A Country Practice

A Country Practice

Main title caption.
Genre Soap opera/Comedy/Dramaseries
Created by James Davern
Starring (see credited cast list below)
Theme music composer Mike Perjanik
Opening theme A Country Practice (instrumental)
Ending theme Reprise
Country of origin Australia
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 14
No. of episodes 1,088 (List of episodes)
Production
Producer(s) James Davern
Running time 48 minutes
Production company(s) JNP Productions
Release
Original network Seven Network (1981–93)
Network Ten (1994)
Picture format 4.3 PAL
Audio format Stereo
Original release 18 November 1981 (1981-11-18) – 5 November 1994 (1994-11-05)

A Country Practice is a multi-Logie award-winning Australian television serial Comedy/drama series. It ran on the Seven Network for 1,058 episodes at 7.30 pm Monday and Tuesday nights, from 18 November 1981 to 22 November 1993. It was produced in ATN-7's production facility at Epping, Sydney. Exterior locations were filmed on location in Pitt Town and Oakville in the outskirts of Northwest Sydney. Several of the regular cast members became highly popular celebrities through their roles in the series. It also featured a number of native Australian animals adding to its enduring appeal both domestically and internationally. After the series was cancelled by the Seven Network in 1993 a reworked version of the series ran briefly on Network Ten in 1994. A Country Practice was the longest running Australian drama upon its demise, At its height the show attracted 8–10 million viewers weekly, when the population of the time was a mere 15 million, and was eventually sold to 48 countries.

Actress Lorrae Desmond, the first women on Australian television to win the Gold Logie, for The Lorrae Desmond Show, played Shirley Gilroy in ACP

Founding

A Country Practice creator, writer and original executive producer James Davern of JNP Productions, had written the pilot episode and entered a script contest for the Ten Network in 1979. He came third and won a merit award.,[1] although TEN turned the series down, the Seven Network picked up the series stating it liked the characters and setting. Davern would be inducted into the Logie Hall of Fame in 1991 and be honoured as an Order of Australia recipient in 2014.

Logie Awards

A Country Practice is the third most successful television program in the history of the Logie Awards, after Home and Away (1st) and Neighbours 2nd), having won 29 awards during its twelve years of production.[2]

Logie Awards 1983

Logie awards 1984

Logie Awards 1985

Logie Awards 1986

Logie Awards 1987

Logie Awards 1988

Logie Awards 1989

Logie Awards 1990

Logie Awards 1991

Logie Awards 1992

Logie Awards 1993

Format

Though sometimes considered a soap opera, the storylines of the show's two one-hour episodes screened over any one week formed a self-contained narrative block. The storylines were meant to have a primary appeal to adult and older youthful audiences, and in particular they had greater appeal to children from middle-class backgrounds.[3] As it did not have the open ended narrative of a traditional soap opera, it was technically a series.[4] Nevertheless, many storylines were developed as sub-plots for several episodes before becoming the focus of a particular week's narrative block. Overall, the programe "so emphasized the ongoing storylines of its major characters as to make the distinction between series and serial more or less meaningless".[4]

Setting and stories

The series followed the workings of a small hospital in the fictional New South Wales rural country town of Wandin Valley as well as its connected medical clinic, the towns veterinary surgery, RSL club/pub and local police station. The show's storylines focused on the staff, and regular patients of the hospital and general practice, their families, and other residents of the town. Through its weekly guest actors, who appeared in the series portrayed differing characters, it explored various social and medical problems. The series examined such topical issues as youth unemployment, suicide, drug addiction, HIV/AIDS and terminal illness, as well as Aborigines and their importance in modern Australian society. Apart from its regular rotating cast, mainly among the younger personnel, A Country Practice also had a cast of semi-regulars who would make appearances as the storylines permitted. One of the more popular and frequent characters from its inception included the valley's corrupt town Councillor Alfred Muldoon (Brian Moll). The program as well would also showcase a number of animal stars and Australian native wildlife, most famously Fatso the wombat. Fatso was played throughout the series by three separate wombats, Fatso (1981–1986) replaced due to temperament issues with the cast, George (1986–1990) replaced due to early signs of wombat mange (a marsupial viral disease), and Garth (1990 through series end).

Iconic storylines over its lengthy 12-year run included the wedding of Dr. Simon Bowen, to local vet Vicki Dean, in 1983, and the later wedding of Dr. Terence Elliot to Matron Rosemary Prior amidst the series' bushfire scenes that marked the final episodes. The death of nurse Donna Manning in a car crash, the off-screen death of longtime resident Shirley Gilroy in a plane crash, as well as the final undoing of town councillor Alf Muldoon, which were highly watched. The highest rating episode however featured the death of beloved farmer Molly Jones from leukemia in 1985. After being diagnosed, receiving treatment and battling the terminal illness, Molly retires to her garden, watching her husband Nurse Brenden and young daughter Chloe flying a kite and passes away peacefully as the screen fades to black. Molly's death storyline was originally written for an 11-week script, but producers realized that her death was proposed in a week the ratings were not being monitored, hence the storyline lasted 13 weeks and an extra two episodes.

