The popularity of the series led to a one-off TV special,
Aunty Jack Rox On with special guest
Stevie Wright, a concert tour, a #1 hit single, "
Farewell Aunty Jack" (a version of the closing theme of the series) and a best-selling album
Aunty Jack Sings Wollongong, released in early 1974. "Farewell Aunty Jack" was released as a single in December 1973, reached Number 1 on the Australian charts a week later, where it stayed for 3 weeks. It was the first Australian single in picture-disc form to hit No.1 nationally, reputedly being the first disc of its kind in the world (although "Goondiwindi Grey" by Tex Morton in 1972 had also been issued in Australia as a picture disc too, but didn't hit the top spot nationally). By the time Series 2 was underway Bond was already tired of Aunty Jack so he decided to kill her off in the final episode, "The R-Certificate Show" when, shocked by the gratuitous sex and nudity, Aunty Jack expires from a heart attack. Bond then departed for a much-needed holiday on
Norfolk Island where, jointly inspired by the convict ruins and his holiday reading,
Errol Flynn's
My Wicked, Wicked Ways, he came up with the concept for a new series set in the bushranger days, which became
Flash Nick from Jindivick. The next outing for the classic Aunty Jack team was
Wollongong the Brave (1974), a series of four one-hour specials that showcased favourite characters from the series. Episode 1 ''Aunty Jack'n'The Gong in Bloody Concert'' featured the core characters, augmented by a rock group. Episode 2 featured 'Country and Mediterranean' music group The Farelly Brothers and their singing sheep Jason; Episode 3 featured meat guru Kev Kavanagh and the final instalment
Norman Gunston: The Golden Weeks eventually spawned
The Norman Gunston Show in late 1975. At 11:57 PM on Friday 28 February 1975, Aunty Jack, Thin Arthur, and Kid Eager introduced colour television broadcasting on
ABC-TV, beating another channel's first colour program by deliberately starting three minutes early. The team's last major TV collaboration was the abortive comedy series
The Off Show (1977) which was cancelled after only a few episodes following a controversial incident in which ABC executive Alan Batemen pulled the premiere episode from the schedule half an hour before it was due to air and then erased the tape, reportedly because he was offended by the
Bill Harding religious parody sketch "Leave It To Jesus". The character of
Norman Gunston, originally created for a single sketch in the second series, was given his own series
The Norman Gunston Show which ran from 1975 to 1983. After a faltering start, it became hugely popular and McDonald won the
Gold Logie in 1976. Bond, O'Donoghue, McDonald, MacGregor and Derum later appeared in
News Free Zone, created by Murphy in 1985. Each episode included an Aunty Jack sketch in a section called
Vintage Video. Bond also revived the character Kev Kevanagh. Although fans long hoped that
The Aunty Jack Show might be released on home video, it was more than thirty years after the show's first screening until this took place. Although there have been a number of reasons suggested, it is generally accepted that the major stumbling block was a long-running disagreement between Bond and the ABC, stemming from Bond and O'Donoghue's resentment over the presumed loss of several
Aunty Jack episodes and the
Off Show incident. Since Bond and O'Donoghue controlled the rights for all the original music featured in the series, their refusal to release them effectively kept the series from release until 2005. For many years there were persistent rumours—fuelled by press statements from Bond himself—that some episodes had been lost or destroyed. This was given added credence by the fact that (like the
BBC) the ABC had undertaken an "economy drive" in the late 1970s and early 1980s, during which (it has been reported) substantial portions of many shows were erased. Although (according to Bond) the original master tapes for three episodes were erased, all the original film footage shot for the missing episodes had survived and with the assistance of the
National Archives of Australia the footage was located and restored, enabling the missing episodes to be reconstructed. The long-awaited release of the complete Series 1 on DVD took place in December 2005, and the complete Series 2 followed in April 2006. Although the master videotapes were monochrome, and the main episodes are presented in this format on DVD, much of the footage for the series was filmed in colour and these are included as alternate scenes. The only episode in the entire Aunty Jack Show series not to be released on DVD was the 1973 special, 'Aunty Jack Rox On'. In 2019,
TV Week listed
The Aunty Jack Show at #99 in its list of the 101 greatest Australian television shows of all time, which appeared in its monthly
TV Week Close Up publication. The magazine said the character's aggressive attitude, her golden boxing glove and her "I'll rip yer bloody arms off" catchphrase quickly established her, and the show, as comedy icons. ==Stage show==