Josh Mcconville

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Josh Mcconville JOSH MCCONVILLE Training: NIDA and Griffith University Film: Lone Wolf Conrad Jonathan Ogilvie Future Pictures Fantasy Island Sarge Jeff Wadlow Columbia Pictures Top End Wedding Officer Kent Wayne Blair Goalpost M4M Ice Man Paul Ireland Toothless Pictures Escape and Evasion Seth Storm Ashwood Bronte Pictures The Merger Snapper Mark Grentell Umbrella Entertainment 1% Skink Stephen McCallum Head Gear Films War Machine Payne David Michod Netflix Down Under Gav Abe Wild Eddie Joe Cinque's Consolation Chris Sotiris Dounoukos Consolation Productions The Infinite Man Dean Trilby Hugh Sullivan Infinite man Productions The Turning "Commission" Vic lang David Wenham ArenaMedia TV: Wakefield Scott Jocelyn Moorhouse & Kim Morduant Jungle Ent. Mr Inbetween S2 Alex Nash Edgerton Blue-Tongue Films Home and Away Caleb Snow Alan Bateman 7 Network Cleverman Dickson Leah Purcell Goalpost Pictures Redfern Now Photographer Various ABC TV / Blackfella Films Wild Boys Ben Barratt Southern Star Ent. Shirley Barratt Underbelly II Michael Hurley C9 Network Tony Tilse Theatre: Cloud 9 Clive/Cathy Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company A Midsummer Night's Dream Bottom Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company All My Sons George Deever Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company Hay Fever Sandy Tyrell Imara Savage Sydney Theatre Company Arcadia Bernard Nightingale Richard Cottrell Sydney Theatre Company Hamlet Hamlet Damien Ryan Bell Shakespeare Tour Death of A Salesman Biff Adam Mitchell Black Swan Theatre Company The Boys Brett Sprague Sam Strong Griffin Theatre Company Josh McConville 1 Markham Froggatt & Irwin Limited Registered Office: Bank Gallery, High Street, Kenilworth, Warwickshire, CV8 1LY Registered in England No. 7268133 VAT Registration No. 993 055 789 Members of the PMA Gross Und Klein The Guitar Player Benedict Andrews Sydney Theatre Company Loot Denis Richard Cottrell Sydney Theatre Company In The Next Room Leo Irving Pamela Rabe Sydney Theatre Company King Lear Poor Tom Marion Potts Bell Shakespeare Co (AS) Strange Attractor Rube NIck Marchande Griffin Theatre Compnany Dealing With Claire Ashley / Vittorio / Toby Cristabel Sved Griffin Theatre Company The Call Gary Lee Lewis The Griffin Theatre (AS) Gallipolli Joe Murray/aerialist Nigel Jamieson Sydney Theatre Company Days Of Significance Lenny Kate Gaul Nida Angels In America Prior Mark Grentall Nida The Servant Of Two Masters Truffaldino Darren Gilshenan Nida Wet And Dry Alex Georgina Sutton Nida Private Life Of The Master Race Judge Helmut Bakaitis Nida Macbeth Macduff & King Duncan Richard Cottrell Nida Three Sisters Chebutykin Kevin Jackson Nida Our Country’s Good Sideway Terrance Clark Nida Footprints Trickster Julia Cotton Nida Private Lives Elyot Tony Knight Nida Special Skills: Dialects – Australian, Cockney, RP, Standard American, Southern American, Scottish, Irish, Indonesian, New York. Vocal Range – Tenor Instruments – Didgeridoo Special Skills – Juggling, Magic, Clowning, Acrobats, Mime Sports – Tennis, Snow Skiing, Rugby, Cricket, Soccer, Surfing (basic), Basketball, Bowling – All ball games Josh McConville 2 Markham Froggatt & Irwin Limited Registered Office: Bank Gallery, High Street, Kenilworth, Warwickshire, CV8 1LY Registered in England No. 7268133 VAT Registration No. 993 055 789 Members of the PMA.