Network Ten continuation

After its lengthy run on the Seven Network, just months after its demise it was announced that the serial would be picked up by Network Ten with a mainly new cast and a few key cast members continuing from the Seven series. Unlike the Seven series which was produced in Sydney, the Network Ten series was produced in Melbourne with location shooting in Emerald, Victoria. The new series debuted in April 1994, but it was not as successful as its predecessor and was abruptly cancelled in November.

Celebrity guest stars

A Country Practice became renowned for its long list of guest cameos, totaling over 1000 stars with well known mainly Australian actors (predominately of the period) that would appear in each week's two part episode arc, and indeed similar to other such series like Prisoner, literally every working actor in Australia at the time would appear in a prominent role or star guest appearance at one time or another, including for example: Ray Meagher, Amanda Muggleton and Sons and Daughters regulars Tom Richards and Leila Hayes. Some actors became more prominent during the series runs, and were classified as semi-regulars, appearing as the storyline permitted, Famous international stars included: Baz Luhrmann, Smokey Dawson, John Meillon (the program would also feature Meillon's one time wife June Salter), Sir Robert Helpmann, Nicole Kidman, Paul Kelly, Toni Collette, Delta Goodrem, Peter Phelps and Simon Baker. At the program's height even the then Prime Minister of Australia, Bob Hawke, appeared as himself.

Logie awards

The series is also the third most successful series in the history of the Logie Awards following Home and Away and Neighbours having won 29 times. Australian actress Georgie Parker would win 4 logies for her portrayal of Lucy Gardner. Apart from winning best series numerous times, many of its stars won logies: Brian Wenzel, Lorrae Desmond, Shane Porteous, Anne Tenney, Grant Dodwell, Shane Withington, Penny Cook and Joan Sydney. A Country Practice was ranked 14th in the 50 Years 50 Shows poll in 2005.

Cast List

Doctors

Nurses

Matrons and Directors of Nursing

Veterinary

Police

Park Ranger

The Hudsons

Miscellaneous

Home Media: DVD release

A Country Practice: Series 1–3 April 2006[5]
A Country Practice: Series 2 – Part 1–3 April 2006[6]
A Country Practice: Series 2 – Part 2–11 April 2007[7]
A Country Practice: Series 3 – Part 1–11 April 2007[8]
A Country Practice: Series 3 – Part 2–11 April 2007[9]
A Country Practice: Series 4 – Part 1–8 November 2007[10]
A Country Practice: Series 4 – Part 2–8 November 2007[11]
A Country Practice: Series 5 – Part 1–23 April 2008[12]
A Country Practice: Series 5 – Part 2–23 April 2008[13]
A Country Practice: Series 6 – Part 1–7 April 2010[14]
A Country Practice: Series 6 – Part 2–9 June 2010[15]
A Country Practice: Series 7 – Part 1–5 October 2011[16]
A Country Practice: Series 7 – Part 2–2 May 2012[17]
A Country Practice: Series 8 – Part 1–2 January 2014[18]
A Country Practice: Series 8 – Part 2–2 January 2014[19]
A Country Practice: Series 9 – Part 1–5 March 2014[20]
A Country Practice: Series 9 – Part 2–5 March 2014[21]
A Country Practice: Series 10 – Part 1–28 April 2014[22]
A Country Practice: Series 10 – Part 2-28 April 2014[23]
A Country Practice: Unforgettable Moments from Seasons 1–5 – December 2009[24]
A Country Practice: The Early Years – Seasons 1–6 – 1 May 2013[25]
A Country Practice: The Middle Years (Limited Edition) – Seasons 7–10 – 28 April 2014[26]

International Broadcasts

United Kingdom

In addition to being broadcast in Australia, the series also had a successful run on the ITV network in the United Kingdom. Shown regionally from 1982 to 1999, episodes were initially shown in their original format as a one-hour episode per week (Wednesdays), however, from 1984, Yorkshire Television screened it as two half-hour editions over two days (Mondays and Tuesdays). This format eventually led to the series being stripped Monday to Friday as five continuous daily episodes, and by 1990, the half-hour format was adopted across most of the ITV network.

Considered a daytime soap and notably several years behind Australian broadcasts, A Country Practice was very popular in the UK and achieved consolidated viewing figures of between 2–3 million which is good for daytime television. To that end, some regions (HTV and Granada) moved the later episodes of the series to an early evening slot of 17.10–17.40.

ITV Broadcasts

Satellite and Cable Broadcasts

Unlike other Australian soap opera's such as Prisoner and Sons and Daughters, A Country Practice has never been repeated in the UK.

