Sky Trackers is a 26-part science-based Australian children's television adventure series, and a stand-alone children's television movie of the same name, which feature the adventures of children who live at Tracking station in Australia. Both series and telemovie were created by Jeff Peck and Tony Morphett, and executive-produced by Patricia Edgar on behalf of the Australian Children's Television Foundation (ACTF).
The 1990 telemovie was shot at the Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex, at Tidbinbilla in the Australian Capital Territory. The subsequent TV series, which had an entirely new cast fronted by Petra Yared and Zbych Trofimiuk, was shot at the Australia Telescope Compact Array in the New South Wales outback near Narrabri. The series aired in Australia in 1995, on the Seven Network. Although the series and movie have characters in common, they do not share continuity.
Sky Trackers the series grew from a request by Australia's federal science agency (the CSIRO) to Patricia Edgar, the then director of the ACTF, to create a program that would help attract girls towards careers in science. The resultant series aimed to popularise science for children through drama, and to excite them about its opportunities and its potential for future career choices,Australian Children's Television Foundation, (1995). Care for kids: Television News, The newsletter of the Australian Children's Television Foundation, Issue No. 48, p. 1-4. . and at the same time demystify the work and working conditions of scientists.Australian Children's Television Foundation, (1995). Care for kids: Television News, The newsletter of the Australian Children's Television Foundation, Issue No. 50, p. 1-4. .
Sky Trackers the series won the Australia Film Institute's Award for Best Children's Drama Series (1994), and Zbych Trofimiuk picked up its award for Young Actor. Sky Trackers also won at the Cairo International Film Festival for Children (1994) and the Australian Teachers of Media (ATOM) Awards (1995).
Nikki is 13 and passionately loves science. Her dream is to be an astronaut and the first person on Mars. She is an avid fan of Mike's famous astrophysicist father.
Mike is 14 and loves playing electric guitar, horse-riding, and rollerblading; but he has a poor relationship with his workaholic father. Jimi Hendrix is his hero. And although Mike thinks "science sucks" when he arrives at the station with his father, he quickly becomes friends with Nikki, and her younger sister Maggie.
Together they share adventures where they use the station's high-tech facilities to solve problems and save lives.Encore Media Group's Position - Presentation on Public Service Obligations - 15 August 1997 And as they experience the excitement of adventures such as tracking meteorites, searching for a Bushranger's treasure, listening to signals from outer space, seeing auroras, finding hidden caves, and hunting for UFOs, they learn a lot about the world, themselves, and each other – as they live, love, fight and laugh together.
Filming was done April–May 1990, with post-production completed in September. The movie was first telecast in the USA on the Disney Channel on 27 May 1991. In Australia, the movie screened at the Melbourne International Film Festival, in June 1991. ACTF went ahead in producing a Sky Trackers series, without Disney's involvement, before the movie was broadcast in Australia.
On 11 March 1995, the weekend before Sky Trackers the series premiered, the movie was telecast in Australia on Seven Network.
, seen in orientation used for Sky Trackers episode "Skating the Dish"|right]]Funding from the Australian Film Finance Corporation was secured on 29 July 1992, and pre-production began on 15 February 1993. Filming was set to take place at NASA's Tidbinbilla Tracking Station again, however Tidbinbilla station baulked at the episode 1 scene of roller-blading on a tracking dish, and so the entire shoot was relocated to the Australia Telescope Compact Array at the CSIRO's Australia Telescope National Facility outside Narrabri, in New South Wales, where the rollerblading scene was felt to be OK.
The series was shot over 28 weeks, initially on location at the Australia Telescope Compact Array, Narrabri – in the drama portrayed as the "Kaputar Tracking Station" – and then in studio in Melbourne, with further exterior shoots all around the state of Victoria. CSIRO reported filming commencing in June 1993, and Petra Yared recalls the whole shoot taking "9 months". Production was completed in 1994. ACTF entered the first episode "Skating the Dish" into the 1994 Australian Film Institute Awards (winners announced 4 November), and Sky Trackers won Best Children's Television Drama, and Zbych Trofimiuk received the Young Actor award.
The program was launched in Australia by The Hon Michael Lee, MP, Minister for Communications and the Arts, at the Planetarium, Museum of Victoria, on 20 February 1995.Australian Children's Television Foundation, (1995). Australian Children's Television Foundation Annual Report 1994-1995. A.C.T.F. Productions Limited. Also in attendance were Bob Campbell, Chief Executive of The Seven Network, representatives of NASA and CSIRO, Sky Trackers cast and crew members, Staff and Board Members of The Seven Network and the ACTF, and representatives of the media. The series began screening nationally on The Seven Network and its affiliate, Prime Television, each week across Australia from 19 March 1995.
Dr Tamara Jernigan, a NASA astronaut who has spent more than 800 hours in space and orbited the Earth more than 400 times, visited Australia at the invitation of the ACTF in June 1995 and made a four day tour of schools in Melbourne, Sydney, Adelaide and Brisbane. Travelling with her was Petra Yared, the 15-year-old star of Sky Trackers.
The series was digitally re-mastered on the 25th anniversary of its initial release.
Each pack contained three Sky Trackers episodes on videotape, introduced by the young actors, with teacher's background notes on the topic and suggested questions and student activities aimed at upper primary and junior secondary school (years 5-8) classrooms. The featured episodes are a dramatic blend of stories about science, deep space, the environment and family life, which provide launch points to explore a range of issues, encouraging kids to ponder, debate, discuss, question and investigate further.
Today, the educational resources for the series are provided in a downloadable PDF from ACTF's website.
Sky Trackers episode-clips also feature in ACTF's publication What's Fair, by Val Catchpoole – an educational multi-media resource for teaching ethical inquiry in schools.
Sky Trackers the series was released on video by Reel Entertainment in nine volumes, with the first collection of episodes available to the public in June 1995.
Sky Trackers the series has been sold to 105 countries. It performed particularly well in Europe where it was sold to ARD Germany, Danmarks Radio, NRK Norway, the Finnish Broadcasting Company, Slovak TV, RTSR Switzerland, AVRO in the Netherlands, and RTE Ireland who aired it from 28 August 1995. A contract with France 2 was also negotiated in 1995. In 1996, Telepiu, a pay television channel in Italy, acquired a one year window of the series, and Canal Plus Poland acquired a two year window.
The series has also been sold to the Philippines, Nigeria, Brazil, Turkey, Slovak Republic, Israel, Iceland, Cyprus, Arabic-speaking territories, Hong Kong, Mexico, Indonesia, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Sri Lanka; and to the Encore Media Corporation, for its WAM! teenage channel in the United States.
1994 | episode of Sky Trackers | Australian Film Institute (AFI) Awards, Melbourne, Australia | Best Children's Television Drama | ||
Zbych Trofimiuk for the role of Mike Masters | Young Actor Award | ||||
episode of Sky Trackers | Banff Television Festival, Canada | Banff Rockie Award for Best Children's Program | |||
Sky Trackers series | Cairo International Film Festival for Children in Egypt | Golden Cairo for TV Programmes | |||
1995 | ATOM Award, Melbourne, Australia | Best Children's Television Series | |||
Bavarian State Ministry for Education, Culture, Science and Art in Munich | International Competition of the MediaNet Awards | ||||
1996 | Prix Jeunesse, Munich | Children's program, Age 7-12 |
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