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Marcus Cooney Marcus Cooney i(A531 works by)
Born: Established: 1937 Burnie, Burnie area, Northwest Tasmania, Tasmania, ; Died: Ceased: 1987 Binalong, Yass area, Canberra region (NSW), Southeastern NSW, New South Wales,
Gender: Male
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1 form y separately published work icon The Maestro's Company Marcus Cooney , Sue Woolfe , Sheila Sibley , Marcia Hatfield , Hugh Stuckey , ( dir. William Fitzwater ) Australia : Independent Productions , 1985 Z1819592 1985 series - publisher film/TV children's fantasy

According to Moran, in his Guide to Australian TV Series, 'This hybrid series revolves around a company of opera singers (incarnated as puppets) who live in a disused theatre. They are found by two children who are their only audience as they proceed through thirteen different operas'.

The program was designed by Marcia Hatfield as a way of introducing child viewers to opera, and ran through such productions as Il Trovatore, Carmen, Aida, and I Pagliacci.

Moran notes that SBS, which purchased the series, ran it in an early evening timeslot during the traditionally poor summer season, but that the series did sell well to overseas markets.

2 5 form y separately published work icon A Country Practice Graeme Ellis , Anne Brooksbank , Hugh Stuckey , David William Boutland , Moya Wood , Leon Saunders , Luis Bayonas , James Davern , Roger Dunn , David Sale , Peter A. Kinloch , Keith Thompson , Chris Thomson , Tony Morphett , Denise Morgan , Christine McCourt , Gwenda Marsh , David Allen , Christine Schofield , Ro Hume , Galia Hardy , Marcus Cooney , Beverley Phillips , Don J. Townshend , Margaret Mitchell , Michael Aitkens , Patricia Johnson , Sheila Sibley , Margaret Kelly , Judith Colquhoun , Agi Schreck , Mary Wright , John Graham , Ted Roberts , Michael Brindley , Forrest Redlich , Anthony Wheeler , Michael Freundt , Russell E. Webb , Bill Searle , Cliff Green , Foveaux Kirby , Helen Steel , Howard Griffiths , Suzanne Hawley , Terry Larsen , Serge Lazareff , Helen Boyd , Carol Williams , David Worthington , Ray Harding , Bevan Lee , Stephen Measday , Patrea Smallacombe , Shane Brennan , Betty Quin , Graeme Koetsveld , Tim Pye , Jenny Sharp , Bob Herbert , Tom Galbraith , Alister Webb , David Phillips , Andrew Kennedy , Craig Wilkins , Grant Fraser , Sally Webb , Caroline Stanton , Chris Roache , Geoff Newton , David Marsh , Colin Free , Thomas Mitchell , Brett Mitchell , Steve J. Spears , Louise Crane , Ian David , Robyn Sinclair , Micky Bennett , Linden Wilkinson , Terry Fogarty , Michael Cove , Patrick Flanagan , Peter Neale , Peter Lavelle , Julieanne Stewart , Sally Irwin , John Hanlon , David Henry , Jenni Kubler , Jo Barcelon , John Misto , Katherine Thomson , Neville Brown , Margaret Morgan , Susan Bower , Sean Nash , John Lonie , Paul Spinks , Christifor McTrustry , Andrew Kelly , Charlie Strachan , Susan Bower , James Balian , Peter Dann , Michael Harvey , Jerome Ehlers , Jo Horsburgh , Jeff Truman , Rod Rees , Peter Gawler , Linda Aronson , Catherine Millar , Lynn Bayonas , James Davern , ( dir. Igor Auzins et. al. )agent Sydney Australia : JNP Films Seven Network , 1981-1993 Z1699739 1981-1994 series - publisher film/TV

Set in a small, fictional, New South Wales country town called Wandin Valley, A Country Practice focused on the staffs of the town's medical practice and local hospital and on the families of the doctors, nurses, and patients. Many of the episodes also featured guest characters (frequently patients served by the practice) through whom various social and medical problems were explored. Although often considered a soap opera, the series was not built around an open-ended narrative; instead, the two one-hour episodes screened per week formed a self-contained narrative block, though many of the storylines were developed as sub-plots for several episodes before becoming the focus of a particular week's storyline. While the focus was on topical issues such as youth unemployment, suicide, drug addiction, HIV/AIDS, and terminal illness, the program did sometimes explore culturally sensitive issues, including, for example, the Aboriginal community and their place in modern Australian society.

