Are You Being Served? (Australian TV series)
Are You Being Served? | |
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Created by | Jeremy Lloyd and David Croft |
Directed by | Bob Spiers |
Starring |
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Opening theme | "Are You Being Served Sir?" (Jeremy Lloyd, Penny Croft)[1] |
Country of origin | Australia |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 16 |
Production | |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | Network Ten |
Release | 1980 1981 | –
Related | |
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Are You Being Served? is an Australian sitcom that is based on the British sitcom of the same name; it was produced by Network Ten. A total of 16 episodes were produced in two series, which aired in 1980 and 1981. The draw-card was the presence of actor John Inman reprising his role of Mr. Humphries from the original series. The other characters were all directly based on the regular characters in the show's original British version, but were all given new names. Hence there were no other returning original actors.[2]
In comparison to the original series, Inman politely described this version of the series as "tighter - there's less padding."[3]
For the opening theme, Inman himself performed vocals.
Premise
[edit]Audio samples of Are You Being Served? (media help)
Mr. Humphries (Inman) is sent to Australia by Mr. Grace to work temporarily for his Australian cousin Mr. Bone at Bone Brothers. Apart from the new setting and Australian rather than British characters, the characters and situation are almost identical to that of the original series, as are the set design and layout and even the costuming (down to the senior sales woman's ever-changing hair colours). Menswear and ladies apparel share a floor of a large city department store and the departments come into regular conflict. The staff on the floor are the pompous floor-walker Captain Wagstaff (Reg Gillam), crusty senior salesman Mr. Mankowitz (Anthony Bazell), randy sales junior Mr. Randel (Shane Bourne), strident older sales woman Mrs. Crawford (June Bronhill) and attractive but brassy and common younger sales woman Miss Buxton (Judith Woodroffe). Basil Clarke portrays the store's owner Mr. Bone, Reg Evans is the obnoxious cleaner Mr. Cocker, Kerry Daniel plays the nurse, and Tracey Kelly is Bone's attractive secretary.
Cast
[edit]- John Inman as Mr. Humphries
- June Bronhill as Mrs. Crawford
- Reg Gillam as Captain Wagstaff
- Judith Woodroffe as Miss Buxton
- Christine Amor as Miss Nicholls
- Tony Bazell as Mr. Mankowitz
- Shane Bourne as Mr. Randel
- Peter Collingwood as Mr. Dunkley
- Ken Fraser as Mr. Fenwick
- Basil Clarke as Young Mr. Bone
- Reg Evans as Mr. Cocker
- Kerry Daniel as Young Mr. Bone's Nurse
- Tracey Kelly as Young Mr. Bone's Secretary
- Bernadette Gibson as the Canteen Manageress
- Maurie Fields as Harry Collins (1 episode)
Both Judith Woodroffe (Miss Buxton) and Peter Collingwood (Mr. Dunkley) were unavailable for series two so they were replaced with Miss Nicholls (Christine Amor) and Mr. Fenwick (Ken Fraser) respectively.
Character similarities with the original series
[edit]- Mrs. Crawford = Mrs. Slocombe
- Captain Wagstaff = Captain Peacock
- Miss Buxton/Miss Nicholls = Miss Brahms
- Mr. Mankowitz = Mr. Grainger (with some characteristics of Mr. Goldberg)
- Mr. Randel = Mr. Lucas/Mr. Spooner
- Mr. Dunkley/Mr. Fenwick = Mr. Rumbold
- Young Mr. Bone = Young Mr. Grace
Production notes
[edit]The first series was produced at the ATV-0 studios in Melbourne in the early months of 1980.[4]
It was the first television role for opera singer June Bronhill. (Her first straight dramatic acting role had been in a theatre production the previous year.) John Inman said, "It's amazing to think this is her first television role, she's a natural." Bronhill discussed the role with TV Week magazine. "I'm delighted with the way my character has turned out. Mrs. Crawford tries to be very refined but sometimes the ocker in her slips out. The British version of Are You Being Served? has always been my favourite comedy series. And I loved Mollie Sugden's performance as Mrs. Slocombe, my counterpart."[4]
For the second and final series, produced in late 1980, original regular cast members Judith Woodroffe, who was Mrs. Crawford's attractive junior Miss Buxton, and Peter Collingwood who had played the Mr. Rumbold-like store manager Mr. Dunkley, were unavailable. To replace them, Christine Amor was the new, brassy young female retail assistant Miss Nicholls, and Ken Fraser came in as Mr. Fenwick.
