Acropolis Now
Acropolis Now was an Australian television sitcom that aired on the Seven Network from 1989 to 1992, comprising 63 episodes focused on the daily antics and interpersonal dynamics of employees and customers at a fictional Greek café in Melbourne.[1] The series starred Nick Giannopoulos as Jim Stefanidis, the second-generation Greek-Australian manager navigating family expectations and business challenges, alongside Mary Coustas as the outspoken waitress Effie, George Kapiniaris as the cook Memo, and Simon Palomares as the Spanish waiter Rick.[2] Produced by Crawford Productions, it adapted elements from the 1987 stage show Wogs Out of Work created by Giannopoulos, Kapiniaris, and Palomares, emphasizing insider perspectives on migrant life rather than external caricatures.[3] The show's humor derived from cultural clashes, exaggerated ethnic traits, and workplace absurdities within Melbourne's multicultural milieu, resonating with audiences through authentic depictions of Greek-Australian identity.[3] It achieved significant commercial success, regularly drawing up to three million viewers weekly and ranking as Australia's top-rated comedy during its run, which highlighted demand for ethnic-led narratives on mainstream television.[4] By granting second-generation immigrants narrative control, Acropolis Now challenged prevailing stereotypes and paved the way for greater diversity in Australian broadcasting, with Coustas's Effie character spawning later spin-offs.[3] Despite its popularity, the series ended abruptly after five seasons, reportedly due to Channel Seven's strategic shifts rather than declining viewership, underscoring tensions between audience appeal and network priorities in ethnic programming.[5]Premise and Format
Synopsis
Acropolis Now is an Australian sitcom that chronicles the daily operations and interpersonal dynamics at the fictional Acropolis Café, a Greek-owned establishment in Melbourne. The central premise revolves around Jim Stephanidis, a young Greek-Australian who assumes management of the café after his father, Kostas, departs for Greece following decades in Australia.[6] [7] Jim, portrayed as immature and impulsive, relies on his pragmatic Spanish-Australian friend and manager, Ricky Martinez, to handle the business's challenges, including staffing issues, customer interactions, and financial strains. The ensemble includes Effie, a vivacious Greek waitress with family ties to Jim, and other multicultural employees like the Italian chef Bruno, whose cultural clashes and personal quirks drive the humor.[7] [8] Episodes typically feature comedic scenarios rooted in immigrant experiences, such as navigating Australian bureaucracy, balancing traditional values with modern life, and managing eccentric patrons in a bustling urban café setting. The series aired for five seasons from August 1989 to November 1992, emphasizing lighthearted depictions of ethnic diversity without delving into overt social commentary.[9] [10]Format and Style
Acropolis Now utilized a standard half-hour sitcom format, with each of its 63 episodes structured as self-contained narratives focusing on the comedic mishaps, customer interactions, and personal relationships among the staff at the fictional Acropolis Cafe in Melbourne.[1] Episodes typically revolved around workplace scenarios infused with cultural humor, such as family obligations, generational conflicts, and the integration of Greek traditions into Australian urban life, resolving within the 30-minute runtime to maintain episodic pacing.[11] This structure emphasized quick setup, escalating farce, and punchy resolutions, characteristic of 1980s-1990s Australian broadcast television comedies.[2] The production style employed a multi-camera setup filmed before a live studio audience, incorporating audible laughter to underscore timing and punchlines, which contributed to the show's energetic, theatrical delivery.[1] Visually, it featured straightforward set design centered on the cafe interior, with minimal location changes to prioritize dialogue-driven humor over elaborate action sequences.[3] Comedically, the series leaned on ethnic caricature and situational irony, exaggerating Greek migrant stereotypes—like boisterous family dynamics and culinary pride—for broad appeal, while critiquing assimilation pressures through characters' hyperbolic behaviors.[12] This approach, often termed "wogsploitation" in Australian media discourse, balanced light-hearted mockery with affectionate portrayals of multicultural identity, distinguishing it from more subdued domestic sitcoms of the era.[13]Production History
