
Seven Little Australians is an Australian musical with music by David Reeves, lyrics by John Palmer and Reeves and book by Reeves, Palmer and Peter Yeldham. Fortunately, I have the book which backs up the DVD packaging.Program cover of original Australian productionĭavid Reeves, John Palmer and Peter Yeldham I mention this as the IMDb page has a couple of different spellings. The family name, by the way, is 'Woolcot'. The 'Weekend Magazine' segment of behind the scenes interviews was a treat in itself. It's been given a restoration and probably looks better now than when it was first transmitted 30 years ago. This 10-episode mini-series, a masterpiece of its time, still stands up as a shining achievement of dear old Auntie in her prime. A 'must have' for any lover of the book which it so closely follows. Plus a gallery of Ethel Turner family photos, backed by the lady herself reciting one of her favourite poems.

It also gives behind the scenes shots of the production. This extremely interesting item has interviews with Ethel Turner's son, cast members, the scriptwriter and includes a nostalgic shot of the children's shelf in a Sydney bookshop. The second disc includes a segment from 'Weekend Magazine', the newsreel which used to follow the ABC news at 7.20pm on Sunday nights. It takes a tragedy to eventually bring the family together. However his rules and regulations were no match for the fun loving children, led by the redoubtable Judy. Another had come from the new marriage, so that the Captain felt it necessary to run the family with army discipline. Captain Woolcot having lost his wife had remarried a much younger girl, bringing to the marriage 6 children. In a nutshell, it's the story of the Woolcot Family of Sydney in 1894. Often the subject of "when will it become available on DVD?" queries, the ABC issued it this month as a twin disc set with a couple of extras.

The series was much loved in its time, and regularly shown via 16mm prints to appreciative audiences in later years. Co-produced by Ethel Turner's son Adrian Curlewis, this was always going to be close to the novel and such was the case.

Ethel Turner's best selling novel, 'Seven Little Australians', continuously in print for more than 105 years, was the subject of an ambitious made for TV series back in 1973.
