Neighbours
Neighbours
Australian Soap Opera
βGet back to Ramsay Streetβ was the 1995 promotional line used by the Ten Network, home of Neighbours since late 1985. The marketing strategy sought to reorient both the program itself and the audiences who have followed it through uncertain beginnings, extraordinary local and international success, and continuing quiet domestic popularity. The message was clear and reflected a key element in the programβs enduring popularity: a decade after it began, after attracting millions of viewers around the world, Neighbours is home.
Neighbours.
Photo courtesy of Grundy Television Pty Ltd.
Bio
Neighbours is almost without doubt the Australian program with the highest international profile since the 1980s. Well over 2,000 episodes into production, it still commands worldwide audiences of more than 50 million and has helped transform its production company, the Grundy Organisation, into one of the worldβs most successful television production groups.
The programβs success, both in Australia and overseas, has always been attributable to a mix of textual and industry factors. This success lies both in its qualities as a well-developed and well-executed Australian soap opera and in the ways it has been scheduled both in Australia and in the United Kingdom. The premise for the show is the daily interactions of the people living in a middle-class street in a suburb of Melbourne. It is simple in design, yet allows for any number of narrative possibilities. Significantly, it is the limiting of these possibilities to the realms of the ordinary, the unexceptional, and non-melodramatic that has ensured Neighboursβ success for so long.
Stephen Croftsβs detailed analysis of program form and content identifies several key aspects that support these general speculations. These include Neighboursβ focus on the everyday, the domestic, and the suburban; its portrayal of women as doers; its reliance on teen sex appeal and unrebellious youth; its βfeel-goodβ characters and wholesome neighborliness. Social tension and values conflicts are always resolved, dissolved, or repressed, and the overall ideological tone is of depoliticized middle-class citizenship.
Ramsay Street and its suburb of Erinsborough have provided a pool of characters drawn from the ranks of home owners and small-business people, school kids, and pensioners. Textually, the program firmly roots itself in the domesticβin the family and the home, friends and acquaintances, and the immediate social contexts in which they are located. The mundane nature of the domestic storylines extends to the geographical reach of the show. Erinsborough is a fictional suburb, which constructs the family homes as its hub and the local shops, hotel, surgery, and school as the domain of its characters. While it has been known to send its characters overseas, Neighbours has also become notorious for sending its popular players off into the far reaches of Brisbane or the Gold Coast (indeed, it seems that βoverseasβ is a place from which it is easier to retrieve its characters than from the depths of Queensland). In keeping with the showβs philosophy of βthe everyday,β it is the impact that the charactersβ interactions with such places produces on other characters that is important to the narrative.
Initially based around three families, the Robinsons, the Ramsays, and the Clarkes, with other local residents thrown in for romance and a touch of conflict, the narrative structures of the program were sufficiently loose to allow for a considerable turnover of characters. In this respect, while the idea of the series is simple, the specifics of the houses in Ramsay Street and the families that inhabit them necessarily change and adapt. The element of continuity lies in the central institutions of the house and home and supporting institutions like small business and public education, and in the performance of small-scale romance and tragedy.
Perhaps one of the most interesting aspects of the show is its foundations in the βneighborlinessβ of (albeit select segments of) the local community. This means that the households and the living and working arrangements of the residents of Ramsay Street take precedence over the establishment of any strict boundaries that mark out the βfamilyβ and the roles of family members. Intergenerational con flict abounds and, while resolution is almost unfailingly the order of the day, the show provides an interesting mix of the nuclear and the non-nuclear family. In its current form, there is not one complete nuclear family unitβa significant reflection on the boundaries for the exploration of the βsocialβ within the programβs narrative framework.
These characteristics intertwine with the TV-industry features of the programβs success. When the Seven Network axed the show in the second half of 1985βone of the monumental mistakes of Australian network programmingβGrundyβs managing director, Ian Holmes, offered it to the Ten Network. Ten was able to revive the show with new, sexier characters, and shining, enviable domestic sets. The focus on family and community life continued, this time with a little more glamour and in a later time slotβshifting the program from 5:30 P.M. to 7:00 P.M., Monday to Friday. When the show again ran into trouble in 1986, the new network embarked on a massive selling campaign aimed at reviving flagging Sydney ratings. It worked: ratings in Australia soared along with the developing relationship of its stars, Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan. This in turn led the program into the period of its phenomenal success in the United Kingdom.
