All Saints (TV series)

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All Saints
Allsaintsseason4titlecard.jpg
Seasons 4-6 title card
GenreMedical drama
Created byBevan Lee
Developed byJo Porter
Starring(see detailed cast list in article)
ComposerMatteo Zingales
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons12
No. of episodes493 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerJohn Holmes
ProducersJo Porter (seasons 1-4)
Di Drew (seasons 5-7)
Jo Porter (seasons 7-8)
MaryAnne Carroll (seasons 8-10)
Bill Hughes (seasons 11-12)
Running time45 minutes
Production companiesSeven Network Operations Limited
Red Heart Entertainment
DistributorSouthern Star Group[1]
Release
Original networkSeven Network
Picture format4:3 (seasons 1-3)
16:9 (seasons 5-12)
Audio formatStereo
Original release24 February 1998 (1998-02-24) –
27 October 2009 (2009-10-27)
External links
Website

All Saints is an Australian medical drama television series that first screened on the Seven Network on 24 February 1998. Set in the fictional All Saints Western General Hospital, it focused on the staff of Ward 17 until its closure in 2004, which is when the focus changed and began following the staff of the Emergency Department. It was produced by John Holmes alongside Jo Porter, MaryAnne Carroll and Di Drew. The final episode aired on 27 October 2009, completing its record-breaking 12-year run.

Plot[]

All Saints follows the lives of the staff at All Saints Western General Hospital. Until its closure in 2004, the show primarily focused on the staff in Ward 17. Known as the "garbage ward" as it took all the overflow from the other wards, Ward 17 was run by compassionate nun, Sister Terri Sullivan (Georgie Parker). Her staff included her nurses Connor Costello (Jeremy Cumpston), Von Ryan (Judith McGrath), Bronwyn Craig (Libby Tanner), Jared Levine (Ben Tari) and Stephanie Markham (Kirrily White) and her ward clerk Jaz Hillerman (Sam Healy). Luke Forlano (Martin Lynes) and Peter Morrison (Andrew McKaige) were doctors who frequently worked with Terri and her staff. Ben Markham (Brian Vriends) was an ambulance officer who worked closely with Luke, despite their rivalry. Bronwyn left Ward 17 and became an ambulance officer at the end of 1998 but returned to the ward full-time at the end of season 3.

Cast[]

Main cast[]

Actor Character Season
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Judith McGrath Von Ryan Main
Georgie Parker Terri Sullivan Main Does not appear
Jeremy Cumpston Connor Costello Main Does not appear
Sam Healy Jaz Hillerman Main Does not appear
Martin Lynes Luke Forlano Main Does not appear
Andrew McKaige Peter Morrison Main Does not appear
Libby Tanner Bronwyn Craig Main Does not appear
Ben Tari Jared Levine Main Does not appear Guest Does not appear
Kirrily White Stephanie Markham Main Guest Does not appear
Brian Vriends Ben Markham Recurring Main Does not appear
Erik Thomson Mitch Stevens Does not appear Main Does not appear
Conrad Coleby Scott Zinenko Does not appear Main Does not appear
Jenni Baird Paula Morgan Does not appear Guest Recurring Main Does not appear
Paul Tassone Nelson Curtis Does not appear Guest Recurring Main Does not appear
Tammy Macintosh Charlotte Beaumont Does not appear Recurring Main
Christopher Gabardi Vincent Hughes Does not appear Main Does not appear
John Howard Frank Campion Does not appear Main
Wil Traval Jack Quade Does not appear Main Does not appear
Natalie Saleeba Jessica Singelton Does not appear Main Does not appear
Alexandra Davies Cate McMasters Does not appear Main Guest Does not appear
Mark Priestley Dan Goldman Does not appear Guest Does not appear Main Does not appear
Chris Vance Sean Everleigh Does not appear Guest Main Does not appear
Andrew Supanz Bartholomew West Does not appear Main
Jolene Anderson Erica Templeton Does not appear Main Does not appear
John Waters Mike Vlasek Does not appear Guest Main
Virginia Gay Gabrielle Jaegar Does not appear Recurring Main
Allison Cratchley Zoe Gallagher Does not appear Main Does not appear
Jack Campbell Steve Taylor Does not appear Main
Kip Gamblin Adam Rossi Does not appear Main
Ella Scott Lynch Claire Anderson Does not appear Main
Alix Bidstrup Amy Fielding Does not appear Main
Mirrah Foulkes Jo Mathieson Does not appear Main

