The Young Doctors Explained

Genre:Soap opera
Creator:Alan Coleman
Developer:Reg Watson
Director:Alan Coleman
Reg Watson
Ian Coughlan
Max Varnel
David C. Wilson
Brian Faull
Peita Letchford
Kendal Flanagan
Chris Adshead
Mike Murphy
Chris Connelly
Michael Pattinson
Phillip Bowman
Rusty Buckley
Denny Lawrence
Wayne Cameron
Starring:(see detailed cast and character list below)
Theme Music Composer:Alan Olivan / Brian King
Opentheme:The Young Doctors, performed by The Executives
Endtheme:The Young Doctors, performed by The Executives
Composer:Olivan/King
Country:Australia
Language:English
Num Seasons:6
Num Episodes:1,397 (60 minute pilot episode and 1,396 30-minute episodes)
Executive Producer:Reg Watson
Producer:Alan Coleman
Sue Masters
Location:The Film Centre, North Sydney[1]
Runtime:25 minutes
Company:Reg Grundy Organisation
Channel:Nine Network
Related:Starting Out

The Young Doctors is an Australian early-evening soap opera originally broadcast on the Nine Network and produced by the Reg Grundy Organisation, it aired from Monday 8 November 1976 until Wednesday 30 March 1983. The series is primarily set in the fictional Albert Memorial Hospital, as well as the restaurant/nightclub Bunny's Place, and is fundamentally concerned with the romances and relations between younger members of the hospital staff, rather than typical medical issues and procedures.

The program was shown and exported internationally including throughout North America and Canada and Europe including the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, France and Spain.[2]

Series history

Early years

The series produced by the Grundy Organisation was created and devised by Alan Coleman with Reg Watson acting as Executive Producer.

Watson had been the Producer of the British TV soap opera Crossroads from 1964 to 1973 and he moved back to Australia to help set up a new drama department within the Reg Grundy Organisation, which at the time, was better known for its game and quiz shows. With Coleman producing, as well as Watson's experience of making fast-turnaround, five-days a week serial drama, The Young Doctors became the third soap opera produced by the Reg Grundy Organisation following the Seven Network's serials Class of 74 / 75, and Until Tomorrow, which screened briefly in 1975.

The Young Doctors began in November 1976, a week earlier than another new soap opera on Network Nine, The Sullivans, which was produced by Crawford Productions. The Nine Network made it clear only one of the series would be commissioned beyond the initial 13-week production run (approximately 65 episodes).

The Sullivans, which had a three times greater budget, after the trial period emerged as the critical success, so The Young Doctors was cancelled.

Fans however lobbied the Nine Network, who then reversed their decision and by popular demand The Young Doctors continued in its daily 6.00 pm slot and had a successful run of six and a half years, making it one of Australia's longest running and popular serials of the time.

Later years

The Young Doctors long-serving cast members began to leave, so during the final season in 1982–83, many new characters were added in an attempt to modernise and refresh the long-running serial.[3]

Producer and co-creator Alan Coleman also left in early 1982, and was replaced by Sue Masters twelve months before the series finished production in late November 1982. Masters went on to produce Grundy's replacement medical soap, Starting Out, for Nine, and then Grundy's stablemate, Prisoner, from 1983.

Several cast members after the series ended production went on to have leading roles in cult series Prisoner including Judy McBurney, Genevieve Lemon, Babs McMillan, Tottie Goldsmith and Peter Bensley.

The loss of several popular cast members had contributed to a sharp decline in ratings, and as a consequence of this, the series was cancelled in late 1982.[4] The advent of one-day cricket had led to the Nine Network moving the show around the schedules, particularly in Sydney where it was first moved to 5pm weekdays and, after its cancellation was announced, broadcasts were reduced to a weekly hour-long episode late on Saturday afternoons from November 1982.

When the series ended after 1397 episodes, it held the record of Australia's longest-running commercial television drama serial. This was later surpassed by A Country Practice and then Neighbours, which is currently the longest-running Australian drama serial. The Young Doctors also holds the distinction, rare among long-running Australian dramas, of having never won any sort of television award.

The Young Doctors final episode aired on 30 March 1983 at 18:00 in Melbourne and on 15 October 1983 at 17:30 in Sydney.

Stories and settings

Albert Memorial Hospital

Despite the hospital setting, medical procedures rarely featured in storylines, with the majority of the stories and plots focusing more on the personal lives, romances and dramas of the staff. All scenes were played out in the various sets forming the Albert Memorial Hospital. A memorial plaque situated on the wall of the studio set of the hospital's exterior stated the hospital opened in 1889 and it is also established early in the series that the fictional Albert Memorial is located in a Sydney district, with Sydney generically referred to as 'the City'.

