A Place to Call Home (TV series)

A Place to Call Home is an Australian television drama series created by Bevan Lee for the Seven Network. It premiered on 28 April 2013.[1] Set in rural New South Wales in the period following the Second World War, it follows Sarah Adams (Marta Dusseldorp), who has returned to Australia after twenty years abroad to start a new life and ends up clashing with wealthy matriarch Elizabeth Bligh (Noni Hazlehurst). The main cast also includes Brett Climo (George Bligh), Craig Hall (Dr. Jack Duncan), David Berry (James Bligh), Abby Earl (Anna Poletti), Arianwen Parkes-Lockwood (Olivia Bligh), Aldo Mignone (Gino Poletti), Sara Wiseman (Carolyn Bligh), Jenni Baird (Regina Standish), Tim Draxl (Henry Fox), Dominic Allburn (Harry Polson), and Frankie J. Holden (Roy Briggs).

A Place to Call Home
GenrePeriod drama
Created byBevan Lee
Starring
Composer(s)Michael Yezerski
Country of originAustralia
Original language(s)English
No. of series6
No. of episodes67 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • John Holmes
  • Julie McGauran
  • Penny Win
Producer(s)Chris Martin-Jones
CinematographyJohn Stokes
Running time42–45 minutes
Production company(s)Seven Productions
DistributorEndemol
Release
Original networkSeven Network (2013–14)
SoHo (2015)
Showcase (2016–18)
Picture formatPAL (576i)
HDTV 1080i
Audio formatStereo
Original release28 April 2013 (2013-04-28) 
21 October 2018 (2018-10-21)
External links
Website

It has been described as a "compelling melodrama about love and loss set against the social change of the 1950s".[2] The show ended after six seasons in 2018.