Recurring cast[]

Actor Character Season
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Elizabeth Maywald Sophie Williams Recurring Guest Does not appear
Kim Hillas Joan Marden Recurring Guest Recurring Guest Does not appear Recurring
Michael Angus John Ahearn Recurring Guest Does not appear
John Noble John Madsen Recurring Guest Recurring Guest Does not appear
Justine Clarke Samantha O'Hara Recurring Does not appear
Damon Herriman Danny Bucknell Recurring Guest Does not appear
Rod Mullinar Prof. Richard Craig Recurring Does not appear
Robert Coleby Does not appear Guest Does not appear
Jake Blundell Tony Hurst Does not appear Recurring Guest Does not appear
Celia Ireland Regina Butcher Does not appear Recurring Does not appear Guest Recurring Does not appear
Joy Smithers Rose Carlton Stevens Does not appear Recurring Guest Does not appear
Ling-Hsueh Tang Kylie Preece Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Kim De Lury Mick Todd Does not appear Recurring Guest Does not appear
Sarah Vassallo A&E Nurse Stella Does not appear Guest Recurring Does not appear
Pia Miranda Brittany Finlay Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Belinda Emmett Jodi Horner Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Emma Jane Fowler Vicky Dernakov Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Natasha Beaumont Rebecca Green Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Josh Quong Tart Matt Horner Does not appear Recurring Guest Does not appear
Rochelle Whyte Cara Windom Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Chris Haywood Peter Buchanan Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Rebecca Massey Various Does not appear Guest Does not appear Guest Does not appear
Troy Planet Dennis Poole Does not appear Guest Recurring Guest Recurring Does not appear
Alan Flower Morris the Florist Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Rachel McNamara Frances Regan Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Fletcher Humphrys Alex Kearns Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Henry Nixon Sterling McCormack Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Liz Alexander Alison Newell Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Anne Looby Julia Archer Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Grant Bowler Nigel "Mac" MacPherson Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Jaime Mears Kerry Lytton Does not appear Recurring Guest Does not appear
Peter Phelps Doug Spencer Does not appear Recurring Guest Does not appear
Sibylla Budd Deanna Richardson Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Nicole da Silva Sasha Fernandez Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Bryce the Ambo Does not appear Recurring Guest Does not appear
Guy Edmonds Stuart Mapleston Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Wendy Strehlow Lorraine Tanner Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Douglas Hansell Aaron Roth Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Celeste Barber Bree Matthews Does not appear Recurring
Alexandra Fowler Eve Ballantyne Does not appear Guest Recurring Does not appear
Jacinta Stapleton Jo Henderson Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Mike Smith Heath Velaga Does not appear Recurring Guest
Renee Lim Suzi Lau Does not appear Recurring
Petra Yared Rhiannon Wilson Does not appear Recurring Does not appear
Jonathan Wood Elliott Parker Does not appear Recurring

Production[]

After the death of Dr. Mitch Stevens (Erik Thomson) and the departure of Bron Craig (Libby Tanner) in 2003, the producers decided to do something in response to considerable drop in ratings and to prolong the life of the series.[2]

In February 2004, John Holmes told The Age journalist Debi Enker that All Saints would be undergoing "major surgery" when the focus shifted from Ward 17 to the Emergency Department. He also stated that while four familiar faces will be leaving, new characters will be introduced to fill the void. Holmes recalled a statement that he made in May 2003 in which he said, "we [myself and Seven script executive Bevan Lee] were seeing the scripts and watching episodes and we were feeling that there was a little bit of a sameness in it. We started to think, 'Don't know about this. Sixth year. Maybe we've had a few too many people through the door of Ward 17 on a trolley and had the 'Hi, I'm Von, I'm your nurse. Room Three, thanks Sterlo.'" After tossing up between cancelling the show and using it as the foundation of a spin-off series, Holmes and Lee decided to rejuvenate the show by changing the setting. Ward 17 would then close and the show would be relocated to the Emergency Department.[3]

As a result of the shift, several cast members decided to leave the show. Paula Morgan (Jenni Baird), Luke Forlano (Martin Lynes), Alex Kearns (Fletcher Humphrys) and Sterling McCormack (Henry Nixon) were all written out of the show. Former Always Greener star John Howard signed a three-year deal and was added to the cast as the cranky head of Emergency, Dr. Frank Campion. Other new faces included Wil Traval as Dr. Jack Quade, Mark Priestley and Natalie Saleeba as nurses Dan Goldman and Jessica Singleton and Alexandra Davies as ambulance officer Cate McMasters.[2]

