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Soap opera
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===The 1970s=== The first major soap opera hit in Australia was the sex-melodrama ''[[Number 96 (TV series)|Number 96]]'', a nighttime series produced by [[Cash Harmon Television]] for [[Network 10]], which debuted March 1972. The program dealt with such topics as [[homosexuality]], [[adultery]], drug use, rape within marriage and [[racism]], which had rarely been explored on Australian television programs before. The series became famous for its sex scenes and nudity and for its comedic characters, many of whom became cult heroes in Australia. By 1973, ''Number 96'' had become Australia's highest-rated show. In 1974, the sexed-up antics of ''Number 96'' prompted the creation of ''[[The Box (soap opera)|The Box]]'', which rivaled it in terms of nudity and sexual situations and was scheduled in a nighttime slot. Produced by [[Crawford Productions]], many critics considered ''The Box'' to be a more slickly produced and better written show than ''Number 96''. ''The Box'' also aired on the Ten Network, programmed to run right after ''Number 96''. For 1974 ''Number 96'' was again the highest rating show on Australian television, and that year ''The Box'' occupied the number two spot. Also in 1974, the [[Reg Grundy Organisation]] created its first soap opera, and significantly Australia's first ''teen'' soap opera, ''[[Class of '74]]''. With its attempts to hint at the sex and sin shown more openly on ''Number 96'' and ''The Box'', its high school setting and early evening timeslot, ''Class of '74'' came under intense scrutiny from the Broadcasting Control Board, who vetted scripts and altered entire storylines. By 1975, both ''Number 96'' and ''The Box'', perhaps as a reaction to declining ratings for both shows, de-emphasised the sex and nudity shifting more towards comedic plots. ''Class of '74'' was renamed ''Class of '75'' and also added more slapstick comedy for its second year, but the revamped show's ratings declined, resulting in its cancellation in mid-1975. That year Cash Harmon's newly launched second soap ''[[The Unisexers]]'' failed in its early evening slot and was cancelled after three weeks; the Reg Grundy Organisation's second soap ''[[Until Tomorrow]]'' ran in a daytime slot for 180 episodes. A feature film version of ''Bellbird'' entitled ''Country Town'' was produced in 1971 by two of the show's stars, Gary Gray and Terry McDermott, without production involvement by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. ''Number 96'' and ''The Box'' also released feature film versions, both of which had the same title as the series, released in 1974 and 1975 respectively. As Australian television had broadcast in black and white until 1975, these theatrical releases all had the novelty of being in colour. The film versions of ''Number 96'' and ''The Box'' also allowed more explicit nudity than could be shown on television at that time. In November 1976 ''[[The Young Doctors]]'' debuted on the [[Nine Network]]. This Grundy Organization series eschewed the adult drama of ''Number 96'' and ''The Box'', focusing more on relationship drama and romance. It became a popular success but received few critical accolades. A week later ''[[The Sullivans]]'', a carefully produced period serial chronicling the effects of World War II on a [[Melbourne]] family, also debuted on Nine. Produced by Crawford Productions, ''The Sullivans'' became a ratings success, attracted many positive reviews, and won television awards. During this period ''Number 96'' re-introduced nudity into its episodes, with several much-publicised full-frontal nude scenes, a cast revamp and a new range of shock storylines designed to boost the show's declining ratings. ''Bellbird'' experienced changes to its broadcast pattern with episodes screening in 60 minute blocks, and later in 30 minute installments. ''Bellbird'', ''Number 96'' and ''The Box'', which had been experiencing declining ratings, were cancelled in 1977. Various attempts to revamp each of the shows with cast reshuffles or spectacular disaster storylines had proved only temporarily successful. ''The Young Doctors'' and ''The Sullivans'' continued to be popular. November 1977 saw the launch of successful soap opera/[[police procedural]] series ''[[Cop Shop]]'' (1977β1984) produced by Crawford Productions for [[Seven Network|Channel Seven]]. In early December 1977 [[Network 10|Channel Ten]] debuted the Reg Grundy Organisation produced ''[[The Restless Years]]'' (1977β1981), a more standard soap drama focusing on several young school leavers. The Seven Network, achieving success with ''Cop Shop'' produced by Crawford Productions, had Crawfords produce ''[[Skyways (TV series)|Skyways]]'', a series with a similar format but set in an airport, to compete with the Nine Network's popular talk show ''[[The Don Lane Show]]''. ''Skyways'', which debuted in July 1979, emphasised adult situations including homosexuality, marriage problems, adultery, [[prostitution]], drug use and smuggling, crime, suicide, political intrigue, and [[murder]], and featured some nudity. Despite this, the program achieved only moderate ratings and was cancelled in mid-1981.
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