Recommended publications
  • 2015 Sydney Theatre Award Nominations
    2015 SYDNEY THEATRE AWARD NOMINATIONS MAINSTAGE BEST MAINSTAGE PRODUCTION Endgame (Sydney Theatre Company) Ivanov (Belvoir) The Present (Sydney Theatre Company) Suddenly Last Summer (Sydney Theatre Company) The Wizard of Oz (Belvoir) BEST DIRECTION Eamon Flack (Ivanov) Andrew Upton (Endgame) Kip Williams (Love and Information) Kip Williams (Suddenly Last Summer) BEST ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE Paula Arundell (The Bleeding Tree) Cate Blanchett (The Present) Jacqueline McKenzie (Orlando) Eryn Jean Norvill (Suddenly Last Summer) BEST ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE Colin Friels (Mortido) Ewen Leslie (Ivanov) Josh McConville (Hamlet) Hugo Weaving (Endgame) BEST ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE Blazey Best (Ivanov) Jacqueline McKenzie (The Present) Susan Prior (The Present) Helen Thomson (Ivanov) BEST ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE Matthew Backer (The Tempest) John Bell (Ivanov) John Howard (Ivanov) Barry Otto (Seventeen) BEST STAGE DESIGN Alice Babidge (Suddenly Last Summer) Marg Horwell (La Traviata) Renée Mulder (The Bleeding Tree) Nick Schlieper (Endgame) BEST COSTUME DESIGN Alice Babidge (Mother Courage and her Children) Alice Babidge (Suddenly Last Summer) Alicia Clements (After Dinner) Marg Horwell (La Traviata) BEST LIGHTING DESIGN Paul Jackson (Love and Information) Nick Schlieper (Endgame) Nick Schlieper (King Lear) Emma Valente (The Wizard of Oz) BEST SCORE OR SOUND DESIGN Stefan Gregory (Suddenly Last Summer) Max Lyandvert (Endgame) Max Lyandvert (The Wizard of Oz) The Sweats (Love and Information) INDEPENDENT BEST INDEPENDENT PRODUCTION Cock (Red
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  • Robert Lepage's Scenographic Dramaturgy: the Aesthetic Signature at Work
    1 Robert Lepage’s Scenographic Dramaturgy: The Aesthetic Signature at Work Melissa Poll Abstract Heir to the écriture scénique introduced by theatre’s modern movement, director Robert Lepage’s scenography is his entry point when re-envisioning an extant text. Due to widespread interest in the Québécois auteur’s devised offerings, however, Lepage’s highly visual interpretations of canonical works remain largely neglected in current scholarship. My paper seeks to address this gap, theorizing Lepage’s approach as a three-pronged ‘scenographic dramaturgy’, composed of historical-spatial mapping, metamorphous space and kinetic bodies. By referencing a range of Lepage’s extant text productions and aligning elements of his work to historical and contemporary models of scenography-driven performance, this project will detail how the three components of Lepage’s scenographic dramaturgy ‘write’ meaning-making performance texts. Historical-Spatial Mapping as the foundation for Lepage’s Scenographic Dramaturgy In itself, Lepage’s reliance on evocative scenography is inline with the aesthetics of various theatre-makers. Examples range from Appia and Craig’s early experiments summoning atmosphere through lighting and minimalist sets to Penny Woolcock’s English National Opera production of John Adams’s Dr. Atomic1 which uses digital projections and film clips to revisit the circumstances leading up to Little Boy’s release on Hiroshima in 1945. Other artists known for a signature visual approach to locating narrative include Simon McBurney, who incorporates digital projections to present Moscow via a Google Maps perspective in Complicité’s The Master and Margarita and auteur Benedict Andrews, whose recent production of Three Sisters sees Chekhov’s heroines stranded on a mound of dirt at the play’s conclusion, an apt metaphor for their dreary futures in provincial Russia.