In 2009 another attempt to stem the softening ratings and add a bit of excitement to the series, Seven Network executives decided to rejuvenate again, introducing a medical response unit to deal with tricky rescues which involved a helicopter going to remote locations to rescue patients who needed assistance. They would then bring those patients back to the ED and the staff there would assist in their treatment. Along with the addition of the new "department" the show was also renamed to All Saints: Medical Response Unit, the introduction of Mirrah Foulkes and the new MRU proved to lift the ratings substantially, but then levelled out at where they were prior to the revamp.[4]

In June 2009, after months of rumours that the cancellation of All Saints was imminent, a spokeswoman from the Seven Network informed The Daily Telegraph that the episode order had been trimmed. Season twelve of All Saints would screen 24 episodes instead of the usual 40 episodes and that production would cease in August instead of November.[5]

In July 2009, exactly one month later after the first announcement, Tim Worner, Seven's Director of Programming at the time announced that All Saints had been cancelled. He told Michael Idato of the Sydney Morning Herald, "All Saints is a show which Seven and viewers have loved. However, an audience shift and increased production costs are behind this tough decision." He also informed Idato that the episode order trim had been reverted and the season would complete a 37 episode order, finishing on episode 493. It was reported after the announcement that since the introduction of the MRU in 2009 it inflated the cost of each episode to $500,000. Many people still argue as to why the MRU was introduced in the first place or should have been removed instead of axing the show if the network was wanting to cut costs. [6]

In the Feb/Mar 2010 GQ magazine in 2010, Tim Worner said his one regret was "Axing All Saints. But it was the right call at the time and we have two new drama projects in development."

Controversy[]

Episode 265[]

On 20 April 2004, episode 265, "Brave New World" aired, which saw the introduction of John Howard's character, Frank Campion. It was also the first episode to be set in the Emergency Department. This episode attracted lots of controversy.

One patient came into the triage and tried to get help, but he was told to wait. Later on, Nelson heard a phone ring coming from the patient and asked him to turn off the phone. It was later hinted that he had been using the phone to masturbate and it had gotten stuck in his rectum.

The end of the episode saw Frank go introduce himself to Terri (Georgie Parker), who was recovering from heart surgery. During a heated argument about staff members, Frank blatantly said to Terri, "if you ever use your influence with your previous employees to white-ant me again, you will never work in Emergency." Before Terri could get a word in, Frank added, "can I make it any fucking clearer?"[7]

The next day, Channel Seven announced that they had received more than 100 phone calls in Melbourne alone. Parker told the media, "it's a good response because it's not about the shock words—we've sworn on the show before—but because people clearly feel really protective about Terri. It's like they really feel for her as a character and don't like her being under attack by a very confronting man. It's great to know they care for her so much."[7]

On 22 April, the network issued a statement that read, "within an M classification code, coarse language is permitted provided it is appropriate to the storyline or program context." An apology was not made.[7]

Episode 432[]

On 27 May 2008, episode 432, "Never Tell" aired.

This episode saw a woman pregnant from an incestuous relationship with her brother, told her child may have Down syndrome as a result.

Leading geneticist Dr. David Amor of Murdoch Children's Research Institute stated, "There is absolutely no increase in the risk of Down syndrome for the offspring of incestuous relationships."[8]

Down Syndrome Australia considered legal action, complained to the media regulator, the Australian Communications and Media Authority and called for a boycott by the show's advertisers if an apology and correction was not aired on All Saints the following week.[8]

Seven responded with, "All Saints values its audience and has the greatest respect for their commitment to the program. Without reservation, to any members of the audience who have found an element of a recent story offensive, Channel Seven apologises."[8]

The final episode[]

The longer-than-usual 49-minute episode aired at 9:30pm on Tuesday, 27 October 2009. The episode, unlike those in the rest of the season, went back to basics and focused more on the lives of the nurses and doctors as they tended to patients.

