The Box (Australian TV series)
The Box | |
---|---|
Genre | Soap opera |
Created by | Ian Jones - Tom Hegarty |
Written by |
|
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 4 |
No. of episodes | 603 |
Production | |
Running time | 90 minute premiere, 474 x 30 minutes - 128 60 minutes |
Production company | Crawford Productions |
Original release | |
Network | ATV |
Release | 11 February 1974 11 October 1977 | –
The Box is an Australian soap opera that ran on ATV-0 from 11 February 1974 until 11 October 1977 and on 0–10 Network affiliates around Australia.
The Box was produced by Crawford Productions which at the time was having great success producing police drama series in Australia. The Box was Crawfords' first soap opera, and was launched as a reaction to the enormous success of another adult soap opera Number 96.[1]
Synopsis
[edit]The Box was a drama set in a fictional Melbourne television station, called UCV Channel 12, and explores the day-to-day workings of the company and the professional and personal lives of the staff who work there. It featured elements that satirised the Australian television industry.
Characters in the series were said to be modelled on Australian television figures and personalities of the day. Sir Henry Usher was based on both media mogul Sir Frank Packer and Sir Reginald Ansett, owner of both Ansett Airlines and the O/10 network. The tea lady Mrs Hopkins (Lois Ramsay) was based on the company's own tea lady.[2]
The Box featured many self-referential elements. Additionally, like Number 96 it was famous for its adult storylines, frequent nude glimpses, and sexual content. Also like Number 96 it was spun off into a feature film adaptation, The Box.
Storylines
[edit]Along with constructing characters modelled on real-life Australian television figures of the day, The Box presented various fictional programs produced by UCV-12 that commented-on real-life Australian programs. Police procedural Manhunt, which was lumbered with a dim and accident-prone lead actor Tony Wild (Ken James), was much like the police series produced by Crawfords at that time. Variety program Big Night Out was an In Melbourne Tonight style production. Later the medical drama Mercy Flight seemed connected to early British series The Flying Doctor (1959). Other programs produced by the station included children's show Holliday Farm and period drama Gully Rider.
The initial episodes of The Box emphasised sex, scandal, the political machinations of station personnel, and featured several nude scenes. The first episode showed a sexy young woman named Felicity (played by 20-year-old Helen Hemingway) seducing Big Night Out host Gary Burke (Peter Regan). Felicity then announced she was a 15-year-old schoolgirl, causing the station to try to avoid the scandal. Scheming bisexual television magazine journalist Vicki Stafford (Judy Nunn) exploited the situation and had Felicity pose for a nude centrefold with Tony Wild. Vicki also kissed Felicity, in Australian TV's first ever lesbian kiss.[3][4] Felicity was soon revealed to be over 18, and schemed her way into the station to appear on Big Night Out. Vicki later switched to working for the station, producing and presenting daytime chat show Girl Talk.
The Box also featured an openly gay television producer, the flamboyant Lee Whiteman (Paul Karo), and gossipy tea lady Mrs. Hopkins (Lois Ramsey). Mrs. Hopkins' son Wayne (Bruce Kilpatrick) was released from prison during the show's first year. When he fell in love with Lee, Mrs. Hopkins was forced to accept that her son was a homosexual. Lee also clashed with Gary Burke upon taking over as producer of Big Night Out. Gary continually schemed to retain his position on the show.
A feature film adaptation of The Box made at the end of the first year of production featured most of the regular series characters but had a stand-alone story. The film emphasised comedy to a greater degree than the series version at that time.
The program's second year (1975) increasingly emphasised comedy, much of it focused on Tony Wild. Enid Parker (Jill Forster) arrived as a jolly but frumpish spinster secretary. Enid was perturbed when her glamorous sister, the scheming Emma (also played by Forster), showed up and impersonated her. Lee had a brief relationship with closeted newsreader John Barnett (Donald McDonald). Cheryl Rixon appeared on a recurring basis in 1975–1976 as television starlet Angela O'Malley, and appeared nude in the series several times.