Development and Creation
Acropolis Now originated as an adaptation of the stage play Wogs Out of Work, conceived in 1987 by Nick Giannopoulos, George Kapiniaris, and Simon Palomares, who sought to address the scarcity of roles for Greek-Australian performers in mainstream Australian media during the 1980s.[3][14] The play toured nationally, drawing from the creators' personal experiences with migrant life, ethnic stereotypes, and cultural clashes in Melbourne's Greek community, which resonated with audiences and highlighted underrepresented voices in Australian comedy.[3] The transition to television occurred after Hector Crawford, co-founder of Crawford Productions, attended a performance of Wogs Out of Work and, impressed by its humor and authenticity, approached the creators to develop a sitcom series.[4] Crawford Productions handled the production, adapting the play's core characters—such as the bumbling cafe owner Jim and his associate Memo—into a weekly format centered on the fictional Acropolis Cafe, while expanding storylines to explore intergenerational family dynamics and workplace antics.[4][15] Development emphasized retaining the play's raw, observational style rooted in first-generation migrant struggles, with scripts co-written by Giannopoulos and his collaborators to ensure cultural specificity without dilution for broader appeal.[3] The Seven Network commissioned the series following pilot testing, leading to its debut on 9 August 1989, with 13 episodes in the first season produced at a cost reflecting standard Australian sitcom budgets of the era, though exact figures remain undisclosed in public records.[15] This creator-driven process marked a pivotal shift, enabling ethnic comedians to produce content that challenged assimilation narratives prevalent in 1980s Australian television.[3]Casting and Crew
The series was created by Nick Giannopoulos, George Kapiniaris, and Simon Palomares, who also contributed as writers and principal performers.[2] Production was led by Crawfords Australia, with direction handled by a team including Pino Amenta, Ted Emery, Peter Andrikidis, Kendal Flanagan, and others across its 63 episodes airing from 1989 to 1992.[15] [16] Casting centered on Greek-Australian actors to authentically depict the Melbourne cafe setting, with Giannopoulos portraying the cafe owner Jim Stephanidis, Kapiniaris as the cook Memo Hatzidimitropoulos, and Palomares as the barman Ricky. Mary Coustas played Effie Stephanidis, Jim's sister and a key character in family dynamics, while Tracey Callander portrayed university student Liz Wilson, introducing external perspectives into the cafe's operations.[17] [18]| Actor | Character | Episodes |
|---|---|---|
| Nick Giannopoulos | Jim Stephanidis | 63 |
| George Kapiniaris | Memo Hatzidimitropoulos | 63 |
| Mary Coustas | Effie Stephanidis | 40 |
| Simon Palomares | Ricky | 52 |
| Tracey Callander | Elizabeth 'Liz' Wilson | Varies |
Filming and Locations
Acropolis Now was produced by Crawford Productions and filmed primarily at studios in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, where episodes were shot in front of a live audience to capture the sitcom's comedic timing.[21][15] The production utilized Channel 7 Studios for interior scenes, reflecting the Seven Network's role as broadcaster and facility provider.[22] Exterior shots establishing the Acropolis Cafe were filmed in the inner-city suburb of Fitzroy, Melbourne, capturing the vibrant, multicultural streetscape typical of the area's Greek immigrant communities during the late 1980s and early 1990s.[2] These location shoots complemented the studio-based interiors, grounding the fictional cafe in a realistic Melbourne setting while emphasizing the show's focus on ethnic humor derived from post-war migration experiences.[3] Filming for the four series occurred between 1989 and 1992, with each 30-minute episode completed under the multi-camera format standard for Australian sitcoms of the era.[6]Cancellation and Aftermath
