Ladies in Black

Ladies in Black

A six-part drama for the ABC about a group of women who fling open their shop doors to the fabulous 60s. Directing all six episodes is Gracie Otto, whose credits include The Clearing , Heartbreak High and Artful Dodger . The writing team includes script producer Greg Waters (Riot, The Twelve), Joan Sauers (The Principal , Rake), Sarah Bassiuoni (The Heights) and Randa Sayed (Halal Girls). The series is produced by Sophia Zachariou (The Office Australia , The Moth Effect), Angela Littlejohn (Cleverman, In Limbo), Greer Simpkin and David Jowsey, whose credits also include Mystery Road: Origin, True Colours. Sue Milliken and Allanah Zitserman, who produced the Ladies in Black feature film, are attached as executive producers with Louise Smith executive producing for the ABC. It has received major production investment from the ABC and is financed with support from the South Australian Film Corporation and Screen NSW. ABC Commercial manages worldwide distribution.

Funding from Screen Australia

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The movie was very good.

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I enjoyed the movie. I wonder if they’ll continue the stories from the movie or have new characters in the same location.

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I noticed the movie is getting another run on TV next week too and I also enjoyed it, Noni is fantastic in anything she’s in

Especially in “One Night” with her strong Scottish accent. :grin:

2024 Upfronts

Following on from the film of the same name and drawing inspiration from the much-loved 1993 novel, Ladies In Black sees the beloved women from Goodes Department Store fling open their shop doors to the fabulous 60’s. The heartwarming six-part drama series takes place in 1961, six months after the events of the original story, where amidst this backdrop of major societal shifts, the women embracing more freedom and independence are forced to confront personal choices and challenges which cast shadows over their once cherished dreams.

PRODUCTION CREDITS

A Bunya Entertainment production. Major production investment from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Screen Australia. Financed with support from the South Australian Film Corporation and Screen NSW. Producers Sophia Zachariou, Angela Littlejohn, Greer Simpkin, David Jowsey. ABC Commissioning Editor Louise Smith. ABC Head of Scripted Rachel Okine. International Sales by ABC Commercial.

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I wonder if any of the cast members from the 2018 movie will be involved in the drama series.

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I hope this will be good as the movie

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Me too, loved the movie.

The three ladies in the photo above are (from left to right) Debi Mazar, Miranda Otto and Jessica De Gouw.

Debi is an American actress, best known for her role in Entourage and Younger. Jess can be seen in season 2 of The Secrets She Keeps starting on 10 next Monday night.

Looks like they will be the leads in the drama adaptation.

I thoroughly enjoyed the movie. Am also hoping that this 6-part series will be just as good.

Miranda Otto and Jessica De Gouw are great actresses, which is a bonus.

It was a good movie but not sure I’d want to watch it as a series

From South Australian Film Corporation

SA lands new ABC series Ladies in Black with all-star cast

Ladies in Black, the second television series to be funded under the ABC SAFC Content Pipeline Fund, has been announced by the ABC today (November 9)

The six-part drama is the second production to be funded through the $5.2 million fund delivered by the State Government to drive screen production in South Australia, create jobs and strengthen the state’s screen industry. It follows popular children’s series Beep and Mort from Adelaide’s Windmill Pictures, which wrapped filming its second season earlier this year at Adelaide Studios.

The cast of Ladies in Black will be led by renowned American actress Debi Mazar (Younger, Entourage), Miranda Otto (The Clearing, Talk To Me) and Jessica De Gouw (The Drover’s Wife: The Legend of Molly Johnson, The Secrets She Keeps).

Following on from the 2018 film of the same name and drawing inspiration from the much-loved 1993 novel, the new television adaptation sees the beloved women from Goodes Department Store fling open their shop doors to the fabulous 1960’s.

Debi, Miranda, and Jessica will be joined by an ensemble cast of talented Australian actors including Kate Box (Deadloch, Wentworth), 2022 NIDA graduate Clare Hughes, Azizi Donnelly (Secret Society of Lies), Julian Maroun (Aftertaste), Carlos Sanson Jr (Bump), Tom Wilson (Heartbreak High), Sacha Horler (The Letdown), Huw Higginson (Total Control), Russell Dykstra (Rake), Thom Green (Of an Age), Hamish Michael (The Twelve), Krew Boylan (Simply Red), Ngali Shaw (The Twelve), Hazem Shammas (The Clearing), Peter O’Brien (Tidelands), Gemma Ward (While The Men Are Away) and Todd McKenney (Significant Others).