Cast and characters

Main continuing characters

  • Marta Dusseldorp as Sarah Adams, who despite a strict Catholic upbringing, had moved to Paris to be with the man she loved and had adopted his Jewish faith. She comes to work for the local hospital near the Bligh family, whom she met while serving as a nurse on the ship taking them back to Australia from Europe. Later, she is astonished to hear a report that her husband is still alive following World War II, and her life again spins into troubled times.[3]
  • Noni Hazlehurst as Elizabeth Bligh, the headstrong and stubborn matriarch of the Bligh family. She at first worries that Sarah will endanger the Bligh's family social position, but she mellows over time. She guesses James' homosexuality, since her own husband had also had affairs with men, and she presses James to stay in the marriage as she had done. Later in the series, she leaves for Sydney to live with her daughter Carolyn, and to become a better person.[3]
  • Brett Climo as Elizabeth's son, George Bligh, a good-hearted man who takes Sarah under his protection and gradually falls in love with her. He is Elaine's widower and father to James and Anna, although it eventually emerges that Anna is the secret child of his sister Carolyn and their friend Jack, taken in by George and Elaine to spare Carolyn any scandal. His harsh treatment of James puts James in danger, until eventually George remembers seeing his own father kissing another man. He later runs for public office and takes over as lord of the estate. He has a child by Sarah.[3]
  • Craig Hall as Jack Duncan, the secret past lover of Carolyn and secret father to Anna, who now faces many challenges in his work as a doctor in a hospital run by the Bligh family. He is compassionate and generous despite his personal problems, and would do anything to help others. Over the series, he and Carolyn connect with their daughter Anna and reconnect with each other.[3]
  • David Berry as James Bligh (regular: seasons 1–4, 6; recurring: season 5), the only son of George and Elaine, who grows up believing Anna is his sister. In spite of his homosexual relationships with local farmhand Harry and fellow student William, he marries William's sister Olivia but, tormented by his gay desires, he tries to commit suicide. During Olivia's pregnancy, he undergoes electroconvulsive therapy and aversion therapy to change his sexuality. He feels betrayed when Olivia has an affair, but returns to Ash Park to live for his son. He gets involved with Henry, his father's physician, and later moves to the Riviera with William, where he feels he can be fully himself.[3]
  • Arianwen Parkes-Lockwood as Olivia Bligh, James' wife, a newlywed from England at the start of the series. She does not know that James is secretly in love with her brother, William. She develops anger toward James for his indifference to her desperate need for affection, but tries to come to terms with his sexuality in the interests of their son, Georgie, and of the family estate. She hides for many months the fact that her baby with James died in the womb and that the baby she brings home is not really theirs.[3]
  • Abby Earl as Anna Bligh, the secret child of Carolyn and Jack, who was raised believing she was daughter of George and Elaine. Anna marries a local farmer, Gino, after rebelling against the Bligh family. The marriage faces difficulties, however, when Gino goes into debt, and his attempts to expand the farm fail. Anna becomes a novelist and later has a child by Henry.[3]
  • Frankie J. Holden as Roy Briggs, a kindly old farmer who lives alone at the series start. He is very generous toward Sarah from the time she arrives in town, eventually offering her a refuge in his small home. They develop an easy, informal, mutually-supportive friendship.[3]
  • Sara Wiseman as Carolyn Bligh (regular: season 2–6; recurring: season 1). Much like her secret daughter Anna, Carolyn was the rebel child of her generation. For a long time, she gave up on her relationship with the Bligh family, and has had little contact for years. Once her secret is revealed, she is reunited with her long-separated daughter Anna and they develop an even closer relationship than before. Later on Carolyn works for Sir Richard Bennett, encountering new problems.[3]
  • Tim Draxl as Doctor Henry Fox (regular: season 3–6), the doctor who helps to save George's life after he is shot. Henry befriends James, and they realize their mutual attraction is stronger than mere friendship. Henry helps James learn how to be gay without attracting attention, and the Blight family eventually accepts their relationship as good for James. Henry falls under the devious control of Regina, when she blackmails him into supplying her with morphine for her addiction. He moves to Inverness to be with James and is devastated when James abandons him to live in Europe with an old flame.[3]
  • Deborah Kennedy as Doris Collins (regular: season 4–6; recurring: seasons 1–3), the most widely-known member of the Inverness village, who seems omnipresent on her bicycle. Although she means well, her gossiping ways can sometimes make her seem rude and intrusive. Sarah dislikes her at first, but as time goes on, finds her helpful as someone who always knows who has done what in the village.
  • Dominic Allburn as Harry Polson (regular: season 1; recurring: season 4; regular: season 6), Amy Polson's gay brother, who had had a romantic involvement with James when they were teens. Harry kisses James, which is discovered by Bert, who then beats him up, kicks him out, and blackmails James' family. After another severe beating, Sarah helps him to settle back into a more stable life at Inverness. Eventually, Harry connects with Henry.
  • Aaron Pederson as Frank Griggs, an Aboriginal Australian man, broken by the effects of war and racism. He paints watercolours and is discovered by Carolyn who encourages him to show his work. Frank and Jack bond over shared military experience. Early in their friendship, Jack remarks that “a bullet can’t tell the colour of your skin. We all took the same risks.” Both men learn to trust each other and begin to break free of their self-imposed prisons.

