Outback House

Outback House was an Australian historical reality TV series that originally aired on ABC TV in 2005. The series was based on several series produced by Channel 4 in the United Kingdom and PBS in the United States, in which the concept was to have a modern-day family living in a facsimile of an historical dwelling with their staff, making do with only the technology and materials of the time. Outback House was set in 1861 Outback Australia, on a sheep station called Oxley Downs in New South Wales.

Outback House
GenreHistorical reality television
Country of originAustralia
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producer(s)Ivo Burum
Camera setupdigi beta
Running time60 min.
Release
Original networkABC TV
Picture format576i (SDTV)
Original release12 June 
31 July 2005
External links
Website

Production

The series was conceived as an Australian version of the successful House series, produced by Channel 4 in the United Kingdom, and later adapted by American public broadcaster PBS. The series produced by 2005 were: The 1900 House (UK, 1999), The Edwardian Country House (UK, 2002), Frontier House (US, 2002) and Colonial House (US, 2004).

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation advertised for twenty people to participate in the series filming for three months, portraying the inhabitants of an 1860s Australian sheep station. Over 5000 people applied to take the journey back in time. In the recreated world of the series, the family running the station were "squatters", who had taken over an abandoned property. In addition, the participants included the considerable number of staff required on an outback sheep farm: overseers, shepherds, governesses, station hands, cooks and maids.[1]

The "Oxley Downs" sheep station was constructed from scratch at a secret location in western New South Wales (later revealed to be just outside Dubbo), because the producers couldn't find an existing property in authentic condition. The year 1861 was chosen as the setting for the series, as Australia's land ownership laws were about to change dramatically making the incentive to turn a profit even higher, especially given squatters had to fend off challengers for their land if they were not making money on the property.[1] One of the show's producers mentioned on an ABC message board that the location had three requirements: it had to be big; it had to be distinctively Australian in appearance, with nothing of 2005 visible; and it had to be secluded to allow the filming to be conducted in secret.[2] In an attempt to keep the historical bubble from bursting the executive producer banned the production crew from wearing clothes with signage, perfume or aftershave on the sheep station. While filming on the station the small production team used a horse and cart as their crew vehicle. After filming was completed, the Oxley Downs property was retained as a tourist attraction.[3]

Cast

The squatters

  • Paul Allcorn
  • Julianne Allcorn
  • Persephone, Pierette and Portia Allcorn

The overseer families

  • Glen and Kim Sheluchin
  • Peter and Luisa Gordon

The shepherds

  • Bernie Kennedy
  • Dan Hatch

The governesses

  • Genevieve Yates
  • Fiona Schubert

The station hands

  • Mal Burns
  • Adam Carter
  • Russell Wulf

The cooks

  • Carolina Francese
  • Brigid Dwyer

The maids

  • Claire Williams
  • Danielle Schaefer

References

  1. Kermond, Clare: Out of the past, The Age, 9 June 2005.
  2. Where is Oxley Downs?, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 23 June 2005.
  3. Oxley Downs Open Weekend, Dubbo Tourism.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.