Dancing Daze
Dancing Daze is a 1986 Australian mini series about two sisters from Wagga Wagga who leave their family pig farm to make it as dancers in the big city.[1]
Dancing Daze | |
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Based on | idea by Michael Cove Chrissie Koltai |
Written by | Michael Cove John Misto Debra Oswald |
Directed by | Jane Campion Geoffrey Nottage Peter Fisk |
Starring | Meryl Tankard Patsy Stephen |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | 6 x 1 hour |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | 16 February 1986 |
Soundtrack
Dancing Daze | |
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Soundtrack album by various | |
Released | February 1986 |
Recorded | 1985 |
Studio | ABC Television Mixdown Suite |
Genre | |
Label | ABC Music |
Producer | Martin Armiger |
Dancing Daze soundtrack was released in February 1986.[2]
SIDE A:
- "Dancing Daze" (Sharon O'Neill) performed by Wendy Matthews and Jenny Morris.
- "Can I Dance" (Mick Walter, Glen Muirhead - G. Lungren) performed by Mark Williams.
- "Second Opinion" (Jenny Morris, Richard Fataar) performed by Mark Williams.
- "Dare to Be Bold" (Sharon O'Neill) performed by Wendy Matthews.
- "You're So Curious" (Jennifer Hunter-Brown, Michael Hegarty) performed by Marc Hunter.
- "Disaster" (Stephen Cummings, Dean Richards) performed by Jane Clifton.
SIDE V:
- "Against the Dance" (Martin Armiger) performed by Mark Williams.
- "I Love It When We're Dancing" (Greg Macainsh, David Briggs) performed by Martin Armiger and Sherlie Matthews
- "Might Have Been" (Martin Armiger, Michael Cove) performed by Jenny Morris, Mark Williams, Wendy Matthews.
- "Phoebe" (Martin Armiger) performed by Marc Hunter.
- "Casanova Club" (Larry Van Kriedt) performed by Larry Van Kriedt.
- "Lost in a Dancing Daze" (Martin Armiger) performed by Wendy Matthews.
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gollark: It's a function, not some sort of syntactic construct, and also apiologically generalized, yes.
gollark: I mean, it has constructs you can use as them, but not literal for loops.
gollark: For example, Haskell. You may be aware of Haskell.
gollark: > Every language has for loops, even Macron.This is objectively wrong.
References
- Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p186
- "DANCING DAZE". TV Mem. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
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