The Daryl and Ossie Show | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy Game Show |
Presented by | Daryl Somers |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 40 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company | Reg Grundy Productions |
Original release | |
Network | The 0-10 Network |
Release | 11 September – 3 November 1978 |
Related | |
Hey Hey It's Saturday |
The Daryl and Ossie Show was a short-lived Australian comedy game show, which aired on Melbourne's Channel 0 in 1978. It was hosted by Daryl Somers, Ossie Ostrich (a puppet operated by Ernie Carroll), model Monique Daams [1] and actor and comedian Betty Bobbitt. Like Blankety Blanks, the show it was created to replace, The Daryl and Ossie Show was a Reg Grundy production. [2]
After five years of presenting the Saturday morning children's show Hey Hey It's Saturday, Somers and Carroll did not return with the show in 1978. Instead, they produced one, one-hour evening show The Daryl and Ossie Special which aired on Wednesday, 10 May at 7:30. The special also starred Chelsea Brown, The Echoes and 'psychic phenomena expert' [3] Kevin Arnett. Reportage at the time suggested the show was 'rushed' into the Channel 9 schedule 'as part of a savage reaction to recent ratings defeats'. Program manager for Channel 9, Jim Masterson, told TV Week that the channel's strategy was to 'do about six or eight specials a year' featuring the pair. [4]
Somers and Carroll left Nine when offered a show by the 0-10 Network to replace Graham Kennedy's Blankety Blanks. The Daryl and Ossie Show was, readers of TV Week were told, 'based on Englishman Bruce Forsyth's Generation Game which is Number One in the ratings charts [in the UK]'. [5] The show ran only in Melbourne, where (journalist Christine Hogan wrote) 'it was launched with as much panache as Channel 0 in Melbourne could muster'; however, she added, it was soon 'languishing... with terrible ratings'. [6] Despite an announcement that it would come to Sydney screens on 11 September, The Daryl and Ossie Show was never to be screened outside Melbourne.
In early October 1978, the Melbourne Age's television writer Brian Curtis told his readers:
Channel O's disappointing Daryl and Ossie Show is to be dropped from its daily 7pm time slot after November 3. The show will be restructured, I understand, and a one-hour edition will be screened at 6:30 pm on Sundays next year. [7]
He added:
Daryl Somers, who moved with partner Ernie (Ossie) Carroll from Channel 9 to break into night-time variety TV, said yesterday he had not heard of the change but would not be disappointed with it. "It's very hard to keep up the standard with a show that comes out every day... Frankly, both Ernie and I are exhausted at the moment."
As it transpired, the show was cancelled before the end of the year. Somers and Carroll returned to Nine and Hey Hey It's Saturday in 1979.
In a story on Somers for the Sydney Morning Herald in 1992, journalist Paul Daley referred to a 'short and unsuccessful stint with Channel 0' and added that 'Curiously, there is no mention of Channel 0 on [Somers'] curriculum vitae.' [8]
Nine episodes of The Daryl and Ossie Show are held in the National Film and Sound Archive. [9]
GTV is a commercial television station in Melbourne, Australia, owned by the Nine Network. The station is currently based at studios at 717 Bourke Street, Docklands. GTV-9 is the home of the Australian Open tennis coverage.
Hey Hey It's Saturday was a long-running variety television program on Australian television. It initially ran for 28 years on the Nine Network from 9 October 1971 to 20 November 1999, with a recess in 1978. Its host throughout its entire run was Daryl Somers, who later also became executive producer of the program. The original producer, Gavan Disney, left the program in December 1990 and Somers then formed a production company, Somers Carroll Productions, with comedy writer and on-screen partner Ernie Carroll, the performer of Somers' pink ostrich puppet sidekick Ossie Ostrich. Carroll retired in 1994, and Ossie was no longer featured in the show.
Oswald Q. Ostrich, better known simply as Ossie Ostrich, is an Australian television puppet character in the form of a pink ostrich, created, performed and voiced by Ernie Carroll who appeared firstly on the Tarax Show, and then opposite Daryl Somers as the co-host on the long-running Nine Network program Hey Hey It's Saturday which started as a Saturday morning cartoon show for children in 1971. In 1984, he also hosted an after-school children's show called The Ossie Ostrich Video Show, with co-host Jacki MacDonald.
Daryl Paul Somers is an Australian television personality and musician, and a triple Gold Logie award-winner. He rose to national fame as the host and executive producer of the long-running comedy-variety program Hey Hey It's Saturday and continued his television celebrity and status as host of the live-performance program Dancing with the Stars.
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Ernest Carroll was an Australian puppeteer, entertainer, radio and television personality, comic writer, television producer and comic strip writer, most recognised for his role as the sidekick opposite Daryl Somers, as the man behind Ossie Ostrich on Hey Hey It's Saturday, Cartoon Corner and The Daryl and Ossie Show.
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Somers Carroll Productions is an Australian television production company.
John Blackman was an Australian radio and television presenter, voice artist, comedy writer and author. He was most widely-known for his voice-over work for the long-running Nine Network comedy variety show Hey Hey It's Saturday from 1971 until 1999, returning for reunion specials in 2009 and in 2021, with a brief relaunch in 2010.
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