Elly & Jools | |
---|---|
Starring | Rebecca Smart Clayton Williamson Peter Fisher Anne Tenney Abigail Dennis Miller Damon Herriman Vanessa Collier |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Production | |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production company | Southern Star Group |
Original release | |
Network | Channel Nine Australia |
Release | 11 June – 26 June 1990 |
Elly & Jools is an Australian children's television series that originally aired on the Nine Network in 1990. It starred Rebecca Smart as Elinor 'Elly' Lockett and Clayton Williamson as Julian 'Jools' Trevaller. It also featured Abigail, Anne Tenney, Peter Fisher, Dennis Miller, Damon Herriman and Vanessa Collier.[1] It was filmed at Peninsula House in Windsor, New South Wales and at the Australiana Pioneer Village in Wilberforce.
The dog which appeared in the series also played the dingo in the Meryl Streep and Sam Neill film, A Cry in the Dark.
Cast
- Rebecca Smart as Elinor 'Elly' Lockett
- Clayton Williamson as Julian 'Jools' Trevaller
- Abigail as Dulcie Dickson
- Anne Tenney as Anna Traveller
- Peter Fisher as David Traveller
- Dennis Miller as Feral O'Farrell
- Damon Herriman as Liam O'Farrell
- Vanessa Collier
- Albert Moran
- Willie Fennell as Cec
Plot synopsis
The Trevaller family move from the city to a new house in a small country town called Waterloo Creek – a town full of weird and wonderful characters. The house they move into is haunted by the ghost of Elly, a young girl. Elly befriends the Trevaller's son Jools, who tries to help solve the mystery of her murder. In the final episode it is revealed that Elly was never murdered but had died in a tragic accident and stayed in the world of the living in order to clear the name of the man suspected of her murder. Finally having achieved her peace she passes to the afterlife and is reunited with her loving family whilst Jools meets Eloise, a living girl identical to Elly who is perceived either as her reincarnation or as a sign to him that the world is full of human girls just like her.
See also
References
- ↑ Albert Moran, Moran's Guide to Australian TV Series, AFTRS 1993 p 158
External links
- Elly & Jools at IMDb
- Elly and Jools at the Australian Television Information Archive.