The series endured critical acclaim, where it became the recipient of several major Australian awards and nominations, including the AFI award, in which it won for Best Television Drama Series for each of its three seasons, as well as award wins at the TV Week Logie Awards, Australian Writers' Guild Awards (AWGIE), and the ASTRA Awards.
Premise
Set in Sydney, Love My Way was about a group of 30-somethings dealing with the ups and downs of life. The series revolves around an extended family unit - Frankie Paige and Charlie Jackson are the separated parents of Lou, and Frankie also lives with Charlie's brother, Tom. As the series began, Charlie's new wife Julia is about to have their first child. Frankie's mother, Di and Charlie's mother, Brenda, and father, Gerry, also have a strong presence in the ongoing story, as does Julia's ex-lover Howard, who enters into a relationship with Frankie.
Production
Love My Way was produced by John Edwards of the Southern Star Group,[1] and Claudia Karvan, who also played the leading role of Frankie Paige in the series. Initially intended to be picked up by Network Ten, which they agreed not to proceed due to budget concerns,[2] subscription service Foxtel commissioned a first season on ten episodes in 2003, with pre-production lasting 18 months before filming began on 21 June 2004.[3]
When the series was launched, much was made of the connection between Love My Way and The Secret Life of Us: both sharing a star, as well as significant creative talent (Edwards and Perske both were involved in Secret Life, as were series writers like Tony McNamara). However, the series is not a continuation of Secret Life, although it does share some thematic concerns. When developing Love My Way, Edwards and Karvan did, in fact, explore the possibility of a spin-off series set in a hospital, featuring Karvan's character Alex, and Rex (played by Vince Colosimo), a project with never came to fruition.[4]
Foxtel's director of television and marketing, Brian Walsh, stated that the series marked the first time that the network had the freedom to produce a drama exclusively aimed at subscribers, as he remarked that it drew inspiration from several HBO series, including Six Feet Under, The Sopranos and Sex and the City, commenting "[he] wanted to carve out a piece of TV drama that was edgy, daring, provocative".[5]
The series was filmed in actual locations, including The Sunday Telegraph office, while some scenes were filmed on location at the infamously dangerous Cromwell Park, as there was enough money in the budget to cover council fees. Another advantage of producing a pay TV drama was the freedom to push the boundaries, such as the inclusion of regular swearing, drug use and sexual scenes and references, content which is limited in free-to-air shows.[6]
In March 2005, Foxtel commissioned a 12-episode second season, with Austar joining the production as co-investors.[7] The series was renewed for a third season in May 2006, and filming commenced in December 2006.[8]
The star of the series, Claudia Karvan, is also a co-producer, along with having written for the series. Brendan Cowell, who appears as Tom, also worked as script writer for two episodes of seasons 1 and three episodes of season 2.
On first airing, the theme song originally by The Psychedelic Furs, this time covered by Magic Dirt, played over the title sequence.[9]
(Episode information retrieved from Australian Television Information Archive).[10][11][12]
Season 1 (2004-05)
No. overall
No. in season
Title
Directed by
Written by
Original air date
1
1
"Don't Tell Me Your Dreams"
Jessica Hobbs
Jacquelin Perske
22 November 2004 (2004-11-22)
2
2
"What's In A Name"
Jessica Hobbs
Tony McNamara
22 November 2004 (2004-11-22)
3
3
"Crazy Love"
Jessica Hobbs
Jacquelin Perske & Marissa Cooke
29 November 2004 (2004-11-29)
4
4
"Spin Cycle"
Ian Watson
Brendan Cowell
6 December 2004 (2004-12-06)
5
5
"Stick Sisters"
Ian Watson
Louise Fox
13 December 2004 (2004-12-13)
6
6
"To Dance With Death"
Ian Watson
Fiona Seres
20 December 2004 (2004-12-20)
7
7
"My Family Up A Tree"
Ian Watson
Brendan Cowell
10 January 2005 (2005-01-10)
8
8
"A Different Planet"
Jessica Hobbs
