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Television series.
Prisoner told stories of the inmates of Wentworth Detention Centre, a women's prison. The show had its roots in the similar UK drama series Within These Walls, but presented storylines with a much harder and sometimes controversial edge, including themes such as lesbianism, murder, and drugs.
Key characters in the series included Bea Smith (aka Queen Bea), who ran things from the prisoners' side, and prison guards Joan 'The Freak' Ferguson and Vera 'Vinegar Tits' Bennett. Other inmates included the elderly Lizzie Birdsworth and lesbian Franky Doyle.
Notes
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The series is known as Prisoner: Cell Block H outside Australia, due to the similarity of the title to that of Patrick McGoohan's television series The Prisoner.
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Award-winning and individually published episodes in this series will be included on AustLit.
Content indexing in process.
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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y
The Gloves Are Off
Chatswood
:
New Holland
,
2019
17280425
2019
single work
autobiography
'In The Gloves Are Off, Maggie takes us on her journey from humble beginnings in a Newcastle dress shop to becoming one of Australia’s most well-known television and theatre stars.
'She gives us a peek behind the scenes of the television industry and the world of the theatre with insight and wit – the business, the challenges and the names. Maggie also shares publicly, for the first time, the full story of her very public legal battle – and the consequences of that battle that she’s still living with today.
'The Gloves Are Off is an engaging, amusing and sometimes harrowing tale from one of the grand old dames of the Australian acting scene.
'What happens when you take a half-orphan from Newcastle with stars in her eyes eventually give her the chance to play a sadistic, psychopathic prison guard in a cult TV series for 389 episodes?
'She turns into a household name, that’s what.
'But there’s so much more to Maggie than Prisoner’s favourite freak Joan Ferguson. Over an acting career that spans almost six decades Maggie Kirkpatrick has established herself as one of Australia’s most respected actors with highlights that include war survivor Bridie Cartwright in Shoehorn Sonata and master-manipulator witch Madame Morrible in Wicked. She’s also been a political activist, wife, mother, grandmother and friend to some of the most renowned professionals in the entertainment industry in Australia and the U.K.'
Source: Publisher's blurb.
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As Wentworth Slips Quietly Onto the ABC, the Series Still Asks Tough Questions about Gender Politics
2018
single work
column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 18 April 2018;'In early March, the ABC issued a press release announcing that the “multi-award-winning Australian drama Wentworth” would make its free to air television debut on April 12. “This ground-breaking and much acclaimed Foxtel drama”, it went on, has not only been enormously popular “worldwide”, but also garnered a swag of nominations and awards, including one from the Monte Carlo TV festival. Somehow overseas recognition still seems to count for so much more when it comes to assessing the value and impact of Australian screen productions.'
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Prisoner Reborn Locks in a Stylised Vision
2016
single work
column
— Appears in: The Australian , 15 April 2016; (p. 17) -
Strindberg for Breakfast : Elspeth Ballantyne
2016
single work
biography
— Appears in: Players : Australian Actors on Stage, Television and Film 2016; 'Elspeth Ballantyne grew up in a household that revolved around theatre, with both her parents involved in amateur theatre groups. At meal times her father, Colin, would lecture his small children on Jonson, Ibsen, Chekhov, Strindberg and Shakespeare. Colin was away for the first three years of Elspeth’s life. When he came back from his war service, he resumed his day job as a photographer and his evenings in the theatre. He hoped that each of his three children would also share his passion for drama and for the classics. At this time there was no permanent professional theatre in Adelaide and the Ballantynes put all their energy into developing theatre in their home state in amateur companies. Later Colin Ballantyne founded the State Theatre Company of South Australia. Elspeth’s mother Gwenneth (Richmond) was a drama teacher and amateur theatre actor and like Colin devoted much of her time to theatrical ventures.' (Introduction) -
New Faces Doing Time on Inside
2013
single work
column
— Appears in: The Courier-Mail , 1 March 2013; (p. 10)
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y
Super Aussie Soaps : Behind the Scenes of Australia's Best Loved TV Shows
North Melbourne
:
Pluto Press
,
2004
Z1511282
2004
single work
criticism
The definitive history of Australian TV soaps, Super Aussie Soaps examines Australian television serials, in chronological order from 1958 to the early 2000s. Among the series presented are Bellbird, Number 96, The Sullivans, Prisoner, Sons and Daughters, Neighbours and Home and Away.
- y Moran's Guide to Australian TV Series North Ryde : Australian Film Television and Radio School , 1993 Z1511317 1993 single work criticism An in-depth history of Australian television series from 1956-1993.
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y
Australian Television : A Geneology of Great Moments
South Melbourne
:
Oxford University Press
,
2001
Z1632922
2001
single work
criticism
(taught in 1 units)
Alan McKee examines some key moments in Australian television history, drawing on extensive contemporary evidence as well as presenting detailed analysis of the programs themselves.
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Bad Girls Broke the Shackles
2009
single work
column
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 16 February 2009; -
Top-Dog Bea's Back in the Clink
2012
single work
column
— Appears in: The Sun-Herald , 4 March 2012; (p. 3)
Awards
- 1982 winner Logie Awards — Most Popular Drama Series
- 1981 winner Logie Awards — Most Popular Drama Series
- 1980 winner Logie Awards — Best New Drama