Damo Johnson

Damo Johnson
Shortland Street character
Portrayed by Grant Lobban
Duration 2015–
First appearance 11 May 2015
Introduced by Simon Bennett
Classification Present; regular
Profile
Occupation Head of Information Technologies department
IT Technician

Damien Alex Heath "Damo" Johnson is a fictional character on the New Zealand soap opera Shortland Street. Portrayed by comedian Grant Lobban, Damo first appeared over several years in a guest role before becoming a regular character in 2017. Primarily written as comic relief, Damo has also featured in storylines such as his diagnosis of bowel cancer.

Creation and casting

The character of Damo was created for a one-off guest appearance in 2015,[1] with comedian Grant Lobban securing the role.[2] He knew the role was short term so believed, "I'm going to give it everything I've got and play with it and be this big dorky guy', so I just went for it really."[1] His performance lead to Damo being written into further episodes,[2] in a "on and off" basis before returning as a full-time character in 2017. Lobban was pleased to have a regular role in Damo and hoped for it to be permanent, stating, "I'd love it to continue."[1]

Storylines

Damo first arrived to the hospital when he purchased Kylie Brown's (Kerry-Lee Dewing) dress online believing it to instead be a date and resulting in him being rebuffed. Damo later appeared when as Head of the IT department, he vindictively changed hospital CEO Chris Warner (Michael Galvin) passwords before backing down after mistakingly believing Chris' best friend Mo (Jarrod Rawiri) was a gang member. Several months later Damo moved into Esther Samuels (Ngahuia Piripi), Lucy Rickman (Grace Palmer) and Ali Karim's (Tane Williams) flat and confused many with his strange hobbies and quest for love. Damo clashed dramatically with elder hospital receptionist Leanne Black (Jennifer Ludlam) especially when she received a promotion, making him accountable to her. Leanne set up Damo with a patient's daughter Erin (Kayleigh Haworth) but following her mother's death, she left Damo. After months of connecting through shared loneliness, Damo realised he was in love with Leanne and despite her reservations, she too fell in love and the two became a secret couple. The relationship was short lived when Damo pushed a pregnant Lucy during an earthquake but came round to eventually loving her child when Lucy died from childbirth, making him want to father a child himself. The return of Erin saw her relationship with Damo rekindle much to Leanne's jealousy, leading to her spitefully revealing Erin was unable to have children. However it soon became apparent Erin was psychotic when she kidnapped Damo and attacked both Ali and Leanne. This resulted in Damo and Leanne reuniting and committing to raising a child together eventually. Whilst Leanne was overseas, Damo was shocked to be diagnosed with bowel cancer and eventually opted to have surgery, removing the disease.

Character development

Characterisation

The New Zealand TV Guide described the character as "socially awkward, over-confident and unlucky-in-love".[2] Damo was written as primarily a comic relief character which pleased Lobban who came from a comedy background, describing Damo as "the clown". He believed "The comedy is very natural to me", and had no dramatic training leading him to think that, "With comedy you can do anything and it doesn't have to be believable, just funny, whereas serious subjects ... you are quite conscious of making it look as real as possible." Co-star Luke Patrick (Frank Warner coached Lobban to act out Damo's dramatic scenes.[1] Damo was said to be a "coward" after a storyline saw him push a pregnant Lucy Rickman (Grace Palmer) during an earthquake, something Lobban said proved the difference between himself and his character, "I know I am not Damo, I just didn't feel comfortable being this coward."[3]

Bowel cancer

In an attempt to raise awareness of startling bowel cancer diagnosis rates in New Zealand, advertising agency TBWA approached Television New Zealand to feature a storyline that saw the cancer affect one of the characters. It was decided that the character of Damo would undergo the cancer storyline due to the belief from the campaigns Chief Executive that, "Working with such a well-loved character gave people a reason to care: it means a huge portion of the population now has a friend who has experienced bowel cancer. That provided great traction we can draw upon to educate Kiwis about this disease, which affects so people, but which still flies under the radar."[4] It was believed that the comedic nature of the Damo character would be a suitable medium to convey the wide-reaching nature of the cancer and Lobban believed Damo was an obvious target for such a disease as, "He's an unhealthy eater. He's always got those junk-food wrappers on his desk. He's just an unhealthy, disgusting guy."[1] Over a three-week period, Damo was shown to undergo the symptoms of bowel cancer,[4] but actively ignore them and turn them into "toilet-humour" based jokes.[1] Bowel Cancer New Zealand actively consulted Shortland Street on how best to portray the symptoms, testing, diagnosis, surgery, and aftermath. The episodes were also accompanied by warning's suggesting the "disease could strike anyone".[4] Lobban enjoyed the storyline and thought overall that the, "message, of course, being check yourself early and you can survive these things."[1]

Reception

Damo was hugely popular with the public,[4] and critics alike.[5][6] His first appearances were well received online with Shorty Street Scandal satirically named Damo and Kylie as the "Hookup of the week".[6] The Spinoff writer Tara Ward gave him the "Shortland Street power ranking" of number 1 of the week, calling the character "batshit crazy" and suggesting the show was better for it. She concluded her review by suggesting, "Damo for Prime Minister".[5] The character of Damo was so popular, he was purposefully chosen to undertake his prostate cancer storyline as it was believed this would be the most effective measure to impact such an issue to the audience.[4] Lobban was not prepared for the amount of affection audiences would have for his character and noted one particular incident where he thought he was going to be assaulted by a motorbike driver but was instead unexpectedly applauded for his portrayal.[2] Lobban's co-star Tane Williams (Ali Karim) praised Damo as "just ridiculous" and thought working with the actor was, "just so crazy that it's hard to stay in the scene and hold it together when they are cracking some of their ridiculous jokes."[7]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Harvey, Keari (16 November 2017). "Life-and-death fight for Shortland Street actor Grant Lobban". New Zealand TV Guide.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Nealon, Sarah (25 February 2017). "Being Damo: Shortland Street actor's awkward encounter with die-hard fan". New Zealand TV Guide. Fairfax Media.
  3. Mealing, Fleur (3 May 2017). "Shortland Street's Grant Lobban is far from his cowardly character". Stuff.co.nz. Fairfax Media.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Bowel Cancer New Zealand pairs up with Shortland Street to raise awareness via TBWA". StopPress. 14 December 2017.
  5. 1 2 Ward, Tara (26 October 2015). "Shortland Street Power Rankings, 26 October – Love in a Hardware Store?". The Spinoff.
  6. 1 2 Mustapic, James (27 May 2015). "Expensive Organic Vegetables and a New Take on the Santa Suit". The Spinoff.
  7. Harvey, Kerry (3 May 2018). "Shortland street star the author of his own misfortune". New Zealand TV Guide.
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