In Our Blood

As Australia gets ready to celebrate Sydney WorldPride and Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras, the ABC, Screen Australia and Screen Queensland are proud to announce In Our Blood, a four-part musical drama series inspired by Australia’s radical response to AIDS in the early 1980’s, coming soon to ABC TV and ABC iview.

Starring an ensemble cast led by Tim Draxl (A Place to Call Home, Summer Love), Matt Day (Rake, Harrow), Jada Alberts (Mystery Road, The Stranger), Nicholas Brown ( A Perfect Pairing, Christmas On The Farm), Anna McGahan (Spirited, House Husbands) and Oscar Leal (Bump, Black Snow), In Our Blood tells the story of people from politics, medicine and affected communities grappling separately with a terrifying new disease. With no cure in sight, they realise they must all work together to succeed, requiring something truly radical: trust. In the face of moral crusaders and public panic, these courageous, disparate groups join forces to stop the spread of AIDS and save thousands of lives.

The series is written by Adriano Cappelleta, Jane Allen and Jonathan Gavin and produced by Hoodlum Entertainment. Fremantle are handling global distribution for the series.

Screen Australia’s Head of Content, Grainne Brunsdon said, “Series creator and writer Adriano Cappelletta alongside writers Jane Allen and Jonathan Garvin have created a moving story of hope and how individuals have the power to make systemic change. With Hoodlum Entertainment producing, this original and compelling story about a seminal moment in Australian history is set to inspire and resonate with audiences when it premieres on ABC.”

Sally Riley, ABC’s Head of Drama Entertainment and Indigenous said, “We are thrilled to be presenting this genre-defying take on an important and inspiring story. Produced by Hoodlum Entertainment and lead by an exciting ensemble cast including the superb Tim Draxl, Matt Day and Jada Alberts, we look forward to sharing this captivating series with ABC audiences off the back of our WorldPride programming.”

Hoodlum Entertainment’s CCO and series Executive Producer/Producer Nathan Mayfield said, “We are so excited to bring this ambitious and compelling musical drama to life. Based on Adriano Cappelletta’s play and set against the backdrop of the anthemic songs of the time, In Our Blood is inspired by those in government, the LGBTQIA+ community, and benevolent supporters who together led the world in their response to AIDS in the 80s.”

Screen Queensland’s Chief Creative Officer Dr Belinda Burns said, “Produced by Queensland-based Hoodlum Entertainment, In Our Blood follows a pivotal moment in Australia’s history, which had a significant impact on our country’s political landscape and the LGBTQIA+ community. We are thrilled to support the production through Screen Queensland’s Screen Finance program, and look forward to seeing this important story come to life.”

In Our Blood is coming soon to ABC TV and ABC iview.

Production credit: In Our Blood is a Hoodlum Entertainment production for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation & Fremantle. Major production investment from Screen Australia and the ABC. Financed with support from Screen Queensland. Distributed by Freemantle. Executive Producers: Nathan Mayfield, Tracey Robertson, Tracey Vieira and Adriano Cappelletta. Co-Executive Producer: Jane Allen. Producers: Nathan Mayfield, Tracey Robertson and Tracey Vieira. Co-Producer: Ben McNeil. ABC Executive Producer: Sally Riley and Andrew Gregory. Directors: John Sheedy and Nick Verso.

ABC drama In Our Blood reveals its untold story in March

ABC is proud to announce the captivating four-part musical drama series In Our Blood will premiere on Sunday 19 March at 8.30PM on ABC TV, with all episodes available to binge on ABC iview.

More than 40 years since the first cases of AIDS were reported, this is the must-watch ABC drama event inspired by how Australia became the unexpected world-leader of AIDS prevention and saved thousands of lives.

Starring an impressive cast including Tim Draxl (A Place to Call Home, Summer Love), Matt Day (Rake, Harrow), Jada Alberts (Mystery Road, The Stranger), Nicholas Brown (A Perfect Pairing, Christmas On The Farm), Anna McGahan (Spirited, House Husbands) and Oscar Leal (Bump, Black Snow).

Set in the 80’s, In Our Blood tells the story of people from politics, medicine and affected communities grappling separately with a terrifying new disease. With no cure in sight, they realise they must all work together to succeed, requiring something truly radical: trust.

Fear may be infectious, but courage is contagious.

For more LGBTQIA+ programs check out our collections on ABC iview and Innies + Outies on ABC listen

Production credits: In Our Blood is a Hoodlum Entertainment production for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation & Fremantle. Major production investment from Screen Australia and the ABC. Financed with support from Screen Queensland. Distributed by Freemantle. Executive Producers: Nathan Mayfield, Tracey Robertson, Tracey Vieira and Adriano Cappelletta. Co-Executive Producer: Jane Allen. Producers: Nathan Mayfield and Tracey Robertson. Co-Producer: Ben McNeil. ABC Executive Producer: Sally Riley and Andrew Gregory. Written and Created by Adriano Cappelletta. Directors: John Sheedy and Nick Verso.