A "real life" Albert Memorial Hospital, commonly referred to as the A. M. Hospital[5] was located in Wollongong, and commenced operation in 1864, however closed when the Wollongong Hospital opened in 1907.[6]

The most regularly seen set was the large hospital's entrance lobby containing a reception desk, refreshments kiosk, a lift and stairs to the upper floors, and swinging double-doors that led into the casualty department. Various wards, offices, theatres and small medicine labs all saw an equal amount of romantic and dramatic action over the years. Alan Coleman revealed on a DVD release of the series that the various 'flats' used as sets were simply re-dressed with different hospital equipment and furniture giving the Albert Memorial a sense of monotony often associated with clinical, hospital environments.

Later in The Young Doctors run, location shooting became more frequent and viewers saw more of the hospital's exterior and grounds. Scenes filmed outside the hospital now showed modern, 1960s era buildings, presumably extensions to the original Victorian hospital. Exterior shots were filmed at the real life Royal North Shore Hospital and the former Greenwich Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, which was used for later exterior shots. There was also a Chapel located in the hospital grounds which was filmed on a few occasions, most notably when Julie Holland was shot at the altar on her Wedding day to Dr Russell Edwards. With location shooting so rare, a trip to Melbourne for a travelogue-style Wedding and tour of the city was an extravagant way to celebrate Liz Kennedy's marriage to Dr John Forrest in 1981.

Bunny's Place

There was also a local bar Bunny's Place which was another venue for the staff to mingle. The bar was originally owned by, and named after, Bunny Howard, played by comedian, Ugly Dave Gray, who was killed off in an early episode. Bunny's Place was said to be situated on the opposite side of the busy main road to the hospital. After Bunny died, Edna Curtis (Vivienne Benson-Young) ran the bar for a while, until Annemarie Austin (Judi Connelli) took over a year later. Although the bar's exterior was never shown on-screen, its interior regularly featured in many episodes for the duration of the -year series, appearing in both the first and final episodes.

Cast and characters

Early characters

The Young Doctors had a relatively high turnover of young cast playing the doctors and nurses who featured alongside a more stable roster of longer-running elder cast members. The serial also featured many well-known Australian actors appearing in their earliest roles.[7]

Cultural impact

Although The Young Doctors was obviously low-budget and the limitations of the fast-turnaround production schedule sometimes crept into the programme, it was immensely popular during the late 1970s in Australia. One highlight episode of this period was the Wedding Day of Tania (Judy McBurney) to Tony Garcia (Tony Alvarez) in March 1978. The producers splashed out on an OB unit, and a rare church wedding took place with the wedding photos gracing all of the week's TV magazine covers.[8] In a 2006 interview, Judy McBurney, who played Tania, commented; "I thought Young Doctors was a beautiful show. I felt it was innocent, sweet, and a good show...and I think that's why people remember it".[9]

One of the programmes most popular doctors was Ben Fielding, played by Eric Oldfield. He was also Male Model of the Year in 1977 and became the second man to appear naked in a centre spread for Cleo magazine whilst appearing in the show. The actor fondly recalls the photo shoot on a reunion documentary available on both the Umbrella and ViaVision DVD releases, where he describes the pictures as "taboo" because "it wasn't acceptable back then for men to be taking all their clothes off". Oldfield also commented that the pictures have since garnered a popular cult following amongst gay men.[10]

Another notable actor, a very young Russell Crowe, appeared in his first acting role in The Young Doctors. In an episode originally aired in 1977, appropriately, he played a young boy called Russell.

During the 1970s, a number of actors appearing in the show also had singing careers, preempting a similar fad for "singing soap stars" a decade later with another Grundy soap opera, Neighbours. Early episodes featured singers including Jewel Blanch, Mark Hembrow, Bartholomew John, Mark Holden and Judi Connelli. Possibly due to the fast production schedule, and filming six months in advance of transmission dates, contemporary cultural references are rare in The Young Doctors, however, in a very early 1977 episode, Sister Gibbs briskly remarks; "...casualty is busier than an ABBA concert today". The reference to ABBA is likely due to the fact that their 1977 film, , was at the same time being produced by Reg Grundy Productions.[11]

Also extremely popular in the United Kingdom, the success of The Young Doctors here is notable because it didn't air in Britain contemporaneously with Australian broadcasts. Most ITV regions did not start showing it until after it had ended in Australia in March 1983. It therefore looked somewhat dated compared with more recent Australian serials that were airing at the same time (namely, Sons and Daughters), nevertheless, it became so popular, a fan club was formed, which was active for several years well into the 1990s.