Main departed characters

  • Aldo Mignone as Gino Poletti (seasons 1–4), the young, handsome Italian farmer who has set Anna's heart on fire. He has a real passion for farming and trying to please everybody, but his ambitious business decisions are not very successful.[3]
  • Jenni Baird as Regina Standish (season 1–5), the widowed, wealthy, but still money-hungry sister of George's late wife, Elaine. Regina is the opposite of who Elaine had been: cold, bitter, and scheming, she despises Jews and openly displays religious intolerance toward Sarah. Regina has now set her sights on the widower George's inheritance, and would take extreme actions to achieve her goals regardless of anyone she sees as an obstacle. After being committed in an asylum for the murder of Millie Davis and a policeman, Regina was released in 1958. She returned to the town and helped Sarah and George fight Sir Richard's cruel intentions. She committed suicide at the end of season 5, overdosing on morphine while making her death appear to be homicide.
  • Matt Levett as Andrew Swanson (guest: season 6; regular: season 2; recurring: season 1), a somewhat entitled heir apparent who tries to win the hand of Anna Bligh.
  • Ben Winspear as Doctor Rene Nordmann (regular: season 3; recurring: season 2), the long-lost first love and husband of Sarah Adams. First seen only in flashback, Rene had been arrested by the Nazi occupiers of Paris, and had disappeared without a trace. Later, when Sarah is amazed to learn that he is still alive, she travels to Paris to rescue him from the deep psychological damage caused by his long ordeal of imprisonment and torture. Rene has great difficulty adjusting to normal life, and still seems to carry his imprisonment within him.
  • Brenna Harding as Rose O'Connell (regular: season 4; recurring: season 3)
  • Robert Coleby as Douglas Goddard, a retiree who ran a club for Australian war veterans. He married Elizabeth Bligh but died in season 5.

Recurring characters

  • Heather Mitchell as Prudence Swanson, the wealthy friend of Elizabeth. Prudence socializes with Elizabeth whenever she comes to visit Sydney. As a member of Sydney's upper class, she is very aristocratic and looks down her nose at Sarah when she arrives for a garden party.
  • Judi Farr as Peg Maloney, the aunt of Sarah Adams, who writes to her frequently from her home in Sydney. She and Sarah have grown very close, and when Sarah later decides to take a difficult action, she asks Peg for help.
  • Krew Boylan and then Amy Mathews as Amy Polson, the maid of the Bligh household, sister to Harry and sister-in-law to Bert. When Regina suspects that James is gay, she manipulates Amy into spying for her, which eventually forces Elizabeth to fire Amy with great sorrow. After James's aversion therapy, her face reminds him of Harry, causing him to develop intense nausea.
  • Dina Panozzo as Carla Poletti, the mother of Gino. She is very critical of the relationship with Anna and her son, saying that it will never work because she is not Catholic. But when George accedes, she does so as well.
  • Angelo D'Angelo as Amo Poletti, the father of Gino
  • Jacinta Acevski as Alma Grey
  • Scott Grimley as Norman Parker (driver)
  • Rick Donald as Lloyd Ellis-Parker, a talented portrait artist on temporary assignment, who seems to offer Olivia the romantic affection she desperately craves.
  • Michael Sheasby as Bert Ford, Amy and Harry's brother-in-law, a local yobbo who always seems to be looking for a fight. His suspicion of outsiders and religious intolerance make Sarah a natural target, as are the Italian Poletti family, and Harry and James, whose attraction Bert uses to blackmail the Blighs. Bert is found dead in the lake, and the unknown circumstances surrounding his death haunt his former victims.
  • Mark Lee as Sir Richard Bennett, a rich and powerful, but unprincipled owner of a major city newspaper. He is used to taking whatever he wishes to possess, including the people around him.
  • Conrad Coleby as Matthew Goddard, Douglas' son who returns to town after his father's death. He starts dating Olivia and later asks her to marry him.

Production

Development for A Place to Call Home began after Bevan Lee completed his "domestic trilogy" (Always Greener, Packed to the Rafters and Winners & Losers).[4] He took inspiration from film director Douglas Sirk's 1950s films such as Written on the Wind (1956) and All That Heaven Allows (1955).[5] Lee told The Age that he wanted to create a romance-driven melodrama based in the 1950s because people's lives in the present are "relatively bland". He said: "At the end of the day, conflict is drama and we live in relatively conflict-free society. I had to go to a place where there was pain and damage and hurt; after the war there was."[6] The script is co-written by Lee and Trent Atkinson.[7]