Among the show's principal characters were Dr Terence Elliott, local policeman Sergeant Frank Gilroy, Esme Watson, Shirley Dean Gilroy, Bob Hatfield, Vernon 'Cookie' Locke, and Matron Margaret 'Maggie' Sloan. In addition to its regularly rotating cast of characters, A Country Practice also had a cast of semi-regulars who would make appearances as the storylines permitted. Interestingly, while the series initially targeted the adult and older youth demographic, it became increasingly popular with children over the years.

1 1 Between the Lines Marcus Cooney , 1978 single work drama
1 form y separately published work icon A Nice Day at the Office Marcus Cooney , John Brendan , ( dir. Ric Birch ) Sydney : Australian Broadcasting Commission , 1972 Z1832681 1972 series - publisher film/TV

Like Our Man in Canberra, Scattergood: Friend of All, and Aunty Jack, A Nice Day at the Office began as an episode of the ABC's anthology program The Comedy Game. According to Don Storey, in his Classic Australian Television, the ABC had hoped that some episodes of their anthology show 'could act as pilots and spin-off into a series on a regular basis, allowing the ABC to screen at least one Australian-made comedy a week'.

Storey summarises the program as follows:

A Nice Day At The Office is a situation comedy satirising the public service. The two central characters, Ted Harvey and Sean Crisp, work in the Central Files office of a government department. Harvey is solidly entrenched in the career system of the public service and follows every rules in the book, an outlook completely foreign to the impetuous, irreverent Crisp. Their differing personalities often lead to clashes and petty ways of annoying each other.

Limited to seven episodes (excluding the episode of The Comedy Game that served as the pilot) by the availability of actor Neil Fitzpatrick, the program rated moderately well (no better or worse than other program's in the same time slot, perhaps, as Storey notes, 'indicating that most people who watched the series were loyal ABC viewers anyway') and received mixed reviews from critics.

1 y separately published work icon Cash Michael Boddy , Marcus Cooney , 1972 (Manuscript version)x400133 Z850175 1972 single work musical theatre satire
1 form y separately published work icon The Group David Sale , Rosamund Waring , Marcus Cooney , Anne Hall , ( dir. Hugh Taylor ) Sydney : Cash Harmon Television , 1971 Z1812804 1971 series - publisher film/TV humour

A thirteen-episode sit-com from the production company that was shortly to launch soap-opera Number 96.

The premise involves three men and two women who, for purely economic reasons, share a basement flat: Jeremy (who works in television), Mark (a medical student), Bob (an accountant), Jennifer (a university student), and Laura (a model and receptionist).

The program's tension comes from their landlord Tinto, whose prurient distress at the mixed-gender tenancy leads him to attempt various methods of evicting them.

According to Don Storey, on his website Classic Australian Television:

'The Group relies, in classic sit-com tradition, on misunderstandings and misinterpretations of events to generate comedy, which are usually the result of the scatter-brained antics of Laura. There is no underlying social comment, other than the overall theme of not judging by appearances as Tinto does. The sole purpose of The Group is to entertain, and this it does.'

Though The Group was popular with audiences, it was not picked up for a second season for various reasons, including (according to Don Storey) the lack of overseas sales, Bruce Gyngell's departure from the Seven Network, and Cash Harmon Television's planned production of Number 96 for the Ten Network.

1 y separately published work icon Hamlet on Ice Ron Blair , Michael Boddy , Marcus Cooney , Aarne Neeme , Grahame Bond (composer), Rory O'Donoghue (composer), 1971 (Manuscript version)x400122 Z850115 1971 single work musical theatre

Play with music.

A satiric pantomime-style piece of music theatre, based on Shakespeare's Hamlet, in which 'the rottenness in the state of Denmark turns out to be a rampant permissiveness which has led to a complete breakdown in sexual identity. Hamlet has fallen for his best friend Horatio. In the grips of this unnatural passion he has gone to Wittenburg where Dr Yorik has carried out a successful sex-change operation' (Brian Hoad 1971, p37).

The authors suggest that community singing from the audience is to be encouraged whenever possible.

1 1 Biggles Michael Boddy , Ron Blair , Marcus Cooney , 1970 single work musical theatre
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