词条 | Alan Hopgood |
释义 |
|name = Alan Hopgood |image = |caption = |birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1934|9|29}} |birth_place = Launceston, Tasmania, Australia |occupation = Actor, playwright and producer |yearsactive = 1960–present }} Alan Hopgood AM (born 29 September 1934) is an Australian actor and writer. Early lifeHopgood was born in Launceston, Tasmania and grew up in Tasmania. He acted in several dramatic roles while still a child. He attended school in Melbourne, and attended the University of Melbourne, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts with Honours and a Diploma of Education. Hopgood had his first play, Marcus, produced at Melbourne University while he was working as a school teacher. He left teaching to write full-time and act in the theatre.[1] CareerHopgood's first very successful play was And the Big Men Fly in 1963 produced by the Union Theatre Repertory Company. The script writer at the time was Brad Hopgood. The play was adapted for TV by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 1973. In 1964, he followed with The Golden Legion of Cleaning Women. In 1966 he produced Private Yuk Objects, which he claims was the first play anywhere in the world on the subject of the Vietnam War. Hopgood has also written a number of film and television screenplays, including the comedy film Alvin Purple (1973), which was the most commercially successful Australian film of the early 1970s. Hopgood was an actor with the Melbourne Theatre Company for ten years and was an early "soap" star in Bellbird, in which for six years he played the town doctor. He has also performed in the later soaps, Prisoner (for which he also scripted many episodes) and Neighbours as Jack Lassiter (a role he reprised in August 2013).[2] As an actor, his cinema credits include My Brilliant Career (1979), The Blue Lagoon (1980), Roadgames (1981), Evil Angels (1988, released as A Cry in the Dark outside of Australia and New Zealand)[3] and The Man from Snowy River II (1988). He has worked with a large number of actors including Frank Thring, Meryl Streep, Brooke Shields, Sam Neill, Judy Davis.[4] He contracted prostate cancer and his book on the experience Surviving Prostate Cancer – One Man's Journey (1996) was widely praised. He often tours giving humorous talks on men's health.[4] HonoursHopgood won AWGIE awards for The Cheerful Cuckold and The Bush Bunch and writing several feature films including Alvin Purple and the documentaries The Prophecies of Nostradamus and The Fountain of Youth. Hopgood was awarded the A.M. (Member of the Order of Australia) in 2005 for his services to the performing arts as an actor, playwright and producer, and to the community through raising awareness of men's health issues.[5] Select credits
References1. ^AustLit, The Resource of Australian Literature 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://neighbours.com.au/Jack-Lassiter-returns-to-Erinsborough.htm|title=Jack Lassiter returns to Erinsborough|date=8 August 2013|work=Neighbours.com.au|publisher=Eleven|accessdate=8 August 2013}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094924/releaseinfo#akas|title=A Cry in the Dark (1988) – Release dates |publisher= IMDb.com|accessdate=2012-06-14}} 4. ^1 Entertainoz {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060829113410/http://www.entertainoz.com.au/index.cfm?oid=1227 |date=29 August 2006 }} 5. ^Health Play {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120824113629/http://www.healthplay.com.au/bio.html |date=24 August 2012 }} External links
9 : 1934 births|Australian dramatists and playwrights|Australian male film actors|Australian screenwriters|Australian male soap opera actors|Australian male stage actors|Living people|People from Launceston, Tasmania|University of Melbourne alumni |
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