Richmond Hill (TV series)

Richmond Hill is an Australian television soap opera made in 1988 by the Reg Grundy Organisation for the Ten Network. It was devised by Reg Watson who also created Neighbours. It debuted on 27 January 1988 as a two-hour premiere telemovie episode on Network 10 at 7.30pm. The series was only moderately successful and was cancelled on 22 June 1988. A total of 91 episodes were produced.

Richmond Hill
GenreDrama
Soap opera
Created byReg Watson
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes91
Production
Production companyReg Grundy Organisation
Release
Original networkNetwork Ten
Original release27 January 1988 (1988-01-27) 
22 June 1989 (1989-06-22)

Synopsis

Whereas Neighbours was set in Melbourne, this series was set in a small fictional Australian country town near Sydney and most of the scenes revolved around the local police station, a real estate agency, and the pub. The serial drew comparisons to the hugely popular Seven Network soap operas, A Country Practice and Cop Shop. The programme was produced in Sydney, some location shooting took place in Mona Vale, New South Wales. Connie Ryan's house in the series was in Berryman Street, North Ryde NSW.

The cast was intentionally made up of experienced soap actors in a bid to secure immediate success. Well-known names included Maggie Kirkpatrick, Amanda Muggleton, Paula Duncan and Tim Elston from Prisoner. Popular veteran actress, Gwen Plumb, famous for her long-running role as Ada Simmonds in The Young Doctors, starred as Mum Foote. There were also several actors from Sons and Daughters, including Tom Richards, Rona Coleman, Angela Kennedy and Michael Long, as well as an assortment of young beginners, Ashley Paske, Emily Symons (pre Home and Away), Marc Gray, and Melissa Tkautz, all made their TV debuts in the series. Former comedy star Ross Higgins of Kingswood Country played the central role of the local police officer and family man Dan Costello.

Broadcast history

Richmond Hill was broadcast on Network Ten in an evening timeslot 19:30–20:30 as two one-hour episodes each week on Wednesdays and Thursdays.

The series, although quite popular, was considered a lukewarm success in the Australian ratings, and was cancelled after only one year. The decision came as a shock to producers, not least due to the fact that key actors contracts had just been extended for another year. As a result, the actors continued to be paid even though the series was no longer in production. There was not a definitive conclusion to the series and it ended abruptly because production was expected to continue. A further blow was the series had just been sold to the ITV network in the UK the very week it was axed in Australia.

International screenings

The UK's ITV bought Richmond Hill in June 1988, encouraged by the huge success of its sister-series Neighbours on the BBC. ITV decided to show Richmond Hill in a daytime Wednesday and Thursday 14:00 slot and it began 5 October 1988. In a first for ITV, an Australian soap opera was to be shown on the same day, at the same time, across all 14 ITV regional companies. It is not known whether Richmond Hill was ever intended to be a networked primetime series on ITV, but Network Ten's cancellation of Richmond Hill seemingly resulted in ITV losing interest in the series and its mid-afternoon timeslot meant that it didn't achieve anywhere near the audience figures that Neighbours, was achieving in its tea-time slot over on BBC One.

From its debut, Granada Television never followed the network patten, and started to screen the series weekly from 20 October 1988 choosing to screen A Country Practice in the Thursday slot instead. In 1990 the series was moved to a Sunday and didn't finish until spring 1991. Central Television also broke away from the network screenings in January 1989, eventually falling behind the rest of the network by dropping to one episode a week towards the end of its run. The majority of regions resumed A Country Practice as its replacement, with regional UK viewers now considerably behind Australia and at varying parts of the storyline.

Richmond Hill was last screened in the UK in the mid-1990s on cable & satellite channel Wire TV (hosted by Femi Oke and co hosted Chris Stacey with guest presenters Darren Edwards, and Darren Gray), it was screened back to back with USA soap The Bold and the Beautiful, before Wire TV was finally axed in 1994.

Grundy also sold the soap to German television channel Pro 7, and Richmond Hill was dubbed into German. It was aired twice a week from 1991 to 1992.

Major cast

Home media

As of Jan 2020, there has been no DVD Release of Richmond Hill.

DVD name Format Ep # Discs/Tapes Region 4 (Australia) Special Features Distributors
Richmond Hill DVD 92 N/A N/A N/A N/A

Available At (National Film and Sound Archives)

[Various related material is available from the National Film and Sound Archive

Title Episodes NFSA Content Available For Viewing
Richmond Hill 92/92 Documents

Scene Documents:

Episodes 26,29,33–34,36,39,40–41,44–49,51,53–58,60–71,74–76,79–83,88,93,95–98

Scripts

Episodes 70, 77–78,80–84

Production Stills

Set of 58 Images

Set of Three Images

Set of 26 Continuity Shots Featuring Main Cast

Publicity Shot of Emily Symons (Anne Costello)

Set of Four Publicity Shots featuring Cast

Set of Two Publicity Shots featuring Cast

Episodes 01-20 (Episodes 01–03,11,27,90–92 Disc Format)

Episodes 27,83,90–92 (Episodes 04–10,12–20,83 Digital Format)

Publicity Shot of Emily Symons (Anne Costello)

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