Kangaroo Palace
Kangaroo Palace | |
---|---|
Directed by | Robert Marchand |
Produced by | Ewan Burnett |
Written by |
Deborah Cox Andrew Knight |
Starring |
Jacqueline McKenzie John Polson Rebecca Gibney Jeremy Sims Jonathan Firth Jerome Ehlers |
Music by | Tim Finn |
Cinematography | Kim Batterham |
Edited by | Anne Carter |
Release date | 25 May 1997 |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Kangaroo Palace is a 1997 drama television film which aired on Seven Network.[1]
Plot summary
In 1966, Catherine Macaleese (Jacqueline McKenzie) is counting the days until she meets her father, a distant childhood memory, and starts a new life with him in England. Heather Randall (Rebecca Gibney) is Catherine's cousin and closest friend who puts her marriage plans on hold to travel on the Oriana. Richard Turner (John Polson), an aspiring journalist, decides to try his luck on Fleet Street, and promises his fiancée, Sandy, that he will return in a few months. Jack Gill (Jeremy Sims), heading along a path of self-destruction, embarks on the journey at the last minute. On board, Jack disappears with the group's money and the trio arrive penniless. The only contact they have is a friend of Jack's, the mysterious Terence Foster-Burrows (Jonathan Firth). He shows little surprise for their predicament and offers them rooms in the Palace.
Cast
Actor/Actress | Role |
---|---|
Jacqueline McKenzie | Catherine Macaleese |
John Polson | Richard Turner |
Rebecca Gibney | Heather Randall |
Jeremy Sims | Jack Gill |
Jonathan Firth | Terence Foster-Burrows |
Jerome Ehlers | Simon Seymour |
Josephine Byrnes | Ann |
Alison Whyte | Barbara |
Kym Gyngell | Spider |
Susanne Chapman | Sandy |
Susie Edmonds | Lillian |
Jim Daly | Ted Rowlands |
Alexandra Sangster | Lucy |
Jan Frazer | Mrs. Turner |
Dennis Miller | Mr. Turner |
See also
References
- ↑ "All-time top-rating Australian mini-series on television". Screen Australia. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
External links
- Kangaroo Palace at the Internet Movie Database
- Kangaroo Palace at TV.com