The fifth and final series of Acropolis Now concluded on 17 November 1992, after 63 episodes across five seasons broadcast on the Seven Network.[4][5] The network axed the program during the subsequent summer hiatus, without prior notice to the production team, leaving the final episode to end on an unresolved cliffhanger involving key character arcs.[4][23] Channel Seven's decision stemmed from a shift in programming strategy under new management, which prioritized alternative content directions over continuing the sitcom.[5][4] Creator and star Nick Giannopoulos, who played Jim Patakis, later described the cancellation as misguided, noting the show's status as Australia's top-rated comedy at the time, consistently drawing approximately 3 million viewers per episode in its final season.[4][24] In the years following, the series left a lasting imprint on Australian multicultural comedy, pioneering self-deprecating portrayals of Greek-Australian experiences and popularizing terms like "wog" in mainstream entertainment.[12][4] It facilitated greater visibility for ethnic identities, influencing subsequent works in the genre and affirming Greek-Australian contributions to national culture.[25] Principal cast members largely extended their careers in similar comedic veins: Giannopoulos developed the Wog Boy film trilogy (2000–2015) and stage productions like Wogs Out of Work; Mary Coustas, known for Effie, pursued acting in shows such as Police Rescue; George Kapiniaris continued touring with Wog Boy-related content; and Simon Palomares appeared in diverse roles including Neighbours.[26] No direct sequel or revival materialized, though retrospective discussions in 2019 and 2022 highlighted its enduring popularity and the perceived error in its abrupt termination.[4][27]Characters and Casting
Main Characters
Jim Stephanidis, portrayed by Nick Giannopoulos across all 63 episodes, serves as the central protagonist and immature owner of the Acropolis Cafe, a young Greek-Australian man who inherits the business from his father Kostas after the latter returns to Greece following 23 years in Melbourne.[1][2] Lacking business acumen and common sense, Jim frequently pursues schemes to attract women and modernize the cafe into a trendy spot for ethnic Australians, often leading to comedic mishaps amid cultural clashes.[2] Memo Hatzidimitropoulos, played by George Kapiniaris in all 63 episodes, is Jim's fast-talking and traditional Greek best friend and employee, typically serving as the cafe's waiter with a strong adherence to old-world customs.[1][2] His character embodies stereotypical Greek mannerisms, providing contrast to the cafe's evolving dynamics through humorous interactions with customers and staff.[1] Effie Stephanidis, enacted by Mary Coustas in 63 episodes, is Jim's loud, high-haired cousin and a hairdresser who becomes a fixture at the cafe, representing the bold "wog chick" archetype of 1980s-1990s Australian multiculturalism with her brash personality and family loyalty.[1][2] Introduced in the first season, Effie's over-the-top demeanor and involvement in cafe antics, such as beauty contests, made her one of the show's most iconic figures.[2] Ricky Martinez, portrayed by Simon Palomares in 52 episodes, functions as the sensible Spanish-Australian manager and cook, offering pragmatic advice to counter Jim's impulsiveness and helping stabilize the cafe's operations.[1] His level-headedness highlights the multicultural staff's collaborative efforts amid daily chaos.[2] Elizabeth "Liz" Wilson, played by Tracey Callander, is the liberated Australian waitress and primary non-ethnic character, bringing an outsider perspective to the Greek-dominated environment with her straightforward, independent attitude.[1][2] As a counterpoint to the immigrant staff, Liz navigates cultural differences while contributing to the cafe's service and storylines involving relationships and workplace humor.[1]Supporting and Recurring Characters
Ricardo "Ricky" Martinez, played by Simon Palomares across 52 episodes, functions as the Acropolis Cafe's manager and the level-headed Spanish-Australian counterpart to owner Jim Stephanidis.[19] Often depicted as the voice of reason, Ricky navigates the cafe's interpersonal conflicts and operational mishaps with pragmatic advice.[26][23] Elizabeth "Liz" Wilson, portrayed by Tracey Callander, serves as a waitress embodying a liberated Australian perspective that contrasts with the immigrant staff's cultural norms.[23] Her role highlights generational and ethnic tensions through sarcastic interactions and modern attitudes toward work and relationships.[6] Gavin "Skip" Farrell, the initial cook introduced as a naïve figure from rural Australia, contributes to early episodes' humor via his inexperience in the urban cafe environment.