The Henderson Kids is an Australian television series made by Crawford Productions for Network Ten between 1985 and 1987.[1] It was created and storylined by Roger Moulton, who also wrote 5 episodes in the first series and 2 episodes in the second series.[2]
The Henderson Kids | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama |
Written by | Roger Moulton |
Directed by | Paul Moloney, Chris Langman |
Opening theme | "Carry on" by Chris Lloyds (instrumental) |
Ending theme | "Carry on" by Chris Lloyds |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 48 |
Production | |
Production location | Birregurra, Victoria |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Network Ten |
Release | 9 May 1985 29 August 1987 | –
Season one
editSynopsis
editThe series follows teenage siblings Steve (Paul Smith) and Tamara (Nadine Garner). They are forced to leave the city and move to the country to live with their uncle Mike (Nicholas Eadie) after their mother Alice (Diane Craig) is hit by a truck and killed. Mike is a police officer in the fictional town of Haven Bay.
The Henderson kids make a new life in Haven Bay and make friends with the local gang. They were Ted Morgan (Ben Mendelsohn), Colin "Cowboy" Clarke (Mark Hennessy), Charlotte "Char" Kernow (Kylie Minogue) and Brian "Brains" Buchanan (Bradley Kilpatrick).
Steve and Tamara defend the family land, Henderson's Point, against the schemes of ruthless businessman Ashley Wheeler (Peter Whitford). To compound matters, Steve falls in love with Wheeler's daughter Sylvia (Annie Jones).
Cast
editMain
edit- Paul Smith as Steve Henderson
- Nadine Garner as Tamara "Tam" Henderson
- Ben Mendelsohn as Ted Morgan
- Kylie Minogue as Charlatte '"Char" Kernow
- Mark Hennessy as Colin "Cowboy" Clarke
- Bradley Kilpatrick as Brian "Brains" Buchanan
- Annie Jones as Sylvia Wheeler
- Peter Whitford as Ashley Wheeler
- Nicholas Eadie as Uncle Mike
Recurring & guests
edit- Antoinette Byron as Pat Edwards
- Jane Hall as Regina Powell
- Tottie Goldsmith as Glynnis Wheeler
- Kevin Harrington as Gazza
- Peter O'Brien as Suds
- Stefan Dennis as Terry
- Nicholas Creed as Trevor Cathcart
- Diane Craig as Alice Henderson
- Reg Gorman as Kernow (4 episodes)
- Michael Aitkens as Walter "Wal" Mullens
Garner, Mendelsohn, Minogue, Kilpatrick, Jones, Hall, Goldsmith, Harrington, O'Brien and Dennis all went on to appear in Neighbours.[3]
Filming
editThe Haven Bay set footage was filmed in Birregurra, Victoria.
Season two
editSynopsis
editA second series (called The Henderson Kids II), set in the fictional bayside suburb of Westport followed in 1987. This had Steve and Tamara living in the city again, with their father Walter "Wal" Mullens (Michael Aitkens). They had a new gang of friends, including Vincent "Vinnie" Cerantonio (Alex Papps) as the leader of the Brown Street Boys (a gang of local high school kids on BMX bikes), twins Carol (Anita Cerdic) and Marty Summers (Nathan Croft), and Brian "Brains" Buchanan and Trevor Cathcart (Nicholas Creed), both holdovers from the original series.
Other central characters were the Henderson's next door neighbours Helen Marshall (Louise Howitt) and her 9-year-old daughter Sally (Marieke Hardy), their dad's shady business partner Harry (Ross Thompson) and his henchman Spider (John Jacobs), Sergeant Javorsky (Doug Bowles) of the Victorian police, Brown Street Boy Mick Dalton (Paul Hall) and the Westport High School 'snob' Miranda Kilsyth (Elizabeth Rule).
Cast
editMain
edit- Paul Smith as Steve Henderson
- Nadine Garner as Tamara "Tam" Henderson
- Alex Papps as Vincent "Vinnie" Cerantonio
- Anita Cerdic as Carol
- Nathan Croft as Marty Summers
- Bradley Kilpatrick as Brian "Brains" Buchanan
Recurring & guests
edit- Michael Aitkens as Walter "Wal" Mullens
- Louise Howitt as Helen Marshall
- Marieke Hardy as Sally
- Mary Ward as Mrs Cathcart
- Nicholas Creed as Trevor Cathcart
- Ross Thompson as Harry
- John Jacobs as Spider
- Doug Bowles as Sergeant Javorsky
- Paul Hall as Mick Dalton
- Elizabeth Rule as Miranda Kilsyth
Filming
editThe Westport footage was filmed in Williamstown, Melbourne.
Awards
editActress Nadine Garner won a Logie Award in 1985, and a Television Society of Australia Penguin Award (1987) for her portrayal of Tamara ("Tam") Henderson.
DVD releases
editA total of 24 episodes were produced. In 2007 Madman Entertainment released two 3-DVD sets of the series: The Henderson Kids (series one) and The Henderson Kids II. The DVD extras are a 13-minute TV promo for series 1 on the first The Henderson Kids DVD set and a short "goof reel" from series two on the DVD set The Henderson Kids II.
DVD name | Format | Ep # | Discs/Tapes | Region 4 (Australia) | Special Features | Distributors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Henderson Kids I | DVD | 24 | 3 | 2007 | 13-minute TV promo for series 1 on the first | Madman Entertainment |
The Henderson Kids II | DVD | 24 | 3 | 2007 | Short Goof Real | Madman Entertainment |
The Henderson Kids I | DVD | 24 | 3 | 2012 | N/A | Crawford Productions |
The Henderson Kids II | DVD | 24 | 3 | 2012 | N/A | Crawford Productions |
International broadcasts
editBoth series were screened in the UK during 1989 on Channel 4. It was also screened in Poland.[citation needed]}
The whole series was screened in New Zealand on TVNZ. The first season aired on Fridays from 13 February to 1 May 1987[4] , followed by the second season which aired from 24 July to 9 October 1987.[5]
The series aired Sunday evenings at 7:30 pm on GBC TV in Gibraltar where the series found much success, becoming the topic of conversation every Monday morning in schools.[original research?]
It also aired in Greece under the title The Henderson Legacy on the state TV channel, ERT2.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ "The Henderson Kids, series 1 episode 2 | NFSA".
- ^ Gray, Darren (24 November 2018). "Every episode of The Henderson Kids now on DVD". Archived from the original on 24 November 2018.
- ^ Maddox, Garry (16 November 2016). "Nicole Kidman, Russell Crowe and Kylie Minogue as you've never seen them". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ "Television and radio". The Press. 13 February 1987. p. 15.
- ^ "Television and radio". The Press. 24 July 1987. p. 15.