We use cookies to help us understand how you use our site, and make your experience better. To find out more read our privacy policy.

Sorry – due to licensing restrictions,
this clip can't be viewed outside New Zealand.

Thankfully most of NZ On Screen's content
can be viewed from anywhere: browse and enjoy!

We're sorry, but something went wrong

Please try reloading the page

We're sorry, but your browser is unable to play this video content.

If this continues please try upgrading your browser or contact us for assistance.

We're sorry, but this video is currently unavailable on mobile.

Hero image for Shortland Street - 20th Anniversary Special

Shortland Street - 20th Anniversary Special

Television (Excerpts) – 2012

Shortland Street

Shortland Street can claim a number of firsts: the first five-day-a-week drama, the first fast turn-around NZ serial drama geared to a commercial market; it was also the first NZ soap to be exported. It has become iconic NZ television, and lines from the show have entered the culture: most famously, “you’re not in Guatemala now Dr Ropata!”

Right from the first episode Shorty (as it’s affectionately known) made an impact, with a canny sex scene ensuring the show would turn heads.

In 1991 funding body NZ On Air invited television networks to submit proposals for a daily soap opera aimed at the 14 – 25 demographic. Although TVNZ’s Shortland Street beat out TV3’s Homeward Bound, TVNZ’s top executives assessed the project as too high a risk. However programming and production executives actively encouraged the concept, with Bettina HollingsCaterina De Nave, and Don Reynolds spearheading the push. In 1991 an agreement between NZOA, TVNZ, and South Pacific Pictures assured a year’s worth of episodes, and a three million dollar budget to work with.

Australia’s Grundy Television aided by providing extra financial assistance, writing advice, and production expertise, leveraging their proven soap opera production experience, the most relevant being The Young Doctors (1976–1983). 

The production efficiently blends melodrama, social realism and comedy and turns out the required hospital soap opera elements: medical crisis, romance, human drama, comedy and cliff-hanging suspense. Despite Shortland Street’s format — populist entertainment based on imported genre models — the show has a very strong local flavour. Over the years, the storylines have had an uncanny knack of relating to and even anticipating, contemporary political, social and cultural issues.

The original setting, a private health clinic, reflected the current drive by the then-government to make health services more ‘user pays’. Later political changes in the Shortland Street administration seem to parallel restructuring within New Zealand’s health sector. Other political issues that have impacted on New Zealand society have also been dealt with in the show’s storylines, including changes in the education system, Māori land grievances, the Civil Union bill and union disputes.

Shortland Street has been a significant vehicle for changing the way ethnicity is represented on New Zealand screen. From the beginning, a diversity of cultures have been cast. Nancy Brunning (Jaki Manu), Temuera Morrison (Hone Ropata), Rene Naufahu (Sam Aleni), and Lynette Forday (Grace Kwan) were the first in a long line of Māori, Pacific and Asian talent to walk the hospital’s corridors.

In particular the portrayal of Māori and Pacific Islanders as urbane middle-class professionals (doctors, nurses, ambulance drivers, CEOs and entrepreneurs) represented a positive change for those cultures, who, apart from the odd character in Close To Home and the likes of Billy T James and Jim Moriarty, had scant presence on primetime television or stage.

The production has also been something of an unofficial industry training institution, both behind and in front of the cameras. Original Shortland producer Caterina De Nave argued that “you can always tell a Shortland Street actor, they’re technically very good .. they can cope with any changes that have to happen quickly on location or in the studio”. A sampling of names that have been through the Shorty stable reads like a who’s who of Kiwi acting talent: aside from long-timers Michael Galvin (aka 'Dr Love') and actor turned director Angela Bloomfield, the list includes Tim BalmeGeraldine BrophyAlison BruceDanielle CormackShane CorteseMarton CsokasOliver DriverMartin HendersonAnna HutchisonJohn LeighRobyn Malcolm, Miriama McDowellTemuera MorrisonDean O'GormanCraig Parker, Madeleine Sami, Miriama SmithAntony StarrJoel TobeckCalvin Tuteao, Karl UrbanJennifer Ward-LealandKatie Wolfe and Tandi Wright