Noni Hazlehurst (Elizabeth Bligh) was the first cast member to be announced for A Place to Call Home, on 18 June 2012.[8] Marta Dusseldorp (Sarah Adams), Brett Climo (George Bligh) and Frankie J. Holden (Roy Briggs) were announced a month later, with Dusseldorp leading the overall cast.[9] Newcomers David Berry (James Bligh), Arianwen Parkes-Lockwood (Olivia Bligh), Abby Earl (Anna Bligh) and Aldo Mignone (Gino Poletti), made up the rest of the main cast.[10]

A Place to Call Home is set primarily in both the fictional estate "Ash Park" and the nearby fictional country town of "Inverness" in New South Wales.[11] Inverness was also used as the country setting of Always Greener. Camden and the Southern Highlands in New South Wales serves as the backdrop for Inverness. Ash Park is actually Camelot, a heritage-listed property located at Kirkham, on the outskirts of Camden.[1][12][13] Sydney, the capital city of New South Wales, is a third location where major events occur, but most city scenes are filmed indoors, aside from some establishing shots such as historic footage of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Filming for the first season began on 9 July 2012 and concluded on 12 December 2012.[14] Season one was shot on a Sony F65 camera, the first Australian television production to do so.[15]

In June 2013, Erin McWhirter of TV Week announced that A Place to Call Home had been renewed for another season. Abby Earl told McWhirter, "We're locked in pre-production in August and then we start filming in September, so there's plenty of time for me to get back in Anna's shoes."[16] The second season started on 11 May 2014 and concluded on 13 July 2014.

TV Week confirmed that a third season had been commissioned.[17] In June 2014, however, the magazine reported that Channel Seven had declined the option to renew the series, and that the cast and crew had been told that they would not be required for a third season.[18]

On 15 October 2014, it was announced that Foxtel had finalised a deal with Channel Seven that would see a third season written by Bevan Lee, produced by Seven Productions, but aired on Foxtel.[19] On 25 October 2014, The Daily Telegraph announced that A Place to Call Home was renewed for another two seasons and would return in late 2015, airing on Foxtel channel, SoHo. It was also announced that all the original cast and crew members would return.[20]

On 16 August 2015 it was announced via the official Facebook page that season 3 would premiere on 27 September 2015 on SoHo. Season 4 premiered on Foxtel's Showcase channel on 11 September 2016.

Season 5 was announced by Foxtel on 16 November 2016. The timeline of season 5 skips ahead from 1954 to the year 1958. Production of A Place to Call Home resumed in February 2017 with principal photography continuing through July 2017. Season 5 premiered on Foxtel's Showcase Channel in Australia starting on 8 October 2017.[21]

A sixth and final season was announced by Foxtel on 6 December 2017,[22] which was noted to be the last in March 2018.[23] The final season began airing on 19 August 2018 and the final episode aired 21 October 2018.

Release

Broadcast

Series overview
SeriesChannelEpisodesOriginally airedOzTAM viewershipRank
First airedLast aired
1Seven1328 April 2013 (2013-04-28)21 July 2013 (2013-07-21)1,480,000[24]8[24]
21011 May 2014 (2014-05-11)13 July 2014 (2014-07-13)1,150,000[25]7[25]
3SoHo1027 September 2015 (2015-09-27)29 November 2015 (2015-11-29)168,0002
4Showcase[26]1211 September 201627 November 2016139,0002
5128 October 201724 December 2017104,0003
610[23]19 August 201821 October 2018114,000TBA

When Seven Network revealed its new television series lineup for 2012, A Place to Call Home was mentioned alongside other titles.[27] Seven Network's Angus Ross said that it would potentially premiere in late 2012, but would not be rushed to air by a certain date unless "casting and other elements" were right.[28] The first season of A Place to Call Home consisted of thirteen episodes.[6] The pilot episode was originally broadcast on 28 April 2013, in the 8:30 pm time slot (previously occupied by Downton Abbey).[1]

International

Shortly after airing in Australia A Place to Call Home started broadcasting on TV One in New Zealand.[29]

Series one and two began airing on BBC2 in the United Kingdom on 17 November 2014, series three on 25 February 2016,[30] and series four on 13 February 2017. The fifth series was promoted to a BBC1 daytime slot, and began airing daily on 13 March 2018. The sixth and final series begins on BBC1 on 11 February 2019.

