Wildside featured several regular characters from the police force and an inner-city crisis centre. The regular cast included Tony Martin, Rachael Blake, Aaron Pedersen, Jessica Napier and Alex Dimitriades. Martin starred as Detective Bill McCoy with Dimitriadis joining him a third of the way through the first series as his partner, Detective Charlie Coustos. Pedersen, Napier and Blake portrayed the staff at the crisis centre. Detectives McCoy and Coustos were often called upon to investigate clients of the centre, creating tensions with its staff. Richard Carter appeared in several episodes as a fellow officer Detective Brian Deakin critical of Coustos. Abi Tucker joined the showat the beginning of the second season, playing Kate Holbeck, a colleague of Coustos and McCoy. Mary Coustas joined the series in a regular role late in its run, appearing in the last ten episodes; her character replacing Aaron Pedersen's as the crisis centre's resident lawyer. The recurring cast includes:
Tony Martin as Bill McCoy, a former detective who comes to Sydney looking for his missing son and is persuaded to rejoin the police.
Alex Dimitriades as Detective Charlie Coustos, McCoy's partner.
Rachael Blake as Maxine Summers, a doctor who runs a community crisis centre.
Aaron Pedersen as Vince Cellini, a lawyer at the crisis centre.
Jessica Napier as Gerry Davis, the receptionist at the crisis centre.
Mary Coustas as Louise Arden, Vince Cellini's replacement in the last series.
Abbie Cornish as Simone Summers, Maxine's daughter.
Martin, Blake, Pedersen and Napier were the only actors to appear in every episode. Martin and Blake began an off screen relationship during show's run and married in 2003.
Production and broadcast
Wildside was originally produced a 2-part miniseries created by Michael Jenkins and Ben Gannon. It was broadcast on 23 and 24 November 1997. A further 36 episodes were broadcast between February and September 1998. A second series of 20 episodes was broadcast between February and July 1999. In repeats and syndication, the miniseries was edited into the first four episodes of the 40 episode first series. The style of production was very similar to Jenkins' earlier series Scales of Justice and Blue Murder, particularly the "observational" use of multiple hand-held cameras and the density of semi-improvised dialogue. Many of the cast had previously worked with Jenkins in Blue Murder.
DVD release
The series has been released by the ABC on DVD in three volumes, each containing 20 episodes across 5 discs.