EPISODE 1

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Sunday 19 March 8.30pm

On the 1983 Federal election night, Labor wins by a landslide and Bob Hawke becomes the new Prime Minister. On Oxford Street at Patchs nightclub, there is an eruption of celebration - this could mean a big step forward in the fight for equality. For out gay man, David Westford (Tim Draxl), it means a shiny new job in Canberra as the senior adviser to the Health Minister, Jeremy Wilding (Matt Day). David and his lover, Gabe (Oscar Leal), decide to go long distance as David heads to the capital.

As AIDS infection rates start to rise exponentially in the US, and the revelation of the first case in Sydney, David convinces Jeremy to act quickly and prioritise AIDS as a potential public health crisis.

However, AIDS isn’t a consideration for many in the gay community. Activists Deb (Jada Alberts) and Tim (Ryan Murphy) are too busy campaigning in Sydney for the decriminalisation of homosexuality, and once again face police hostility.

With no concrete knowledge of how the virus is spreading, no treatment and no cure – the government and the community must find a new way to save their lives and prevent an epidemic.

A public meeting is organised with gay community groups and the newly formed federal advisory body. When the doctors suggest abstinence and the cancellation of Mardi Gras as the only means of AIDS prevention, tempers flare as the meeting erupts into anarchy.

2 Likes

For the record, Dr Neal Blewett was the health minister in the 1983 Hawke ministry.

He’s playing the senior adviser not the minister

From the synopsis, it looks like a good.mininseries to watch.

So it starts Sunday 19 March. And is a 4 part mini series. Should have aired 2 weeks earlier, so that the last two episodes dont air over the teo-week ratings break (over Easter).

On a side note, will the ABC be airing Aussie dramas on pretty much every Sunday from March 19 until the “end of the year” like they did in the past few years?

Set in the early 80s, the four-part series, In Our Blood, is a captivating musical drama inspired by the incredible story of how Australia became the unexpected world-leader of AIDS prevention and saved thousands of lives.

It’s 1983. Sydney is a magnet for misfits and Darlinghurst is the centre of gay life, teeming with leather bars, saunas, gay sex, discos, and drag shows.

David (Tim Draxl), an out gay man, has a shiny new job working for the Federal Health Minister. But when AIDS hits, David finds himself at the forefront of the nation’s response. Working closely with his boss Jeremy (Matt Day), David comes to realise that the best approach is to join forces with the communities most at risk – which includes the gay men, sex workers and IV drug users of Darlinghurst.

Working within this close-knit community, is Dr Paul (Nicholas Brown), who runs the local health clinic. With a waiting room full of young gay men, he sees the impact of the disease firsthand.

The gay rights group, led by the passionate Deb (Jada Alberts), and nun-habit wearing Tim (Ryan Murphy), don’t take long to swing into action, turning their attention from demanding gay sex be decriminalised, to fighting against AIDS. They establish advice hotlines, attend meetings with the government, and are trained by the nuns at St Vincents to care for AIDS patients. While a young country boy, Liam (Wil King), finds his voice as an activist, and refuses to bow to the violence meted out by homophobic gangs roaming gay beats.

The shocking speed and infectiousness of the virus brings these disparate groups together. With no vaccine and no cure in sight, they tirelessly work, as one, to stop the spread. However, fear and hysteria is mounting in the broader community, and when blood supplies are accidently infected, the backlash is swift and merciless.
For David, the work is unrelenting and ultimately comes at a great personal cost.

But whatever happens, there’ll always be a dance floor.

Production credits: In Our Blood is a Hoodlum Entertainment production for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation & Fremantle. Major production investment from Screen Australia and the ABC. Financed with support from Screen Queensland. Distributed by Freemantle. Executive Producers: Nathan Mayfield, Tracey Robertson, Tracey Vieira and Adriano Cappelletta. Co-Executive Producer: Jane Allen. Producers: Nathan Mayfield and Tracey Robertson. Co-Producer: Ben McNeil. ABC Executive Producer: Sally Riley and Andrew Gregory. Written and Created by Adriano Cappelletta. Directors: John Sheedy and Nick Verso. Writer: Jane Allen and Jonathan Gavin.

ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

Forty years since the first cases of AIDS were reported, we are ready to hear this story - it is a map to help us navigate a new pandemic. We can be inspired by how fearlessly the LGBTQIA+ community in Australia fought, how they changed their behaviour, how they trusted and took care of one another. Australia led the world with one of the most successful responses to a health crisis in history. In Our Blood demonstrates that when we are faced with a health crisis, if we mobilise as a community, educate ourselves and put our differences aside, we can save lives.

This is the story of how Australia got it right. While other stories have focused solely on activists and community members, In Our Blood dramatizes how a gay man inside the government was able to work with affected communities to achieve lasting change. It’s the untold story of Australia’s radical fight against AIDS and how the LGBTQ community, both sides of government, doctors, nuns and nurses united to save thousands lives. The fear, the solidarity and the determination to fight, party and love bravely are reflected through an ensemble cast of characters, inspired by interviews and extensive research.

THE MUSIC

Music is the emotional heartbeat of the story. It’s set to an 80’s pop era soundtrack sung by LGBTQIA+ performers acting as a kind of Greek chorus - our audience’s direct link into the world.

The experience of AIDS during those early years was so disorientating, dreamlike, pinch-yourself-is-this really happening, that music allows us to confront it, and escape it, at the time. The Chorus communicates the internal world of the characters, and they help us and them sing through the pain and celebration of life.
The LGBTQIA+ community doesn’t just have songs, we have anthems. Go into any gay club in the world and when these anthems play you will find everyone up dancing and singing with unfettered passion and glee. For three and a half minutes their souls take flight. In the song, they belong. This soundtrack will not only appeal to the LGBTQIA+ community, it will also captivate a broad audience, and lovers of 80’s music pop groups such as Depeche Mode, Tears for Fears and The Eurogliders to name a few. These are classic, timeless songs.







KEY CREATIVES

EXECUTIVE PRODUCER & PRODUCER – NATHAN MAYFIELD

Nathan Mayfield is the Chief Creative Officer and co-founder of Hoodlum, an Emmy and BAFTA Award winning Production Company. Hoodlum operates their offices in Brisbane, Australia and in Los Angeles, developing feature film and television drama projects for the international marketplace. Mayfield has been the creative force behind Hoodlum’s multiplatform, television series and feature film work. He has worked alongside his co-founder Tracey Robertson to expand the business across the globe and across many different mediums.
Currently, Nathan is producing In Our Blood, a 4-part drama series for the ABC as well as season 4 of Five Bedrooms, which is set to premiere in 2023. He is also the Executive Producer on action-thriller Land of Bad, starring Russell Crowe and Liam Hemsworth.
Previously, Mayfield produced the three seasons of Five Bedrooms, an 8-part series which is on Paramount Plus in Australia and Peacock in the US. Recent producer credits include three seasons of Harrow for ABC Australia and Disney, feature film Australia Day for Foxtel and Icon and Australia’s first original Drama for Netflix, Tidelands.
Additionally, Hoodlum delivered two feature films for global SVODs; With the second series of ABC Signature / Amazon series The Wilds and ABC’s cutting edge series All My Friends Are Racist airing to huge acclaim.

EXECUTIVE PRODUCER & PRODUCER – TRACEY ROBERTSON

Tracey Robertson is the Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of Hoodlum, an Emmy® and BAFTA Award-winning Entertainment Company. As CEO, Robertson leads market engagement with partners, networks and studios to produce scripted content globally.
Recently, Robertson produced the feature film Christmas on the Farm, now streaming on Stan and Hulu, and was Executive Producer on the feature film A Perfect Pairing for Netflix. Currently, Tracey is the Executive producer on action-thriller Land of Bad, as well as the 4-part drama series In Our Blood for the ABC. Hoodlum’s Tidelands, Netflix’s first original TV series for the territory and launched globally in 2018. Robertson also produced three seasons of Harrow with ABC Australia and ABCSI, as well as three seasons of Five Bedrooms for Paramount Plus in Australia and Peacock in the US.
Additionally, Hoodlum facilitated the second series of ABC Signature / Amazon series The Wilds and produced ABC’s cutting edge series All My Friends Are Racist streaming on ABC TV + iview.
Robertson is a member of BAFTA, the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences and the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA). She was recognized as an outstanding alumnus and is an Adjunct Professor of Creative Industries at the Queensland University of Technology.

