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Kath Leahy Kath Leahy i(A65492 works by)
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Kath Leahy has worked as a teacher, actor and casting director. She has published the practical guide Don't Screw Up That Screentest (1995).

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Lords and Larrikins : The Actor's Role in the Making of Australia Strawberry Hills : Currency House , 2009 Z1645312 2009 single work criticism 'This radical new account of the male performer in public life reveals for the first time his central importance to Australian society and character. From our first Hamlet, to Laurence Olivier's lordly post-war tour, the aspiring middle-classes turned to actors to each them public behaviour and political opinion. From the first moment in 1830 when little Barnett Levey was denied access to his own stage, class has been the divide between high art and low comedy. Imperial Shakespeare was the principal weapon in this war, drawing in patrons, politicians and critics, while in the vaudeville houses comedians like Roy Rene upheld the right to a working-class Australia. Then, in 1970, just as public funding fuelled again the rise of a high-art culture, a bevy of buffoons led a new assault to subvert it. Kath Leahy asks some penetrating questions about why the cultural cringe lasted so long, and why, even today, we still call for control of the public artist.' (From the publisher's website.)
2010 joint winner Australasian Association for Theatre, Drama and Performance Studies Rob Jordan Prize
Last amended 10 Nov 2009 16:45:25
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