Awards

OrganisationCategoryYearResults
Australian Film and Television AwardsBest Drama Award 1978
Australian Film and Television AwardsBest Actor in a TV Series1978 Tim Page for portrayal of Dr. Graham Steele
Australian Film and Television Awards Best Actress in a TV series1978 Joanne Samuel for portrayal of Jill Gordon
Sammy AwardsGold Sammy1978 Cornelia Frances for portrayal of Sister/Matron Grace Scott
Sammy AwardsGold Sammy 1978 Delvene Delaney for portrayal of Jo Jo Adams
Australian Film and Television AwardsBest Drama 1979
Australian Film and Television AwardsBest Actor in a TV Series 1979 Peter Lochran for portrayal of Dr. Peter Holland
Sammy AwardsGolden Sammy 1979 Diana McLean
Sammy AwardsGolden Sammy1979 Peter Lochran
Sammy AwardsGolden Sammy1979 Joanne Samuel
Australian Film and TV Awards Best Drama Series1980
[12] [13]

Cornelia Frances on the DVD release audio commentary for episode 325 titled, Classic Cliffhangers, that she lost out on the Logie Award for Best Actress for two consecutive years to Lorraine Bayly, who played Grace Sullivan in The Sullivans, which also beat The Young Doctors as Best Drama in 1978, 1979 and 1980.

Regular cast

There was consistently a core cast of 16 regular characters in The Young Doctors, with all cast members contracted to appear in three out of a block of five episodes each week. Sometimes, a regular character would not be seen on-screen for several weeks and there is an obvious rotation of recurring characters whom came and went as script requirements permitted. More often than not, a departing regular character would simply disappear from the screen, but their presence in the serial would be maintained by regular scripted references to the character being elsewhere in the hospital, or, as Cornelia Frances described it, "stuck in a cupboard for weeks", but, always off screen.

Doctors

ActorDoctorDuration
Dr. Graham Steele 1976–83 Original cast
Dr. Raymond Shaw 1976–83Original cast
Dr. Brian Denham 1976–83 Original cast
Dr. Jim Howard 1976–79 Original cast
Dr. Greg Mason 1976–77, 1981 Original cast
Dr. Craig Rothwell 1976–77 Original cast
Dr. Gail Henderson 1976–78Original cast
Dr. Paul Barratt 1977
Dr. Susan Richards 1977–80
Dr. John Somerville 1977
Dr. Vincent Snape 1977–79
Dr. Tony Garcia 1977–79
Dr. Chris Piper 1977–79
Paul Mason Dr. Mike Neilson 1977
Andrew Sharp Dr. Andrew Baxter 1977–78
Dr. Lesley Collins 1978
Dr. Crewe 1978-79
Tim Elliot Professor William Hume 1978
Kevin Wilson Dr. David Meredith 1978
Dr. Ben Fielding 1978–82
Dr. Peter Holland 1978–82
Chris Orchard Dr. Rod Langley 1978–80
Dr. Liz Kennedy 1979–81
Dr. John Forrest 1979–83
Dr. Ian Parrish 1979
Dr. Mike Newman 1979–83
Eileen Colocott Dr. Marion Stoddard 1979
Dr. Clifford Langley 1979
Dr. Dan Wheatley 1979, 1981
Dr. Russell Edwards 1980–81
Dr. Robyn Porter 1980–81
Dr. Judith Anne Napier (aka Dr. Hall) 1980-81
Dr. Richard Quinlan 1981–82
Raina McKeon Dr. Martha Ahmed 1981–82
Dr. Nick Barratt 1982–83
Dr. Lance Wilkinson 1982
Dr. Matt Burke 1982
Dr. David Henderson 1982–83
John O’Brien Dr. Ian Mitchell1982–83
Dr Vicki Daniels 1982–83

Sisters

Actor SisterDuration
Sister/Matron Grace Scott 1976–79 Original cast
Susanne Stuart Sister Suzanne Gibbs 1976 extra 1977–83 regular
Jeannie Drynan Sister Margaret Evans 1977
Sister/Nurse Tania Livingstone 1977–83
Sister Eve Turner 1977-80
Sheila D'Union Spinal Unit Sister 1977
Sister Vivienne Jeffries 1978–82
Sister Erin Cosgrove 1982–83
Helen Scott (as Helen Hough)Sister Norma Campbell 1981