Directed by Gracie Otto (The Arftul Dodger, The Clearing, Heartbreak High), Ladies in Black takes place in 1961, six months after the events of the original story, where amidst this backdrop of major societal shifts, the women embracing more freedom and independence are forced to confront personal choices and challenges which cast shadows over their once cherished dreams.

Minister for the Arts Andrea Michaels MP said: “It is incredibly exciting to secure Ladies in Black for South Australia. We want to tell Australian stories to the world, and we are achieving this through our $5.2 million partnership between the South Australian Film Corporation and the ABC, with this being the second series to be supported through the Content Pipeline Fund.

“Along with the significant cultural benefits of supporting our stories to reach Australian and global audiences, our investment is creating hundreds of jobs for our local screen sector, and driving high quality production outcomes which showcase South Australia’s world-class film and television production capability around the world.

“South Australia is truly the home of Australian stories on screen, and the Malinauskas Government will continue to invest in this important sector for the future.”

South Australian Film Corporation CEO Kate Croser said: “We are thrilled to support Ladies in Black to be made in South Australia under the new ABC SAFC Content Pipeline Fund. As the second production to come out of the fund, this fabulous, quintessentially Australian series will really showcase the diverse capability of our Adelaide Studios production facility and South Australia’s screen industry workforce.”

ABC Head of Scripted Rachel Okine said: “Ladies in Black is a celebration of beauty, ambition and friendships forged against a backdrop of high fashion in the 1960s. We anticipate audiences both here and abroad are going to love losing themselves in this glamorous world and are delighted to be bringing it to the screen in 2024”.

Bunya Entertainment’s Co-Managing Director and producer Sophia Zachariou said: “At Bunya we pride ourselves on bringing stories to the screen that we haven’t seen before and our television version of Ladies in Black is just that. Our Ladies in Black inhabit an intriguing world on the cusp of change. We can’t wait to bring the exquisite characters we’ve created – and their stories – to the screen. I hope audiences fall in love with them just as much as we have”.

Screen Australia Head of Content Grainne Brunsdon said: “We are proud to be part of the highly anticipated drama series Ladies in Black. Beautifully tailored and laced with a fierce intelligence, this charming series skilfully captures Australian culture during a truly transformative era. With its winning combination of cast and crew, this series will transport audiences to a bygone era, yearning for more.”

The series is written by Greg Waters (The Twelve) who also serves as script producer, Sarah Bassiuoni (House of Gods), Joan Sauers (Wakefield) and Randa Sayed (Halal Girls).

Ladies in Black is coming soon to ABC TV and ABC iview.

Production credit: A Bunya Entertainment production. Major production investment from the ABC, South Australian Film Corporation and Screen Australia. Financed with support from Screen NSW. Producers: Sophia Zachariou, Angela Littlejohn, Greer Simpkin, David Jowsey. Executive Producers: Greg Waters, Sue Milliken, Allanah Zitserman. ABC Executive Producers: Rachel Okine & Louise Smith. Distributed by ABC Commercial.

Ladies in Black begins on Sunday 16 June, at 8.30pm.

ABC drama Ladies in Black flings open its shop doors with June premiere

The ABC is thrilled to announce the heartwarming six-part drama series Ladies in Black will premiere on Sunday 16 June at 8.30pm on ABC TV, with all episodes available to stream on ABC iview.

With a stellar cast led by renowned actresses Debi Mazar (Younger, Entourage), Miranda Otto (The Clearing, Talk To Me), Jessica De Gouw (The Drover’s Wife: The Legend of Molly Johnson, The Secret She Keeps) and introducing Clare Hughes and Azizi Donnelly, Ladies in Black, the television adaptation sees the beloved women from Goodes Department Store fling open their shop doors to the fabulous 60’s.

Following on from the 2018 film of the same name and drawing inspiration from the much-loved 1993 novel, Ladies in Black takes place six months after the events of the original story, where amidst this backdrop of major societal shifts, the women embracing more freedom and independence are forced to confront personal choices and challenges which cast shadows over their once cherished dreams.

For director Gracie Otto (The Artful Dodger, The Clearing, Heartbreak High) the story of Ladies in Black is still relevant for audiences today.

Otto said: “Ladies in Black is set at a time when my mother was a young woman. It’s interesting for today’s younger generation to imagine how few rights women had back then. It really was not that long ago. It’s great to explore that era but it’s also an amazing, fun world of fashion and friendships”.

It will be interesting to see if the new cast plays new characters, or existing characters from the movie.

