Always Greener
Always Greener was an Australian television drama/comedy series that aired on the Seven Network which followed the fortunes of two families, one from the city and the other from the country, when they decide to switch homes and start a new direction in life for themselves. It ran from 2001 until 2003, when it was cancelled after declining ratings and concerns over the cost of production.
History
The name of the show stems from the phrase "The grass is always greener on the other side". Promotion of the show's premiere episode used the Travis song "Side," which features the phrase as part of the chorus. The show was broadcast overseas in New Zealand on TV ONE. In 2006 reruns started airing on TV2. The series has since been released on DVD.The Southern Star Group owns the rights to distribute Always Greener internationally.
Premise
The series mainly revolved around the members of two families, the Taylors, who live in suburban Sydney, and the Todd family who live on a farm just outside the rural New South Wales town of Inverness. Each faced with problems of their own, John Taylor pays a Christmas visit to his sister Sandra Todd at her farm. Joking that they should consider switching houses for a change in their lives, the move becomes a reality when John discovers that his daughter Marissa is on drugs and Sandra can't pay the bills. Always Greener was noted for both dealing with serious issues as well as putting an often humorous touch to episodes. Fantasy sequences were common and often added to the charm of the series.Cast
The Taylor family
- John Howard as John Taylor
- Anne Tenney as Liz Taylor
- Michala Banas as Marissa Taylor
- Daniel Steven Bowden as Jason Taylor
- Natasha Lee as Kimberley Taylor
The Todd family
- Caitlin McDougall as Sandra Todd
- Bree Walters as Pip Todd
- Abe Forsythe as Campbell Todd
Other main characters
- Scott Major as Tom Morgan
- Andrew Clarke as Derek Unn
- Merridy Eastman as Eileen Unn
- Denise Roberts as Isabelle Turnbull
- Georgie Shew as Katy Turnbull
- Peter Corbett as Bert Adams
- Bree Desborough as Shelley Southall
- Clayton Watson as Mickey Steele
- Grant Bowler as Greg Steele
- Nathaniel Dean as Craig 'Patch' Porter
- Steven Rooke as Nick Greenhill
Recurring
- Bartholomew John as Gregory Kind
- Betty Lucas as Florence Holiday
- Craig McLachlan as Greg Graham
- Eddie McGill as Eddie McGill
- Felicity Price as Anne Clark
- Ian Turpie as Rollie Fields / Rollie Meadows
- Lynette Curran as Connie Linguini
- Matt Doran as Scumbag
- Matt Passmore as Pete 'The Love Professor'
- Peter Collingwood as Dr Dalrymple
- Roy Billing as Eddie McGill
Guests
- Amy Mathews as T'ree
- Annalise Braakensiek as Self
- Annie Byron as Lolly Hopkins
- Bruce Spence as Rev Millburn
- Carmen Duncan as Antonia Jones
- Genevieve Lemon as Loretta
- Hayley McElhinney as Fleur
- James Smillie as Frank
- Jeanne Little as Julia the Chicken / Self
- John Adam as Bryce Richards
- John Orcsik as Mario Linguini
- Kate Fitzpatrick as Chantal Wilkinson
- Kieran Darcy-Smith as Trevor Southall
- Kylie Watson as Dancer
- Lois Ramsey as Old Woman
- Maggie Dence as Sister Stern
- Maria Venuti as Lorraine
- Mary Coustas as Cher the Chicken
- Michael Caton as Jack
- Michael Craig as Judge
- Natalie Saleeba as Christy Schaffer
- Nicholas Hammond as Nigel Milne
- Oliver Ackland as Matt Payne
- Paula Duncan as Makeup Artist
- Simon Chilvers as Charlie Parker
- Tim Campbell as Joe Farnell
- Tina Bursill as Lucy Buckingham
- Wayne Pygram as Trevor Southall
- Zac Drayson as Devo
Ratings
Awards
Clayton Watson won the Australian Film Institute's award for "Best Actor in a Supporting or Guest Role in a Television Drama" for his work on Always Greener in 2002. The show was also nominated for an International Emmy Award in 2002 and Always Greener and its cast have been nominated for several Logies during its run.Logie Awards
- 2003 Nominee: Most Outstanding Drama Series
- 2003 Nominee: Most Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series
- 2002 Nominee: Most Outstanding Drama Series
- 2002 Nominee: Most Popular New Female Talent
- 2003 Nominee: Best Achievement in Sound for a Television Drama
- 2002 Nominee: Best Music for a Television Series or Serial
International Emmy Awards
- 2002 Nominee: Always Greener Series 1 – Episodes 1 & 3
- 2002 Nominee: Television : "The Good Woman's Guide To A Happy Home"
Cancellation
The cancellation was rumoured to be due to falling ratings. The show began with over 2 million viewers in 2001, but ratings never recovered from the disastrous decision to début the second season in the low rating Easter period of 2002 – Against stronger competition in both '60 Minutes' and 'Big Brother'. In 2002 the show moved from Sunday to Monday and then back to Sunday by 2003. Always Greener was rating around 1.0 million when cancelled. However, Seven cited "cost management" as the reason for dropping the series.
At the time, Worner was reported as saying that the decision was purely based on cost, because the 22 episodes were to cost $10 million, which he said was far too much.
In late 2005 Seven aired reruns of the show in the early morning 9:30am timeslot and again in Seven's popular reruns timeslot at 12:00pm. Presently, it airs sporadically on Universal Channel.