For the 1976 season, Jock Blair returned as the program's producer and announced his plans to refocus the series to emphasise adult drama as it had done in its first year.[5]
Production
[edit]The Crawford Productions series was created and written by Ian Jones and Tom Hegarty and commenced at the studios of Melbourne's ATV-0 (now ATV-10) in October 1973. The first premiere 90-minute episode screened on ATV-0 on 11 February 1974 at 9.00pm. The program was initially shot in black and white, before switching to colour production in late 1974.
Initially, The Box was proposed with the title The Dream Makers, however Crawfords' head executive Hector Crawford, believed network owner Reginald Ansett would reject the series, based on its adult themes and risque content. The series was therefore offered to the Seven Network who turned it down, and the series was put on hold for some time, re-pitched to the 0-10 Network under new title The Box, it was purchase in a deal by Ansett on 14 July 1973. It proved to be a huge hit, ranking as Australia's second most popular show in 1974. (Number 96 was Australia's highest rating television production that year.)[6]
A feature film adaptation of the series was produced in January 1975 and released later that year. It placed a greater emphasis on comedy than the series at that time, and featured several scenes featuring full frontal nudity. The film's sets were later moved to the television studios to be used in the series. In the show's storyline an office fire in October 1975 explained the change in appearance.
Production of the series was in half-hour episodes for the first two years. In some regions two episodes were aired consecutively in one-hour blocks. Other regions broadcast the serial as five half-hour instalments each week, stripped across each weekday evening. Starting with the 1976 season, episodes were compiled in one-hour instalments.
In Melbourne episodes screened as two, one-hour episodes each week throughout 1976.
Production on the series ended 1 April 1977 due to declining ratings and the closing episodes screened through 1977 in a late-night timeslot. The final episode, 603, was broadcast in Melbourne on 11 October 1977.
Regular cast 1974-1975
[edit]Actor | Role |
---|---|
George Mallaby | Paul Donovan |
Barrie Barkla | Max Knight |
Ken James | Tony Wild |
Fred Betts | Sir Henry Usher |
Peter Regan | Gary Burke |
Belinda Giblin | Kay Webster/Kay Webster-Brookes |
Paul Karo | Lee Whiteman |
Judy Nunn | Vicki Stafford |
Briony Behets | Judy Donovan |
Fred 'Cul' Cullen | Eddie Holliday |
Helen Hemingway | Felicity Baker |
Kay McFeeter | Cathy Holliday |
Graeme Blundell | Don Cook |
Monica Maughan | Jean Ford |
Lois Ramsay | Mrs. Hopkins |
Ken Snodgrass | Jack O'Brien |
Luigi Villani | Mick Maloney |
Lynda Keane | Barbie Gray/Barbie Cook |
Vanessa Leigh | Fanny Adams |
Carol Passmore | Chris Burke |
Margaret Cruickshank | Marion Knight |
Shane Porteous | David Warner |
Syd Heylen | Vern Walters |
Owen Weingott | Phillip Bailey-Smith |
Bruce Kilpatrick | Wayne Hopkins |
Patricia Stephenson | Susie King |
Delvene Delaney | Penny O'Brien |
David Downer | Brad Miller |
John Krummel | Frank Roberts |
John Waters (actor) | Michael Brookes |
Guest cast
[edit]Colleen Hewett appeared as herself resident singer on 'Big Night Out' singing Roberta Flack song "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" in the TV pilot movie episode. Hewett was also featured in episode 351 in 1975, again as herself singing on 'Big Night Out'.
Deborra-Lee Furness appeared as a recurring one-line extra in episodes produced in late 1974.
Cast notes
[edit]Judy Nunn, Barrie Barkla, Ken James, Ken Snodgrass and Lois Ramsay appeared throughout the series' entire run. Barrie Barkla actually worked at a TV station (CTC-7 in Canberra) before moving to Melbourne to play his role as the station manager in The Box. After The Box finished up, Barkla moved to Perth where he worked as a presenter for the Nine Network station STW-9
Peter Regan, who played the part of TV host Gary Burke, went on to become host of ABC's Quest variety series in 1976–78.
Scriptwriters
[edit]Key writers for the early episodes included Tom Hegarty (born c. 1934-1935 - 22 September 2023),[7] Don Battye and Jonathan Dawson.
Awards
[edit]George Mallaby won the Best Australian Actor-National Logie Award in 1975 for his portrayal of television executive Paul Donovan in The Box.
