Alan Cassell

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Alan Cassell
Victoria, Australia
OccupationActor

Alan Louis Cassell (16 February 1932 – 30 August 2017) was an

English Australian actor, on stage, film and television.[1]

Personal life

Alan Cassell was born in

Rubery Lunatic Asylum after she suffered brain damage following a visit to a dentist.[2] It is believed the dentist had left the gas on for too long which caused the brain damage.[2]

Cassell worked as a motor trimmer in an Austin Motor Company car factory in Birmingham during the 1950s. He also performed national service, although a senior officer convinced him not to volunteer for service in the Korean War.[2]

After meeting a woman called Rosina, they married and in 1957 emigrated to Perth in Western Australia as "Ten Pound Poms", where he continued his work as a motor trimmer before moving to the sales department.[2]

From 1983, Cassell lived in

Victoria.[2]

He was a prominent member of the Save Albert Park movement, after it was first proposed the Australian Grand Prix would relocate to the area where Cassell would walk his dogs.[2]

In his later years, Cassell was diagnosed with dementia and lived in an aged care facility at Kyneton where he died on 30 August 2017 at the age of 85.[1][3]

After Cassell's death, Australian film director Bruce Beresford placed an obituary in The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald in which he described Cassell as "one of the most gifted actors I have had the privilege to work with - and one of the most charming."[2]

Career

He commenced his acting career in Western Australia when he and his friend signed up for acting classes hosted by the Patch Theatre Company, which began his career as a stage actor.[2] His first role was a doctor who said two words, but he was soon playing the lead in subsequent productions.[2]

Cassell became heavily involved with promoting theatre in Perth and helped establish a theatre called “The Hole in the Wall".

The Playhouse Theatre, he began casting Cassell and the two became good friends.[2]

He won "Best Actor of the Year" for his role in A Day in the Death of Joe Egg. He later worked for the Sydney Theatre Company and the Melbourne Theatre Company. He was in the original cast of Away, which toured to New York.

Cassell also played Boss Finley in Sweet Bird of Youth with Lauren Bacall for the Sydney Theatre Company, accepting the role after the actor originally cast in it, Frank Wilson, suffered a heart attack.[1]

Cassell was one of the actors who worked in Beresford's early Australian films after moving to the eastern states to audition for Beresford and Hector Crawford.[2]

His film credits included:

Cassell's television roles included:

Cassell was recognised at the 1979 Sammy Awards for his role in Cathy's Child.[5]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1975 Plugg Herman Cavanagh Feature film
1975 The Olive Tree Feature film
1978 Money Movers Sammy Ross Feature film
1979 Cathy's Child Dick Wordley Feature film
1980 Harlequin Mr. Porter Feature film
1980 Breaker Morant Lord Kitchener Feature film
1980 The Club Gerry Cooper Feature film
1981 Puberty Blues Mr. Vickers Feature film
1982
The Highest Honor
Lt. Ted Carse Feature film
1982 Squizzy Taylor Det. Brophy Feature film
1982 The Dark Room Ray Sangster Feature film
1983 The Settlement Lohan Feature film
1986 The Big Hurt Blake Feature film
1987 Belinda (aka Midnight Dancer) Belinda's father Feature film
2001 Halifax f.p. TV series, Season 6, episode 2: “Playing God”
2003 The Honourable Wally Norman Willy Norman Feature film
2004 Strange Bedfellows Stan Rogers Feature film (final film role)

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1973 The Drifter TV series
1981 Falcon Island Jack Brady TV series
1982 Taurus Rising Ben Drysdale TV series
1984
Special Squad
Det. Insp. Don Anderson TV series
The Flying Doctors TV series
1989 The Power, The Passion Dr Andrew Edmonds TV series
Blue Heelers TV series
1998-2000 SeaChange Harold Fitzwalter TV series, Seasons 1-3
Stingers TV series
MDA TV series

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Knox, David (5 September 2017). "Vale: Alan Cassell". TV Tonight. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Jones, Irene (12 October 2017). "'£10 pom' became star of stage and screen". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  3. ^ The Age, 1 September 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2017
  4. ^ Flynn, Greg; Adams, Clay (1 September 1982). "Meet the stars of 'Taurus Rising'". The Australian Women's Weekly. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  5. ^ "Hines, Walsh awarded gold Sammys". The Canberra Times. 18 October 1979. Retrieved 21 July 2022.

External links