Bandstand
1 9 5 7 - 1 9 7 2 (Australia)
Bandstand was the longest running Australian
pop television show of its time, and throughout its fifteen years it
featured the same host (bespectacled Channel Nine newsreader Brian
Henderson) and the same format.
Based on Dick Clark's American Bandstand, the
Australian show was pre-recorded before a studio audience, with
singers lip-synching their way through numbers performed on elaborate
studio sets. While other pop shows presented screaming fans and
long-haired beat groups, Bandstand somehow seemed to ignore the
extreme trends in music that happened in the mid and late 1960s.
Although it showcased a range of pop performers, it shied away from
the brash and the scruffy, becoming a more family-entertainment
program than a show strictly for teenagers.
Bandstand's fifteen year run saw vast,
bewildering changes in pop music, but by maturing with its viewers,
the program retained the loyalty of the viewers who had grown up with
it.
Pop shows abounded on Australian TV in the mid-60s;
There was Bobby and Laurie's Dig We Must, Billy Thorpe's It's
All Happening, Ross D Wylie's Uptight, Tony Murphy's Saturday
Date, Go!! with Ian Turpie (and later Johnny Young), and Teen
Scene with Johnny Chester. Bandstand outlasted all of them
. . .
Each Bandstand episode was usually a themed
musical production with lavish studio sets. By the time its young
producer/director Warwick Freeman left in the mid 60s, the show
was costing $6,000 a week to produce. Occasional outside broadcasts
added variety - In December 1963, for example, in the midst of the
glorious summer of Australian Surf Music, one episode was filmed at
Sydney's Avalon Beach.
With its broad appeal, Bandstand attracted a
weekly viewing audience of two million at the height of its
popularity. It was voted the best youth show of 1961, and Brian
Henderson won a Gold Logie - the supreme accolade in Australian
television - in 1967. He even recorded a single called What Is A
Square?, a spoken sermon on the moral virtues of the uncool, which
mercifully failed to chart.
Through the 1960s, Bandstand kept up a roster
of regulars and a cast of hundreds of guests. Viewers became familiar
with Bill & Boyd, Bryan Davies, Sandy Scott, Jimmy Hannan, Ian
Turpie, The Executives, Tony Brady, Vicki Forrest, Jade Hurley, Frank
Ifield, the Barry Sisters, the De Kroo Brothers, The Delltones, Kevin
Todd, Lucky Starr, the Bee Gees, Helen Reddy and Janice Slater . . .
to name but a few.
Overseas performers ranged from middle-of-the-road
singers like Neil Sedaka, Shirley Bassey and Wayne Newton, to the
Rolling Stones and an electric Bob Dylan during the Australian leg of
his historic 1966 world tour.
Four years after its demise, Bandstand was
briefly resurrected in 1976, this time with Daryl Somers as the host,
but the experiment was doomed to fail. After all, Brian Henderson was Bandstand;
Benign, calm, and paternal but never patronising. Henderson
remained the chief newsreader for Australia's Channel 9 until finally
announcing his retirement in 2002.
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Brian Henderson
The Executives
Bill & Boyd
Bryan Davies
Sandy Scott
Jimmy Hannan
Ian Turpie
Tony Brady
Vicki Forrest
Jade Hurley
Frank Ifield
Barry Sisters
De Kroo Brothers
The Delltones
Kevin Todd
Lucky Starr
Bee Gees
Helen Reddy
Janice Slater
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