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  • Issue 17 Ausact: the Australian Actor Training Conference 2019
    www.fusion-journal.com Fusion Journal is an international, online scholarly journal for the communication, creative industries and media arts disciplines. Co-founded by the Faculty of Arts and Education, Charles Sturt University (Australia) and the College of Arts, University of Lincoln (United Kingdom), Fusion Journal publishes refereed articles, creative works and other practice-led forms of output. Issue 17 AusAct: The Australian Actor Training Conference 2019 Editors Robert Lewis (Charles Sturt University) Dominique Sweeney (Charles Sturt University) Soseh Yekanians (Charles Sturt University) Contents Editorial: AusAct 2019 – Being Relevant .......................................................................... 1 Robert Lewis, Dominique Sweeney and Soseh Yekanians Vulnerability in a crisis: Pedagogy, critical reflection and positionality in actor training ................................................................................................................ 6 Jessica Hartley Brisbane Junior Theatre’s Abridged Method Acting System ......................................... 20 Jack Bradford Haunted by irrelevance? ................................................................................................. 39 Kim Durban Encouraging actors to see themselves as agents of change: The role of dramaturgs, critics, commentators, academics and activists in actor training in Australia .............. 49 Bree Hadley and Kathryn Kelly ISSN 2201-7208 | Published under Creative Commons License (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) From ‘methods’ to ‘approaches’:
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  • Abigail Mckern
    Abigail McKern Agents Charlotte Davies Assistant [email protected] Cat Palethorpe +44 (0)20 3214 0800 [email protected] +44 (0) 20 3214 0800 Roles Stage Production Character Director Company MERCHANT OF VENICE Nerissa Peter Hall West End THE CHERRY ORCHARD Dunyarsha Sam Mendes Aldwych Theatre DEATH OF A SALESMAN The Woman Robert Falls Lyric Theatre THE MAGISTRATE Agatha Poskitt Nick Broadhurst Savoy Theatre SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER Richard Cottrell Sydney Theatre Company 5 CHARACTERS IN SEARCH TBA Mike Alfreds Shared Experience OF A GOOD NIGHT'S SLEEP, NORTH BY NORTHWEST Mrs Thornhill Simon Philips Adelaide Festival NORTH BY NORTHWEST Mrs Thornhill Simon Philips Bath Theatre Royal and Toronto Royal Alexander A ROOM WITH A VIEW Mrs Honeychurch Adrian Noble CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF Big Mama Rob Hastie Theatr Clwyd BRAVE NEW WORLD Linda James Dacre Northampton Royal and Derngate United Agents | 12-26 Lexington Street London W1F OLE | T +44 (0) 20 3214 0800 | F +44 (0) 20 3214 0801 | E [email protected] Production Character Director Company PRIDE AND PREJUDICE Lady Catherine De Tamara Harvey Sheffield Crucible Theatres Bourgh SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE The Nurse Declan Donellan/ West End Noel Coward A TALE OF TWO CITIES Miss Pross James Dacre Northampton Royal and Derngate TRAVELLING LIGHT Ida Nick Hytner National Theatre TRAVESTIES Nadya Philip Wilson Birmingham Rep THE IMPORTANCE OF Miss Prism Philip Wilson Birmingham Rep BEING ERNEST BUS STOP Grace James Dacre New Vic/Scarborough co- production LINGUA FRANCA, Madge Fox
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  • 2018 Brochure Web.Pdf
    SEASON 2018 2 A message from Kip Williams 5 The top benefits of a Season Ticket 10 Insight Events 13 Get the most out of your Season Ticket THE PLAYS 16 Top Girls 18 Lethal Indifference 20 Black is the New White 22 The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui 24 Going Down 26 The Children 28 Still Point Turning: The Catherine McGregor Story 30 Blackie Blackie Brown 32 Saint Joan 34 The Long Forgotten Dream 36 The Harp in the South: Part One and Part Two 40 Accidental Death of an Anarchist 42 A Cheery Soul SPECIAL OFFERS 46 Hamlet: Prince of Skidmark 48 The Wharf Revue 2018 HOW TO BOOK AND USEFUL INFO 52 Let us help you choose 55 How to book your Season Ticket 56 Ticket prices 58 Venues and access 59 Dates for your diary 60 Walsh Bay Kitchen 61 The Theatre Bar at the End of the Wharf 62 The Wharf Renewal Project 63 Support us 64 Thank you 66 Our community 67 Partners 68 Contact details 1 A MESSAGE FROM KIP WILLIAMS STC is a company that means a lot to me. And, finally, I’ve thought about what theatre means to me, and how best I can share with It’s the company where, as a young teen, I was you the great passion and love I have for this inspired by my first experience of professional art form. It’s at the theatre where I’ve had some theatre. It’s the company that gave me my very of the most transformative experiences of my first job out of drama school.