[6] Later replaced, Skip's tenure underscores themes of cultural adaptation among non-Greek employees.[14] Manolis, enacted by George Vidalis, emerges as the subsequent cook, characterized by stubborn traditionalism rooted in Greek heritage, often clashing with the cafe's evolving dynamics.[6] His presence amplifies comedic friction over culinary authenticity and authority.[14] Additional recurring figures, such as Sophie (Sheryl Munks), appear in familial or customer roles that sporadically influence plotlines involving community ties, though with fewer episodes than core staff.[17] These characters collectively drive subplots exploring multicultural Melbourne in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[3]Episodes
Series Overview
Acropolis Now consisted of five series totaling 63 episodes, each approximately 30 minutes in length, broadcast on Australia's Seven Network from 1989 to 1992.[28][29] The first episode aired on August 9, 1989, and the final episode on November 4, 1992.[29][30]| Series | Year | Episodes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1989 | 13 |
| 2 | 1990 | 13 |
| 3 | 1991 | 13 |
| 4 | 1992 | 12 |
| 5 | 1992 | 12 |
Series 1 (1989)
Series 1 of Acropolis Now premiered on 9 August 1989 on the Seven Network in Australia, comprising 11 episodes each approximately 30 minutes in length.[31][8] The season centers on Jim Stephanidis (played by Simon Palomares) assuming management of the family-owned Acropolis café in Melbourne's inner city after his father Kostas departs for a holiday in Greece, resulting in chaotic attempts to modernize the establishment amid interpersonal conflicts among the staff, including waiter Memo (George Kapiniaris), accountant Ricky Martinez (Traea Vassos), and barmaid Effie (Mary Coustas).[32] Directed primarily by Ted Emery for the initial episodes and Pino Amenta for later ones, the series draws from Greek-Australian immigrant experiences, emphasizing cultural clashes and entrepreneurial mishaps.[32] The episodes aired weekly on Wednesdays, blending farce with observations on ethnic community dynamics in 1980s Australia.[31]| Episode | Title | Directed by | Original air date | Plot summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Old Bar... New Bar | Ted Emery | 9 August 1989 | Kostas Stephanidis departs for Greece after 23 years in Australia, leaving his son Jim to run the café; Jim promptly modernizes the venue to attract younger patrons, transforming the traditional space.[31][32] |
| 2 | The Proxy Blues | Ted Emery | 16 August 1989 | Jim's aunt Stella arrives as a proxy manager from Kostas, imposing traditional oversight; the staff navigates customer complaints and operational tensions under divided authority.[31][32] |
| 3 | The Martinez Inquiry | Ted Emery | 23 August 1989 | Accountant Ricky Martinez assumes financial control amid scrutiny; Jim's promotional stunts, including free meals and drinks, threaten the café's solvency.[31][32] |
| 4 | The Trouble with Mothers | Ted Emery | 30 August 1989 | Waiter Memo trains for a local waiters' race to impress his mother; family expectations and café rivalries complicate preparations.[31][32] |
| 5 | It's Academic | Ted Emery | 6 September 1989 | Revelations about Ricky's scholarly background and romantic history surprise the team; Jim attempts to arrange a date for him.[31][32] |
| 6 | It's Not Unusual | Ted Emery | 13 September 1989 | A former celebrity waiter returns seeking a performance slot at the café, sparking nostalgia and logistical challenges for the staff.[31][32] |
| 7 | The Key to Her Heart | Pino Amenta | 20 September 1989 | Ricky installs security deadlocks on the doors; Jim and barmaid Liz become accidentally locked inside after hours, leading to awkward confinement.[31][32] |
| 8 | Easter Greek Style | Pino Amenta | 27 September 1989 | The café hosts Easter celebrations with traditional fasting, red-dyed eggs, and lamb roasting, highlighting Greek Orthodox customs amid customer demands.[31][32] |
| 9 | Three Skips and a Joey | Pino Amenta | 11 October 1989 | A pregnant customer confronts musician Gavin, claiming paternity; Jim panics over potential responsibility and café scandal.[31][32][33] |
| 10 | Bucklovers | Pino Amenta | 18 October 1989 | Jim hosts a rowdy bucks' night party at the café; Liz organizes a competing hens' night, escalating gender-based rivalries.[31][32][33] |
