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Shane Brennan Shane Brennan i(A70379 works by) (a.k.a. Shane Patrick Brennan)
Born: Established: 1957 Bendigo, Bendigo area, Ballarat - Bendigo area, Victoria, ;
Gender: Male
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BiographyHistory

Shane Brennan began his career as a newspaper journalist and an on-air television reporter for the ABC in Australia in the 1970s. By 1981, he had left journalism for work as a television script-writer. His work between the early 1980s and the mid-1990s includes scripts for such widely varied television programs as police drama Special Squad; television-studio drama Prime Time; young-adult drama about Australian multi-culturalism In Between; medical dramas A Country Practice and The Flying Doctors; sit-com All Together Now; Barron Entertainment's circus-based children's drama Clowning Around; Jonathan M. Shiff Productions' young-adult ecological science-fiction program Ocean Girl; the Australian Children's Television Foundation (ACTF) live-action/puppetry program Lift Off; and historical drama Banjo Paterson's 'The Man from Snowy River'.

From the mid-1990s, Brennan began seeking work on American cable programs, including the Australian-based but American-produced Flipper. As he notes in an interview for ScreenHub, 'I started travelling backwards and forwards for about five years - usually four or five times a year, coming for two or three weeks at a time, doing lots and lots of meetings, all at my expense.' Excluding Flipper, none of Brennan's scripts for American programs in this period are included on his public bibliographies.

Brennan continued to write for Australian programs into the early 2000s, including scripts for crime dramas Good Guys, Bad Guys, State Coroner, and Stingers; television movie Witch Hunt; ACTF children's program Crash Zone; American-produced/Australian-filmed fantasy The Lost World; and country-life drama McLeod's Daughters.

By around 2003, however, Brennan had become increasingly frustrated with Australian television production processes. He notes in his interview with ScreenHub that

'I'd had a couple of projects that hadn't got off the ground, for no apparent reason so I got very frustrated with it. One of the things that happened - another writer and I got a pilot script and I pitched it to the network and they read the script and they said no-one would ever want to do this. What makes you think anyone would want to watch a show like this? You guys should just stick to writing, why do you want to produce this kind of program? They basically just dismissed it out of hand.'

With a professional network already established in the United States, Brennan shifted countries permanently, and began writing for such programs as CSI: Miami, Summerland, and One Tree Hill. Following these programs, he became first script-writer and then, the following year, executive producer/showrunner of naval crime dramas NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigative Service and NCIS: Los Angeles.

Further References:

Keveney, Bill. 'Shane Brennan of 'NCIS': The Hardest-working Man in TV Biz'. USA Today. 22 Sep. 2009. (http://www.usatoday.com/life/television/news/2009-09-21-brennan-ncis_N.htm) (Sighted: 12/9/2012)

Tiley, David. 'Shane Brennan: Showrunning NCIS, Remembering his Australian Roots.' ScreenHub. 19 Jan. 2011. (http://www.screenhub.com.au/news/shownewsarticleG.php?newsID=36048 (Sighted 12/9/2012)

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

form y separately published work icon Stingers ( dir. Julian McSwiney et. al. )agent Australia : Beyond Simpson Le Mesurier Nine Network , 1998-2004 6031565 1998 series - publisher film/TV crime detective

'Inspired by true events, Stingers reveals the shadowy and ambiguous world of undercover cops — people with covert lives and constantly changing identities. They are police who defeat crime from within the criminal world — always without a badge and frequently without protection. The series follows the lives of the operatives as they befriend and betray those on the other side of the law. For these select few, it is a deadly way of life.The undercover cops of Stingers are a unique breed. They must juggle their own lives — love, laughter, family and humanity — with the tension of the criminal personas they adopt in their passion for justice.'

Source: Australian Television Information Archive. (Sighted: 7/6/2013)

2001 nominated Logie Awards Most Outstanding Drama Series
2005 nominated Logie Awards Most Outstanding Drama Series
2003 nominated AFI Awards Australian Film Institute Awards Best Television Drama Series
2004 won AFI Awards Australian Film Institute Awards Best Television Drama Series
form y separately published work icon Good Guys, Bad Guys ( dir. Brendan Maher et. al. )agent 1997 Australia : Beyond Simpson Le Mesurier Nine Network , 1997-1998 Z1367327 1997 series - publisher film/TV crime

An edgy and off-beat crime series that relies heavily on humour, contemporary music, and a touch of the bizarre, centring on the character of Elvis Maginnis. An ex-cop from the wrong side of the tracks, Maginnis now runs his own dry-cleaning business but still finds himself drawn into the shady side of life.

1998 shortlisted Logie Awards Most Outstanding Series
form y separately published work icon Blue Heelers ( dir. Mark Callan et. al. )agent 1994 Sydney Australia : Hal McElroy Southern Star Seven Network , 1994-2006 Z1367353 1994 series - publisher film/TV crime

A character-based television drama series about the lives of police officers in the fictitious Australian country town of Mt Thomas, this series began with the arrival of Constable Maggie Doyle (Lisa McCune) to the Mt Thomas station in the episode 'A Woman's Place'. Doyle and avuncular station boss Senior Sergeant Tom Croydon (John Wood) were the core characters of the series until the departure of Lisa McCune.

Immensely popular for a decade, Blue Heelers was cancelled in 2006 after thirteen seasons. The announcement was front-page news in Australia's major newspapers including The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney's Daily Telegraph, The Herald Sun and The Age in Melbourne, and Brisbane's Courier Mail.

On June 8, 2006 Ross Warneke wrote in The Age:

'It's over and, to be perfectly blunt, there's no use lamenting the demise of Blue Heelers any more. When the final movie-length episode aired on Channel Seven on Sunday night, 1.5 million Australians tuned in, a figure that was big enough to give the show a win in its timeslot but nowhere near big enough to pay the sort of tribute that this writer believes Heelers deserved after more than 500 episodes.It is unlikely there will be anything like it again. At almost $500,000 an hour, shows such as Blue Heelers are quickly becoming the dinosaurs of Australian TV.'

1998 winner Logie Awards Most Popular Series
1997 winner Logie Awards Most Popular Series
Last amended 12 Sep 2012 13:14:29
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