Nurses

ActorNurseDuration
Jo Jo Adams 1976–77 Original cast
Julie Warner 1976–77 Original cast
Jill Gordon 1976–79 Original cast
Kathryn Dagher Kelly Jones 1977
Martin Price 1977, 1978–79
Lisa Brooks 1977-78
Deborah Kendall 1977
Ros Wood Kate Rhodes 1977–82
Kim Barrington 1977–79
Julie Holland 1978–81
Virginia Mason 1978–81
Debbie Baile Vicki Rayner 1978–79
Angela Parry 1978
Kim Krejus Sally Brown 1978
Carla Hoogeveen Jeanette Palmer 1978
Sherry Andrews 1979–82
Yvonne Davies 1979
Jodie Carter 1980–81
Maggie Gordon 1981–82
Dolly Davis 1982–83
Linda Wilson 1982–83
Genevieve Ridgeway 1982–83
Zelda Baker 1983
Julianne White Diana Trent 1983

Hospital staff

ActorRole Duration
Ada Simmonds 1976–83 Original cast
Helen Gordon 1976–83 Original cast
Dennis Jamison 1976–82 Original cast
Caroline Fielding 1977, 1978–82
Robert Leys Mark Holland 1978–80
Terry Cooper 1978
Kent Strickland Damian Swift 1979
Robert Korosy Flint Stone 1981–83
Toni Sheffield 1982–83
Stephen McDonald Tim Jones 1982-83

Other cast and characters

International broadcasts

The relatively long-running serial also achieved modest international cult success, particularly in the United Kingdom, where it was broadcast on the ITV network. It also aired in New Zealand, France and Spain.

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, the programme was acquired by 13 of the 14 weekday members of the ITV Network, while Scottish Television never purchased the series although Ulster, Grampian and Border did. Most of the ITV regions screened The Young Doctors at their own regional pace, starting in January 1982.

ITV region in start date order

Air dates of significant episodes

ep 40 Grace at the altar

ep 227 Graham and Eve marry

ep 256 1977 cliffhanger

ep 281 Tony and Tania marry

ep 327 Arrival of Jeffries

ep 469 1978 cliffhanger

ep 474 Raymond and Erica marry

ep 529 aftermath of Barrington shooting

episode 679 Liz and Ben wedding aftermath

ep 717 Dennis and Caroline marry

ep 872 1980 cliffhanger

episode 1000

ep 1019 John and Liz marry

ep 1077 1981 cliffhanger

Central TelevisionTue 15/06/82 12:30Mon 24/06/85 15:30Mon 15/12/86 15:30Tue 30/12/86 15:45Tue 28/07/87 15:30Fri 05/08/88 12:35Thu 08/06/89 15:30Tue 19/12/89 15:30Fri 26/01/90 15:30
HTV (Wales & West)Mon 01/08/83 17:15Mon 16/12/85 15:30Mon 18/01/88 15:30Mon 07/08/89 15:30Tue 19/12/89 15:30
Thu 17/11/83 17:15Tue 18/11/86 15:30Mon 09/05/88 15:30Mon 12/12/88 15:30Fri 17/07/92 15:20
Granada TelevisionTue 01/11/83 15:30Thu 13/12/84 15:30Wed 06/03/85 15:30Fri 03/05/85 15:30Fri 23/08/85 15:30Fri 12/09/86 15:30Thu 25/09/86 15:30Wed 11/02/87 15:30Fri 29/01/88 15:30Thu 28/04/88 15:30Thu 27/04/89 15:30Fri 06/07/90 15:25
Border TelevisionTue 01/11/83 15:30Thu 13/12/84 15:30Wed 06/03/85 15:30Fri 03/05/85 15:30Fri 23/08/85 15:30Fri 12/09/86 15:30Thu 25/09/86 15:30Wed 11/02/87 15:30Fri 29/01/88 15:30Thu 28/04/88 15:30Thu 27/04/89 15:30Fri 06/07/90 15:25
Grampian TelevisionWed 01/02/84 15:30Mon 30/01/89 15:30Thu 12/11/92 15:20
Ulster Television (UTV)1988Mon 21/02/94 14:50Not screenedNot screenedNot screenedNot screenedNot screenedNot screenedNot screenedNot screenedNot screened
Television South (TVS)Wed 01/08/84 15:30Mon 06/03/89 15:30Fri 09/06/89 15:30Thu 12/09/91 13:50
Anglia TelevisionTue 05/02/85 15:30Tue 20/01/87 15:30Mon 18/05/87 15:30Mon 17/08/87 15:30Mon 08/02/88 15:30Mon 31/07/89 15:30Tue 15/08/89 15:30Thu 14/01/93 15:20Wed 10/02/93 15:20
Tyne Tees TelevisionTue 05/03/85 15:30Tue 23/06/87 15:30Tue 22/09/87 15:30Mon 14/03/88 15:30Tue 05/09/89 15:30Mon 25/09/89 15:30Tue 17/04/90 15:30Tue 02/02/93 15:20Mon 01/03/93 15:20
Television South West (TSW)Mon 17/10/88 12:30Mon 04/12/89 13:30Thu 01/06/95 14:25
Channel TelevisionMon 06/03/89 15:30Fri 09/06/89 15:30Thu 12/09/91 13:50
Yorkshire Television (YTV)Tue 02/08/88 12:30Mon 07/08/89 12:30Mon 02/10/89 15:30Mon 05/02/90 15:30Not screenedTue 02/02/93 15:20Mon 01/03/93 15:20

