Showing posts with label Club Seventeen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Club Seventeen. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 September 2010

Johnny Young for ARIA Hall of Fame

johnnyyoungJohnny Young, the 60s pop star who created a generation of stars with the long-running Young Talent Time, is to be inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame as recognition of his contribution to the Australian recording industry.

Born in the Netherlands but raised in Perth, Young was a chart-topper with songs including Cara-Lyn and Step Back and wrote several hits that went on to become ‘60s anthems, including Smiley and The Real Thing.  He also hosted a pop music program, Club 7Teen, for Perth’s TVW7

In the late ‘60s, he featured on Melbourne-based pop music programs Go!! and Happening before starting Young Talent Time – a talent quest and variety series cast with junior performers.  Young’s adaptation of the Beatles song All My Loving served as the closing signature tune for Young Talent Time.

Under Young’s guidance, Young Talent Time created stars from child performers like Jamie Redfern, Tina Arena, Jane Scali, Sally Boyden, Debbie Byrne, Phillip Gould, Karen Knowles and Dannii Minogue.  The show won TV Week Logie awards for Best Variety/Music Program in 1972, 1974, 1975 and 1976 and in 1982 won a special Logie for sustained excellence in television.  His chain of talent schools, started in the late ‘70s, continue to operate across Australia today.

In 1990, Young was inducted in the TV Week Logie Awards’ Hall of Fame.

Young, 65, is now back in Perth presenting the breakfast program on radio station 6IX and is still performing.

The ARIA Awards’ Hall of Fame presentation is to be held on 27 October, hosted by Julia Zemiro. Also to be inducted this year are John Williamson, The Models, The Loved Ones and The Church.

Source: Daily Telegraph, Wikipedia, Johnny Young Talent School, Australian Television Information Archive

Saturday, 11 April 2009

Celebrating 50 years of WA TV

tvw7_early When television began in Australia it inevitably started up first in Sydney and Melbourne in 1956.  The following year it was announced that TV services would be extended to the other capital cities of Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth and Hobart. 

By the end of 1959, Brisbane would have three channels, Adelaide would have two, and Perth would have its first channel – TVW7. (Hobart followed in 1960)

The licence to operate Perth’s first commercial television station was issued to TVW Limited, owned by West Australian Newspapers, in October 1958.  The only other applicant for the licence was Western Television Services which had ties with News Limited, based in Adelaide.  News Limited was successful, however, in gaining one of the two commercial television licences for Adelaide.

TVW7 made its first test transmissions from 31 August 1959 and was officially opened on Friday 16 October 1959.  The station was operating from studios in the suburb of Tuart Hill and from a transmitter located in Bickley.

tvw7_colourThe opening night’s line-up started with speeches from TVW general manager James Cruthers and Western Australian governor Sir Charles Gairdner, who officially declared the station open.  Later in the evening, TVW7 presented the first edition of its live-to-air variety show, Spotlight, featuring Rolf Harris who had returned from London to become a presenter and producer for TVW.

TVW7 would have Perth’s TV viewers all to itself for the next few months – as ABC’s local channel, ABW2, did not commence transmission until May 1960. 

tvw7_loveyouperth_80sPerth’s second commercial channel, STW9, commenced transmission in June 1965 – almost six years after TVW launched.  It was this prolonged commercial monopoly in the market that helped TVW gain an unbeatable position against its newcomer rival and, to this day, TVW7 continues to dominate ratings in Perth.

In the lead-up to TVW7’s 50th anniversary – and a planned staff reunion – the website WA TV History has compiled an excellent and detailed account of various aspects of the station’s history – including some of the channel’s past and present personnel, programs and technical production.  There is a vast array of photographs – many donated from the personal collections of former staff – and a roll-call of people who have worked at TVW7, and also a list of Western Australia’s TV Week Logie award winners.

tvw7_loveyouperthSome names have gone on from TVW7 to become known across Australia.  Garry Meadows was an early TVW presenter who went on to radio and television on the east coast.  Johnny Young hosted a pop music program, Club SeventeenPeter Meakin worked in the news room before heading the news department at Nine and now the Seven NetworkAnn Sanders was a game show hostess on $50,000 LetterboxSimon Reeve was a children’s show host and news reporter.  Terry Willesee was a newsreader.

tvw7_telethon_68 And it would be remiss not to mention what is the station’s annual highlight – Telethon.  Since 1968, Telethon has raised over $80 million for children’s charities in Western Australia.  It has attracted national attention and international celebrities – including Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder, Whitney Houston, Sammy Davis Jnr and Celine Dion – some of which came to Australia specifically for Telethon.  (Pictured are Johnny O’Keefe, Graham Kennedy, Bobby Limb and Stuart Wagstaff, all sans shirts for a stunt at the first Telethon.)

WA TV History is an excellent resource and a highly-recommended read.

Additional source: Eric Fisher