Puberty Blues (TV series)

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Puberty Blues
Logo for Puberty Blues.png
Series One opening title card
GenreComing-of-age
Comedy-drama
Period drama
Created byJohn Edwards, Imogen Banks
Written byTony McNamara, Alice Bell, Fiona Seres, Jonathan Gavin, Shyt Henderson-Croft
Starring Brenna Harding
Claudia Karvan
Dan Wyllie
Jeremy Lindsay Taylor
Ashleigh Cummings
Susan Prior
Sean Keenan
Ed Oxenbould
Katie Wall
Charlotte Best
Isabelle Cornish
Reef Ireland
Dylan Goodearl
Jonathan Gavin
Christian Byers
Theme music composer Paul Hewson
Opening theme"Are You Old Enough?" by Dragon
ComposerStephen Rae
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of series2
No. of episodes17 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersRick Maier
Janeen Faithfull
ProducersImogen Banks
John Edwards
Production locationsSydney, New South Wales
CinematographyJohn Brawley
EditorsDeborah Peart, Geoff Hitchins
Running time45 minutes
Production company Endemol Australia (Then branded as Southern Star Entertainment)
Original release
Network Network Ten
Release15 August 2012 (2012-08-15) 
7 May 2014 (2014-05-07)
Related
Puberty Blues

Puberty Blues is an Australian coming-of-age comedy-drama television series broadcast on Network Ten. It is based on the 1979 book by Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey, which was also the inspiration for the 1981 film Puberty Blues . [1] Set during the late 1970s, the series revolves around the family and friends of Debbie and Sue, two inseparable teenage friends who are coming of age in Sydney's Sutherland Shire. The first series of eight episodes began airing from 15 August 2012. A second series was later confirmed and premiered on 5 March 2014. [2]

Contents

Production

In January 2012, it was announced an eight-part adaptation of the coming-of-age novel Puberty Blues would be made in New South Wales. [3] [4] The series, based on Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey's 1970s book, focuses on a group of teenagers from Cronulla "as they explore sex and the gender politics of the day." [4]

Filming on the series began in April 2012, with locations mainly around the Sutherland Shire on Wanda Beach. The shoot lasted for twelve weeks and wrapped on 1 July 2012. [5] Puberty Blues began airing from 15 August 2012. [6]

On 16 September 2012, Debbie Schipp from The Daily Telegraph reported Southern Star producers John Edwards and Imogen Banks were planning a second series of Puberty Blues. Edwards stated "Yes, we are discussing it now. There's a strong chance, and Imogen and I have been in the plotting room and are well into development ourselves. So for those demanding more, we have high hopes we'll deliver." Edwards and Banks revealed the storyline would probably pick up from where series one ended or maybe a year later. [7]

On 23 October 2012, the official Puberty Blues Facebook page confirmed that there would be a second series of the show premiering in 2013 on the Australian television network; Channel Ten. [8] Filming for the second series began in May 2013, and began broadcasting in March 2014.

On 8 May 2014, Ten's production division went bankrupt. Co-producer John Edwards told TV Tonight that a third season of Puberty Blues is likely but may not come immediately. [9]

Cast and characters

Main Cast

ActorCharacterSeason
1 2
Ashleigh Cummings Debbie VickersMain
Brenna Harding Sue KnightMain
Claudia Karvan Judy VickersMain
Jeremy Lindsay Taylor Martin VickersMain
Ed Oxenbould David VickersMain
Susie Porter Pam ParkerMain
Daniel Wyllie Roger KnightMain
Rodger Corser Ferris HennesseyMain
Susan Prior Yvonne HennesseyMain
Sean Keenan Gary HennesseyMain
Isabelle Cornish Vicki Main
Charlotte Best Cheryl HayesMain
Katie Wall Lynette HayesMainRecurring
Reef IrelandBruce BoardMainRecurring
Dylan GoodearlDanny DixonMainRecurring
Jonathan GavinGraham RecurringMain
Christian Byers Mark "Woody" WoodsMain

