Ned Manning

Ned Manning
Born 1950 (age 6566)
Occupation Actor, writer, teacher
Nationality Australian
Spouse Bronwyn Bancroft (1)
Marion Potts (2)
Children Jack, Ella, and two with Potts

Ned Manning is an Australian playwright, actor and teacher, whose film credits include the lead role in Dead End Drive-In (1986) and an appearance in the teen film Looking for Alibrandi (2000). Manning's television credits include Bodyline, The Shiralee, "Prisoner"", and Brides of Christ. His first major play was Us or Them, and its production by Griffin Theatre Company marked the company's transition to being staffed by professional actors. Other plays have included Milo, Kenny's Coming Home and Close to the Bone; in 2007 Manning played the lead in his own play Last One Standing at the Old Fitzroy theatre in Sydney. The plays have received mixed reviews, with Last One Standing in particular being criticised for its formulaic and predictable narrative. Manning has written for the Bell Shakespeare Company's Actors at Work program, a travelling community and schools theatrical education initiative.

At one time the husband of Indigenous Australian artist Bronwyn Bancroft, Manning has since remarried, to theatre director Marion Potts. His children include New South Wales Young Australian of the Year for 2010, Jack Manning Bancroft.

Life

Ned Manning was born in 1950[1] and grew up on a property in Coonabarabran, New South Wales.[2] He married Bronwyn Bancroft, an Indigenous Australian artist, with whom he had two children, including New South Wales Young Australian of the Year for 2010, Jack Manning Bancroft.[3][4][5] Manning remarried to theatre director Marion Potts, with whom he had two children. In 2010, they relocated from Sydney to Melbourne when she was appointed director of the Malthouse Theatre.[6]

Playwright and author

Manning's first play, Us or Them, was initially produced at the Childers Street Hall in Canberra on 1 November 1977. It was then re-written and performed in 1984 at the Stables Theatre for the Griffin Theatre Company,[7] where it marked a turning point in Griffin's history as the play's success led to the cast and creatives being paid full professional rates. The play then transferred to the Philip St Theatre and on to the Q Theatre in Penrith.[8]

Milo premiered at the Sydney Theatre Company's Wharf 2 Theatre in October 1984[9] before productions at the Q Theatre, Theatre Up North in Townsville, Theatre South in Wollongong and regional performances.[10][11] Milo has been recorded for Radio National, had numerous other productions, and also been published by Currency Press.[8] However a 2001 production in Sydney was panned by the reviewer, who described it as "formulaic and obvious, complete with clunky and unconvincing pat ending", and thought the play should be "put out to pasture".[12] The same year, The Australian's reviewer was more positive, considering the performance to be "passionate and funny. Seven years after it first appeared, it remains one of the best plays written about the bush-city divide".[13]

Manning's next play, Kenny's Coming Home (1991), was performed at the Q Theatre, Penrith and was subsequently recorded for radio on ABC Radio National.[11] The play is centred on a Rugby league footballer, Kenny, who gets caught up in a preselection battle between two of his family members.[14] Kenny's Coming Home included songs by Shane McNamara.[8]

Close to the Bone was written in collaboration with the Indigenous students at the EORA Centre for Performing and Visual Arts in Redfern, and first produced there in September 1991.[11][15] Luck of the Draw was produced by the Darwin Theatre Company in May 1999[16] and was the first play written by a non-Indigenous writer to be produced by Kooemba Jdarra theatre company in Brisbane.[8] Last One Standing was performed at Sydney theatre the Old Fitzroy in 2007. Manning played lead character Joe in the Old Fitzroy production; The Sydney Morning Herald's reviewer Bryce Hallett described his performance as "terrific", providing the play "with an emotional anchor", but considered the play itself to be predictable, lacking in depth and with "nothing revelatory on offer";[17] The Sun-Herald reviewer was of a similar view.[18]

Manning has created many works for young audiences. He has prepared scripts for ten works for The Bell Shakespeare Company's Actors at Work program, a travelling community and schools theatrical education initiative.[11][19] Other plays for young people have included Alice Dreaming, which is one of the Australian Script Centre's anthology of large cast plays.[11] In 2012 he contributed to a Federation Press anthology of monologues for drama students, No Nudity, Weapons or Naked Flames.[20] His play Romeo and Juliet Intensive was nominated for a 2011 AWGIE Award.[21]

In 2012, NewSouth Books published Manning's memoir of a life of school teaching, Playground Duty. Reviewed by the New South Wales Writers' Centre's Amanda Calwell, it was described as showing "the value that one person with drive, ambition and compassion can offer by applying themselves to teaching".[22]

Television, film and directing

Manning's film credits include the lead role in the 1986 Ozploitation film Dead End Drive-In. Based on a Peter Carey short story called "Crabs", Dead End Drive-In is a post-apocalyptic tale about a young man stranded in a small town's drive-in theater when the wheels are stolen off his car. He finds himself amongst a community of misfits trapped at the site, and seeks to break out. The film, directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith, received mixed reviews: Tim Kroenert writing for Eureka Street described it as "Mad Max-lite" and said that the film "is an example of how literality of translation can result in the sacrifice of the story’s essence. The film is fun on its own terms, but much of the nuance and irony that lend ‘Crabs’ its magic are simply lost".[23] Philippa Hawker writing for The Age said the film was "an energetic, inventively designed, cheerfully satirical and entertaining film",[24] and it is one of American film director Quentin Tarantino's favourites.[25] The film received only a short box-office season; Manning was critical of the distributor Greater Union and worked with the film's other actors to secure separate release in independent cinemas.[26] Manning's other film credits include an appearance in the teen film Looking for Alibrandi.[11] He has also made a short film, Love Bites.[11] Manning's television credits include Bodyline, The Shiralee and Brides of Christ.[27]

In 1989 Manning directed the Belvoir St Theatre production of a play, Black Cockatoos, about the relationship between a white woman and an Aboriginal man. The script (not by Manning) was criticised by reviewer Angela Bennie, who nevertheless described Manning's direction as delicate and perceptive in places, if also naive and self-conscious.[28]

References

Notes

  1. "Catalogue record: Kingaroy / Martin Buzacott. Milo / Ned Manning". National Library of Australia. 1996. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  2. Humphries, Glen (25 May 2001). "Rice milks Milo role". Illawarra Mercury. pp. Applause, 39.
  3. Bruce-Lockhart, Anna (7 March 2008). "Spotlight on Australia's past". The Guardian Weekly.
  4. "Award recipients: Jack Manning Bancroft". NSW Young Australian of the Year 2010. National Australia Day Council. 18 November 2009. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
  5. