Carol Burns

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carol Burns
Born
Carol Ann Burns

(1947-10-29)29 October 1947
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Died22 December 2015(2015-12-22) (aged 68)
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Occupation
  • Actress
  • theatre director
  • theatre founder (founding member of Queensland Theatre Company
Years active1967–2015
Spouse(s)Alan Lawrence (1979–2015, her death)

Carol Ann Burns (29 October 1947 – 22 December 2015) was an Australian actress, theatre director and patron of the arts. She worked extensively in theatre and television serials, as well as telemovies and mini-series in Australia and the United Kingdom. In Australia she was a founding member of the Queensland Theatre Company. Burns was an original cast member, as Franky Doyle, in the serial Prisoner during the first season in 1979 and although she only appeared in the first 19 episodes,[1] she became a major breakout and much loved character, and gained cult status as a fan favourite.[2][3]

Early life[]

Burns was born and raised in Brisbane, Queensland. Her mother Mary (née Langford) was a receptionist and her father William was a motor spare parts manager.[4] She attended Milton State Primary School where her initiation into the world of theatre began with speech and drama classes in 1958. Burns acted with Brisbane Arts Theatre and also Twelfth Night Theatre, where she was a student of theatre director, Joan Whalley, and also tutored within the junior drama workshops, in Brisbane.

Career[]

Television and film[]

Burns' major television role was her performance in the cult television program Prisoner, in which she played the tough but affable lesbian bikie character, Frieda "Franky" Doyle.[5] Although only appearing in the first 20 episodes, her character attained cult status, resulting in her winning a Logie Award for Best Lead Actress in a Series. Burns stated in a 2011 interview that she left the show due to very low pay and an increased workload as a result of the more rapid production of episodes. She also stated that it was her decision to be killed off as she did not want to be lured back. After Burns's departure from the series the producers released a telemovie titled The Franky Doyle Story which they compiled using footage from the episodes in which Burns had participated.

Burns, an experienced and versatile theatre actress, went to the UK and appeared in numerous West End theatre productions and had roles in TV series such as The Bill, Taggart and Heartbeat. Burns also appeared in films, particularly during the late 1970s and 1980s, including The Mango Tree (1977), Bad Blood (1981), Starstruck (1982) and Strikebound (1984)[4]

Theatre[]

Burns had acted exclusively in the theatre for ten years before film or television, based in Brisbane. In 2005, Burns performed in the Queensland Theatre Company's sell-out season of Edward Albee's production of The Goat, or Who is Sylvia?. As part of the 2007 season, she appeared in The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams.[6] She performed for La Boite Theatre. She was in a stage production of Elizabeth: Almost by Chance a Woman by Italian playwright Dario Fo. In 2015, Burns played, in what turned out to be her final performance, the lead role of Winnie in Samuel Beckett's Happy Days for Queensland Theatre Company.[4][7]

Burns directed the Queensland Theatre Company productions of The Road to Mecca (2002) and A Day in the Death of Joe Egg (2003), as well as her own adaptation of Picnic at Hanging Rock (2013) at Brisbane Arts Theatre.[4]

Personal life and death[]

Burns was married to Alan Lawrence, a British-born musician and composer, for 36 years. She died on 22 December 2015, after a brief cancer illness at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane at the age of 68.[5][8][9]

Awards, honours and nominations[]

Association Year Award Work/s Results
Logie Awards (Silver Logie) Best Lead Actress in a Series 1979 Prisoner (also known internationally as Prisoner: Cell Block H (USA and UK)and Caged Woman (Canada) Won
Australian Film Institute 1994 Best Actress in a Guest Role in a Television Drama Series Blue Heelers episode – "Deadly Fascination" Nominated
Australian Film Institute Best Actress in a Lead Role 1984 Strikebound Nominated
Australian Film Institute Best Actress in a Supporting Role 1977 The Mango Tree (1977) Nominated
Queensland Actors Equity Award Best Established Artist 2006 Honoured
Matilda Awards Gold Matilda 2015 (posthumously) Honoured
Actors' & Entertainers' Benevolent Fund - Alan Edwards Lifetime Achievement Award[10] 2003 Honoured

References[]

  1. ^ Lane, Richard (1991). Prisoner: Cell Block H. Thames Mandarin.
  2. ^ "Vale: Carol Burns".
  3. ^ Matthew Westwood. "Prisoner's Carol Burns loses cancer fight". The Australian.
  4. ^ a b c d Hayward, Anthony (28 December 2015). "Carol Burns obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  5. ^ a b Mitchell-Whittington, Amy (22 December 2015). "Prisoner actor Carol Burns, Queensland Theatre Company founder, dies at 68". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  6. ^ The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams – Queensland Theatre Company
  7. ^ "Australian Actress Carol Burns Passes Away at 68". Broadway World. 21 December 2015. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  8. ^ "Vale: Carol Burns" (PDF). Queensland Theatre Company. 22 December 2015. Retrieved 25 December 2015.
  9. ^ "Prisoner actor Carol Burns dies in Brisbane aged 68". ABC News. 22 December 2015. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  10. ^ "Awards | Actors' & Entertainers' Benevolent Fund of QLD Inc". Retrieved 8 April 2020.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""