Joan Stuart (actress)
Joan Stuart | |
---|---|
Nationality | Canadian |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1959-1981 |
Joan Stuart (6 February 1937- 30 October 1996[1]) was a Canadian actress, singer and dancer in television, film and theater.
Joan Stuart was an actress, known for (1978), Comedy Cafe (1970) and Just Ask, Inc. (1981).
Biography[]
Theater[]
Joan Stuart played in "Up Tempo' 59", an off-beat musical revue, at Café André, 2077 Victoria St., Montreal for more than 20 week. There was two shows nightly. , and Joan Stuart were among the top rank young actors in the cast.[2][3]
In the summer of 1965, Joan Stuart played with Howard Ryshpan in the play "The Tiger", written by Murray Schisgal, produced by for Piggery Playhouse Guild inc at "The Piggery-Summer Theater" in North Hatley, inaugurated on August 2, 1965.[4] This play will be performed on Oct. 21, 1965 at the Canadian Institute, at the Canadian Women's Circle.[5]
Television[]
- "A World of Music", 23 octobre 1960. Host: Wally Koster. Guess: Joan Stuart, Shirley Shaw and Doug Chamberlain.[6]
- In 1968, Stuart and Peter Cullen appeared as "Penelope" "Giles" in L'Anglaise, a recurring segment about a French-Canadian man with an English-Canadian wife, on the CBC Radio comedy series, Funny You Should Say That.
Filmography[]
- Kiss (Short), 1981
- Just Ask, Inc. (TV Series), acting as Lustra
- Les femmes de 30 ans, 1978, acting as aunt Alice
- Nic and Pic (TV Series), 1975, acting as Nic (English version, voice)
- Tiki Tiki, 1971 (voice)
- Zut!, 1970, (TV Series)
- Comedy Cafe, 1970, (TV Series)
- Comedy Crackers, 1970 (TV Series)
- Once Upon a Prime Time, 1966 (Short).[7]
Self credit[]
- Tee-Won Short, Episode #1, 1970 (Documentary short)
- Tee-Won Short, Episode #2, 1970 (Documentary short)
- Comedy Crackers (TV Series), 1970. Note: Episode dating from March 4, 1970.
References[]
- ^ Article "Joan Stuart best loved for doll skit", by Alan Hustak, November 1, 1996.
- ^ Article "Shows you shouldn't miss" - Montreal Repertory Theatre, Inc., February 1959.
- ^ Article "Current Cinema", by Harold Whitehead, January 1959.
- ^ Article "Piggery Playhouse story said one of a community", by Leonard Ryan (record wire editor), Sherbrooke daily record, August 2, 1965, p. 1.(in English)
- ^ Article "In Quebec today - Arts", Le Soleil, Quebec, Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1965, p. 40.(in French)
- ^ Horaire de CBMT Montréal - Canal 6, "La Semaine à Radio-Canada", 23 octobre 1960, p. 14.
- ^ IMDb Joan Stuart.
External links[]
- Joan Stuart at IMDb
- 1937 births
- 1996 deaths
- Canadian stage actresses
- Canadian television actresses
- Canadian voice actresses