
Sons and Daughters
1 9 8 2 - 1 9 8 8 (Australia)
972 x 30 minute episodes
This Australian soap opera revolved around twins Angela Hamilton and
John Palmer (pictured at right with Fiona Thompson) who are separated at
birth and meet twenty years later after growing up in different cities
and circumstances.
With a potentially incestuous plot-line, this extremely bitchy show
featured the sensationally camp character of Pat the Rat.
Pat was the supreme bitch of Australian soaps. Rowena Wallace, who
kept her teetering between one sort of madness and another, eventually
tired of the role and after three years of her, viewers accepted that
she had undergone drastic plastic surgery in Brazil and returned home
looking like actress Belinda Giblin.
The series had so many relationship twists and turns that it would be
impossible to explain the plot line in a few paragraphs. Suffice it to
say that just about everybody ends up with just about everybody else at
some stage.
The Hamilton's (from Sydney) are worth mega-bucks but are certainly a
nasty piece of work (or at least Patricia and Wayne are - Gordon is a
bit of an old softie really) and the Palmer's (from Melbourne) are a
typical family of Aussie battlers, doing it hard in the cheaper part of
town.
Viewers were able to hiss happily at spoiled rich boy Wayne
Hamilton (pictured at left),
who almost ruined his father Gordon, mistreated women and was jealous of
Angela.
As well as the regular cast (which was large enough anyway!) there
was a large transient population sharing the trials and tribulations.
More than 2,000 actors appeared during the series' six years, many well
known from other Aussie soaps, such as Division 4's Terence
Donovan, Judy Nunn from The Box and Abigail (fully clothed this
time) from Number 96.
Anne Haddy (later to play Helen in super-soap Neighbours) was
immensely popular as the Hamilton's lovable housekeeper, Rosie.
But the rock in this sea of changing faces was Aunt Fiona, the
guest-house owner who raised baby John for his father, knew all about
all and was the shoulder for every main character to cry on.
When poison Pat was scheming and deceiving, Fiona alone knew the
truth. For actress Pat McDonald - much loved as scatty Dorrie Evans,
caretaker of the flats in Number 96 - this sophisticated lady
with a shady past (she once ran a brothel) was a contrast.
Where Dorrie could keep a secret for about two seconds. Fiona had to
be worldly, wise and silent for years on such matters as who was parent
to whom. For a while, one of Fiona's lodgers was ex-hooker Jill Taylor.
The two were sisters under the skin and it was shown.
The undoubted queen of Sons and Daughters though was the wife
and mother no one deserved - bitchy Pat Hamilton.
British-born Rowena Wallace established the character as the
iron-fisted roost ruler, ranting and raving one minute, breaking down
the next, and scooped awards for her as the woman viewers loved to hate,
both at home in Australia and abroad.
When Rowena left the show after three years and was replaced by
Belinda Giblin, the producers even added a Pat look-alike - another
character who had been in the Rio de Janeiro clinic with Pat and who'd
lost her memory and innocently taken on Pat's identity.
David Palmer even married this impostor before spotting the new, real
(second) Pat, who was calling herself Alison Carr.
As with the re-birth of dead Bobby Ewing in Dallas, viewers
were happy to go along with the story. But the soap never bubbled so
well again.
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