Shane Bourne Explained

Shane Bourne
Birth Name:Shane Jerome Bourne
Birth Date:1949 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Years Active:1975–present

Shane Jerome Bourne (born 24 November 1949 in Melbourne, Victoria) is an Australian stand-up comedian, actor, musician, and television host.

Biography

Early years

Shane Jerome Bourne was born on 24 November 1949 in Melbourne.[1] He was raised by his mother Moreen "Pixie" (Freeman, 1915–2000), a former model, with his younger brother Dannie. Their father Stan Bourne, who was a musician and entertainer, had left the family home when Bourne was seven.

1970s

Shane Bourne co-founded an Australian pop, rock band Bandicoot in early 1976 with Mick Fettes (formerly of the band Madder Lake) both on lead vocals.[2] [3] The group's songs were co-written by Bourne and Fettes.[3] Fellow musicians were his brother Dannie Bourne on keyboards or piano (from Pantha), Ross Davis on guitar, Kerry McKenna on guitar (from Madder Lake) and Gary Young on drums (ex-Daddy Cool, Hot Dog).

Bandicoot released a self-titled album in 1976 via Rainbird/Tempo, with a top-100 single "Living off the Radio" issued in March 1976. According to Australian musicologist Ian McFarlane, Bandicoot "mixed good-time rock'n'roll, blues, country and pop but failed to chart." Bandicoot toured for a year with Bourne and Fettes joined by Bruno De Stanislo on bass guitar, Mick Elliot on guitar, Peter Reed on drums and Tony Vikaris on guitar. They disbanded in May 1977.

1980s–1999

Bourne was a well-known comedic face throughout the 1980s and 1990s, with an acting role on the Australian version of the British sitcom, Are You Being Served? (in 1980 and 1981). He had regular appearances on the variety program Hey Hey It's Saturday (1988–1994) in various sketches, but mainly appeared on the Great Aussie Joke segment. He starred in the short-lived sitcom Bingles in 1992 and 1993. In 1996, Bourne hosted a revived Blankety Blanks, which lasted only two seasons.[4]

He also had dramatic roles; he was in 3 episodes of the drama series Prisoner in the early 1980s as 3 different guest roles,[4] and had a guest role in The Flying Doctors in 1995.

2000–present

Bourne made a change to dramatic acting and has been critically acclaimed. After a two-episode guest appearance on Blue Heelers in 2000, he took the lead role of lawyer 'Happy' Henderson (starring alongside Kerry Armstrong) in the ABC TV legal-drama series MDA.[5] The show ended after its third season in September 2005. This show won him 2 awards. He also played a minor role in the film Kokoda, an Australia WWII film about the Kokoda Track in which he played as the battalion's doctor.[6]

Bourne hosted the comedy television series Thank God You're Here from 2006 to 2009. When the show was revived in 2023, he was succeeded by Celia Pacquola. In 2006, he hosted How the Hell Did We Get Here?, a series that aired on ABC TV.[7]

Bourne began acting in the Channel Seven drama series, City Homicide on 27 August 2007.[8] He appeared on the show until its axing after season 5, in 2011.

Bourne participated in Who Do You Think You Are? in 2010. The following year, he hosted the 2011 Logie Awards.[9] In 2012, Bourne appeared in the short-lived drama Tricky Business, that aired on Channel Nine. He also starred in the telemovie The Great Mint Swindle. In early 2014, he hosted the AACTA Awards on Channel Ten.

In June 2015, Bourne played the role of Evan Pettyman, a minor character in The Dressmaker. The same year, he also joined the fifteenth season of Dancing with the Stars as the new co-host alongside Edwina Bartholomew, replacing Daniel MacPherson.[10]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
2006KokodaThe DoctorFeature film
2012The Great Mint SwindleDon HancockTV movie
2015The DressmakerEvan PettymanFeature film
2016Comedy Showroom: BleakJohn O'BrienTV movie
2019Ride Like a GirlTrevor SmartFeature film

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1980s Prisoner 3 guest roles
1980–81 Are You Being Served? Guest role
1985Trapp, Winkle and Box
1988-94 Hey Hey It's Saturday Sketch actor Great Aussie Joke segment & more
1991The Flying DoctorsWalter1 episode
1992–93BinglesBarry23 episodes
1996Blankety Blanks Host2 seasons
1996Cody: The BurnoutGrahamTV movie
2000Blue HeelersBryce McLeod2 episodes
2002–05MDABill 'Happy' Henderson56 episodes
2006–09Thank God You're HereHost41 episodes
2006–11City HomicideStanley Wolfe84 episodes
20112011 Logie AwardsHostTV special
2012Tricky BusinessJim Christie13 episodes
2014AACTA AwardsHostTV special
2015Dancing with the StarsCo-hostTV series, season 15
2022FiskHoward3 episodes

Personal life

Bourne has a daughter, Ruby Louise Bourne (born 20 November 1990).

Awards

At the AFI Awards, in 2003[11] and 2005,[12] Bourne won the 'Best Actor in a Television Drama' award for his role in MDA, and was nominated for the same award in 2002.[13]

At the 2003 Logies, he was nominated for the 'Most Outstanding Actor' award for his role in MDA.[14]

Discography

Studio albums

List of albums! Title! Album details
The Great Aussie Joke
(with Maurie Fields)
  • Released: 1988
  • Format: LP
  • Label: Hammard (HAM 186)

Notes and References

  1. Season 3 Episode 4: Shane Bourne . . . 19 December 2010 . n.b.: broadcast in Australia.
  2. Book: McFarlane . Ian . Ian McFarlane . . Encyclopedia entry for 'Bandicoot' . http://web.archive.org/web/20040615134407/www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=72 . http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=72 . 1999 . . . 15 June 2004 . 1-86508-072-1 . dead .
  3. News: 50's Style Music, but with a 'New' Sound . . Konedobu, Port Moresby, PNG . 16 July 1976 . 26 May 2024 . 29 . .
  4. News: The Bourne identity . Melbourne . The Age . 10 July 2003.
  5. News: Breakthrough treatment . Melbourne . The Age . 23 June 2005.
  6. Web site: Shane Bourne. IMDb.
  7. Web site: How the Hell Did We Get Here?. IMDb. 9 December 2006.
  8. https://www.heraldsun.com.au/archive/news/aussie-tv-passion-returns/news-story/6cdc9b4082e882e95e3f786e6860d597 Herald Sun
  9. Web site: Shane Bourne to host 2011 Logie Awards . . 28 March 2011 . 26 October 2020.
  10. Web site: Comedian Shane Bourne to co-host Channel 7's Dancing with the Stars . . 7 June 2015 . 26 October 2020.
  11. Web site: Winners & Nominees.
  12. Web site: Winners & Nominees.
  13. Web site: Winners & Nominees.
  14. Web site: Shane Bourne.