Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
Only includes names with the selected topics
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
1-50 of 70
- Judith McGrath was an Australian TV actress who was born and raised in Brisbane, Queensland and she was most known for her roles in Australian TV Drama Prisoner (1979) as acidic and sarcastic officer Colleen 'Po Face' Powell where she stayed for until the 1984 season before moving on and working extensively in the Australian Theatre Company before her next big role in Australian romance/medical drama A Country Practice (1981) and then working several years later in one of Australia's most beloved TV dramas All Saints (1998) which ran for 12 years and earned McGrath a logie nomination for best actress, during the series 493 episodes McGrath only missed one episode.
McGrath retired from acting in 2012 after her final on-screen role on the TV drama Winners & Losers (2011) and lived quietly until her death in 2017. McGrath died in 2017 aged 70 after a battle with lung cancer. - Director
- Writer
- Cinematographer
Mark Toia was a director and writer, known for Monsters of Man (2020), UFO Man and The last Yowie. He died on 23 October 2023 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.- Deryck Guyler, born at the outbreak of WW1 in 1914 at Liverpool in England, was the only child of Elsie and Samuel Guyler. He grew up in Liverpool and had his senior education at Liverpool College. On leaving school he tried his hand at a few things including working with his father in the family jewelers business 'Green & Guyler'. However, he then left home to go to Bristol theological college to become an Anglican Minister, in those days Deryck was not a Catholic. It was not long before it became obvious to the 'powers-that-be' he would make a better actor than a Parson!!!! So, he eventually joined the Liverpool Repertory Company in 1935 which became his training ground for a very successful career in theatre, radio and television.
During the war, however, he was called up to join the RAF Police and served there for a time before being invalided out and then rejoined his profession. As all the theatres had been closed down due to wartime, he was sent out on ENSA (Entertainment National Services Association) to entertain the troops. It was during this time that he met and married his wife Paddy, who was also working on ENSA with her two sisters as a three handed singing harmony act, 'The Lennox Sisters'. They were married on 15th Sep 1941 so, at the time of his death Deryck and Paddy had just celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary. They had two sons, Peter, born 26th April 1943 during the war and Chris, born after the war on 15th June 1948. Soon after their son Peter was born, Deryck converted to the Catholic faith and became an active member of the 'Catholic Stage Guild'. They also had another wedding ceremony, as Paddy was also a Catholic, and son Peter was in the front row of the church.
Just after the war, in 1946, Deryck joined the famous war time radio show ITMA ('It's That Man Again') and was with the show until its finish in 1949, due to the death of its star Tommy Handley. It was during this time that he was renowned for bringing to the radio, for the first time, the Liverpudlian accent with his immortal character "Frisby Dyke". Not long after this television started and Deryck began pursuing his very successful career in this new medium of entertainment. Due to the excellent quality of his voice he started in television, as many did, doing 'voice-overs' for many, many commercials which was his 'bread and butter', but then, he went on to become as well known for his face as he was for his voice in many TV series including Three Live Wires (1961), Room at the Bottom (1966), Best of Enemies (1968) and the well known Sykes (1972) series with Eric Sykes, Hattie Jacques and Richard Wattis. There were many other series that followed, supporting such other stars as Michael Bentine in It's a Square World (1960) and Harry Worth in his own series and then, of course, the TV series he's probably best known for, Please Sir! (1968) as the cantankerous school janitor 'Norman Potter'!!
It was in 1982 that he went out to New Zealand to star in a series written by an English TV scriptwriter Vince Powell called "An Age Apart"; it only went to 'air' in New Zealand. So, after a long successful career lasting over 50 years he then decided to retire 'down under' in Australia to be near his younger son Chris and his family, Deryck's three grandchildren, Paul, Mark and Cathryn. Deryck and his wife Paddy arrived in Brisbane on 5th November 1993, and lived in the tree-lined suburb of Ashgrove until about September of 1997. In October of that year, due to a few unfortunate falls at home attributed to his frailty and ailing legs, he had to go into a nursing home to be cared for, his wife Paddy being too small and frail herself to care for him. Regrettably due to his frailty; he had to be content with a wheelchair to get around. Paddy moved to 'Forest Place' Retirement Village, attached to the nursing home, and naturally, visited him daily. Additionally, the rest of the family often visited him in the nursing home where he was looked after admirably by the nursing home staff at 'Forest Place' until the evening of 7 October 1999 when he passed away very peacefully at about eight o'clock whilst wife Paddy and son Chris, with his wife, were at his bedside to say their final 'Goodbyes'.
His funeral service was held at St. Mark's Catholic Church, Inala on the 13 October 1999 and he was cremated at Mt. Gravatt Cemetery. In 1995 there was a wonderful 10 minute tribute to Deryck, made by Danny Baker and the BBC, which the family used as a part of the eulogy delivered by his son Chris at his funeral service at St. Mark's. Deryck's wife Paddy also passed away on 6 January 2002 and their ashes are now buried side by side in the "Guyler" family 'garden seat' estate in the peaceful surroundings of "Mount Thompson Memorial Gardens" in the Brisbane suburb of Holland Park. - Writer
- Script and Continuity Department
- Additional Crew
Colin Thiele was born on 16 November 1920 in Eudunda, South Australia, Australia. He was a writer, known for Sun on the Stubble (1996), O Processo do Rei (1990) and Storm Boy (1976). He was married to Rhonda. He died on 4 September 2006 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.- Carol Burns was born on 29 October 1947 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. She was an actress, known for Prisoner (1979), The Mango Tree (1977) and Tracks (2013). She was married to Alan Lawrence. She died on 22 December 2015 in Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Actor
- Writer
A Drama graduate of the University of Queensland, Bille Brown is a well-known Shakespearean actor. He began with the Queensland Theatre Company and, later, was a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) in Strathford and London. While with the RSC, he was one of its few commissioned writers.
