TV3, Prime New Zealand, The History Channel, Channel 7 Australia, Channel 9 Australia; ABC Australia, Discovery Channel, National Geographic Channel and BSkyB (UK).

Shows Produced

Comedy

Drama

Film

Factual

Light Entertainment / Reality

Documentary

New Media

Sport

Commercial Non Broadcast

References

  1. Qantas Awards screendaily.com
  2. EML Page

External links