All six seasons are available for streaming in the US and Canada on Acorn TV. The first four seasons were also distributed to television stations by American Public Television.[31]

In 2020, all six seasons was made available for streaming in Sweden on SVT Play until September 17th, and in Norway on NRK TV.

Home media

Title Set details DVD release dates Blu-ray release dates Special features
Region 1[32] Region 2[33] Region 4[34] Region B[34]
A Place to Call Home — Season 1 3 March 2015 (2015-03-03)23 February 2015 (2015-02-23)8 August 2013 (2013-08-08)
  • Photo gallery (region 2 only)
  • Interviews with the Cast (region 4 only)
A Place to Call Home — Season 2 30 June 2015 (2015-06-30)23 February 2015 (2015-02-23)17 July 2014 (2014-07-17)
  • Interviews
  • Young to Old: Sarah's Transformation
  • Character Profiles (region 1 & 2 only)
A Place to Call Home — Season 2: Revised Edition
  • Discs: 3
  • Episodes: 10
N/AN/A29 October 2015 (2015-10-29)N/A
  • Interviews
  • Young to Old: Sarah's Transformation
  • Season 3 Character Profiles
  • Season 3 Trailer
A Place to Call Home — Season 2: Collector's Edition
  • Discs: 1
  • Episodes: 3
N/AN/A29 October 2015 (2015-10-29)N/A
  • Interviews
  • Young to Old: Sarah's Transformation
  • Season 3 Character Profiles
  • Season 3 Trailer
A Place to Call Home — Season 3 5 April 2016 (2016-04-05)14 March 2016 (2016-03-14)7 April 2016 (2016-04-07)N/A
  • New season 2 finale
  • Picture gallery
  • Season 3 episode recaps (region 4 only)
A Place to Call Home — Season 4 28 February 2017 (2017-02-28)6 March 2017 (2017-03-06)26 April 2017 (2017-04-26)N/A

Region 1:

  • Cast and crew interviews (region 1 only)
  • Behind-the-scenes featurettes (region 1 only)
  • Photo gallery
A Place to Call Home — Season 5 3 April 2018 (2018-04-03)2 April 2018 (2018-04-02)28 March 2018 (2018-03-28)N/A
  • Q and A with Jenni Baird (region 1 only)

Box sets

Title Set details DVD release dates Special features
Region 1[32] Region 2[33] Region 4[34]
A Place to Call Home — Season 1 & 2
  • Discs: 7
  • Episodes: 23
N/AN/A29 October 2015 (2015-10-29)
  • Interviews
  • Young to Old: Sarah's Transformation
  • Season 3 Character Profiles
  • Season 3 Trailer
A Place to Call Home — Complete Seasons One to Three N/A14 March 2016 (2016-03-14)1 September 2016 (2016-09-01)
  • Interviews
  • Young to Old: Sarah's Transformation
  • Season 3 Character Profiles
  • Season 3 Trailer
  • New season 2 finale (region 2 & 4)
  • Picture gallery (region 2 & 4)
  • Season 3 episode recaps
A Place to Call Home — Complete Seasons 1–4 N/A6 March 2017 (2017-03-06)26 April 2017 (2017-04-26)
  • Alternative series two finale (region 2)
A Place to Call Home — Complete Seasons 1–5
  • Discs: 16
  • Episodes: 57
TBATBA28 March 2018 (2018-03-28) Region 4:
  • Interviews
  • Young to Old: Sarah's Transformation
  • Season 3 Character Profiles
  • Season 3 Trailer
  • New Season 2 Finale
  • Season 3 Episode Recaps
  • Photo Gallery

Notes

  1. 2 discs in the UK. Blu-ray includes 3 discs.
  2. Blu-ray and UK release includes 2 discs.
  3. 2 discs in the UK.
  4. 2 discs in the UK.
  5. 4 discs in the U.S. and 2 in the UK.
  6. 6 discs in the UK.
  7. 8 discs in the UK.