Writers who scrubbed up on the show include some major names in NZ television: people like Rachel LangJames GriffinGavin Strawhan and Kate McDermott. Among the directors who've gone on to varied industry careers are Mark BeesleyMurray Keane and Britta Johnstone. Former director's assistant Rachel Jean became drama and comedy commisioner at TV3, while directors Laurence Wilson and Tessa Hoffe went on to direct for major English soaps like EastEnders and Coronation Street

Due to Shortland's primetime family time slot of 7pm, the storylines and scripts are kept in line with broadcasting standard guidelines. Early plots were fairly conservative, but over the years they have become bolder in content, daring to openly reference issues such as homosexual relationships, promiscuous sexual behaviour, AIDS, drug and alcohol abuse, teenage sex, suicide, cot death, child abuse and violence.

The long-running production has consistently reinvented itself. Shortland Street's continuing presence as the flagship Kiwi soap opera is testament to the production’s ability to adapt to ratings downturns and shifts in audience expectations.

- Mihi Murray (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Awa) has been an actor, writer, artist, DJ and radio presenter.

Back to top

If you liked this, you might also like...

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street
Series

Shortland Street

Shortland Street is a fast-paced serial drama...

Collection
Collection image for The Shortland Street Collection

The Shortland Street Collection

A celebration of long-running soap Shortland Street,...

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street - Highlights from the first 15 years

Shortland Street - Highlights from the first 15 years

More Shortland Street drama

Thumbnail image for NZ On Air 30th Birthday - Shortland Street

NZ On Air 30th Birthday - Shortland Street

Jacinda Ardern on Shortland St

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street - Past Memories

Shortland Street - Past Memories

Shortland Street actors tell stories

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street - The Ferndale Strangler finale

Shortland Street - The Ferndale Strangler finale

Another big Shortland finale

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street - Dominic meets a fiery end

Shortland Street - Dominic meets a fiery end

More high drama

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street cast sings 'Anchor Me'                              (2013 Christmas episode)

Shortland Street cast sings 'Anchor Me' (2013 Christmas episode)

A clip from the 2016 Xmas cliffhanger

Thumbnail image for Gloss - First Episode

Gloss - First Episode

Another classic soap

Thumbnail image for Deer Wars

Deer Wars

More helicopter spectacle

Thumbnail image for Sally Martin on helicopter crashes and teaching Bella first aid

Sally Martin on helicopter crashes and teaching Bella first aid

Actor Sally Martin talks about this special episode

Thumbnail image for Amy Street

Amy Street

Features a Shortland Street super-fan

Thumbnail image for Laughing Samoans at Large - First Episode

Laughing Samoans at Large - First Episode

Robbie Magasiva in another medical soap opera

Thumbnail image for A Woman's Right to Shoes

A Woman's Right to Shoes

Brooke Williams stars in this short film

Thumbnail image for Over the Moon

Over the Moon

More of actor Anna Jullienne

Thumbnail image for On the Day

On the Day

Also directed by Wayne Tourell

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street - Musical episode

Shortland Street - Musical episode

Shortland St makes a musical

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street - Tuesday Warner's birth

Shortland Street - Tuesday Warner's birth

A dramatic birth on the Street

Thumbnail image for Shortland Street - Tillie Potts' Birth

Shortland Street - Tillie Potts' Birth

A dramatic excerpt from Shortland Street

Thumbnail image for Teine Sā -  The Ancient Ones (excerpts)

Teine Sā - The Ancient Ones (excerpts)

Shortland St actor Frankie Adams starred in this

Thumbnail image for Auckland Daze - Series One

Auckland Daze - Series One

Shortland Street actors parody themselves

Thumbnail image for Moon TV - MTV Christmas Special (series five, episode 10)

Moon TV - MTV Christmas Special (series five, episode 10)

Beth Allen also features in this show's Naan Doctors sketch