
The genies (Rhys Muldoon) and Baz (Glenn Meldrum) show Penelope (Alexandra Milman) that she is not really in control of them despite being their master. She orders that her room be cleaned of 'its useless mess and rubbish’ and whoosh – she is thrown out too. She wishes for a sparkling kitchen and she sparkles as well. Then Penelope is caught by Lady Diana (Anna Galvin) and Mossie (Monica Maughan) telling Bruce that he should start showing some respect. Lady Diana is appalled at her rudeness but when Penelope tries to use the Genie’s magic to get out of trouble, somehow her wishes don’t work out the way she wants. Summary by Annemaree O'Brien.
Penelope is such an interesting character, and unusual for a children’s television series. A flawed hero, she can be quite unlikeable, but as writer-director Esben Storm says, these flaws make for some terrific comedy. He sees her as a little like the outrageous Eddy and Patsy characters in the BBC series Absolutely Fabulous (Esben Storm in A Television Comedy Study Guide ACTF 1996, p11). Self-centred snob Penelope is set up as deserving of the many insulting and funny things that happen.
‘Mossie’ the loyal housekeeper – a comic foil superbly played by Monica Maughan – never notices the strange things going on around her, but she gets some great lines.
Posh English schoolgirl The Hon Penelope Townes (Alexandra Milman), possessor of the magical opal, is magically whisked away by her Australian genies, Bruce (Rhys Muldoon) and his young son Baz (Glenn Meldrum) – from her grand home in Witshire England to her ‘inheritance’ – Townes Downs in outback Australia. She hates it and wants to go home but her mother Lady Townes (Anna Galvin) likes the solitude and wants to stay.
Shonky tour operator, Otto von Meister (Mark Mitchell), and his nephew Conrad (Fletcher Humphrys) arrive with a load of Russian tourists. When he learns that Penelope has an opal, Otto recalls that it belonged to their family years before and he and Conrad decide to steal it back. Penelope falls for Conrad and hangs around him, while he pays her attention so he can steal the opal.
In this second episode of The Genie From Down Under from series one, the action shifts to Australia and introduces the anti-heroes, Otto von Meister ‘the tour guide from hell’ and his sneaky nephew Conrad, providing contrast with the prim and proper Penelope, Mossop and Lady Diana Townes. The Russian tour guests are one-dimensional and in each episode Otto’s tour group is a different national or cultural group – caricatured as part of the humour.
The name Lady Diana is a relic of the times, a direct reference to Diana, Princess of Wales, formerly Lady Diana Spencer who was at the height of her popularity around the world. She died in 1996.
The Genie From Down Under first went to air on the ABC at 5:00 pm on Monday 3 June 1996 and screened in this timeslot weekly. This episode first screened on Monday 10 June 1996.
Notes by Annemaree O'Brien
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.