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  • Teacher's Notes 2007
    Sydney Theatre Company and Sydney Festival in association with Perth International Festival present the STC Actors Company in The War of the Roses by William Shakespeare Teacher's Resource Kit Part One written and compiled by Jeffrey Dawson Acknowledgements Thank you to the following for their invaluable material for these Teachers' Notes: Laura Scrivano, Publications Manager,STC; Tom Wright, Associate Director, STC Copyright Copyright protects this Teacher’s Resource Kit. Except for purposes permitted by the Copyright Act, reproduction by whatever means is prohibited. However, limited photocopying for classroom use only is permitted by educational institutions. Sydney Theatre Company The Wars of the Roses Teachers Notes © 2009 1 Contents Production Credits 3 Background information on the production 4 Part One, Act One Backstory & Synopsis 5 Part One, Act Two Backstory & Synopsis 5 Notes from the Rehearsal Room 7 Shakespeare’s History plays as a genre 8 Women in Drama and Performance 9 The Director – Benedict Andrews 10 Review Links 11 Set Design 12 Costume Design 12 Sound Design 12 Questions and Activities Before viewing the Play 14 Questions and Activities After viewing the Play 20 Bibliography 24 Background on Part Two of The War of the Roses 27 Sydney Theatre Company The Wars of the Roses Teachers Notes © 2009 2 Sydney Theatre Company and Sydney Festival in association with Perth International Festival present the STC Actors Company in The War of the Roses by William Shakespeare Cast Act One King Richard II Cate Blanchett Production
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  • Shakespeare on Film, Video & Stage
    William Shakespeare on Film, Video and Stage Titles in bold red font with an asterisk (*) represent the crème de la crème – first choice titles in each category. These are the titles you’ll probably want to explore first. Titles in bold black font are the second- tier – outstanding films that are the next level of artistry and craftsmanship. Once you have experienced the top tier, these are where you should go next. They may not represent the highest achievement in each genre, but they are definitely a cut above the rest. Finally, the titles which are in a regular black font constitute the rest of the films within the genre. I would be the first to admit that some of these may actually be worthy of being “ranked” more highly, but it is a ridiculously subjective matter. Bibliography Shakespeare on Silent Film Robert Hamilton Ball, Theatre Arts Books, 1968. (Reissued by Routledge, 2016.) Shakespeare and the Film Roger Manvell, Praeger, 1971. Shakespeare on Film Jack J. Jorgens, Indiana University Press, 1977. Shakespeare on Television: An Anthology of Essays and Reviews J.C. Bulman, H.R. Coursen, eds., UPNE, 1988. The BBC Shakespeare Plays: Making the Televised Canon Susan Willis, The University of North Carolina Press, 1991. Shakespeare on Screen: An International Filmography and Videography Kenneth S. Rothwell, Neil Schuman Pub., 1991. Still in Movement: Shakespeare on Screen Lorne M. Buchman, Oxford University Press, 1991. Shakespeare Observed: Studies in Performance on Stage and Screen Samuel Crowl, Ohio University Press, 1992. Shakespeare and the Moving Image: The Plays on Film and Television Anthony Davies & Stanley Wells, eds., Cambridge University Press, 1994.
