Grant Tilly – a career on screen and stage
Posted on 29 March 2010
Credits: Direction and Interview - Ian Pryor. Camera and Editing - Alex Backhouse
Actor, acting teacher, and artist Grant Tilly has played cow cockies, assassins, missionaries, and German villains in funny hats. And that’s not even counting his long-running stage career, which has included a run of classic Kiwi plays, one of which became acclaimed movie Middle Age Spread.
In this ScreenTalk interview, Tilly talks about:
- how people sometimes still recognise him from 60s TV show Joe’s World, and the topics he was told never to mention on early series In View of the Circumstances
- acting in 70s mega production The Governor, and the challenges of competing on screen against his bad haircut
- being allowed to go solo by director John Reid while making two farmers and a dead Dad comedy Carry Me Back, for a memorable scene in which his character finally tells his father what he really thinks of him
- squaring off against Men in Black star Tommy Lee Jones for a fight scene in movie epic Savage Islands
- how his career as an actor, stage designer, and co-founder of Wellington’s Circa Theatre has intersected with the works of writer Roger Hall – including his acclaimed performance as a philandering headmaster in Middle Age Spread
- playing a repressed accountant who becomes obsessively interested in a masseuse in movie Skin Deep
- the challenges of portraying real life people on screen
- the similarities between war and movie-making
This video is available on YouTube to embed and distribute via a Creative Commons licence.
Tags
Interviews, 60s, acting, actors, Circa, Clare, film, headmaster, Henry Williams, Joe Musaphia, midlife crisis, Savage Islands, television, The Governor, villain, waiting
Post a Comment
Please keep your comment relevant to this blog article. Comments are moderated, and any unacceptable comments will not be published.