A Country Practice also aired in Ireland, New Zealand, Germany, France, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Hong Kong, Zimbabwe, Kenya, and was carried on several United States and Canada stations, both during the show's lifetime and after.

It was estimated that at its height, the show received a worldwide audience of five to six million each week.

Australia

Aired on the Seven Network Monday and Thursday nights at 19:30. Seven aired repeats at 09:30 weekday mornings from 1996–2002. Foxtel's Hallmark Channel broadcast the complete series twice (including the short lived Network TEN series) from 2002 to 30 June 2010. Also Replayed a few episodes in 2014 on channel 7two at 2pm Monday to Friday.

Ireland

aired on RTÉ Two weekdays at 18:00 or 18.30. In Autumn 1988, to make way for Home and Away, it moved to main channel RTÉ One airing weekdays at 17:30. The final episode (1088) aired in 1996.[27] RTÉ stripped episodes into a 30-minute timeslot. RTÉ commenced a repeat in 1998 beginning with season 8 (1988) in a morning slot.

France

A Country Practice was named "À Coeur Ouvert".

Germany

A Country Practice was named "Das Buschkrankenhaus".

Italy

A Country Practice was named "Wandin Valley".

Norway

A Country Practice (called "Hverdagsliv") was broadcast on TV2 during the 1990s

Kenya

was also transmitted on Kenyan Television (VoK now KBC) during the 1980s.

Zimbabwe

broadcast on ZBC state television in the 1980s

New Zealand

was transmitted on TV2 on Sunday afternoons in the late 1980s and early 1990s

North America

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 1980s, until they were caught up to contemporary episodes in the early 1990s. 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.[1]. From 1991 to 1994, the show also aired on ASN in the Canadian Atlantic provinces. Four hour-long episodes aired each week, from Monday to Thursday with Monday's and Tuesday's episodes repeated on Saturday and Wednesday's and Thursday's episodes on Sunday. The station aired the show from episode 1 to somewhere in the early 700s, stopping when Showcase Television launched on 1 January 1995, and started airing the show from the start again.

United States The series was broadcast in the USA during the 1980s. Showcase Television began repeat airing of the show from episode 1 starting in January 1995. It broadcast one episode daily, from Monday to Friday, and completed the entire series run (including the 30-episode Network Ten series) in June 1999. It began rebroadcasting the entire series on 28 June 1999, with promises that the entire series would be broadcast for those who missed the first airing. However, a single line of text scrolling across the bottom of the screen during the 21 August 2000, episode announced that the show would be removed from the Showcase lineup as of Monday, 28 August 2000. According to the station's email autoresponse at the time, the decision was based on "declining viewership and a demand by viewers for more current programming". Sometime after that, Showcase changed their format to favour a less family-oriented and more adult-oriented viewership.

Novel

Series writer Judith Colquhoun, who also wrote episodes for Blue Heelers, Neighbours and Home and Away released a novel in 2015. Called New Beginnings, it is based on the early episodes of the series from 1981.

See also

References

  1. baybee. "A Country Practice (TV Series 1981–1993)". IMDb.
  2. "TV Week Logie Awards – Past Winners". Yahoo!7 TV.
  3. Jacinta Burke; Helen Wilson; Susanna Agardy (1983), "A Country Practice" and the child audience: a case study, Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, Melbourne. ISBN 0-642-87073-X
  4. 1 2 Bowles, Kate. Soap opera: 'No end of story, ever' in The Australian TV Book, (Eds. Graeme Turner and Stuart Cunningham), Allen & Unwin, St Leonards, NSW, 2000. ISBN 1-86508-014-4 p 127
  5. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  6. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  7. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  8. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  9. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  10. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  11. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  12. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  13. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  14. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  15. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  16. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  17. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  18. "Buy A Country Practice: Series 8 – Part 1 on DVD-Video from EzyDVD.com.au". ezydvd.com.au.
  19. "Buy A Country Practice: Series 8 – Part 2 on DVD-Video from EzyDVD.com.au". ezydvd.com.au.
  20. "Buy A Country Practice: Series 9 – Part 1 on DVD-Video from EzyDVD.com.au". ezydvd.com.au.
  21. "Buy A Country Practice: Series 9 – Part 2 on DVD-Video from EzyDVD.com.au". ezydvd.com.au.
  22. "Buy A Country Practice: Series 10 – Part 1 on DVD-Video from EzyDVD.com.au". ezydvd.com.au.
  23. "Buy A Country Practice: Series 10 – Part 2 on DVD-Video from EzyDVD.com.au". ezydvd.com.au.
  24. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  25. "Beyond Home Entertainment – Home page". Beyond Home Entertainment.
  26. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 14 March 2014. Retrieved 2014-03-14.
  27. "RTÉ TV Listings 1981 – 1996". Retrieved 23 April 2010.
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