Louise Fox
17 January 2005 (2005-01-17)
9
9
"Only Mortal"
Jessica Hobbs
Jacquelin Perske
24 January 2005 (2005-01-24)
10
10
"Garden Of Love"
Jessica Hobbs
Fiona Seres
31 January 2005 (2005-01-31)
Season 2 (2006)
No. overall
No. in season
Title
Directed by
Written by
Original air date
11
1
"More To Tell"
Shirley Barrett
Jacquelin Perske
5 February 2006 (2006-02-05)
12
2
"The Christmas Thing"
Shirley Barrett
Tony McNamara
12 February 2006 (2006-02-12)
13
3
"When Wanting Works"
Shirley Barrett
Blake Ayshford
19 February 2006 (2006-02-19)
14
4
"No Immunity"
Garth Davis
Louise Fox
26 February 2006 (2006-02-26)
15
5
"Old Wounds"
Garth Davis
Fiona Seres
5 March 2006 (2006-03-05)
16
6
"I Know You"
Garth Davis
Brendan Cowell
12 March 2006 (2006-03-12)
17
7
"Tower of Love"
Geoff Bennett
Brendan Cowell, Fiona Seres & Tony McNamara
19 March 2006 (2006-03-19)
18
8
"Crossing The Line"
Geoff Bennett
Sarah Lambert
26 March 2006 (2006-03-26)
19
9
"Amphibians"
Geoff Bennett
Brendan Cowell
2 April 2006 (2006-04-02)
20
10
"One Big Happy"
Omar Madha
Tony McNamara
9 April 2006 (2006-04-09)
21
11
"Five Minutes of Fame"
Omar Madha
Fiona Seres
16 April 2006 (2006-04-16)
22
12
"You're Almost There"
Omar Madha
Lousie Fox & Jacquelin Perske
23 April 2006 (2006-04-23)
Season 3 (2007)
No. overall
No. in season
Title
Directed by
Written by
Original air date
23
1
"I'm The King of the Castle"
Ian Watson
Brendan Cowell
26 February 2007 (2007-02-26)
24
2
"Cold Blooded Creatures"
Ian Watson
Tony McNamara
26 February 2007 (2007-02-26)
25
3
"Say What You Mean"
Shirley Barrett
Fiona Seres
5 March 2007 (2007-03-05)
26
4
"Together Apart"
Shirley Barrett
Louise Fox
5 March 2007 (2007-03-05)
27
5
"The Cemetery Gates"
Kate Dennis
Brendan Cowell
12 March 2007 (2007-03-12)
28
6
"Cars Without Brakes"
Kate Dennis
Tony McNamara
12 March 2007 (2007-03-12)
29
7
"Running With Crabs"
Emma Freeman
Fiona Seres
19 March 2007 (2007-03-19)
30
8
"And in the End"
Emma Freeman
Brendan Cowell, Tony McNamara & Fiona Seres
19 March 2007 (2007-03-19)
Reception
Critical reception
Love My Way has received critical acclaim throughout its run.
In a review for The Sydney Morning Herald, prior to broadcast of the second season, Robin Oliver stated that "The unrivalled television drama production of 2004 returns with fresh episodes and a verdict is easily reached: better than ever"... "Love My Way positively glows with that precious and often elusive ingredient, the ordinariness of life." Of the cast, he said, "The old gang is in position, notably Tom, Charlie and Julia Jackson (Brendan Cowell, Dan Wyllie and Asher Keddie). Lovely work, but it is the art of unexplored nuance - the parked car, the fingerprinting - that makes Jacqueline Perske's opening script a triumph."[13]
David Knox of TV Tonight, gave the series a positive review prior to the season three premiere, showing praise to the cast performances, commenting "as with previous seasons of LMW the performances are roundly excellent", in particular, he mentioned "[Ben] Mendelsohn shines in a role that reminds us he is all too rarely seen. [Asher] Keddie’s Julia teeters on the brink of vulnerability and anal-retentiveness that shows she is no one-dimensional performer."[14]
The series premiered on FOX8 on 22 November 2004 during the late summer months when commercial TV is in a non-ratings period.[37] During the second season it was moved to W. Channel. In 2007, for its third season, it screened on Showtime. Foxtel has been criticised for moving the show to different channels to encourage viewing of the W. Channel and then for moving the program to Showtime which is not included in the basic package of subscription television in Australia.[38]
International airings
Love My Way was aired as a primetime show in the UK on Five's spin-off channel Five Life (Now Fiver). In Sweden it airs on channel 4 (TV4) on Thursday evenings and it also aired in Ireland on RTÉ Two in the early hours of Sunday, Monday and Wednesday. It is also screened in Estonia on ETV during Sunday evenings, and in New Zealand on TVNZ Channel 2 during late Monday evenings. As well, Super Channel carries Love My Way. In Mexico is screened on Cosmopolitan. The Netherlands as well.