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  • The Secret River.Pdf
    Andrew Bovell has written extensively for theatre, film, radio and television. His stage plays include Holy Day, winner of the Victorian and Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards and AWGIE for Best Play 2002; Who’s Afraid of the Working Class? (with Patricia Cornelius, Melissa Reeves, Christos Tsiolkas and Irine Vela), winner of the Queensland Premier’s Literary Award, Jill Blewitt Award and AWGIE for Best Play 1999; and Speaking in Tongues, winner of the AWGIE for Best Play 1997. Speaking in Tongues has been produced widely throughout Australia, Europe and America. Earlier plays include The Ballad of Lois Ryan, After Dinner, Ship of Fools, Shades of Blue, Distant Lights from Dark Places, Like Whiskey on the Breath of a Drunk You Love and Scenes from a Separation (with Hannie Rayson). Screenplays include Blessed (with Cornelius, Reeves and Tsiolkas; winner of Best Screenplay at the San Sebastian Film Festival), Edge of Darkness, The Book of Revelation, Head On, The Fisherman’s Wake, Strictly Ballroom (with Baz Lurhmann and Craig Pearce) and the multi-award winning Lantana. He recently completed the screen adaptation of John Le Carre’s novel A Most Wanted Man due for release in 2014. When the Rain Stops Falling, commissioned by Brink Productions, premiered at the 2008 Adelaide Festival of the Arts before touring to Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra and Alice Springs. A new production opened at Perth’s Black Swan Theatre in October 2011. The play has won Victorian and Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards for Best Play, Adelaide Critics Circle Individual Award, AWGIE for Best Stage Play 2009, Best New Australian Work at the Sydney Theatre Awards and the Victorian Green Room Award for Best New Play.
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  • Chloe Armstrong
    JOSH MCCONVILLE | Actor FILM Year Production / Character Director Company 2017 1% Stephen McCallum Head Gear Films Skink 2016 WAR MACHINE David Michôd Porchlight Films Payne 2015 JOE CINQUE'S CONSOLATION Sotiris Dounoukos Consolation Productions Chris 2014 DOWN UNDER Abe Forsythe Riot Films Gav 2013 THE INFINITE MAN Hugh Sullivan Infinite Man Productions P/L Dean Trilby 2012 THE TURNING “COMMISSION” David Wenham ArenaMedia Vic Lang TELEVISION Year Production/Character Director Company 2017 HOME & AWAY Various Seven Network Caleb 2015 CLEVERMAN Wayne Blair ABCTV Dickson 2013 THE KILLING FIELD Samantha Lang Seven Network Operations Jackson 2012 REDFERN NOW Various ABC TV/Blackfella Films Photographer Shanahan Management Pty Ltd Level 3 | Berman House | 91 Campbell Street | Surry Hills NSW 2010 PO Box 1509 | Darlinghurst NSW 1300 Australia | ABN 46 001 117 728 Telephone 61 2 8202 1800 | Facsimile 61 2 8202 1801 | [email protected] 2011 WILD BOYS Various Southern Star Productions No. 8 Ben 2009 UNDERBELLY II: Various Screentime A TALE OF TWO CITIES Hurley THEATRE Year Production/Character Director Company 2017 CLOUD 9 Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company Clive/Cathy 2016 A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company Bottom 2016 ALL MY SONS Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company George Deever 2016 HAY FEVER Imara Savage Sydney Theatre Company Sandy Tyrell 2016 ARCADIA Richard Cottrell Sydney Theatre Company Bernard Nightingale 2015 HAMLET Damien Ryan Bell Shakespeare Hamlet 2015 AFTER DINNER Imara Savage Sydney Theatre Company
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  • PETER CARROLL |Actor
