The pandemic has hugely disrupted the
entertainment industry worldwide and many popular television
shows have had to suspend production.
The cast and crew of "Neighbours" had a month-long break while
producers re-worked scripts and storylines to ensure actors were
able to stay apart, in line with Australian government
guidelines on social distancing.
"This is an unprecedented situation, there is no rulebook for
it," said Jason Herbison, executive producer of the series, now
in its 35th year, about the residents of a fictional suburb in
the Australian city of Melbourne.
"So what we really had to do was just stop, listen to the
government advice and look at the way we film the show. And in
consultation with our cast and crew, really formulate a plan
where we felt we could all return to work safely," he said in an
interview via Skype.
This included reducing the number of characters in specific
scenes. Sometimes they filmed them in "smaller components"
before stitching scenes together in the editing room.
In intimate scenes, a character might "lean in for a kiss, and
then the camera pans away and we hear a little bit of a giggle,"
Herbison said.
"It's just about re-imagining the scene differently, so you
don't see that moment of impact."
Actors and film crews have temperature checks when they arrive
on set, and a colour coding scheme helps ensure that if somebody
contracts the virus or has symptoms, it will be easier to trace
the people they may have come into contact with.
Wherever possible, actors will apply their own make-up and do
their own hair. Where that is not possible, make-up artists will
comply with strict health and hygiene rules.
There will be no explicit references to the coronavirus in the
series, Herbison said, especially given that it is all about
neighbours interacting with one another. But viewers will see,
for example, characters sanitising their hands in restaurants.
"It'll be little things like that that show that perhaps the
world has changed a little bit," he said.
(Reporting by Sarah Mills; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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