Christine Amor said of the series that "Are You Being Served? is one of the few TV comedies we are making in Australia and that's sad. In the days of My Name's McGooley, What's Yours? we had real Australian humour. But we have been very much influenced by overseas countries. Are You Being Served? is popular because people identify with a department store. It has no Australian idioms and it is a take off of the English series, but there is this sort of colonial thing where people enjoy English humour. I've always enjoyed it. I like English comedies, I think they're far superior to American comedies." It was Amor's first acting job before a live television audience. "I look at John Inman because he's been doing TV comedy for 10 years and been a comedian for 25 years. He's got it down to a fine art. But it is an accomplished skill which you keep on learning. I've learned a lot from John. The basic hint he gave me was to enjoy it and to have a rapport with the audience."[5]
Actress Abigail guest starred in one episode as a perfume company sales woman installed on the shop floor, whose presence disturbs the head of men's wear and the head of ladies' wear. Abigail's character then does a strip tease to reveal a skimpy costume. Abigail said of the guest spot that "I took this role because I very much wanted to work with John Inman and I have a high regard for the series itself. Besides, I thought it would be a fun proposition."[6]
Episode list
[edit]Except for "Undesirable Alien", the plot of each episode is based on the corresponding episode of the original series.
Season 1
[edit]- Ep1: Get Fit Down Under, Mr. Humphries (based on "Strong Stuff, This Insurance")
- Ep2: The Hero
- Ep3: Mrs. Crawford, Senior Person
- Ep4: The Agent
- Ep5: The Apartment
- Ep6: The Junior
- Ep7: The Punch and Judy Affair
- Ep8: Anything You Can Do
Season 2
[edit]- Ep9: Dear Sexy Knickers
- Ep10: Camping In
- Ep11: Our Figures Are Slipping
- Ep12: Heir Apparent
- Ep13: Front Page Story
- Ep14: Undesirable Alien
- Ep15: Diamonds are a Man's Best Friend
- Ep16: His and Hers
Legacy
[edit]The series never ran outside of Australia and thus was not seen in the UK or other countries where Are You Being Served? was popular, such as Ireland, the United States, Canada, and New Zealand.
The series has not been repeated on Australian television since the late 1980s. (The UK original Are You Being Served? had been repeated by ABC Television in Australia several times.[7] By 1978 it had been repeated by Channel Seven in Australia to even larger audiences.[8])
In a recurring joke on the radio show Get This, it was stated that only the loss of the master tapes for the series is preventing its release on DVD. The National Film and Sound Archive does in fact contain copies of each episode in its vault.[citation needed]
Notes
[edit]- ^ "Are You Being Served Sir? by John Inman". Official Charts.
- ^ Stavordale, Peter. "Opera Star June For New Comedy Series.", TV Week. 9 February 1980, page 27
- ^ The Cheek of it all Comes Out Again., TV Week. 29 November 1980, page 2
- ^ a b Our June's Busting to be an Actress., TV Week. 12 April 1980, page 33
- ^ Johnson, Jackie. To Christine it's so serious., TV Week. 17 January 1981, page 66
- ^ Fraser, Jill. Abigail's Back Serving Up Laughs., TV Week. 13 December 1980, page 33
- ^ Collier, Shayne. Again and again and again. The Sydney Morning Herald - The Guide: 2 June 1986, pp. 1, 6. [1]
- ^ Semmler, Clement. Why 'Are You Being Served?' is our top-rating program. The Sydney Morning Herald: 25 October 1978, p. 8. [2]
External links
[edit]- Are You Being Served?
- 1980s Australian television sitcoms
- Network 10 original programming
- 1980 Australian television series debuts
- 1981 Australian television series endings
- Australian television series based on British television series
- Television series created by David Croft (TV producer)
- Australian workplace comedy television series
- 1980s LGBTQ-related sitcoms
- Television series created by Jeremy Lloyd