The characters in the 2018 movie were:
Magda - Julia Ormond
Lisa - Angourie Rice
Fay - Rachael Taylor
Mrs Miles - Susie Taylor
Miss Cartwright - Noni Hazlehurst

Debi Mazar features on the cover of Sunday Life magazine inside The Sun-Herald and Sunday Age today.

Episode 1

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Sunday 16 June 8.30pm

Sydney, 1961. The women who work in Goodes ladieswear face tumultuous lives navigating societal shifts and personal challenges amidst the fashion transformation of the sixties.

It’s 1961. Magda’s (Debi Mazar) beautiful dream of transforming Australian women’s fashion is about to be crushed by her husband’s foolish mistake. Without consultation, Stefan (Russell Dykstra) has lent money to their friend Rudi (Thom Green). It proves a costly error. Trapped at Goodes she must fight against entrenched conservatism and snobbery to rise from the bottom once again.

Her newest antagonist, Mrs Ambrose (Miranda Otto) has just arrived from Harrods and is determined to save the store from adventurous designers and working women. Caught between the two is newlywed Fay (Jessica De Gouw), whose plans of starting a family are put on hold by her husband Rudi’s financial risk-taking. Fay faces hard choices about motherhood and career that didn’t figure in her dreams of marriage. The failed loan comes between Fay and Magda when they most need each other’s support.

Forced to return by family tragedy, Lisa (Clare Hughes) finds Goodes ladieswear in turmoil. Her own dreams of university success are threatened by financial crisis, leaving her torn between ambition and necessity. Determined to make her mark on the world, she also struggles to overcome the indifference of campus ‘lion’, Richard (Tom Wilson), who edits the student paper and dominates the uni crowd.

The staff of Goodes face competition, difficult customers, unruly staff, shoplifters, debutantes and internal rivalries. Magda and Mrs Ambrose divide over the direction of women’s fashion. As do Elias (Julian Maroun), the Head of Visual Merchandising and Mackenzie (Todd McKenney) the chief buyer, but their animosity has a darker cause.

Like Sydney in the sixties, the ladies of Goodes are facing a world on the brink of transformation and the pressures of unexpected change will threaten the love and friendship that is their best chance to thrive amidst the challenges of a changing Australia.

Production Credit: A Bunya Entertainment production. Major production investment from the ABC, South Australian Film Corporation and Screen Australia. Financed with support from Screen NSW. Producers: Sophia Zachariou, Angela Littlejohn, Greer Simpkin, David Jowsey. Executive Producers: Greg Waters, Allanah Zitserman, Sue Milliken. ABC Executive Producers: Louise Smith, Rachel Okine, Alex Baldwin, Sally Riley. Distributed by ABC Commercial.

The series was filmed in Adelaide but the storyline was still based in Sydney? Strange.

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Episode 2

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Sunday 23 June 8.30pm

Angela must cover for divided loyalties after scamming her way into Goodes. Mrs Ambrose campaigns for ladieswear supremacy while Magda, Lisa and Fay must deal with the fall-out from unexpected events and revelations.

Angela Mansour (Azizi Donnelly) has got herself into trouble. Claiming to be part of an established retailing family seemed a perfect cover for stealing the look-book of Goodes upcoming designs. Her performance was too good. Goodes offered her a dream job in fashion. Now she must clean up her mess, return the book and hope no-one ever discovers her real family business is selling knock-off Goodes designs.

Lisa (Clare Hughes) is much too pre-occupied with her ‘lost’ night in the bed of her dream man Richard (Tom Wilson). If only she could remember what happened. Having been unintentionally humiliated by Angela, Lisa resists her overtures of friendship, even though a confidante is exactly what she most needs.

Magda (Debi Mazar) and Mrs Ambrose (Miranda Otto) battle over hierarchy, customers and the direction of Goodes. Mrs Ambrose recruits allies and makes herself indispensable to the senior executives of Goodes. While Magda is distracted by Stefan’s (Russell Dykstra) shocking revelation that George (Carlos Sanson Jr), his long-hidden son by a previous marriage, is now in Sydney.

Fay (Jessica De Gouw) must tell Rudi (Thom Green) about her decision to go on the pill, but their discussion is forestalled by Stefan’s arrival with his newly revealed son, George. He needs his friends to give George a home until things settle with Magda. Deeply indebted Fay and Rudi agree. The emotional challenge of Fay’s home-life is exacerbated by the return of Marlow, a ghost from her past who seems hell-bent on inserting himself into her life again.

As the ladies in black contend with the fall-out from secrets and lies, will they find support and strength in each other, or will the tensions caused by sudden revelations push them apart?