EXECUTIVE PRODUCER & PRODUCER – TRACEY VIERIA

Tracey Vieira is the Chief Content Officer for Emmy® and BAFTA Award winning film and television production company Hoodlum. Hoodlum operates between Australia, the US and the UK.
Since joining Hoodlum in 2019, Tracey has produced A Perfect Pairing, a romantic comedy feature for Netflix global released in May 2022 and went on to become the global number one film on the platform and produced Christmas on the Farm for Stan which was released in December 2021. Currently, Tracey is in development for a factual series with ABC and is Executive Producing action-thriller Land of Bad, starring Russell Crowe and Liam Hemsworth.
Prior to Hoodlum, Tracey was the CEO of Screen Queensland where she led the organisation through significant cultural change and growth from February 2014 to August 2019. Vieira was named in the 2018 Australian Financial Review 100 Women of Influence and is the 2016 Telstra Queensland Businesswoman of the Year. Vieira currently Chairs the Asia Pacific Screen Awards and is a Director of Home of the Arts (HOTA) Gold Coast and Chair of Griffith Film School’s Advisory Board. She is an external Advisor to US based Australians in Film and President of Screen Producers Australia.
Tracey is a passionate animal advocate and spent four years as a company director for RSPCA Queensland.

EXECUTIVE PRODUCER / WRITER (EPS 1 & 4) – ADRIANO CAPPELLETTA

Adriano is an actor, writer, director, producer and theatre-maker for over 20 years.
After graduating from the NIDA Acting program, he was a recipient of The Marten Bequest Travelling Scholarship and The Mike Walsh Fellowship and traveled to Paris to study with master clown, Philippe Gaulier for several years.
In 2016 he was co-awarded the Philip Parsons Playwriting Fellowship for Ruby’s Wish which premiered at Belvoir St Theatre and toured to The Sydney Opera House, Arts Centre Melbourne, Parramatta Riverside and Awesome Arts WA.
His debut solo cabaret, This Boy’s in Love was nominated for Best Cabaret at Adelaide Fringe and Fringe World WA and was presented at The Adelaide Cabaret Festival, Provocaré Festival Melbourne and The Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
His other original theatre works include Cubbyhouse (The Public Theatre: New York), Connie Chang’s Cabaret Roadshow (Melbourne Comedy Festival, Sydney Opera House) and Shane and Eddie: Picking up the Pieces at The Edinburgh Fringe. His play, Never Let Me Go was presented at Griffin Theatre, Sydney as part of Batch Festival in 2019.
As an actor he recently appeared as Wilbur in Barking Gecko’s The Great Un-wondering of Wilbur Whittaker. From 2005-2016 he worked extensively in Sydney with Kim Carpenter’s Theatre of Image and The Ensemble Theatre under director Sandra Bates. He was nominated for Best Newcomer at The Sydney Theatre Awards for his role in A View from A Bridge. For Perth Festival: Dennis Cleveland: A Pop Opera, The Mules Foal (Perth Theatre Company).
On screen Adriano has appeared in the Australian feature film I am Woman (2019), US action-feature, Stealth (2005) and TV series, All Saints.
He is the co-creator and co-lead of the comedy series Ultimate Fanj which premiered on ABCiview for Fresh Blood.
In Our Blood marks Adriano’s first major TV series as creator/executive producer and a culmination of years of research on Australia’s response to AIDS. For Adriano, the series is his love letter to all those who fought bravely and to honour our LGBT and Australian history.

EPISODE 4
Sunday 9 April 8.20pm

Facing the daunting prospect of a second wave of infections, David and Jeremy engage journalist and trusted public figure, Caroline McGarvie, to spearhead the campaign to raise public awareness.

Jeremy manages to convince the Government to increase the Department’s funding, but it’s dependent on infection rates falling – which is not happening overseas, and is unlikely to occur in Australia either.

David thinks the government approach is all wrong, instead believes that they need to terrify people into paying attention, not hold their hands. This controversial tactic leads to the creation of a genuinely shocking television advertisement, which gets everyone in Australia, and beyond, talking.

Meanwhile, Deb, Tim, Michelle and gay community activist groups finally get an office and become legitimate. Funded by Federal and State money, they will be able to keep fighting and reach more people and save lives.

Caroline McGarvie is a vague reference to Ita Buttrose (current ABC chairman), who was recruited by Bob Hawke in 1984 to become the chairperson of National Advisory Committee on AIDS, which she served until 1988. Ita mentioned the role in her episode of Australian Story, which aired in November 2022.

I think the producers decided it was a musical with drama so that it had the four supporting characters (Choruses named Alpha, Beta, Gamma and Delta) between scenes, occasionally bursting into songs. They also had to change the names of the people involved, apart from Bob Hawke who was the Prime Minister at the time. If it was a serious drama about AIDS the producers would have retained the character names and got rid of the narrators.

I think it just ended up being a mess. It had the potential to be a good period drama like The Newsreader but I think they messed up with the narrators breaking the fourth wall and looking out of place in the serious scenes. The music of time is phenomenal so a bit of a waste with the way they used it.