| 11 | Writers Block | Pino Amenta | 25 October 1989 | Liz develops a crush on visiting poet Epsilon; Jim's jealousy prompts him to expose the poet's fraudulent persona.[31][32][33] |
Series 2 (1990)
Series 2 of Acropolis Now comprised 13 episodes broadcast on the Seven Network throughout 1990.[34] The season maintained the sitcom's focus on the Acropolis Café's Greek-Australian staff, including Jim, Ricky, Memo, Liz, and Effie, as they dealt with operational mishaps, romantic entanglements, and cultural traditions amid the café's ongoing financial and social pressures.[34] Recurring themes included business gambles, family obligations, and interpersonal rivalries, with episodes often highlighting the characters' immigrant experiences and entrepreneurial struggles.[34] The episodes featured writing contributions from series regulars such as Simon Palomares, Nick Giannopoulos, Chris Anastassiades, and George Kapiniaris, with Pino Amenta directing most installments and Peter Andrikidis handling one.[34] The first episode aired on 2 August 1990.[35]| Episode | Title | Writer(s) | Director | Plot Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.01 | Cappuccino Catastrophe | Simon Palomares | Pino Amenta | Ricky returns from holiday to a wrecked café, learns flirting techniques, and impresses the bank manager during repairs.[34] |
| 2.02 | Double or Nothing | Nick Giannopoulos, Chris Anastassiades | Pino Amenta | Effie wagers Liz cannot date Jim without developing feelings; Memo pursues a coffee cup stacking record.[34] |
| 2.03 | Black Ain’t Black | Nick Giannopoulos, Chris Anastassiades | Pino Amenta | A temporary replacement for Liz attracts Jim; Memo and Jim speculate on her ambiguous ethnic background.[34] |
| 2.04 | Olives Ain’t Olives | Simon Palomares | Pino Amenta | A chain letter and olive surplus jeopardize the café; Jim contemplates a convenience marriage for stability.[34] |
| 2.05 | St. Memo’s Fire | George Kapiniaris | Peter Andrikidis | Memo is ordained as a priest; Ricky assumes head waiter duties while resisting external lures.[34] |
| 2.06 | Ms Acropolis | Nick Giannopoulos, Chris Anastassiades | Pino Amenta | Jim organizes a beauty pageant at the café; Liz serves as judge and scrutinizes the entrants' authenticity.[34] |
| 2.07 | Carmen I’m Too Bizet | Simon Palomares | Pino Amenta | Ricky skips a soccer game to babysit, only for the child's mother to return engaged to another man.[34] |
| 2.08 | Ring Of Confidence | Nick Giannopoulos, Chris Anastassiades | Pino Amenta | Liz interprets Jim's ring as a potential engagement signal.[34] |
| 2.09 | Job’s For The Girls | George Kapiniaris | Pino Amenta | Effie and Sophie apply for café positions, enduring Jim's one-day trial to prove their suitability.[34] |
| 2.10 | Shakespeare was a Greek | George Kapiniaris | Pino Amenta | Jim stages a disruptive Shakespeare play adaptation at the café, blending high culture with venue chaos.[34] |
| 2.11 | My Sister Aphroula | George Kapiniaris | Pino Amenta | Memo arranges a match for his sister, leading to confusion with his own new romantic interest.[34] |
| 2.12 | The Taxman Cometh | Simon Palomares | Pino Amenta | Ricky grapples with untranslated Greek ledgers during a tax inspection; Jim doubts his girlfriend's intentions.[34] |
| 2.13 | Ricky Sings The Blues | Nick Giannopoulos, Chris Anastassiades | Pino Amenta | Ricky weighs loyalty to the café against an opportunity to tour with a jazz ensemble.[34] |
Series 3 (1991)
Series 3 of Acropolis Now consisted of 13 episodes and aired weekly on the Seven Network from February 21 to May 23, 1991.[36] A major storyline development occurred early in the season when Jim's father lost ownership of the Acropolis café in a card game back in Greece, leading to Italian control under a new owner and his nephew, introducing tensions between Greek and Italian staff dynamics.[37] The season maintained the sitcom's focus on multicultural clashes, workplace antics, and personal relationships at the café, with recurring characters like Jim (Nick Giannopoulos), Memo (George Kapiniaris), Effie (Effie Karagiannis), and others navigating absurd situations.[36]| Episode | Title | Air Date | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Harry Who Didn't | Feb 21, 1991 | Jim's friendship with bouncer Harry is jeopardized when he arranges a date for Harry, but the woman falls for Jim instead.[38] [37] |
| 2 | The Goddess | Feb 28, 1991 | Memo develops feelings for his hairdresser and turns to Jim for advice on how to confess them. [37] |