The episode saw Judith McGrath's character, Von Ryan tending to a teenage girl who comes into the ED and gives birth without knowing she was pregnant. Tammy Macintosh and John Howard finished their seven- and five-year reigns as Dr. Charlotte Beaumont and Dr. Frank Campion respectively, caring for a woman played by Heather Mitchell who had cystic fibrosis. Ella Scott Lynch and Jonathan Wood left the show on a high with their characters, Claire Anderson and Elliott Parker treating a man (Luke Pegler) with a disease consistent with diabetes and promiscuity.

Secretly, Von decides to resign from All Saints, telling only Frank that she wouldn't be returning. He offers to take her out for dinner, but instead plans a surprise farewell dinner for her. Throughout the dinner, Gabrielle (Virginia Gay) and Steve (Jack Campbell) decide to raise their child together and get back together, Bart (Andrew Supanz) proposes to his girlfriend Amy (Alix Bidstrup) and Charlotte and Adam (Kip Gamblin) share an intense moment.

At the table, Von is pressured to make a speech by her colleagues and friends and reluctantly, she does, uttering her famous line: "I spent a lot of time at All Saints and I'd just like to thank you all for your loyalty, your support and love. Oh bugger this, here's to us." She raises her glass and toasts.

The finale is capped off by a montage of scenes from over the show's twelve-year run, including Mitch's final scene, the closure of Ward 17 and Bron & Ben's wedding, all to The Beatles song, "In My Life".

The final scene sees Frank raise his glass at Von, who raises hers and smiles.

Opening credits[]

The first opening theme song for All Saints began with several deep breaths and then went into a tune played by a saxophone. The melody bears a striking similarity to "Fly By Night", the first track on Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson's 1983 debut album Walk Into Light. This played over the top of several shots of the cast members. Actors names were in the font Zurich Extra Condensed and underlined. Intercut were shots of hands, various medical equipment and medicine.

The second opening theme song was first used when the opening was upgraded in mid-season two. The same song was used however drums were added to give it more of an authentic sound. The shots of cast changed and names of actors and their characters were now present. The font remained the same. Shots of hands, medical vehicles and equipment were also present.

The first major overhaul of the opening happened in season four, when the titles were completely changed. They now began with several deep breaths over a blue screen with a vision of hands in the background. The screen was set up with a slide of the actor in the centre, with deep blue all around and medical notation. The theme was more stringy and only involved a small saxophone part. Medical crosses, bottles and syringes were present in the opening. This coincided with the change from the standard TV 4:3 aspect ratio to widescreen 16:9.

The second major overhaul of the opening happened in season seven, when the whole layout and font used were completely changed to mark the revamp of the show and its change of focus to the Emergency Department. The basic undertone of the theme was still there, however another saxophone overtone was added tho give the theme more authenticity. The images were also upgraded to include ambulances, surgical equipment and people rushing around in the background. The font changed and actors and characters were now in the font Imprint MT Shadow. This set of opening titles continues until the end of season eight.

At the beginning of season nine, the opening titles credits were ditched and the main cast were listed at the last of every episode with the names returning to their original format and font. This continues until the final episode. In seasons ten and eleven, the actor's name and their corresponding character name flew in from either side, however this idea was dumped when the show returned for its final season.

An intertitle card appeared before every ad break in season nine, however the show returned to fading out in the tenth and eleventh seasons.

At the beginning of the eleventh season, a new title card premiered and this appeared at the start of every episode.

This title card was refurbished for the twelfth and final season to coincide with the change of name. This title card saw the show out.

Reception[]

Awards and nominations[]

The show has been nominated for fifty six Logie awards and won nine.

