Lynette_Curran

Lynette Curran

Lynette Curran

Australian actress


Lynette Curran is an Australian actress known for many roles in Australian television series and films, including the soap opera Bellbird, and the films Country Town (1971) and Bliss (1985).

Quick Facts Born, Occupation ...

Career

Theatre

She started acting in the theatre in 1964. Theatre work includes The Country Wife, Rookery Nook, Richard II, Just Between Ourselves, and Ashes for the Melbourne Theatre Company. She also played in Steaming for the Seymour Centre in Sydney.[1]

Film and television

Curran was a cast member of soap opera Bellbird when it started in 1967. She left the series permanently in 1974; at the time she left she was the program's last remaining original cast member.[2]

Curran acted in the film version of the serial Country Town (1971). She made several other film appearances in the 1970s, with roles in sex comedy Alvin Purple (1973), and in dramas I'm Here, Darlings! (1975), Caddie (1976). Late 1970s television appearances include soap opera Number 96 (in 1976), and police procedurals Bluey and Cop Shop. Curran was a recurring cast member of soap opera The Restless Years (1977–1981), playing the scheming Jean Stafford. She won a Sammy Award for her role in Australian Broadcasting Corporation series Spring and Fall.[1]

She co-starred with Barry Otto in the acclaimed 1985 film adaptation of Peter Carey's award-winning novel Bliss.[citation needed]

Other roles include feature films Heatwave (1982), The Delinquents (1989), The Boys (1998), Japanese Story (2003), Somersault (2004), These Final Hours (2013), A Few Less Men (2017) and Brothers' Nest (2018).[citation needed]

For her appearance in Somersault she won the 2004 AACTA award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role.[3]

On television she played Brenda Jackson in the Love My Way, and acted in Underbelly: The Golden Mile and Cleverman. She was in Wentworth as Vera Bennett's elderly, terminally-ill mother (2015).[citation needed]

Curran appears in Season 2 of Aftertaste (2022).[4]

Filmography

Film

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Television

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Theatre

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[7]

Awards and nominations

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Personal life

Curran was married when she was 19, but the marriage was short-lived. She has had two substantial relationships since then, but bore no children. She lives alone in Sydney. A sexual assault and incest survivor, Curran is estranged from her family.

Curran has Indigenous Australian heritage, as she discovered two of her great-grandmothers were Aboriginal.

She dabbles as a medium, which she got into after foreseeing the death of a friend in a car accident. She first had premonitions as a child. She offers readings at Sydney markets, using tarot cards, numerology and astrology.[9]

Curran is often mistaken for good friend and fellow Australian actress Jacki Weaver, whom she has previously worked with, most notably in the 2008 Ensemble Theatre production of Derrida In Love.[10]


References

  1. Atterton, Margot. (Ed.) The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Australian Showbiz, Sunshine Books, 1984. ISBN 0-86777-057-0 p 54
  2. "1974 Cast Exodus". Bellbird. Aussie Soap Archive. May 2000. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
  3. "The Great Fire | Stage Whispers". www.stagewhispers.com.au. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  4. "I'm With Her | Stage Whispers". www.stagewhispers.com.au. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  5. "AusStage". ausstage.edu.au. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  6. "A blonde's bombshells". amp.smh.com.au. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  7. "Mistaken identities". Star Observer. 20 April 2008. Retrieved 14 February 2024.

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