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The Restless Years[1] is an Australian soap opera which followed the lives of several Sydney school-leavers and the drama and relationships faced by young adults. It was created by Reg Watson and produced by the Reg Grundy Organisation for Network Ten.
The Restless Years | |
---|---|
Genre | Soap opera |
Created by | Reg Watson |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 780 |
Production | |
Producer | Don Battye (later years)[1] |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production company | Reg Grundy Organisation |
Original release | |
Network | Ten Network |
Release | 6 December 1977 12 November 1981 | –
The series debuted in a prime time slot on 6 December 1977 (during the end-of-year TV non-ratings period, in the vein of the Seven Network serial Cop Shop, which had premiered the previous week in the out of ratings period) and was creator Watson's second successful soap opera in Australia, following The Young Doctors. It had a successful run of four years, until December 1981, and ran 781 x 30 minute episodes. It was not renewed by the network due to declining ratings. The series had a predominantly young audience.
The series was Grundy's third foray into creating successful soap operas, and followed a similar theme to their previous school room drama Class of '74.[1] The Restless Years also holds the distinction, with a handful of other Grundy serials, of having never been broadcast, or been remade, in the United Kingdom.
Theme tune
editThe opening and closing theme title sequence was played over a melancholy piano tune, over a shot of rolling clouds while an angelic chorus would intone, It's only a journey, through our restless years, let our hearts run free....
The rather maudlin tune and refrain set a pensive and sad tone.[1]
In a promotional move, the network had singer Renee Geyer, record a funky rock ballad based on the theme tune, and it was used as the Ten Network's identification mark.[1]
Cast
editThere was a high turnover of attractive youngsters in the cast, who made up the students of school graduates, including Olivia Baxter, played by Zoe Bertram, and rebellious youth Peter Beckett, played by Nick Hedstrom, however the series' most enduring character would be Dr. Bruce Russell, played by 28 year-old English-born Number 96 star Malcolm Thompson who before settling in Australia had previously spent a 10-month stint featuring in British TV soap opera Coronation Street.
The series made use of established actors to provide the backbone, including former school teacher and dignified middle-aged spinster Miss Elizabeth McKenzie, played by veteran actress June Salter, who would emerge as the heart of the series.
Original cast members Salter and Hedstrom left the series in late 1980 and Bertram left in late 1981, leaving Thompson as the only remaining original cast member, and the only cast member to continue through the show's entire run. Salter and Hedstrom returned for the final episode.
Cast
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Actor | Role | Ref |
---|---|---|
June Salter | Miss Elizabeth McKenzie | [1] |
Malcolm Thompson | Dr. Bruce Russell | [1] |
Deborah Coulls/Sue Smithers | Penny Russell | [1] |
Nick Hedstrom | Peter Beckett | [1] |
Sonny Blake | Alan Archer | [1] |
Julieanne Newbould | Alison Clarke | [1] |
Graham Thorburn | Barry King | [1] |
Stanley Walsh | Clive Archer | [1] |
Tina Grenville | Louise Archer | [1] |
Lynette Curran | Jean Hutton (later Stafford) | [1] |
John Benton | Mr. Richard Dawson (school teacher) | [1] |
Zoe Bertram | Olivia Baxter | [1] |
Noel Trevarthen | Jeff Archer | [1] |
Peggy Thompson | Carol Archer | [1] |
Michael C. Smith | Shane Archer | [1] |
John Hamblin | A.R. Jordan | [1] |
Richard Gilbert | Mervyn Baggott | [1] |
Sharon Higgins | Nancy James | [1] |
Jill Forster | Heather Russell | [1] |
Bruce Barry | Miles Dunstan | [1] |
Ivar Kants | Ken Garrett | [1] |
Victoria Nicolls | Raelene Geddes (later Archer) | [1] |
Diane Craig | Gail Lawrence | [1] |
Lenore Smith | Diane Archer | [1] |
Tom Burlinson | Mickey Pratt | [1] |
Jamie Glesson | Tim Watson | [1] |
Vince Martin | Craig Garside | [1] |
Benita Collings | Clare Moran | [1] |
Joy Chambers | Rita Merrick | [1] |
Antoinette Byron | Tracey Williams | |
Peter Mochrie | Rick Moran | |
Penny Cook | Susie Denning | |
Ron Haddrick | Greg Denning | |
Anna Hruby | Sally Kennedy | |
Martin Sacks | Adam Lee | |
Warren Blondell | Shaun Williams | |
Joanne Stanley | Sarah Williams | |
Lisa Crittenden | Briony Thompson | |
Jacqui Gordon | ||
Peter Phelps | Kevin Ryan | |
Kim Lewis | Julie Scott | |
Kerri-Anne Kennerley | Melinda Burgess | |
David Argue | Sammy Martin | |
Anne Haddy | ||
Vanessa Downing | Georgie |
Famous alumni
editThere was a high turnover of young performers in the series, and indeed it was a training ground for many stars including Peter Mochrie in his debut as Ric Moran. He would go on to appear in film Winter of Our Dreams starring Bryan Brown and Judy Davis.
