Brass Monkeys
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Template:Infobox television
Brass Monkeys is an Australian television sitcom that was first broadcast in 1984 on the Seven Network. The series was written and produced by Gary Reilly and Tony Sattler, who were known for comedy series The Naked Vicar Show and Kingswood Country. The title comes from the colloquial expression "cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey", in reference to the cold climate of the Antarctic.
Synopsis
Brass Monkeys is the story of a pretty female doctor who joins a group of men confined to the lonely isolation of an Australian Antarctic expedition station.[1]
Cast
- Graeme Blundell as Noddy
- Paul Chubb as Big Eye
- Kev Golsby as Hugo the OIC ("officer in charge")
- Ross Hohnen as Rex (aka, "the Ferret")
- Margie McCrae as Dr Sally Newman
- Colin McEwan as Nick
- Doug Scroope as Cookie
- Bill Young as Martin "Marty" Lightfoot
Background and production
The series was based on a television pilot titled Twelve Below, written by Reilly and Sattler. The pilot was devised as a vehicle for Noel Ferrier. However, owing to Ferrier's schedule, he proved unavailable to star in the series.[1][2] The pilot starred Ferrier as OIC, Robert Hughes as Noddy, Cornelia Frances as Dr Sally Newman, Colin McEwan as Nick and Jeff Ashby as Rex, aka, "the Ferret".[1] Only McEwan returned for Brass Monkeys.[1]
An original draft script and a camera script were written for each episode. Each episode was recorded twice before a live studio audience, using the camera scripts. The two recordings were then edited into one recording, using the best audience reaction from each recording.[3] The series was recorded on Saturdays at Sydney's Epping Studios.[4]
The series is the only example of a situation comedy set in Antarctica.[5]
Owing to exhaustion at having to write the scripts for this series, coupled with those of their previous series, writer Tony Sattler left RS Productions, the company operated by him and writing partner Gary Reilly, leaving Reilly to form his own company, Gary Reilly Productions, in 1984. This was the final series written by Reilly and Sattler as part of their production company RS Productions, until they reunited in 1997 for Bullpitt!.[6]
Episodes
Cameral rehearsals for the thirteen episodes took place between March and June 1983,[7][8] in an old hall in Balmain.[4] All thirteen episodes exist in the National Film and Sound Archive.[9] Four unspecified episodes aired on Wednesdays at 8:00 pm after Kingswood Country on 7 November,[10] 14 November,[11] 12 December,[12] and 19 December 1984.[13] Template:Episode table
References
Notes
Citations
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External links
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