Brendon Lunney is an Australian actor[1] and producer.[2]
Brendon Lunney | |
---|---|
Born | ~1949[1] |
Occupation | Actor |
Lunney's featured screen roles include Michael in No Roses for Michael in 1970,[3] Commissioner Edmund Fitzalan in Rush in 1974,[4] Joey Emmett in Dead Men Running in 1971,[1] Harry Byrne in Lucky Colour Blue in 1975.[5] Ross in Do I Have to Kill My Child? in 1976[6] and Mark Adams in Carrots in 1979[7]
Lunney was a regular presenter on Target[4] and Switched On Set.[8]
Lunney was a member of the Old Tote Theatre Company, appearing for them in As You Like It (1971), The Man of Mode(1971) and A Month in the Country (Parade Theatre, 1971).[9]
References
edit- ^ a b c Shelley, Gary (15 November 1971), "Brendon Lunney — he's a farmer at heart", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Oliver, Robin (13 May 1991), "Against all odds", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Marshall, Valda (30 August 1970), "The box at its best", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ a b "Lunney sets a fierce pace", The Sydney Morning Herald, 2 September 1974
- ^ "Horses, and the twist of fate", The Sydney Morning Herald, 28 July 1975
- ^ Plummer, Dale (28 March 1971), "Baby bashers: stark reality", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Shelley, Gary (2 July 1979), "The star is a carrot", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ "Switched on Marty", The Age, 13 April 1973
- ^ "A tough grind", The Sydney Morning Herald, 28 March 1971
External links
edit- Brendon Lunney at IMDb
- Biographical cuttings on Brendon Lunney, actor and farmer, containing one or more cuttings from newspapers or journals at the National Library of Australia