Difference between revisions of "Jimmy Mentis"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 6: Line 6:
 
James Demetrius (Jimmy) Mentis was one of eight children born to Theodore Mentis and his wife, Anthippe Fardouli, who had come from Greece to South Africa.  The couple settled in Johannesburg, where Theodore ran a general dealership in Kerk Street.  The first known indication that his son was interested in the theatre is a credit as assistant stage manager for ''[[The Quaker Girl]]'', performed by the Johannesburg High School Old Girls’ Club in 1939.  From 1945 onwards he appeared on the stage for various theatrical groups, including the [[Playfair Players]], the [[Johannesburg Repertory Players]], [[JODS]], the [[Company of Three]] and especially the [[Children’s Theatre]], with producer [[Anthony Farmer]] frequently casting him in his productions.  He also made some infrequent film appearances.  His last known stage appearance dates from 1966 and he died unexpectedly on 25 December 1970.
 
James Demetrius (Jimmy) Mentis was one of eight children born to Theodore Mentis and his wife, Anthippe Fardouli, who had come from Greece to South Africa.  The couple settled in Johannesburg, where Theodore ran a general dealership in Kerk Street.  The first known indication that his son was interested in the theatre is a credit as assistant stage manager for ''[[The Quaker Girl]]'', performed by the Johannesburg High School Old Girls’ Club in 1939.  From 1945 onwards he appeared on the stage for various theatrical groups, including the [[Playfair Players]], the [[Johannesburg Repertory Players]], [[JODS]], the [[Company of Three]] and especially the [[Children’s Theatre]], with producer [[Anthony Farmer]] frequently casting him in his productions.  He also made some infrequent film appearances.  His last known stage appearance dates from 1966 and he died unexpectedly on 25 December 1970.
  
 +
== Theatre Credits (Actor) ==
 +
 +
== Theatre Credits (Producer) ==
 +
 +
== Film & Television Credits ==
 +
 +
1958 – ''A Christmas Carol'' (short) (Director: Robert Hartford-Davis),
 +
1964 – ''Diamonds are Dangerous'' / ''Diamanten sind gefährlich'' (TV series) (Director: Hermann Kugelstadt),
 +
1966 – ''Der Rivonia-Prozess'' (2 parts) (Director: Jürgen Goslar),
 +
1971 – ''Diamantendetektiv Dick Donald'' (Episode: ''Der stumme Zeuge'') (television) (Director: Jürgen Goslar).
  
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
As performer he appeared in the revue ''[[Sextet]]'' by [[Anthony Farmer]], [[Ralph Trewhela]] and [[Adam Leslie]] (1957) in a Johannesburg [[Children's Theatre]] production of ''[[The Three Wishes]]'' (1954), as the "Bishop of Beauvais" in the [[NTO]] production of ''[[Saint Joan]]'', in ''[[Ever Since Eve]]'' (1958), ''[[The Fall]]'' (1960) and ''[[Treasure Island]]'' (1964).
 
  
He directed Dodie Smith’s ''[[I Capture the Castle]]'' at the [[YMCA]] in 1955, with designs by [[Anthony Farmer]] and starring [[Shirley Firth]] as well as a [[Children's Theatre]] production of ''[[The Circus Adventure]]''.
 
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 17:31, 29 January 2024

Jimmy Mentis (1915?-1970) was a stage actor and occasional producer.

Biography

James Demetrius (Jimmy) Mentis was one of eight children born to Theodore Mentis and his wife, Anthippe Fardouli, who had come from Greece to South Africa. The couple settled in Johannesburg, where Theodore ran a general dealership in Kerk Street. The first known indication that his son was interested in the theatre is a credit as assistant stage manager for The Quaker Girl, performed by the Johannesburg High School Old Girls’ Club in 1939. From 1945 onwards he appeared on the stage for various theatrical groups, including the Playfair Players, the Johannesburg Repertory Players, JODS, the Company of Three and especially the Children’s Theatre, with producer Anthony Farmer frequently casting him in his productions. He also made some infrequent film appearances. His last known stage appearance dates from 1966 and he died unexpectedly on 25 December 1970.

Theatre Credits (Actor)

Theatre Credits (Producer)

Film & Television Credits

1958 – A Christmas Carol (short) (Director: Robert Hartford-Davis), 1964 – Diamonds are Dangerous / Diamanten sind gefährlich (TV series) (Director: Hermann Kugelstadt), 1966 – Der Rivonia-Prozess (2 parts) (Director: Jürgen Goslar), 1971 – Diamantendetektiv Dick Donald (Episode: Der stumme Zeuge) (television) (Director: Jürgen Goslar).


Sources

Tucker, 1997. pp 79, 111.

Photographs held by NELM in various locations.

Return to

Return to ESAT Personalities M

Return to South African Theatre Personalities

Return to Main Page