John Hargreaves (actor) explained

John Hargreaves
Birth Name:John William Hargreaves
Birth Date:1945 11, df=y
Birth Place:Murwillumbah, New South Wales, Australia
Death Place:Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Occupation:Actor

John William Hargreaves (28 November 1945 – 8 January 1996) was an Australian actor. He won three Australian Film Institute Awards and was nominated six times.[1]

Background

Hargreaves was educated at Marist College Kogarah.[2] He taught in Mendooran, New South Wales, but moved to Sydney in the 1960s. He graduated from the National Institute of Dramatic Art in 1970.[3]

Hargreaves was mainly a film actor, but is well-remembered by Australian audiences for the title role in the TV drama Young Ramsay in the 1970s and worked in a number of stage productions. Hargreaves had roles in The Removalists, Don's Party, The Odd Angry Shot, and Malcolm. He played the love interest of Nicole Kidman's character in Emerald City.

In 1994 he became the first actor to receive the Byron Kennedy Award.

Personal life and death

Although he had exclusively heterosexual relationships while young, by the early 1980s Hargreaves acknowledged and embraced his homosexuality. Between 1984 and 1988, he partnered with French actor Vincent Perrot.[4]

Hargreaves contracted HIV about 1994 and died of AIDS-related complications in a hospice in Sydney on 8 January 1996.[5] Pallbearers at Hargreaves' funeral included actors Sam Neill and Bryan Brown.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1966They're a Weird MobYouth reading paper at train station (uncredited) Feature film
1974EssingtonTV movie
1975Last RitesBennettTV movie
1975Sunday Too Far AwayUncreditedFeature film
1975The RemovalistsConstable Neville RossFeature film
1976Mad Dog MorganBaylisFeature film
1976Don's PartyDon HendersonFeature film
1976Death CheatersSteve HallFeature film
1978A Good Thing GoingPhil HarrisTV movie
Logie Award for Best Actor in a miniseries/telemovie
1978Long WeekendPeterFeature film
Nominated – Sitges Film Festival award for Best Actor
1978Little Boy LostJacko WallsFeature film
1979The Odd Angry ShotBungFeature film
1979Banana BenderTom HardyTV movie
1981The Killing of Angel StreetElliottFeature film
1981HoodwinkMartin StangFeature film
Nominated – Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1982Beyond Reasonable DoubtArthur Allan ThomasFeature film
1983Careful, He Might Hear YouLoganFeature film
Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
1984The Great Gold SwindleRay MickelbergTV movie
1984My First WifeJohnFeature film
Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1986Double ScullsSam LarkinFeature film
1986ComradesConvictAnimated film
1986Sky PiratesLt. HarrisFeature film
1986MalcolmFrank BakerFeature film
Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
1987The Place at the CoastNeil McAdamFeature film
1987Cry FreedomBruce HaighFeature film (based on Australian diplomat Bruce Haigh)
1988Boundaries of the HeartAndy FordFeature film
1988Emerald CityColin RogersFeature film
Nominated – Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1990Sweet RevengeJim HarrisFeature film
1993BlackfellasDetective MaxwellFeature film
1994No WorriesClive RyanFilm
1994Country LifeJack DickensFilm
Byron Kennedy Award
Nominated – Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1995Hotel SorrentoDick BennettFeature film
1996 Lust and RevengeGallery SleazeFeature film

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1969Pastures of the Blue CraneTV series
1972Over ThereRobert KirbyTV series
1972Behind the LegendTom RobertsTV series
1972–74Matlock PoliceDoug Thompson / Peter Smith / Roy JonesTV series, 3 episodes: "Everybody Else Has Everything", "The Last Laugh", "A Weekends Entertainment"
1973Division 4Jackson/JohnTV series, 2 episodes: "Wasteground", "A Wild Wild Rose"
1973SpyforceCaptain/NavigatorTV series, 2 episodes: "The Trail", "The Journey"
1974And the Big Men FlyAchilles JonesTV series
1974–76HomicideBilly Day / David Taylor / Kevin Watson / Steve BrennanTV series, 4 episodes: "Cowboy Billy Day", "You Hear about the Slasher", "The Egotist", "On The Run"
1975Silent NumberTerry LucasTV series, 1 episode: "His Own Private War"
1976Power Without GloryBill EvansTV miniseries
1976BlueyEric YatesTV series, 1 episode: "One Man Band"
1977–80Young RamsayPeter RamsayTV series
1982Last Breakfast in Paradise
1983Scales of JusticeConstable BorlandTV miniseries
1983The DismissalDr. Jim CairnsTV miniseries
1983Carson's LawTV series
1988The HeroesTed CarseTV miniseries
1988Opération MozartHarringtonTV short
1988The Alien YearsWilliamTV miniseries
1991Marie Curie, une femme honourableRutherfordTV miniseries
1992The Leaving of LiverpoolHarryTV miniseries
1992Rome RoméoDavid Waldberg
1993G.P.Dr. Oliver LoydTV series, 1 episode: "Infected"
1995Blue MurderChester Porter QCTV miniseries

Below the line credits

Other credits

Theatre

YearTitleRoleLocation
1967 The Choephori (The Libation Bearers) Chorus Member UNSW
1968 Sam, The Highest Jumper of Them All, or the London Comedy New Theatre, Sydney
1968 Postmark Zero
1968 America Hurrah New Theatre, Sydney
1969 The Night of the Iguana Hank / Herr Fahrenkopf NIDA Theatre
1969 In the Gloaming, Oh My Darling (student graduation play) Mr. Birdsong Jane Street Theatre
1969 Look Back in Anger Jimmy Porter Jane Street Theatre
1970 Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Old Tote Theatre
1970 A Midsummer Night's Dream Old Tote Theatre
1970 Blood Wedding Old Tote Theatre
1970 Biggles Biggles Nimrod Street Theatre
1971 As You Like It Parade Theatre
1971 The Man of Mode Parade Theatre
1971 A Month in the Country Parade Theatre, Canberra Theatre
1971 The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui Parade Theatre, Canberra Theatre
1971 The National Health or Nurse Norton's Affair
1971 Lasseter
1971 The Au Pair Man
1972 Jugglers Three Union Hall, Adelaide
1973 Crete and Sergeant Pepper Union Hall, Adelaide
1973 Measure for Measure Union Hall, Adelaide
1975 The Ride Across Lake Constance Nimrod Theatre
1975 The Importance of Being Earnest Sydney Opera House
1977 The Training Run Constable Patrick Reilly Bondi Pavilion
1980 The Sunny South Matt Morley Sydney Opera House
1980 Bent Max Playhouse Adelaide
1981 Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Brick Sydney Opera House with Sydney Theatre Company
1983 Present Laughter Theatre Royal, Sydney
1990 Love Letters Andrew Makepeace Ladd III Sydney Opera House
[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Gail McCrea, "Captain of the Clouds", Cinema Papers, March 1986 p38-41
  2. http://www.mck.nsw.edu.au/index.php?ID=289 Marist College Kogarah- Famous Ex-students
  3. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituaryjohn-hargreaves-1317741.html OBITUARY:John Hargreaves
  4. Web site: Healey. Ken. Hargreaves, John William (1945–1996). Australian Dictionary of Biography. 2022. 28 November 2022.
  5. News: O'Hanlon. Paul. John Hargreaves: tribute to an Aussie cinema pioneer and legend. Australian Times. 8 January 2016. 28 November 2022.
  6. Web site: AusStage .