Year Nominee Award Result
1999 Georgie Parker Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
Georgie Parker Most Popular Actress Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Program Nominated
Libby Tanner Most Popular New Female Talent Nominated
2000 Georgie Parker Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
Georgie Parker Most Popular Actress Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Program Nominated
All Saints Most Outstanding Program Nominated
2001 Georgie Parker Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Won
Georgie Parker Most Popular Actress Won
All Saints Most Popular Program Won
Georgie Parker Most Outstanding Actress Nominated
Libby Tanner Most Outstanding Actress Nominated
All Saints Most Outstanding Program Nominated
2002 Georgie Parker Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Won
Libby Tanner Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
Georgie Parker Most Popular Actress Nominated
Libby Tanner Most Popular Actress Won
Erik Thomson Most Popular Actor Nominated
Georgie Parker Most Outstanding Actress Nominated
Libby Tanner Most Outstanding Actress Nominated
Conrad Coleby Most Popular New Male Talent Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Program Won
All Saints Most Outstanding Drama Series Nominated
2003 Georgie Parker Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
Libby Tanner Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
Georgie Parker Most Popular Actress Nominated
Libby Tanner Most Popular Actress Won
Erik Thomson Most Popular Actor Won
All Saints Most Popular Australian Program Won
All Saints Most Outstanding Drama Series Nominated
2004 Georgie Parker Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
Erik Thomson Most Popular Actor Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Australian Program Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Australian Drama Series Nominated
All Saints Most Outstanding Drama Series Nominated
2005 Georgie Parker Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
Wil Traval Most Popular New Male Talent Nominated
Natalie Saleeba Most Popular New Female Talent Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Australian Drama Series Nominated
2006 John Howard Most Outstanding Actor Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Australian Drama Series Nominated
All Saints Most Outstanding Drama Series Nominated
2007 John Howard Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
John Howard Most Popular Actor Nominated
Judith McGrath Most Outstanding Actress in a Series Nominated
Andrew Supanz Most Popular New Male Talent Nominated
Jolene Anderson Most Popular New Female Talent Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Australian Drama Series Nominated
2008 John Howard Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Nominated
John Howard Most Popular Actor Nominated
Jack Campbell Most Popular New Male Talent Nominated
All Saints Most Popular Australian Drama Series Nominated
2009 Mark Priestley Most Popular Actor Nominated
2010 Mirrah Foulkes Most Popular New Female Talent Nominated
All Saints: Medical Response Unit Most Popular Australian Drama Series Nominated

Australian Film Institute (AFI) Awards[]

All Saints has won two AFI Awards from the Australian Film Institute and has been nominated for various others.

Year Nominee Award Result
1998 Ep. 6: Give and Take Best Episode in a Television Drama Series Nominated
Ep. 20: Revelations Best Episode in a Television Drama Series Nominated
1999 Ep. 58: Head to Head Best Episode in a Television Drama Series Won
2000 Valley of the Shadow Best Episode in a Television Drama Series Won
Dead on Time Best Episode in a Television Drama Series Nominated
2002 All Saints Best Television Drama Series Nominated
Peter Fisk (ep. 169: Opening Night) Best Direction in a Television Drama Nominated
Belinda McClory (ep. 169: Opening Night) Best Guest or Supporting Actress in Television Drama Nominated
2005 All Saints Best Television Drama Series Nominated
2006 All Saints Best Television Drama Series Nominated
John Waters Best Guest or Supporting Actor in Television Drama Nominated
2007 All Saints Best Television Drama Series Nominated
Mark Priestley Best Guest or Supporting Actor in Television Drama Nominated

Ratings[]

Season # of Episodes Timeslot Season
Premiere
Season
Final
Peak
Audience
Average
Audience
Rank
(Australian series)
1 41 Tuesday 8:30 pm 24 February 1998 17 November 1998 N/A 1,381,000[9] 5th[9]
2 43 8 February 1999 23 November 1999 N/A 1,435,000[9] 5th[9]
3 41 8 February 2000 21 November 2000 N/A 1,488,000[9] 3rd[9]
4 43 13 February 2001 27 November 2001 2,023,000 1,595,000[9] 3rd[9]
5 43 5 February 2002 26 November 2002 1,687,000 1,507,000[9] 3rd[9]
6 43 11 February 2003 25 November 2003 1,544,000 1,363,000[9] 4th[9]
7 40 27 February 2004 16 November 2004 1,424,000 1,235,000[10] 4th[10]
8 41 8 February 2005 22 November 2005 1,559,000 1,282,000[10] 3rd[10]
9 40 28 February 2006 21 November 2006 1,660,000 1,419,000[10] 2nd[10]
10 41 13 February 2007 20 November 2007 1,603,000 1,380,000[10] 2nd[10]
11 40 Tuesday 9:30 pm 12 February 2008 25 November 2008 1,603,000 1,245,000[10] 2nd[10]
12 37 3 February 2009 27 October 2009 1,505,000[10] 1,175,000[10] 3rd[10]

Home media[]

Seasons 1 to 5 were released by EMI Australia in 2005 through 2007. EMI lost the DVD rights in 2007, therefore seasons 1 to 5 were discontinued.

Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia were later awarded DVD rights to the show, releasing seasons 8 to 12 in 2009 and 2010. The two "missing seasons" - seasons 6 and 7 - were released on 2 March 2011. All 12 seasons are being re-released on DVD in Australia in 2018/2019 by Via Vision Entertainment and Madman Entertainment with the first 3 seasons being released as "All Saints Collection One" and available from September 2018. With "All Saints Collection Two" to follow in November 2018.

DVD Releases[]

DVD Season Format #
Episodes
#
Disc(s)
Region 4 DVD Distributors
The Complete First Season DVD 41 10 28 November 2005 (2005-11-28)[11] EMI
The Complete Second Season DVD 43 11 20 June 2006 (2006-06-20)[12] EMI
The Complete Third Season DVD 41 10 17 November 2006 (2006-11-17)[13] EMI
The Complete Fourth Season DVD 43 10 27 November 2006 (2006-11-27)[14] EMI
The Complete Fifth Season DVD 43 10 13 September 2007 (2007-09-13)[15] EMI
2003 Season DVD 43 11 2 March 2011 (2011-03-02)[16] Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia
2004 Season DVD 40 10 2 March 2011 (2011-03-02)[17] Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia
2005 Season DVD 41 11 29 September 2010 (2010-09-29)[18] Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia
2006 Season DVD 40 10 29 September 2010 (2010-09-29)[19] Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia
2007 Season DVD 41 10 9 September 2010 (2010-09-09)[20] Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia
2008 Season DVD 40 10 9 September 2010 (2010-09-09)[21] Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia
2009 Season DVD 37 9 2 March 2010 (2010-03-02)[22] Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Australia
All Saints Collection One (seasons 1-3) DVD 125 31 19 September 2018 (2018-09-19) Via Vision Entertainment
All Saints Collection Two (seasons 4-6) DVD 128 31 1 November 2018 (2018-11-01) Via Vision Entertainment
All Saints Collection Three (seasons 7-9) DVD 121 31 5 December 2018 (2018-12-05) Via Vision Entertainment
All Saints Collection Four (seasons 10-12) DVD 118 29 6 March 2019 (2019-03-06) Via Vision Entertainment
All Saints Complete Collection (seasons 01-12) DVD 493 122 2020 (2020) Via Vision Entertainment

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "All Saints distributor details". C21Media. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  2. ^ a b Byrne, Fiona (23 November 2003). "Four All Saints stars dumped". The Herald Sun. Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
  3. ^ Enker, Debi (19 February 2004). "All Saints gets an extreme makeover". The Age. Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
  4. ^ McWhirter, Erin (20 January 2009). "MRU trio add energy injection to All Saints". The Courier Mail. Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
  5. ^ "All Saints alive, with a bit of surgery". The Daily Telegraph. Australian Television Information Archive. 10 June 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
  6. ^ Idato, Michael (9 July 2009). "TV casualty: All Saints axed after 11 years". The Sydney Morning Herald. Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
  7. ^ a b c Chalmers, Emma (22 April 2004). "My sainted aunt! F-words and a lost mobile". The Courier Mail. Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  8. ^ a b c Ricketson, Matthew (3 June 2008). "Seven apologises for incest episode". The Age. Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Top 20 drama series and serials (including comedy) shown on television, 1998–2003". Screen Australia. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Top-rating Australian drama series and serials on television, 2004–2009". Screen Australia. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  11. ^ "All Saints (TV Series) – Season 1 (Complete)". Chaos. Archived from the original on 24 May 2008. Retrieved 7 June 2008.
  12. ^ "All Saints – The Complete 2nd Season (11 Disc Box Set)". EzyDVD. Archived from the original on 8 June 2008. Retrieved 7 June 2008.
  13. ^ "All Saints - Complete Season 3 (10 Disc Box Set)". Mighty Ape. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  14. ^ "All Saints - Complete Season 4 (10 Disc Box Set)". Mighty Ape. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  15. ^ "All Saints - Complete Season 5 (10 Disc Box Set)". Mighty Ape. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  16. ^ "All Saints: 2003 Season". bookworld.com.au. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  17. ^ "All Saints: 2004 Season". bookworld.com.au. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  18. ^ "All Saints: 2005 Season". devoted.com.au. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  19. ^ "All Saints: 2006 Season". devoted.com.au. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  20. ^ "All Saints: 2007 Season". devoted.com.au. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  21. ^ "All Saints: 2008 Season". devoted.com.au. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  22. ^ "All Saints: 2009 Season". devoted.com.au. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2013.

External links[]

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