Difference between revisions of "Victor Melleney"
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== Biography == | == Biography == | ||
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He was brought out in 1958 to work for the [[National Theatre Organisation]] ([[NTO]]) from 1959-1962, as director and as actor. Later worked for the [[Performing Arts Councils]], [[Pieter Toerien]] and others. Like most professionals, he also directed for amateur companies, such as the [[Bloemfontein Repertory Society|Bloemfontein Reps]]. | He was brought out in 1958 to work for the [[National Theatre Organisation]] ([[NTO]]) from 1959-1962, as director and as actor. Later worked for the [[Performing Arts Councils]], [[Pieter Toerien]] and others. Like most professionals, he also directed for amateur companies, such as the [[Bloemfontein Repertory Society|Bloemfontein Reps]]. |
Revision as of 15:13, 19 December 2023
Victor Melleney (1922-2006) was a British born actor, director and production manager.
Contents
Biography
He was brought out in 1958 to work for the National Theatre Organisation (NTO) from 1959-1962, as director and as actor. Later worked for the Performing Arts Councils, Pieter Toerien and others. Like most professionals, he also directed for amateur companies, such as the Bloemfontein Reps.
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
He has performed in The Complaisant Lover (1960), There Goes the Bride, Rosebloom, Who Killed Agatha Christie (at the Academy Theatre), The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas ( as “Ed Earl Dodd” at His Majesty's Theatre), Hello, Dolly! (as “Horace van der Gelder”), My Fair Lady (as “Alfred Doolittle”).
He starred in Brian Brooke’s Any Wednesday with Helen Cotterill and Vivienne Drummond in 1973. In 1988 he appeared as Goldman in District Six – The Musical at the Market Theatre. He starred in Michael Pertwee’s Birds of Paradise at the Alhambra Theatre in 1992.
He produced and starred in The Cave Dwellers (NTO 1959).
He produced the musical Dingaka in 1961.
Produced The School for Wives, Seven against the Sun, Mornings at Seven (1959), An Oak Fell (at the Baxter Theatre), Send for Dolly (at the Academy Theatre).
Directing credits include John M. Synge’s The Playboy of the Western World for PACT at the Civic Theatre in 1963. He directed Lokval Vir 'n Man Alleen (Trap for a Lonely Man) for TRUK in 1963, The Caucasian Chalk Circle (PACT 1965) , an adaptation of War and Peace at the Alexander Theatre for PACT in 1966, The Mask and the Face (PACT, 1967) and The Skinflint, 1969, Another Sip of Jerepigo, 1990. He also played in The Villagers in 1977 for the SABC - TV
Awards, etc
Sources
SACD 1974, 1979/80, 1980/81, 1981/82.
Tucker, 1997.
Mornings at Seven (NTO) theatre programme, 1959.
Various entries in NELM catalogue.
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