10 August (2014-08-10) – 14 September 2014 (2014-09-14)
ANZAC Girls is an Australian television drama series that first screened on ABC1 on 10 August 2014. The six-part series tells the rarely told true stories of the nurses serving with the Australian Army Nursing Service at Alexandria, Lemnos, and the Western Front during the First World War.[1] The series is based on Peter Rees' book The Other ANZACs as well as diaries, letters, photographs and historical documents.[2]
The series was written by Felicity Packard and Niki Aken, produced by Screentime, and filmed in South Australia.[3]
The nurses arrive in Cairo, Egypt (perhaps Ghezireh Red Cross Hospital at Gezira) from Australia and five principal characters are introduced, all depicting real protagonists.
Matron Grace Wilson, is seen as a strong leader, but kind and helpful to those under her: Sister Alice is seen to be the strongest of the four nurses; Olive the lovable larrikin; Hilda the shy, religious, uncertain New Zealander; and Elsie Shepherd, an upper-class girl who briefly hides the fact she is married to Lieutenant "Syd" Cook, son of ex-P.M. Joseph Cook. She is depicted as using her maiden name, because as a married woman she would not be eligible for overseas service. (This may be a fiction.)[5]
Each is prepared for a grand adventure, although some seem to have ideas other than nursing on their minds. Alice goes sight-seeing with the gauche Lieut. Frank Smith; meets Major Xavier Leopold, a British doctor, who adores her; and finally Lieut. Harry Moffitt who reads to her from a book of verse and she is smitten.
Hilda is among those chosen to join British hospital ship HMHS Sicilia bound for Gallipoli, experiences shelling and tends some of the first casualties, working long hours. Her friend Millicent breaks down.
Back in Cairo, the surgeons are overwhelmed with casualties from Gallipoli, so Alice and Olive undertake procedures beyond their calling. Elsie finds Syd among the wounded, he recuperates and returns to Gallipoli, as does Harry. Frank is admitted with a punctured lung, he is repatriated to Australia but first proposes to Alice; she makes no commitment.
2
"Duty"
Ken Cameron
Niki Aken, Felicity Packard
17 August 2014 (2014-08-17)
Matron Wilson and Olive and are among the nurses sent from Cairo to the island of Lemnos to establish a forward field hospital, to care for the less severely wounded from Gallipoli. They have no shelter and little water, limited supplies and grudging recognition from the Australian Army, as exemplified by Colonel Fiaschi, who would send all women back if he had his way.
In Cairo, Elsie learns Syd has been seriously wounded, pleads with Matron Gould for leave to visit him at No. 19 B.G.H., Alexandria. She persuades their Matron Oram to get her transferred to the British service, and nurses Syd back to health.
Dysentery strikes Lemnos due to flies and lack of sanitation; Matron Jaggard dies and Olive is one of those to suffer, but refuses an offer to be evacuated. She meets an orderly, Pat Dooley, whose company she enjoys.
Harry is wounded and sent to Cairo, so he and Alice meet again. Leopold proposes to her and she is noncommittal, waiting for a sign of affection from the laconic Harry.
Syd's recovery is slow, and Elsie argues for him to be sent to England for treatment; she is sent back to Cairo and Oram is not sorry to see her go.
Olive's friends Poppy and Lorna are among the nurses returning from Lemnos aboard the troopship Marquette, which is sunk by a torpedo from a German submarine.[6]
Winter arrives and soldiers arrive on Lemnos suffering frostbite. Olive's friend Clarice agrees to marry Sgt Lawrence, just to get off the island. Olive is contemptuous.
Fiaschi suffers from beri-beri and is evacuated to Cairo, where the once antagonistic colonel stoutly defends the Lemnos nurses.
Troops withdraw from Gallipoli and the five nurses are reunited in Cairo.
Elsie volunteers for duty aboard ship Demosthenes taking wounded men back to Australia, where she can care for Syd, but knows she will be barred from serving overseas again.
Harry proposes to Alice and she accepts.
4
"Love"
Ian Watson
Felicity Packard
31 August 2014 (2014-08-31)
The nurses are sent to France, at first under UK command as British No. 11. British Stationary Hospital, Rouen, under Ward Sister Bullus, and discover the difference between British and Australian ideas of discipline and order. Alice encounters Private Pat Dooley digging a latrine pit. The nurses organise an Anzac Day commemoration. They begin treating serious injuries from the Somme. Alice gets news from Harry, who's been transferred to 53rd Battalion and sent to the Somme, where the battalion is fighting. Matron Wilson is promoted and leaves for London, where she hopes to improve relations between the Army and the Nursing Service. Pat has had officer training and returns as Lieutenant Dooley; he proposes to Olive. She flees, but catches him the following day and accepts, telling him that she has volunteered for the No. 2 Australian Casualty Clearing Station at Trois Arbres. Returning from a picnic with her friends, Alice is informed that Harry was killed at Fromelles. She receives his last letter.
5
"Mateship"
Ian Watson
Niki Aken
7 September 2014 (2014-09-07)
Hilda is working as theatre nurse, reluctantly takes over from anaesthetist and proves herself capable. Dooley catches up with Olive at the Trois Arbres field station; there is a gas attack and not enough masks for everyone — they improvise; Dooley proposes and she accepts. Hilda and Alice are among those who get anaesthetics training — Hilda tops the class; then orders come through that Australian nurses are not to do surgery, but being a New Zealander she is exempt. Alice refuses to accept Harry is dead, finally receives confirmation, contemplates suicide but is comforted by Hilda. Dooley is seriously wounded but thanks to Olive he gets surgery where another would have been classed beyond saving. He is repatriated and Olive volunteers for service on hospital ship bound for Australia. There is a reunion: Elsie had joined the Red Cross, who didn't mind that she was married, hence was able to serve in France. Alice and Hilda volunteer for duty at the Casualty Clearing Station, closer to the Front.
6
"Courage"
Ian Watson
Felicity Packard
14 September 2014 (2014-09-14)
Elsie is working in a French hospital in Amiens; she knows Syd is back at the Front, but not where. Alice and Hilda arrive at the clearing station and are subjected to air attacks. They are heroic in futile attempts to save patients, then are befriended by a small cat. Elsie hitches a ride to Fricourt to see Syd, who's with 2nd Battalion; back from the Front, he is too traumatised to say much but in a tender scene is bathed and comforted by Elsie. Alice is awarded the Military Medal, presented by Birdwood himself; Major Leopold, with some grace, proposes again and once again Alice refuses, but gratefully. Elsie gets a call from Syd, inviting her to London to meet his parents. She refuses; this time duty comes first; and refuses again when he sees her in person, in a scene that shows him in a less favorable light. Alice nurses some injured German POW's who have been ignored and forgotten. She contemplates the God who is claimed by both sides and becomes fatalistic, while Hilda's faith is reinforced by the fact of her survival. They return to the field hospital and are greeted by Sister Wilson. Following the Armistice and the end of the war, ANZAC soldiers and nurses celebrate in a French town; we are then given a glimpse of the Girls' post-war lives.
The chapter closes with some historical facts, and photos of the actual women depicted in the series.