Allan Trevor (1923 - 1969) was an Australian actor, writer and producer.
Early life
editHe worked on the land for nearly six years but changed careers when he realised he would not earn enough money to buy his own farm. He undertook various other jobs, including police cadet, shop assistant and salesman, before he began to study acting in Perth in 1941.
Career
editTrevor moved to Sydney in 1947 and became one of the leading radio actors in the city, appearing in more than 500 radio plays and serials. He won the Macquarie Acting Award for Best Actor.[1]
He finally concentrated on writing for television and became the line producer for the majority of Crawford's popular 1967 spy series Hunter, in which he also appeared occasionally as an actor.
He also launched the long-running police series Division 4.
Death
editTrevor died suddenly in Melbourne at the end of 1969, after the launch of Division 4.[2] At the time of his death, he was married to the award-winning television producer, Marie Trevor (born Brisbane, Queensland, 1922 - 7 June 2000), who stepped into his producing duties on Division 4 at the encouragement of Hector Crawford.[3]
Acting credits
editTelevision
edit- The Adventures of Long John Silver (1955)
- Armchair Theatre (1960)
- The Patriots (1962) as Governor Ralph Darling
- Tribunal (1963)
- Australian Playhouse - "Across the Bridge"[4]
- Homicide (1966–67)
- Hunter (1967–69)
- Division 4 (1969–70)
Film
edit- Getting Along with the Government (1966, TV film)
- Three in One (1957, anthology film) as Preacher
- Topaze (1966, TV film) as Castel-Benac
Stage
edit- The Break (1962) at Union Theatre, Sydney with Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust
Radio Plays
edit- The Explorers (1952) - Wills
- Black Lightning (1952) - Max Leader
Writer / Producer credits
edit- The Angry General (1965) - writer
- The Man Who Saw It (1966) - writer
- Slow Poison (1967) - writer[5]
- Contrabandits (1967) - writer
- Hunter (1967–69) - producer
- Division 4 (1969–70) -producer
References
edit- ^ "Actor Was Farm Boy". Sydney Morning Herald. 21 May 1962. p. 13.
- ^ "Farewell". Sydney Morning Herald. 11 November 1969. p. 6.
- ^ Bazzani, Rozzi (2015). Hector : the story of Hector Crawford and Crawford Productions. North Melbourne, Vic: Arcadia. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-925003-73-4. OCLC 930045883.
- ^ Vagg, Stephen (2021). "Forgotten Australian TV Plays: A Stay at Home and Across the Bridge". Filmink. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
- ^ "New series on 3". The Canberra Times. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 31 July 1967. p. 13. Retrieved 12 February 2020 – via Trove.
External links
edit- Allan Trevor at IMDb