Bille Brown AM has been recognised twice in the Australian Honours System. On 1 January 2001 he was granted the Centenary Medal "for distinguished service to the arts" and on 26 January 2011, Bille was named as a Member of the Order of Australia "for service to the performing arts as an actor and playwright, and to education". The latter honour is denoted by the post-nominal "AM" after his name.- Camera and Electrical Department
Jeff Seaholme was born on 8 January 1913 in Carshalton, Surrey, England, UK. Jeff is known for Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949), The Man in the White Suit (1951) and The Avengers (1961). Jeff died on 17 January 1974 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.- Director
- Actor
- Producer
Never comfortable in front of the camera, Chris left Blue Peter after only 21 months. He became a journalist. As a war correspondent in Beirut, Lebanon he disappeared for 18 days. In 1995 in the Balkans working for ITN as a journalist for Channel 4, he was brutally beaten up by Serb civilians protesting over Kosovan Albanians.- Johann Ofner died on 23 January 2017 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Make-Up Department
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Patricia Hutchence was born on 6 July 1929 in Australia. She was a writer, known for Death Race 2000 (1975), Two Worlds Colliding and The Great Texas Dynamite Chase (1976). She was married to Kell Hutchence, ? Burgess and Ross Glassop. She died on 22 September 2010 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.- Tony Blue was born on 4 February 1936 in Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia. He died on 1 October 2020 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Margo Dydek was born on 28 April 1974 in Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland. She died on 27 May 2011 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Jack Seccombe was born on 19 January 1919 in Australia. He was married to Norah Seccombe. He died on 5 October 2006 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Tui Bow was born on 19 October 1906 in Hawera, Taranaki, New Zealand. She was an actress, known for Frenchman's Farm (1987), Sunshine of Paradise Alley (1926) and The Irishman (1978). She was married to Robert Bow. She died on 25 March 1993 in Alderley, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Alan Edwards was born on 17 January 1925 in the UK. He was an actor, known for The Children of the New Forest (1955), The Black Arrow (1951) and The Adventures of Robin Hood (1955). He died on 14 January 2003 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Soundtrack
Levi Kereama was born on 9 August 1983 in Australia. He died on 4 October 2008 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.- Actor
- Producer
- Director
John Dommett was born in 1946 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. He was an actor and producer, known for The Box (1974), Frightful Movie (1968) and Matlock Police (1971). He died on 8 January 2004 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.- Sue Dwyer was born on 6 October 1956 in Queensland, Australia. She was an actress, known for The Proposition (2005), Blue Heelers (1994) and Acolytes (2008). She died on 17 May 2013 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Sam Cutler died on 11 July 2023 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
- Composer
- Music Department
- Actor
John Sangster was a central figure in Australian jazz. He began playing traditional jazz with Graeme Bell and his Australian Jazz Band on trombone, later taking up the cornet, then drums. He toured with Bell (1950-55), playing in Australia, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and Korea. While in England he appeared in two Royal Command Performances, and recorded his first composition while playing on the Humphrey Lyttelton/Graeme Bell recordings. In the late 1950s Sangster began playing vibraphone, and played other percussion instruments, including many of his own invention. After leaving Bell's band, Sangster joined the Don Burrows Group, with whom he was to record several compositions.In the 1960s Sangster formed his own quartet and with them experimented with group improvisatory jazz, after he became interested in the music of such American jazz musicians as Sun Ra and Archie Shepp- Pit Ginsburg was born on 28 August 1941 in Brisbane, California, USA. He was an actor, known for Lust in the Dust (1984). He died on 4 September 2011 in Brisbane, California, USA.
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Grant McLennan was born on 12 February 1958 in Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia. He was an actor, known for Kingpin (1996), Something Wild (1986) and Summer Storm (2004). He died on 6 May 2006 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.- Music Department
- Composer
- Writer
Ronald Hanmer was born on 2 February 1917 in Reigate, Surrey, England, UK. He was a composer and writer, known for Pet Sematary (2019), Mystery at the Burlesque (1949) and The Year My Voice Broke (1987). He died on 23 May 1994 in Brisbane, Australia.- Writer
- Producer
Left school at 15; became commercial artist, film cartoonist, laundryman and bushworker. First novel won second prize in Australia's biggest literary contest, launching his writing career. Novel "Peter's Pence" one American Edgar Allen Poe Prize as best crime novel of 1974.- Writer
- Additional Crew
Michael Noonan was born on 19 September 1921 in Sumner, New Zealand. He was a writer, known for The Flying Doctor (1959), Riptide (1969) and December Boys (2007). He died on 4 March 2000 in Brisbane, Australia.