Home (Australian TV series)

Home is an Australian children's television series first broadcast on the ABC on 11 April 1983. It follows the stories and adventures of children living at the fictional Westmere children's home. The series featured a revolving cast with story arcs running across two to six episodes, although some characters appeared in more than one story arc.[1]

Home
Starring
Country of originAustralia
No. of episodes32
Production
Executive producerNoel Price
Running time25 minutes
Release
Original networkABC
Original release11 April (1983-04-11) 
24 May 1983 (1983-05-24)

Production

Home was written by Graeme Farmer and directed by Richard Sarell, Walter Boston, Noel Price and Douglas Sharp. It was the biggest production to come from the network's children's unit at the time, and featured more than 400 young actors in the cast.[2] The series is set in a community of welfare cottages and centres on the children who come to live there.[2]

Broadcast

The series aired on ABC Monday to Friday in a 6:00 pm timeslot.[2] The last episode aired on 24 May 1983.[3]

In the United Kingdom, the series was first screened in 1983 on ITV in the Children's ITV segment and then repeated in 1985. It was also screened in a number of European countries.

Reception

Jacqueline Lee Lewis of The Sun-Herald praised the series, calling it "wonderful".[2] She wrote "The concept is an interesting one, it's believable (thank goodness, after all those soapies) and it's well acted."[2] Lewis said that with such a large cast it was hard to name everyone who deserved "a gold medal" for their performances, but mentioned Lea Steventon, Darren Sole, Paul Spano, Lisa Potasz, Ian Turnnidge and Cindy Unkauf. She also praised the older actors Bill Garner, Christine Amor and Robert Meldrum.[2] Brian Courtis from The Age called Home a "realistic, well-scripted ABC drama".[3]

References

  1. "Australian Television: Home".
  2. Lewis, Jacqueline Lee (10 April 1983). "Top new ABC series for children". The Sun-Herald. Retrieved 28 August 2022 via Newspapers.com.icon of an open green padlock
  3. Courtis, Brian (24 May 1983). "A critical guide to today's programs". The Age. Retrieved 28 August 2022 via Newspapers.com.icon of an open green padlock
  • Home at IMDb
  • Home at the Australian Television Information Archive
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