    SHANAHAN PETER CARROLL |Actor THEATRE Year Production/Character Director Company 2019 LIFE OF GALILEO Eamon Flack Belvoir 7th Actor 2019 CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company Reverend Tooker 2019 MARY STUART Lee Lewis Sydney Theatre Company Shrewsbury 2018 AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE Anne-Louise Sarks Belvoir Morton Kiil 2018 THE RESISTIBLE RISE OF Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company ARTURO UI Dogsborough 2017 THREE SISTERS Kip Williams Sydney Theatre Company Phillip 2017 MARK COLVIN’S KIDNEY David Berthold Belvoir David, Bruce & Others 2016 TWELFTH NIGHT Eamon Flack Belvoir Malvolio 2016 KRAPP’S LAST TAPE Nescha Jelk State Theatre Company of (MONA FOMO tour) South Australia Krapp Shanahan Management Pty Ltd PO Box 1509 Darlinghurst NSW 1300 Australia ABN 46 001 117 728 Telephone 61 2 8202 1800 Facsimile 61 2 8202 1801 [email protected] SHANAHAN 2015 SEVENTEEN Anne-Louise Sarks Belvoir Tom 2015 KRAPP’S LAST TAPE Nescha Jelk State Theatre Company of Krapp South Australia 2014 CHRISTMAS CAROL Anne-Louise Sarks Belvoir Marley and Other 2014 OEDIPUS REX Adena Jacobs Belvoir Oedipus 2014 NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTIAN Matthew Lutton Malthouse Theatre Mr Hugo Sword 2012-13 CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG Roger Hodgman TML Enterprises Grandpa Potts 2012 OLD MAN Anthea Williams B Sharp Belvoir (Downstairs) Albert 2011 NO MAN’S LAND Michael Gow QTC/STC Spooner 2011 DOCTOR ZHIVAGO Des McAnuff Gordon Frost Organisation Alexander 2010 THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE Stuart Maunder Opera Australia Major-General Stanley 2010 KING LEAR Marion Potts Bell
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  • MEDIA KIT 2017 EMBARGOED UNTIL 4PM SUNDAY 28 AUGUST 2016 Melbourne 'S Home of Theatre
    MEDIA KIT 2017 EMBARGOED UNTIL 4PM SUNDAY 28 AUGUST 2016 MElBOURNE 'S hOME OF ThEATRE MELBOURNE THEATRE COMPANY Media Release 28 AUGUST 2016 MTC Season 2017 Melbourne Theatre Company Artistic Director Brett Sheehy ao today revealed MTC’s 2017 Season – a collection of works from around the world that celebrate the art of great, live storytelling. ‘Season 2017 is one of our most exciting yet,’ Brett Sheehy said. ‘The year ahead draws together an enviable assortment of artists to present stories from France, Britain, Ireland, America, India, and, of course, Australia for a season that will bring laughter, empathy, debate and intrigue to all our lives.’ ‘In a season that celebrates and showcases live storytelling at its best, we are especially thrilled that four outstanding new Australian plays will have world premiere productions on our stages,’ Mr Sheehy said. Melbourne Theatre Company’s 2017 Season features eleven mainstage productions, an extensive Education Program and touring education production, plus a range of industry-leading initiatives including MTC’s Women in Theatre Program, NEON NEXT, MTC CONNECT and Cybec Electric. The season opens in grand period style with Garson Kanin’s 1940s Broadway classic Born Yesterday – a screwball romance directed by MTC Associate Director Dean Byrant, starring Christie Whelan Browne and Joel Jackson. The incomparable Helen Morse and Julia Blake return to the stage alongside Ursula Mills making her MTC debut in John, the latest highly acclaimed work from Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Annie Baker, directed by MTC Associate Director Sarah Goodes. Judy Davis directs Brian Friel’s enduring work of art, Faith Healer – an extraordinary creation presented in four beautifully sculpted monologues – starring Colin Friels, Pip Miller and Alison Whyte.
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