Supporting Cast

ActorCharacterSeason
1 2
Jack HorsleyStraccy Recurring
Izzy StevensTracey Smart Recurring
Ellie Gall Raquel Recurring
Pearl HerbertKim Recurring
Lachlan GalbraithMatty Recurring
Thorsten HertogJonno Recurring
Lachlan SkeneJacko Recurring
Leon Ford Mr. Candy Recurring
Eleanor MunroFreida Recurring
Annie MaynardAnnie Recurring
Luke LedgerBroadie Recurring
Tyler Atkins Darren PetersRecurring
Jessica NashNancy Recurring
Di Smith Deputy GranthamRecurring
Oscar ReddingNathan Recurring
Simon Lyndon Gumby RichardsRecurring

Episodes

Promotion and reception

Network Ten released the first episode exclusively to Facebook users who liked the official Puberty Blues page prior to the premiere. [10] Graeme Blundell from The Australian praised the first episodes and stated "And, like the book, the series is racy, confronting, often quite brutal, heartbreaking and coruscatingly entertaining. It sparkles even as it disturbingly illuminates a culture of adolescence that seems not so much dated as distressingly contemporary." [11]

Craig Mathieson of The Sydney Morning Herald wrote "Puberty Blues is good. Really good. What's perhaps been most interesting about the series, set as it is about 35 years back, is just how dark it is. No, this is not Mad Men , far from it, but the folks behind Puberty Blues have cultivated a surprisingly opaque picture of late-1970s Australia." [12] Mathieson's colleague, Melinda Houston, gave the series a mixed review, saying "That combination of anticipation and ennui is something this version of Puberty Blues has captured beautifully. Unfortunately, it doesn't always make for gripping telly, especially prime-time commercial telly. We, too, tend to sit there waiting, waiting, fidgeting, waiting – and suffocating just a bit." [13] Houston explained that the inclusion of the parents' stories felt like a distraction, despite the good performances from the cast. [13] However, the critic added that Puberty Blues is not "a failure by any means. It's certainly a handsome piece, from the opening credits to the pitch-perfect interiors." [13]

Ratings

SeasonNo. of EpisodesSeason
Premiere
Season
Final
Peak
Audience
a
Average
Audience
a
One815 August 20123 October 2012925,000747,000
Two95 March 20147 May 2014578,000508,000

The premiere episode debuted to 925,000 viewers and came 9th for the night in its 8:30 timeslot. [14]

Season 1

EpisodeTitleOriginal airdateOvernight ViewersConsolidated ViewersNightly Rank
1-01"Episode 1"15 August 20120.925 [14] 1.043 [15] 9 [14]
1-02"Episode 2"22 August 20120.843 [16] 1.015 [17] 12 [16]
1-03"Episode 3"29 August 20120.751 [18] 0.899 [19] 12 [18]
1-04"Episode 4"5 September 20120.728 [20] 0.870 [21] 15 [20]
1-05"Episode 5"12 September 20120.673 [22] 0.834 [23] 15 [22]
1-06"Episode 6"19 September 20120.696 [24] 0.857 [25] 16 [24]
1-07"Episode 7"26 September 20120.653 [26] 0.793 [26] 16
1-08"Episode 8"3 October 20120.707 [27] 0.840 [27] 16

Season 2

EpisodeTitleOriginal airdateOvernight ViewersConsolidated ViewersNightly Rank
2-01"Episode 9"5 March 20140.538 [28] 0.625 [29] 17
2-02"Episode 10"12 March 20140.477 [30] 0.590 [31] 19
2-03"Episode 11"19 March 20140.529 [32] 0.670 [33] 18
2-04"Episode 12"26 March 20140.517 [34] 0.651 [35] 17
2-05"Episode 13"2 April 20140.464 [36] 0.588 [37] 17
2-06"Episode 14"9 April 20140.384 [38] 0.544 [39] 23
2-07"Episode 15"16 April 20140.556 [40] 0.682 [41] 14
2-08"Episode 16"30 April 20140.529 [42] 0.674 [43] 19
2-09"Episode 17"7 May 20140.578 [44] 0.706 [45] 19

Figures are OzTAM Data for the 5 City Metro areas.Overnight – Live broadcast and recordings viewed the same night.Consolidated – Live broadcast and recordings viewed within the following seven days.

Notes

Related Research Articles

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