Soundtrack

A Place to Call Home — Music from Seasons 1–5 was released on 20 October 2017[35][36]

Disc 1
No.TitleArtistLength
1."A Place to Call Home Theme" (season 2)Michael Yezerski1:43
2."Motherland" (season 1)Michael Yezerski2:44
3."Ebb Tide" (season 1)Stuie French featuring Shanley Del2:45
4."Music! Music! Music!" (season 1)Teresa Brewer2:46
5."Heart and Soul" (season 1)The Four Aces featuring Al Alberts2:19
6."We're Going to have a Baby" (season 1)Michael Yezerski1:58
7."Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" (season 1)Ella Fitzgerald7:05
8."It's Coming" (season 2)Michael Yezerski3:03
9."The Anniversary Waltz" (season 1)Vera Lynn2:46
10."You Belong to Me" (season 1)Jo Stafford3:15
11."Mona Lisa" (season 1)Michael Yezerski featuring Glenn Cunningham1:51
12."When I Fall in Love" (season 2)Nat King Cole3:13
13."Mr. & Mrs. James Bligh" (season 1)Michael Yezerski1:53
14."A Kiss to Build a Dream On" (season 2)Louis Armstrong3:05
15."Lullaby of Broadway" (season 1)Doris Day with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet2:30
16."Ash Park Morning" (season 1)Michael Yezerski1:19
17."Rag Mop" (season 1)The Ames Brothers2:41
18."Botch-a-Me (Ba-Ba-Baciami Piccina)" (season 1)Rosemary Clooney2:20
19."Sh-Boom" (Single Version; season 2)The Crew Cuts2:50
20."Sway" (season 1)Stuie French featuring Paul Fisher2:44
21."Paris" (season 2)Michael Yezerski2:16
22."I Believe" (season 2)Michael Yezerski featuring Martha Marlow1:56
23."Are You Awake?" (season 2)Michael Yezerski1:46
24."No Other Love" (season 2)Michael Yezerski featuring Alex Oomens3:41
25."Side by Side" (season 1)Kay Starr2:55
26."You're Nobody till Somebody Loves You" (season 1)The Mills Brothers2:25
27."Undecided" (season 1)The Ames Brothers3:01
28."At Last" (season 1)Etta James3:04
29."Amazing Grace" (season 1)Michael Yezerski featuring Mahalia Barnes1:50

Reception

Awards and nominations

Australian Cinematographers Society Awards
Year Category Nominee(s) Work Result Ref
2014 Telefeatures, TV Drama & Mini Series Award of Distinction John Stokes Season 1, Episode 9: "Cane Toad" Won [37]
Equity Ensemble Awards
Year Category Nominee(s) Work Result Ref
2014 Most Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series Cast Season 1 Nominated [38]
Logie Awards
Year Category Nominee Work Result Ref
2014 Most Outstanding Drama Series N/A A Place to Call Home Nominated [39]
Most Popular Actress Marta Dusseldorp A Place to Call Home Nominated
Most Popular New Talent Abby Earl A Place to Call Home Nominated
2016 Best Actress Marta Dusseldorp A Place to Call Home Nominated [40]
Most Outstanding Supporting Actor David Berry A Place to Call Home Nominated
Most Outstanding Supporting Actress Jenni Baird A Place to Call Home Nominated
Best Drama Program N/A A Place to Call Home Nominated
Most Outstanding Drama Series N/A A Place to Call Home Nominated
2017 Best Actress Marta Dusseldorp A Place to Call Home Nominated
Most Outstanding Supporting Actress Jenni Baird A Place to Call Home Nominated
Most Outstanding Drama Series N/A A Place to Call Home Won
2018 Most Outstanding Drama Series N/A A Place to Call Home Nominated
gollark: For my future evil plan in which `async`/`await` syntax becomes do notation?
gollark: Too bad.
gollark: That *could* probably maybe just be added to `Promise.all` without making them !!NOT MONADS!!.
gollark: Yes, JS often bad.
gollark: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45712106/why-are-promises-monads

