The Secret Life of Us

The Secret Life Of Us
Genre Drama
Created by John Edwards, (Amanda Higgs)
Starring Claudia Karvan
Samuel Johnson
Deborah Mailman
Abi Tucker
Joel Edgerton
Sibylla Budd
David Tredinnick
Spencer McLaren
Damian De Montemas
Michael Dorman
Country of origin Australia
Original language(s) English
No. of series 4
No. of episodes 86 (List of episodes)
Production
Location(s) St Kilda, Melbourne, Victoria
Running time 45 minutes
Production company(s) Southern Star Productions
Release
Original network Network Ten
Picture format 576i (SDTV)
1080i (HDTV)
Audio format Stereo
Original release 16 July 2001 – 28 December 2005

The Secret Life of Us was a three-time silver Logie Award-winning Australian television drama series set in the beachside suburb of St Kilda, Melbourne, Australia. The series was produced by Southern Star Group and screened in Australia from 2001 to 2005 on Network Ten and on Channel 4 in the UK. Initially co-funded by the two networks, Channel 4 pulled out after the third series and the fourth series was not aired in the UK. It has been shown in other countries such as New Zealand (TV3), Ireland (RTÉ Two), Canada (SuperChannel3), the Netherlands (Yorin), France (Canal Plus, France 4), Estonia (ETV, Kanal 11), Norway (NRK), Serbia (B92, TV Avala), Russia (TNT, Muz TV), Israel (Channel 2), and United States (Hulu).

Plot

The show revolves around a group of friends in their mid twenties to early thirties who live in a St Kilda block of flats (the actual block is 14A Acland Street and the rooftop is at the Belvedere Flats on the Esplanade). Their interaction with one another, relationships with other friends and romantic interests, along with their personal and career development, are featured.

History and popularity

Initially, the series was immensely popular in Australia, and had a devoted cult following in the UK.

The inclusion of a prominent Aboriginal character (Kelly Lewis, played by Deborah Mailman) attracted comment at the time of the series' broadcast,[1] and has since been cited as a landmark in the history of media representations of Indigenous Australians.[2]

The show's ratings began to dwindle following the departure of several main characters and the introduction of new characters. The third series featured a particularly high character turnover, and included the departure of key original cast members Claudia Karvan and Abi Tucker.

Five main cast members - Sibylla Budd, Spencer McLaren, Dan Spielman, Nina Liu and Gigi Edgley - left at the end of season three and original lead Samuel Johnson left early in season four. Cast members Deborah Mailman, David Tredinnick and Michael Dorman continued, and five new regular characters were added for season four. The changes were part of a larger overhaul which saw the arrival of a new producer, new script producer, and a new writing team.[3] By the end of the fourth (and last) season, only Mailman and Tredinnick remained from the original cast.

Cast and characters

"Regular Stars appearing"
  • Deborah Mailman as Kelly Lewis (Series 1-4, Episodes 1-86)
  • Samuel Johnson as Evan Wylde (Series 1-4, Episodes 1-72)
  • Sibylla Budd as Gabrielle Kovitch (Series 1–3, Episodes 1-66)
  • Spencer McLaren as Richie Blake (Series 1–3, Episodes 1-66)
  • David Tredinnick as Simon Trader (Series 1-4, 86 episodes)
  • Abi Tucker as Miranda Lang (Series 1–3, Episodes 1-56)
  • Claudia Karvan as Alex Christensen (Series 1–3, Episodes 1-50, 64-66)
  • Damian De Montemas as Jason Kennedy (Series 1–2, Episodes 1-44)
  • Joel Edgerton as Will McGill (Series 1–2, Episodes 1-30, 42-43)
  • Michael Dorman as Christian Edwards (Series 2-4, Episodes 31-75)
  • Dan Spielman as Patrick A.K.A. "Tidy" (Series 3, Episodes 45-66)
  • Nina Liu as Chloe (Series 3, Episodes 45-66)
  • Gigi Edgley as George (Series 3, Episodes 52-65)
  • Sullivan Stapleton as Justin Davies (Series 3-4, Episodes 61-86)
  • Stephen Curry as Stuart Woodcock (Series 4, Episodes 67-86)
  • Brooke Harman as Bree Sanzaro (Series 4, Episodes 67-86)
  • Nicholas Coghlan as Adam Beckwith (Series 4, Episodes 67-86)
  • Alexandra Schepisi as Lucy Beckwith (Series 4, Episodes 67-86)
  • Anna Torv as Nikki Martel (Series 4, Episodes 67-86)
  • Ryan Johnson as Zelko Milanovic (Series 4, Episodes 73-86)

"Recurring Guest Stars"

Series ratings

Season Episodes Originally aired Viewers (in millions) Rating Drama Rank
Season premiere Season finale
1 22 23 July 2001 26 November 2001 0.977[4] 7.4[4] #10[4]
2 22 18 February 2002 5 August 2002 1.177[4] 8.9[4] #7[4]
3 22 10 February 2003 11 August 2003 0.994[4] 7.4[4] #9[4]
4 20 18 February 2004 11 January 2006 0.581[5] 4.3[5] #7[5]

Cancellation

Production ended in 2004 with the completion of the fourth series.

The decision had been made to discontinue production after the first three episodes of the fourth series aired in Australia to disastrously low ratings. At that time the program was removed from its prime-time slot.

The unscreened episodes from that final series were broadcast with little publicity in late 2005.

The show is rated R16 in New Zealand for offensive language and sex scenes.

DVD releases

SeriesDate Released# Of Episodes# Of DiscsSpecial Features
The Complete Series 10 November 2010[6] 88 25
  • Behind the Scenes Documentary: ‘The Secret Life of The Secret Life of Us’
  • Interviews: Talking with Claudia Karvan, Talking with Joel Edgerton, Talking with Judi McCrossin, Talking with Spencer McClaren and David Tredinnick, Talking with Deborah Mailman, Talking with Sibylla Budd and Damien de Montemas
  • Exclusive Interview with Samuel Johnson, Exclusive Interview with Abi Tucker
  • Photo Gallery

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.