Return to Eden
1 9 8 3
(Australia)
6 x 60 minute episodes
1 9 8 6 (Australia)
22 x 60 minute episodes
Return To Eden first appeared in 1983.
The 6 hour mini-series, with themes of murder, love and revenge was
filmed over 12 weeks around Sydney, the Darling Downs in Southern
Queensland, the Great Barrier Reef and Arnhem Land in the Northern
Territory. The series also featured rock singer James Reyne from the
band Australian Crawl in his first TV appearance. Production costs
were around $2.5 million.
The 22 part series which followed the successful
mini-series boasted a budget of more than $8 million. A lavish $1
million studio was constructed in Five Dock (in Sydney) and the series
was also shot on location around Sydney and in Fiji. The show featured
a glossy, American-style production and it was compared to American
soaps Dallas and Dynasty - no doubt why it was so
successful with TV audiences. Producers converted a luxurious Barrier
Reef resort to a plastic surgeons clinic, run by Dr Dan
Marshall (played by James Smillie).
The central figure in Return To Eden is
Stephanie Harper. Her rich father died when she was 23 and she spent
the following 17 years in a kind of dream. She had divorced twice and
as the series starts she is marrying a younger man, the incredibly
handsome Wimbledon champion, Greg Marsden.
Everyone except Stephanie can see that he is no
good. He immediately has an affair with Stephanie's best friend, Jilly
Stewart and while on their honeymoon at her family homestead Eden
in the Northern Territory, Greg pushes Stephanie into a crocodile
infested river. Luckily she escapes and is given a new body, face and
name (this IS a soap opera remember!) by plastic surgeon Dr Dan
Marshall. She returns to Sydney as a different woman, Tara
Welles, where she becomes a model and entices Greg into falling in
love with her. They return to Eden with Jilly following them.
Stephanie hatches an elaborate plan and confronts the two. Greg shoots
the aboriginal help while Tara/Stephanie and Jilly save Eden from
burning down by putting out a fire with the curtains!
Greg then tries to kill Tara/Stephanie in the
swimming pool. Instead he is badly wounded by Jilly and he attempts to
flee in a light plane. It crashes and he is killed. The next day the
police arrive and arrest Jilly. Shortly after, Stephanie Harper is
reunited with the doctor who gave her a new face and with her two
children.
The Return To Eden TV series of 1986
picks up from the mini-series seven years later. Stephanie Harper, now
Australia's richest woman, is happily married to her plastic surgeon
husband and her two children are now young adults working in the
Harper empire. The release of Jilly Stewart from prison, however,
starts a dramatic chain of events.
Like all tales of melodrama, Return to Eden
sounds trite in this kind of summary. Nevertheless the show
appealed to audiences (despite a canning from the critics) and did
enormously well on air.
I recently saw Eden again and I was amazed
at how dated it looks now. Apart from the incidental music sounding
like the soundtrack from a bad porno movie, the fashions are
hilarious. The outdoor photo shoot where Stephanie is trying to get on
the cover of Vogue is an absolute scream! I had forgotten what
a fashion accessory the headband was in the 80s. . . and having seen
the mini-series again recently I can confirm that James Reyne may just
be the worst actor in the entire world!
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