Paul Karo won the Best Australian Actor-National Logie Award in 1976 for his portrayal of gay producer Lee Whiteman.
Feature film
[edit]A 1975 feature film, The Box, was produced based on the series, and featuring much of the same cast. The film also features Graham Kennedy playing himself, and Cornelia Frances in the key role of Dr. S. M. Winter, an efficiency expert brought in to improve operations at UCV-12.
A DVD release of the feature film was announced in 2023 and was made available on 1 February 2024.
DVD releases
[edit]In late 2014 Volume 1 of The Box, featuring a selection of episodes from the first year, was released by Crawford Productions. In 2015 Volume 2, which features another selection of episodes from the first year of the series, was released. The releases are described as containing a "selection" of episodes due to a small number of episodes that are excluded as the original tapes were missing or damaged. Each release contains the equivalent of 50 thirty-minute episodes (the first episode is feature length). From the first DVD of 50 episodes, six are excluded as they were missing or damaged. One episode is missed in volumes 2's run of 50 episodes.
The run of episodes continues in Volume 3 which was released in September 2015. Volume 3 contains 50 episodes and there are no missing episodes in this run. Volume 4 was released in January 2017, also with no missing episodes.
After more than a six year hiatus, Crawfords released Volume 5 at the end of September 2023. Volume 6 of the series was released through Crawfords in October 2023 and Volume 7 was released in December 2023. A further seven volumes are still to be released as of February 2024. The Box movie was released in February 2024.
October 11, 2024 sees the final Volume 14 of The Box TV series released.
Title | Format | Ep # | Discs | Region 4 (Australia) | Special Features | Distributors | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Box (Volume 01) | DVD | 44 | 07 | 2014 | None | Crawford Productions | Six Episodes are Missing. |
The Box (Volume 02) | DVD | 55-105 | 07 | 2015 | None | Crawford Productions | Episode 57 (Missing) original tape damaged. |
The Box (Volume 03) | DVD | 106-155 | 07 | September 2015 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 04) | DVD | 156-205 | 07 | 16 January 2017 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 05) | DVD | 206-255 | 07 | 29 September 2023 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 06) | DVD | 256-305 | 07 | 31 October 2023 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 07) | DVD | 306-355 | 07 | 29 November 2023 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 08) | DVD | 356-405 | 07 | 1 March 2024 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 09) | DVD | 406-455 | 07 | 3 April 2024 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 10) | DVD | 456-491 | 07 | 30 May 2024 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 11) | DVD | 492-519 | 07 | 24 June 2024 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 12) | DVD | 520-547 | 07 | 29 July 2024 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 13) | DVD | 548-575 | 07 | 26 August 2024 | None | Crawford Productions | None |
The Box (Volume 14) | DVD | 576-603 | 07 | 11 October 2024 | Last episode has audio commentary from TV historian Andrew Mercado.
Plus an all new exclusive 48 minute retrospective documentary on The Box. |
Crawford Productions | None |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Albert Moran, Moran's Guide to Australian TV Series, AFTRS 1993 p 91-92
- ^ "The Box".[dead link]
- ^ Monaghan, Whitney (February 2020). "Lesbian, gay and bisexual representation on Australian entertainment television: 1970–2000". Media International Australia. 174 (1): 49–58. doi:10.1177/1329878X19876330. ISSN 1329-878X.
- ^ O'Meara, Damien; Monaghan, Whitney (12 March 2024). "We studied two decades of queer representation on Australian TV, and found some interesting trends". The Conversation. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
- ^ Webster, Allan. Box Turns on the Heat. Observer TV. 28 December 1975, pp 4–5.
- ^ Beilby, Peter. Australian TV: The First 25 Years. Cinema Papers: Melbourne, 1981. p 45.
- ^ David Knox. "Vale: Tom Hegarty". TV T.
External links
[edit]- Crawford Productions
- Aussie Soap Archive: The Box – Overview and review
- The Box at IMDb
- Australian television soap operas
- Network 10 original programming
- Television series about television
- Television shows set in Victoria (state)
- 1974 Australian television series debuts
- 1977 Australian television series endings
- Black-and-white Australian television shows
- Television series by Crawford Productions
- Australian English-language television shows