| 3 | A Fistful of Cabana | Mar 7, 1991 | Jim's father gambles away the café, resulting in an Italian takeover that appoints a nephew as manager. [37] |
| 4 | On the Waiter Front | Mar 14, 1991 | Effie provokes a waiters' strike, leaving Memo conflicted between loyalty to the café and the Greek Waiters Association. [37] |
| 5 | Teenage Mutant Ninja Greeks | Mar 21, 1991 | Memo sets up a blind date for his sister with a soccer player, leading to comedic mishaps. |
| 6 | The Kid | Mar 28, 1991 | Jim's young cousin skips school, prompting a visit from his teacher, who turns out to be Memo's former flame. [37] |
| 7 | The Best of Enemies | Apr 11, 1991 | Rival Vinnie attempts to poach Liz for his new bistro, sparking a competition with Jim that culminates in an arm-wrestling contest. [37] |
| 8 | Throw Memo from a Plane | Apr 18, 1991 | Under pressure from his uncle to marry, Memo recruits Effie to pretend to be his fiancée. [37] |
| 9 | Snow Job, Part One | Apr 25, 1991 | Jim, Memo, and Alfredo head to the snowfields for a break, while a temporary replacement is hired at the café and Don Santo pursues Liz. [37] |
| 10 | Snow Job, Part Two | May 2, 1991 | The snow trip devolves with subpar lodging and an escaped convict adding chaos and paranoia. [37] |
| 11 | Midnight Expresso | May 9, 1991 | Liz's environmental protest against a polluting factory results in Jim's arrest. [37] |
| 12 | Back in the USSR | May 16, 1991 | Jim becomes suspicious of Ukrainian exchange student Uri as a potential KGB agent and pairs him with Effie. |
| 13 | Acropolis Law | May 23, 1991 | An ill-fated hair treatment experiment by Effie and Sophie escalates into a lawsuit against the café.[39] [37] |
Series 4 (1992)
Series 4 of Acropolis Now comprised 13 episodes broadcast weekly on the Seven Network, premiering on 13 February 1992 with "Oh Suzanna!" and concluding later that year.[40][41] This season featured cast adjustments, including Nicki Wendt joining as Suzanna Martin, Jim's ex-flame and new waitress, replacing Tracy Callander's character in the ensemble, while Mary Coustas and Nick Carrafa appeared prominently in the opening credits.[40] The storylines maintained the series' focus on chaotic interpersonal dynamics and cultural clashes among the cafe's staff, with recurring themes of romantic entanglements, pranks, and misguided schemes centered on protagonist Jim Stephanidis (Nick Giannopoulos) and his colleagues.[40][42] The season's episodes, numbered 4.01 to 4.13 overall in production (episodes 38 to 50 of the series), were written by a rotating team of contributors including regular cast members and external writers, and directed by multiple filmmakers.[40] Key plots involved Jim's impulsive decisions leading to workplace disruptions, Memo's (George Kapiniaris) superstitious or entrepreneurial mishaps, and Effie's (Mary Coustas) family-oriented antics, often intersecting with new elements like fashion events or game show appearances.[40][42]| Episode | Title | Writer(s) | Director(s) | Air Date | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4.01 | Oh Suzanna! | Elizabeth Coleman | Peter Andrikidis | 13 Feb 1992 | Jim's hiring practices cause ex-girlfriend Suzanna, a marketing executive, to lose her job, prompting him to employ her at the cafe.[40][42] |
| 4.02 | Phantom of the Acropolis | George Kapiniaris, Julian Glavacich, Nick Giannopoulos | Mark Piper | 20 Feb 1992 | Memo suspects the cafe is haunted by a phantom, leading to superstitious chaos among the staff.[40][41] |
| 4.03 | Crimes of Fashion | Ray Boseley | Mark Piper | 27 Feb 1992 | Effie and Sophie's fashion show is sabotaged by Suzanna's interference, with Jim and Memo plotting revenge on her job prospects.[40][42] |
| 4.04 | Twenty One Today | Mary Coustas | Julie Bates, Aleksi Vellis | 5 Mar 1992 | Effie organizes Sophie's 21st birthday party, but the group faces entry issues at a disco club.[40][41] |
| 4.05 | The Letter | Kevin Nemeth | Julie Bates, Aleksi Vellis | 12 Mar 1992 | Suzanna is accused of authoring a scandalous magazine advice letter; Effie consults the staff on buying a car.[40][42] |
| 4.06 | Wheel of Shame | George Kapiniaris | Liz Crosby | 19 Mar 1992 | Memo competes on a game show to finance his sister's trip, while Jim discovers a recognizable model in a magazine.[40][42] |