Singer and TV personality Tom Burlinson, and then-singer Kerri-Anne Kennerley both appeared in early acting roles.[1]
Others included Lenore Smith, Penny Cook (A Country Practice and E Street), Anna Hruby, Martin Sacks (Blue Heelers), Warren Blondell, Joanne Stanley, Lisa Crittenden (Sons and Daughters, Prisoner) and Jacqui Gordon, while Peter Phelps and Kim Lewis would also find fame on Sons and Daughters.[1]
Storylines
editThe series made use of dramatic storylines involving murders, kidnapping, suicides, amnesia, blackmail, serial killers, blackmail, divorce, and prostitution among the more standard elements such as teenage problems, unemployment, romance, jealousy, money-making schemes, and parental problems.[1]
The show's younger characters were seen living in various share households. Their storylines frequently involved romances, attempts to find a job, career problems. There were some family groups where the parents endured marital infidelity, divorce, problems with their children.
Dr Bruce Russell's first wife, Alison (Julieanne Newbould), suffered a miscarriage and was soon afterwards killed by terrorists while on holiday in Asia. Bruce later married Olivia Baxter. She fell pregnant but there were complications. Bruce arranged for her to have an abortion as the pregnancy could harm her health. After this she became mentally deranged and divorced him.[2] Olivia subsequently snatched a baby and went on the run.
The Restless Years, unlike previous series, did not focus on a physical locale, although presented a loose set of relationships where frequent phone calls defined the facilitated links, and frequently occur in the various foyers of the apartment building where the characters resided. Although various scenes were featured at a local bar called "Thommo's", a much frequented cafe, and subsequently a youth refuge and a cafe called the "Beck and Call", the series although filmed in the in-house studios, including shopping centres, parks, gardens and the beach. The physical relationships from the various residences were not clearly defined, and the established logic was restricted to a subset of regulars.[1]
Famous alumni
editThere was a high turnover of young performers in the series, and indeed it was a training ground for many stars including Peter Mochrie in his debut as Ric Moran. He would go on to appear in film Winter of Our Dreams starring Bryan Brown and Judy Davis.
Others included Lenore Smith, Penny Cook (A Country Practice and E Street), Anna Hruby, Martin Sacks (Blue Heelers), Warren Blondell, Joanne Stanley, Lisa Crittenden (Sons and Daughters, Prisoner) and Jacqui Gordon, while Peter Phelps and Kim Lewis would also find fame on Sons and Daughters.[1]
Broadcast
editThe Restless Years originally screened in most areas at 7.30 pm in one-hour installments, twice a week Tuesday and Thursday.
For all but the last three weeks of its 1981 season[citation needed], the series screened in Melbourne as five thirty-minute episodes stripped across each weeknight at 7.00 pm. It was moved to 5.30 pm for the last three weeks, with final episode reached on Thursday, 12 November 1981.
In Sydney in mid 1981 the series switched to running as a single one-hour episode on Wednesday nights at 7.30 pm.
Remakes
editThe show was remade in the Netherlands as Goede tijden, slechte tijden (first broadcast 1990) which in turn was remade in Germany as Gute Zeiten, schlechte Zeiten (since 1992): both these titles mean "Good times, bad times". As of 2021, the Dutch and German shows are still running – although they have long since diverged from the original Australian storylines – and are the highest rated soap operas in their respective countries. Apart from the similar title, the shows are currently also very different from each other with unique characters and very different plotlines.
See also
editReferences
editExternal links
edit- The Restless Years at IMDb
- "Aussie Soap Archive: The Restless Years Overview and review". Archived from the original on 18 February 2020.
- The Restless Years at the National Film and Sound Archive