References

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  2. Knox, David (8 July 2012). "More cast for A Place to Call Home". TV Tonight. Archived from the original on 6 June 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  3. "Characters". Yahoo!7. 4 May 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  4. Knox, David (18 April 2013). "A Place to Call Home Drama Launch". TV Tonight. Archived from the original on 11 May 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  5. Blundell, Graeme (20 April 2013). "Home truths revealed in Bevan Lee's new family drama". The Australian. News Limited (News Corporation). Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  6. Craven, Peter (18 April 2013). "Dressed with vintage appeal". The Age. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 31 May 2013. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  7. Knox, David (25 April 2013). "A Place to Call Home". TV Tonight. Archived from the original on 9 May 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  8. Knox, David (18 June 2012). "Noni Hazlehurst to call Seven home again". TV Tonight. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  9. Idato, Michael (9 July 2012). "Marta finds a home at Seven". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 8 December 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  10. Yeap, Sue (9 July 2012). "New Seven blockbuster cranks up". The West Australian. Seven West Media Limited (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts). Archived from the original on 16 November 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  11. B, Alicia (10 June 2012). "New Seven Show - A Place to Call Home". Throng.com.au. Archived from the original on 4 November 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  12. Chancellor, Jonathan (28 April 2013). "Camelot at Camden is captivating as A Place to Call Home location on Channel 7's new 1950s drama series". Property Observer. Private Media Pty Ltd. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  13. Leys, Nick (17 April 2013). "Seven has high hopes for Bevan Lee's A Place To Call Home". The Australian. News Limited (News Corporation). Archived from the original on 6 May 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  14. "A Place to Call Home production details". Inside Film. 4 December 2012. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  15. Swift, Brendan (11 March 2013). "First Aus TV drama shot with Sony F65: A Place to Call Home". Inside Film. Archived from the original on 11 May 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  16. McWhirter, Erin (22–28 June 2013). "TV Insider". TV Week. Bauer Media Group (25): 25.
  17. Vnuk, Helen (10–16 May 2014). "Home comforts". TV Week. Bauer Media Group (19): 97.
  18. Williams, Glen (14–20 June 2014). "No place to call home". TV Week. Bauer Media Group (22): 11.
  19. Idato, Michael (15 October 2014). "New Place for A Place to Call Home". Sunday Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 15 October 2014. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
  20. Harris, Amy (25 October 2014). "Foxtel breathes new life into A Place To Call Home after Seven signs deal to keep the show alive". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  21. Knox, David (16 August 2017). "Returning: A Place to Call Home". TV Tonight. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
  22. McWhirter, Erin (6 December 2017). "A Place To Call Home: Season 6 confirmed for 2018". Foxtel. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  23. Knox, David (19 March 2018). "A Place to Call Home to end with 6th season". TV Tonight. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  24. "TV ratings: 2013". Government of Australia. Screen Australia. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  25. "TV ratings: 2014". Government of Australia. Screen Australia. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  26. Zautsen, Daniel (9 August 2016). "A Place to Call Home, filmed at Camelot in Kirkham, will return for its fourth series on Foxtel's showcase". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 14 August 2016.
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  31. Programmers’ APT Marketplace choices include Aussie romantic drama and MST3K Archived 24 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  32. American DVD releases:
  33. "A Place To Call Home". iTunes Store. Apple Inc. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  34. "A Place To Call Home: Seasons 1–5 (Music From The Television Series) – Otv". JB Hi-Fi. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
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  37. Knox, David (27 April 2014). "Logie Awards 2014: Winners". TV Tonight. Archived from the original on 30 April 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  38. Knox, David (8 May 2016). "2016 Logie Awards: Winners". TV Tonight. Archived from the original on 9 May 2016. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
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