Clearly, the amiable middle-class βstrugglesβ of the Ramsay Street residents make for a markedly different narrative to those of the EastEnders or the residents of Coronation Street. Neighbours was the first television program in Britain to be screened twice daily and across all five weekdays by the BBC, which had been commanded into greater economic accountability by the Thatcher government of the 1980s. This strategy, followed soon after by another Australian soap opera export, Home and Away, was to transform the nature of the program as its cast became international stars: in Australia the already popular Minogue and Donovan, as well as Craig McLachlan and Guy Pierce, were constructed as cultural exports, with the pop-music careers of the first two building a star status unknown by Australian television actors. Morally unproblematic, the program fit well into a conservative U.K. government agenda that sought a new degree of competitiveness from the BBC at the same time that it valorized conservative themes. The BBC found that this product provided a counterpoint to other television drama such as EastEnders and Coronation Streetβand it did so at far less expense. A weekβs worth of Neighbours could be acquired for around Β£27,000, compared to Β£40,000 per half-hour episode of EastEnders.
While Neighbours was winning U.K. audiences of 20 million by the end of 1988 and consistently challenging the two home-grown soaps for the position of highest-rating drama on British television, it was also criticized for its bland representation of life in a sunny, relatively trouble-free, seemingly egalitarian Australian suburb. EastEnders, particularly, was attracting commendation for the range of its social and ethnic representation, and, while Neighbours had always had its share of strong female characters, it casually over-looked multiculturalism (a phenomenon fundamental to both Australian and British society), as well as other important social subjects such as unemployment. With the U.K.βs growing list of Australian film and television imports, Australian television became the target of arguments addressing issues of British cultural maintenance. And while some of these criticisms may be well-deserved, Neighbours, along with Home and Away, was in turn important to an Australian film and television industry that was itself accustomed to being seen as an import culture dominated by American and British products. Neighbours was the leader in a new wave of audiovisual export successes from the 1980s onward that has invigorated and redirected the local industry.
Finally, the program remains a popular domestic soap opera. Neighbours fits well with the Ten Network broadcasting ethos based around the appeal of a global βyouth culture.β Ten has worked at building a sizeable teen demographic based strictly on ratings, and its success in this respect has contributed to a turn-around in the networkβs profitsβTenβs level of returns to expenditure exceeds that of its long-term rival, the Seven Network. With another cast of sexier young stars, including Blair McDonough (the runner-up in the Ten Networkβs version of Big Brother), and well-chosen older, more experienced actors, Neighbours continues as Australiaβs longest-running soap and one of its most successful television exports.
See Also
Series Info
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Max Ramsay (1985β86)
Francis Bell
Maria Ramsay (1985)
Dasha Blahova
Julie Robinson (1985)Vikki Blanche
Rosemary Daniels (1985β97)
Joy Chambers
Danny Ramsay (1985β86)
David Clencie
Jim Robinson (1985β93)
Alan Dale
Eileen Clarke (1985β88)
Myra De Groot
Paul Robinson (1985β93)
Stefan Dennis
Lucy Robinson (1985β87)
Kylie Flinker
Helen Daniels (1985β97)
Anne Haddy
