Adam Heywood

Adam Heywood is a fictional character in the New Zealand soap opera Shortland Street who was portrayed by Leighton Cardno from early 2001 until mid-2003.

Adam Heywood
Shortland Street character
Portrayed byLeighton Cardno
Duration2001–2003
First appearance14 March 2001
Last appearance25 August 2003
Created byJason Daniel
Introduced bySimon Bennett
ClassificationFormer; regular
Profile
OccupationDoctor
HomeUnited States

Creation and casting

In 2000 an Australian consultant made several large changes to the show that would see a more working class hospital portrayed.[1] Adam and his mother, Barb and brother, Marshall were introduced through the revamp.[2][3] As part of the revamp, producers wished for a more community based cast with established family links, mimicking the past presence of the Warner and McKenna families.[1][4] The Heywood's were created to fulfill this role. Leighton Cardno auditioned for the role and quickly won it.[5] He had little expectations but quickly found he loved the job and relished the opportunity.[5] Cardno was also acting in a series based for teenagers called Being Eve and as such, Adam was portrayed with long dirty hair, something the character would traditionally not have.[6] Although Cardno enjoyed his time on the show, upon arrival he decided to only stay short term so as not to become a "Ken Barlow".[7]

Storylines

Adam arrived to Ferndale alongside his mother Barb (Annie Whittle) and brother Marshall (Paul Reid). He got a job at the hospital and briefly dated Rachel McKenna (Angela Bloomfield) before a brief fling with Robyn Stokes (Kirstie O'Sullivan) which ended when she slept with Marshall. He started a romance with Toni Thompson (Laura Hill). However Adam discovered he was in love with Waverley (Claire Chitham), only to end up sleeping with Toni again. He and Waverley finally got together as the year ended. Waverley eventually dumped Adam and he returned to Toni. But Toni dumped Adam and he attempted to sabotage her wedding to Matt McAllister (Roy Snow). Adam was stabbed by Victor's (Calvin Tuteao) nemesis, Kurt. Adam survived the stabbing but developed a reliance on his medication. Adam reunited with Toni in the aftermath of his addiction but the two broke up indefinitely before Adam departed to the United States.

Character development

Characterisation

Upon arrival, Adam was labelled the most responsible of the Heywood family and someone wiser than his years.[2] The character's debut year set up the characters initial characterisation but the following year, Adam vastly changed with Cardno stating; "all the strengths of Adam that they established in the first year, this year they flipped around and used them against them. So for someone who was confident and supportive, he's become controlling, dominant and stuck in his ways."[5] Cardno enjoyed portraying the darker side of the character saying; "It's interesting to move towards playing the dark aspects of a person. I felt like last year I was more or less a function, the nice guy. I felt [this year] like I've been exploring new territory, going into areas that were interesting and challenging. That's when it starts to become fun."[5]

Reception

Upon arrival, Cardno opted that the Heywood family unit would be a positive for Shortland Street, stating; "We're people you can relate to. We're the middle-class striving family, never learning lessons. We're good for the Street."[7] Adam's declaration of love towards Waverley Wilson was viewed on positively, something producer – Harriet Crampton, believed was due to it being unexpected.[8] After Adam was stabbed in the 2002 cliffhanger, a phone poll was taken and a majority of voters hoped Adam would not survive.[9]

gollark: There are, IIRC, a business version of Glass and HoloLens available, at least.
gollark: There was "North" for a bit, but Google bought and killed it.
gollark: Consumer AR seems to slightly not exist, even without cameras. I'm not sure why.
gollark: I would *really* not trust Neuralink in today's computer ecosystem anyway.
gollark: It would be really weird if it was somehow universally impossible to give people more acute senses without pain.

References

  1. Cleave, Louisa (5 April 2001). "Shortland Street gets real". The New Zealand Herald. APN News & Media. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
  2. Cleave, Louisa (5 April 2001). "Shortland Street's new faces". The New Zealand Herald. APN News & Media.
  3. Cleave, Louisa (7 May 2001). "Shortland Street gets large dose of PC". The New Zealand Herald. APN News & Media.
  4. "Shortland Street: The 10 best tales". The New Zealand Herald. Fairfax Media. May 2002.
  5. Dixon, Greg (21 November 2002). "Grappling with Shortland Street's Adam Heywood". The New Zealand Herald. Fairfax Media.
  6. McDermott, Kate; Bird, Libby (2007). Shortland Street Trivia Quiz Book. ISBN 9780143007173.
  7. Hoby, Katherine (29 May 2001). "Street-smart after this education". The New Zealand Herald. APN News & Media.
  8. Rae, Fiona (16 May 2002). "Shortland Street: Where to from Now?". The New Zealand Herald. APN News & Media.
  9. Hewitson, Michelle (January 2003). "Ooh, the suspense is killing me". The New Zealand Herald. APN News & Media.
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