New Zealand

In New Zealand, The Young Doctors was aired on TV2. On Monday 22 February 1982, the first episode was broadcast at 5.30pm. From 19 July 1982, it was moved to the 6pm slot. To make way for Sons and Daughters, the series was moved from 6pm to a 'double episode' format at 6.30pm on a Tuesday and Wednesday evening from 11 February 1986. It reverted to half hour, weekday episodes in the 5.15pm slot from 4 August until 12 December 1986, and then to double episodes in the 5.05-5.55pm slot from 15 December 1986 until 6 February 1987. From 9 February 1987, the series was moved to TV One and reverted to half hour episodes at 5.15pm. The final episode was broadcast on Wednesday 27 May 1987.

Remake

In November 2007, the Nine Network announced plans to remake the series in conjunction with FremantleMedia. Originally, it was set to be broadcast in 2008 but due to script delays, the premiere date had been pushed back to 2009. The remake was set to be named Young Doctors (minus "The"). However, at the end of 2008, the Nine Network officially passed on the idea. The network decided against the remake, instead, confirming a second series of the popular Australian drama Underbelly. FremantleMedia is currently searching for another television station to contract the programme.[14]

Home media

Selected episodes of the serial were released on DVD in October 2006, under the title of The Best Romances. A second set of selected episodes, under the title of Classic Cliffhangers, was released in February 2008. In 1994, prior to the DVDs, a VHS was edited in the UK by "NTV entertainment" collecting episodes A, B (pilots) & 1.

On 16 June 2021, ViaVision Entertainment released the first 250 episodes of the series in a 35 disc set which consisted of all episodes screened in 1976 and 1977.

TitleFormatEp #Discs/TapesRegion 4 (Australia)Special FeaturesDistributors
The Young DoctorsVHS311994None
The Young Doctors: 30th Anniversary DVD1226 November 2006Reunion

Audio Commentary

Stills Gallery

Umbrella Trailers

Umbrella Entertainment
The Young Doctors: Classic CliffhangersDVD1222 February 2008Audio Commentary

Umbrella Trailers

Umbrella Entertainment
The Young Doctors Collection 1DVD1-2503516 June 2021Reunion; Ada's cookbookViaVision Entertainment

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Coleman, Alan James. One Door Shuts: My Autobiography. pp. 288. Trafford Publishing . 2009. 9781426909207.
  2. Web site: Cut and thrust. 16 October 2006.
  3. Web site: TV Week: "Young Doctors Exodus!" the Young Doctors 9th January 1982. 22 July 2021.
  4. Web site: The Young Doctors - 1976 - 1983 . 2011-08-18 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110807123809/http://www.theyoungdoctors.com/show/history.htm . 7 August 2011.
  5. News: A. M. Hospital. . . 50 . 97 . New South Wales, Australia . 7 December 1906 . 2 January 2022 . 1 . National Library of Australia.
  6. News: Opening of the Wollongong Hospital. . . LXXXIV . 2386 . New South Wales, Australia . 31 July 1907 . 3 January 2022 . 291 . National Library of Australia.
  7. Web site: The Young Doctors turns 40. 8 November 2016.
  8. Web site: 1978: March 11-17. 7 March 2008.
  9. The Young Doctors Collection One. ViaVision Entertainment. Disc 36. Reunion Interview with Judy McBurney.
  10. The Young Doctors Collection One. ViaVision Entertainment. Disc 36. Reunion Interview with Eric Oldfield.
  11. Web site: Celebrating Mr Grundy. 29 November 2008.
  12. Web site: 1978: October 7-13. 4 October 2008.
  13. Web site: 1979: October 13-19. 10 October 2009.
  14. http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,22775803-5006009,00.html New life for Young Doctors | The Daily Telegraph