| 4.07 | Full Metal Jerks | Aleksi Vellis, Nick Giannopoulos | Julie Bates | 26 Mar 1992 | Memo prepares for mandatory Greek army service; Suzanna schemes to regain her previous employment.[40][42] |
| 4.08 | Four Eyes | Aleksi Vellis, Nick Giannopoulos | Kendal Flanagan | 2 Apr 1992 | Jim begins wearing glasses, undergoing an image overhaul courtesy of Suzanna.[40][42] |
| 4.09 | Devil in Disguise | Elizabeth Coleman, Chris Anastassiades | Kendal Flanagan | 9 Apr 1992 | Suzanna fakes an engagement to Alfredo to secure a job opportunity.[40][42] |
| 4.10 | The King and I | John Ruane | Kendal Flanagan | 16 Apr 1992 | Memo discovers what he believes is Elvis Presley's preserved head, inspiring a Graceland pilgrimage plan.[40][42] |
| 4.11 | Desperately Seeking Effie | Mary Coustas | Kendal Flanagan | 23 Apr 1992 | A prank causes Effie to lose her memory, allowing Jim to attempt reshaping her personality.[40][42] |
| 4.12 | Deaf Jammed | Chris Anastassiades | Kendal Flanagan | 30 Apr 1992 | Jim simulates hearing impairment, prompting retaliatory tricks from his friends.[40][42] |
| 4.13 | The Last Temptation | Chris Anastassiades, Nick Giannopoulos | Kendal Flanagan | 7 May 1992 | Alfredo experiences a religious awakening after a close call; Jim and Suzanna suppress mutual attraction.[40][42] |
Series 5 (1992)
Series 5 of Acropolis Now, the final season of the Australian sitcom, aired weekly on the Seven Network from 12 August 1992 to 4 November 1992, consisting of 13 episodes each approximately 30 minutes in length.[29][43] The series maintained its focus on the chaotic daily operations of the Acropolis Café in Melbourne, emphasizing interpersonal relationships and cultural clashes among the Greek-Australian staff. Key narrative arcs included Jim Stephanidis's (Nick Giannopoulos) deepening commitment to Suzanna Martin (Nicki Wendt), marked by marriage, the arrival of their first child, and preparations for a second; Effie Stefanidis's (Mary Coustas) entrepreneurial ventures and romantic pursuits; and Memo's (George Kapiniaris) ongoing tensions in his relationship with Despina. Recurring themes involved family secrets, workplace rivalries, and humorous takes on ethnic traditions, with supporting characters like Alfredo (Nick Carrafa) contributing to the ensemble dynamics.[2][23] The season built on prior developments, such as Kostas Stephanidis's absence after returning to Greece, leaving Jim in charge, while introducing escalating personal stakes like impending parenthood and fidelity issues that tested the café's harmony.[44] Episodes often juxtaposed light-hearted cultural stereotypes with relatable domestic conflicts, maintaining the show's signature blend of slapstick and observational humor derived from multicultural Melbourne life. Production continued under the original creative team, with no major cast departures reported for this series.Episode Guide
- Episode 1: "Dream Baby" (12 August 1992): Effie establishes a hair salon above the café, while Memo reunites with an old girlfriend, sparking jealousy and café disruptions.[44]
- Episode 2: "Love" (19 August 1992): Jim panics in preparation for meeting Suzanna's parents, who scrutinize his suitability; Effie experiments with a new shampoo invention; Memo faces a lawsuit related to café mishaps.[44]
- Episode 3: "Hair Razors" (26 August 1992): Lars Larson develops feelings for Effie while assisting Jim with business matters; Despina sends provocative photographs to Memo, complicating their dynamic.[44]
- Episode 4: "The Other Man" (2 September 1992): Memo grows frustrated with Despina's flirtations toward sports figures and asserts dominance; Suzanna requests Jim dispose of his "little black book" of contacts.[44][45]
- Episode 5: "The Lars Supper" (9 September 1992): Focus shifts to Lars's integration into the group, with tensions arising from his interactions at a shared meal; specific romantic and business subplots escalate.[46]
- Episode 6: "Mum's the Word" (16 September 1992): Jim conceals his relationship with Suzanna from his mother to avoid interference; family approval becomes a central conflict.[44][47]
- Episode 7: "Coward's End" (23 September 1992): Jim mistakenly proposes to another woman, prompting Suzanna to depart for a job opportunity in Cairo; Memo overlooks Despina's birthday, straining their bond.[44]
- Episode 8: "The Battle of the Sexists" (30 September 1992): Gender dynamics at the café ignite debates and comedic standoffs among the staff, highlighting workplace equality issues through exaggerated scenarios.[46][47]