Des Clarke (1985β90)
Paul Keane
Terri Inglis (1985β86)
Maxine Klibingaitus
Barbara Hill (1985)
Louise Le Nay
Shane Mitchell (1985β88)
Peter OβBrien
Scott Robinson (1985β86)
Darius Perkins
Daphne Clarke (1985β88)
Elaine Smith
Nikki Dennison (1986β87)
Charlene Fenn
Madge Mitchell (1986β92, 1996β2001)
Anne Charleston
Scott Robinson (1986β89)
Jason Donovan
Zoe Davis (1986β87)
Alexandra Fowler
Vicki Gibbons (1986)
Charmaine Gorman
Nell Mangel (1986β89)
Vivian Gray
Jane Harris (1986β89)
Annie Jones
Henry Ramsay (1986β90)
Craig McLachlan
Charlene Mitchell (1986β88)
Kylie Minogue
Clive Gibbons (1986β87, 1989)
Geoff Paine
Mike Young (1986β90)
Guy Pearce
Sally Wells (1987β88)
Rowena Mohr
Rob Lewis (1987β88)
Ernie Bourne
Dan Ramsay (1987β88)
Syd Conabere
Edna Ramsay (1987β88)
Jessica Noad
Tom Ramsay (1987β88, 1991)
Gary Files
Harold Bishop (1987β91, 1996β )
Ian Smith
Tony Romeo (1987β88)
Nick Carrafa
Sue Parker (1987β88)
Kate Gorman
Reverend Sampson (1987β 89)
Howard Bell
Lucy Robinson (1987β90)
Sascha Close
Dr. Beverly Marshall (1987β 89)
Lisa Armytage
Gail Robinson (1987β89)
Fiona Corke
Katie Landers (1987β89)
Sally Jensen
Hilary Robinson (1987β90)
Anne Scott Pendlebury
Jamie Clarke (1987β90)
S.J. Dey
Emma Gordon (1987β91)
Tamsin West
Todd Landers (1987β92)
Kristian Schmid
Lou Carpenter (1988, 1992β )
Tom Oliver
Malcolm Clarke (1988β89)
Noel Trevarthen
Bronwyn Davies (1988β90)
Rachel Friend
Toby Mangel (1988β90)
F. Greentree-Keane
Sharon Davies (1988β90)
Jessica Muschamp
Nick Page (1988β90)
Mark Stevens
Joe Mangel (1988β91)
Mark Little
Melanie Pearson (1988β91)
Lucinda Cowden
Sky Bishop (1989β91)
Miranda Fryer
Kerry Bishop (1989β90)
Linda Hartley
Beverley Marshall (1989β90)
Shaunna OβGrady
Melissa Jarrett (1989β91)
Jade Amenta
Matt Williams (1989β91)
Ashley Paske
Jenny Owens (1989)
Danielle Carter
Edith Chubb (1989)
Irene Inescort
Kevin Harvey (1989)
Simon Westaway
Ken Naylor (1990)
Peter Tabour
Josh Anderson (1990β91)
Jeremy Angerson
Gemma Ramsay (1990β91)
Beth Buchanan
Adam Willis (1990β91)
Ian Williams
Cody Willis (1990β92)
Amelia Frid
Doug Willis (1990β94)
Terence Donovan
Pam Willis (1990β96)
Sue Jones
Caroline Alessi (199β93)
Gillian Blakeney
Christina Alessi (1990β93)
Gayle Blakeney
Dorothy Burke (1990β93)
Maggie Dence
Toby Mangel (1990β93)
Ben Geurens
Brad Willis (1991β93)
Scott Michaelson
Gaby Willis (1991β94)
Rachel Blakely
Faye Hudson (1991β92)
Lorraine Bayly
Andrew Robinson (1991β92)
Shannon Holmes
Lucy Robinson III (1991β95)
Melissa Bell
Arthur Bright (1991β92)
Barry Hill
Glen Donnelly (1991β92)
Richard Huggett
Brenda Riley (1991β92)
Genevieve Lemon
Guy Carpenter (1991β92)
Andrew Williams
Phoebe Bright (1991β93)
Simone Robertson
Beth Brennan (1991β93, 1994)
Natalie Imbruglia
Marco Alessi (1992)
Felice Arena
Benito Alessi (1992β93)
George Spartels
Cameron Hudson (1992β93)
Ben Mitchell
Cathy Alessi (1992β93)
Elspeth Ballantyne
Stephen Gottlieb (1992β93)
Lauchie Daddo
Julie Martin (1992β94)
Julie Mullins
Rick Alessi (1992β95)
Dan Falzon
Philip Martin (1992β99)
Ian Rawlings
Hannah Martin (1992β99)
Rebecca Ritters
Debbie Martin (1992β97)
Marnie Reece- Wilmore
Michael Martin (1992β98)
Troy Beckwith
Troy Duncan (1993)
Damian Walshe-Howling
Mark Gottlieb (1993β96)
Bruce Samazan
Darren Stark (1993)
Scott Major
Wayne Duncan (1993β94)
Jonathan Sammy-Lee
Lauren Carpenter (1993β94)
Sarah Vandenbergh
Annalise Hartman (1993β96)
Kimberley Davies
Cheryl Stark (1993β96)
Caroline Gillmer
Dr. Karl Kennedy (1994β )
Alan Fletcher
Billy Kennedy (1994β2000)
Jesse Spencer
Libby Kennedy (1994β )
Kym Valentine
Susan Kennedy (1994β )
Jackie Woodburne
Malcolm Kennedy (1994β97)
Benjamin McNair
Jesse OβConnor (1994)
James Ryan
Aaron OβConnor (1994)
Greg Stone
Sam Kratz (1994β96)
Richard Grieve
