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Tony Twist and his three children (thirteen-year-old twins Pete and Linda and nine-year-old Bronson) move to an old lighthouse on the rugged Australian coast. They soon discover that the lighthouse and the outhouse are haunted.
Notes
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Further Reference:
- 'Round the Twist,' Australian Television Information Archive - online (sighted 5/10/2010).
- 'Round the Twist,' Classic Kids TV - online (sighted 5/10/2010).
- 'Round the Twist,' Internet Movie Database - online (sighted 5/10/2010).
- 'Round the Twist,' Wikipedia - online (sighted 5/10/2010).
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Produced in 1989 and delivered to Channel 7 in November of that year, Round the Twist did not air in Australia until August 1990, four months after the world premiere on the BBC (April 1990).
Source: ACTF (https://blog-actf.com.au/imdb-and-wikipedia-are-wrong-round-the-twist-did-not-premiere-30-years-ago-this-april/). (Sighted: 21/03/2019)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Beyond Bluey : Why Adults Love Re-watching Australian Kids’ TV from Their Childhoods
2021
single work
column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 16 November 2021;'Due to the COVID-19 extended lockdowns this year, as well as greater accessibility on streaming services, many adults have been returning to their childhoods via nostalgic kids’ TV viewing.' (Introduction)
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Round the Twist’s Fans Grew up – and Their Love for the Show Grew with Them
2021
single work
column
— Appears in: The Guardian Australia , 10 September 2021;'Australian kids’ TV show Round the Twist gained an international following when it was first broadcast in 1989-1990. Broadcast over four seasons up until 2001, young audiences were thrilled by the supernatural adventures of the lighthouse-dwelling Twist family.' (Publication summary)
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The Slow Death of Australian Children’s TV Drama
2017
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essay
— Appears in: The Conversation , 27 April 2017;'Australian children’s TV may have recently picked up an Emmy Kids award for the ABCME animation Doodles, but otherwise kids’ TV in this country is in a dire state.
'Free-to-air TV networks have to commission certain amounts of children’s programs each year. But in recent years there’s been a dismaying lack of new live action shows, or recognisably Australian content. Instead, local children’s TV has become dominated by animation with little sense of place.'
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Hazel in Tune with Needs of a Nation
2013
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column
— Appears in: The Courier-Mail , 25-26 May 2013; (p. 60-61) 'As tributes flow for former first lady Hazel Hawke and her brave public battle with Alzheimer's disease, those close to her tell Sarah Blake how she changed Australia for the better.' -
Networks Fight Children's TV Local Quota
2012
single work
column
— Appears in: The Sun-Herald , 4 March 2012; (p. 21)
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Networks Fight Children's TV Local Quota
2012
single work
column
— Appears in: The Sun-Herald , 4 March 2012; (p. 21) -
Hazel in Tune with Needs of a Nation
2013
single work
column
— Appears in: The Courier-Mail , 25-26 May 2013; (p. 60-61) 'As tributes flow for former first lady Hazel Hawke and her brave public battle with Alzheimer's disease, those close to her tell Sarah Blake how she changed Australia for the better.' -
The Slow Death of Australian Children’s TV Drama
2017
single work
essay
— Appears in: The Conversation , 27 April 2017;'Australian children’s TV may have recently picked up an Emmy Kids award for the ABCME animation Doodles, but otherwise kids’ TV in this country is in a dire state.
'Free-to-air TV networks have to commission certain amounts of children’s programs each year. But in recent years there’s been a dismaying lack of new live action shows, or recognisably Australian content. Instead, local children’s TV has become dominated by animation with little sense of place.'
-
Round the Twist’s Fans Grew up – and Their Love for the Show Grew with Them
2021
single work
column
— Appears in: The Guardian Australia , 10 September 2021;'Australian kids’ TV show Round the Twist gained an international following when it was first broadcast in 1989-1990. Broadcast over four seasons up until 2001, young audiences were thrilled by the supernatural adventures of the lighthouse-dwelling Twist family.' (Publication summary)
-
Beyond Bluey : Why Adults Love Re-watching Australian Kids’ TV from Their Childhoods
2021
single work
column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 16 November 2021;'Due to the COVID-19 extended lockdowns this year, as well as greater accessibility on streaming services, many adults have been returning to their childhoods via nostalgic kids’ TV viewing.' (Introduction)