Marlene Kratz (1994β97)
Moya OβSullivan
Jen Handley (1994β95)
Alyce Platt
Luke Handley (1994β96)
Bernard Curry
Brett Stark (1994β96)
Brett Blewitt
Danni Stark (1994β96)
Eliza Szonert
Luke Foster (1994)
Murray Bartlett
Sassy Patterson-Smythe (1994)
Defah Dattner
Louise Carpenter (1994)
Jiordan Anna Tolli
Kris Hyde (1994)
John Higginson
Len Mangel (1994)
John Lee
Katarina Torrelli (1994)
Josephine Mitchell
Andrew βMaccaβ MacKenzie (1994)
John Morris
Sally Pritchard (1994)
Brenda Webb
Serendipity Gottlieb (1994β95)
Raelee Hill
Cody Willis (1994β96)
Peta Brady
βStonefishβ Rebecchi (1994β96)
Anthony Engelman
Kev Duve (1994β98)
Brad Wade
Leanne βPackoβ Packington (1994, 1995)
Verity McIntyre
Colin Taylor (1995)
Frank Bren
Reuben White (1995)
James Condon
Lance Wilkinson (1995β2001)
Andrew Bibby
Luke Bowers (1995β97)
Jamie Field
Patrick Kratz (1995)
Shane Porteous
Angie Rebecchi (1995β96)
Lesley Baker
Melissa Drenth (1995β96)
Aimee Robertson
Joanna Hartman (1995β97)
Emma Harrison
Rupert Sprod (1995β97)
Tobi Webster
Zoe Tan (1995β98)
Jeuliette Hannafie
Andrew Watson (1996)
Christopher Uhlman
Ruth Wilkinson (1996β99)
Ailsa Piper
Anne Wilkinson (1996β2000)
Brooke Satchwell
Sarah Beaumont (1996β99)
Nicola Charles
Jarrod βToadfishβ Rebecchi (1996β)
Ryan Moloney
Steve George (1996)
Alex Dimitriades
Georgia Brown (1996)
Petra Jared
Catherine OβBrien (1996β97)
Radha Mitchell
Darren Stark (1996β98)
Todd MacDonald
Ben Atkins (1997β98)
Brett Cousins
Caitlin Atkins (1997β98)
Emily Milburn
Paul McClain (1997β2001)
Jansen Spencer
Amy Greenwood (1997β2000)
Jacinta Stapleton
Cassandra (1997β2000)
Elizabeth Shingleton
Geoff Burke (1997β98)
Andrew McKaige
Lisa Elliot (1997)
Kate Straub
Rowan Kendrick (1997)
Paul Zebrowski
Joel Samuels (1998β2002)
Daniel MacPherson
Lily Madigan (1998)
Alethea McGrath
Karen Oldman (1998β99)
Pia Miranda
Pippa Layton (1998β2000)
Natalie Shostak
Drew Kirk (1998β )
Dan Paris
Hilary Grand (1998)
Olivia Hamnett
Mike Healy (1998)
Andrew Blackman
Mickey Dalton (1998)
Trent Fowler
Kenny Hyland (1998)
Jonathan Dutton
Wayne βTadβ Reeves (1999β )
Jonathan Dutton
Rose Kirk (1999, 2000)
Diana Greentree
Ron Kirk (1999, 2000)
John Orcsik
Geri Hallett (1999)
Isabella Dunwill
Maurie Ryan (1999)
Neil Fletcher
Teabag Teasdale (1999)
Nathan Phillips
Teresa Bell (1999β2001)
Krista Vendy
Joe Scully (1999β )
Shane Connor
Lyn Scully (1999β )
Janet Andrewartha
Stephanie Scully (1999β )
Carla Bonner
Felicity Scully (1999β )
Holly Valance
Michelle Scully (1999β )
Kate Keltie
Damien Smith (1999β2000)
John Ridley
Dione Bliss (2000β )
Madeleine West
Cecile Bliss (2000)
Molly McCaffrey
Patsy Edis (2000)
Anne Moloney
Simone King (2000β )
Denise Briskin
Bianca Nugent (2000β )
Jane Harber
Darcy Tyler (2000β )
Foster (Mark) Raffety
Bernie Samuels (2000β )
Sean Scully
Rachel Bailey (2000)
Carolyn Bock
Merridy Jackson (2000)
Suzy Cato
Connie OβRourke (2000)
Val Jellay
Carrie Clark (2000)
Vanessa Rossini
Daniel Fitzgerald (2000)
Brett Tucker
Brendan Bell (2000)
Blair Venn
Mick Scully (2000)
Andy Anderson
Dorothy βAllanaβ Truman (2000β01)
Josephine Clark
Larry βWoodyβ Woodhouse (2000β01)
Andrew Curry
Jessica Fielding (2001β )
Elisha Gazdowicz
Matthew Hancock (2001β )
Stephen Hunt
Evan Hancock (2001β )
Nicholas Opolski
Maggie Hancock (2001β )
Sally Cooper
Leo Hancock (2001β )
Anthony Hammer
Emily Hancock (2001β )
Isabella Oldham
Stewart Parker (2001β )
Blair McDonough
Veronica Anderson (2001β)
Monika Isabella Karwan
Summer Hoyland (2002β )
Marisa Siketa
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The Grundy Organisation
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Seven Network
March 1985βNovember1985Weeknights 6:00β6:30
Ten NetworkNovember 1985βMarch 1992
Weeknights 7:00β7:30
March 1992β
Weeknights 6:30β7:00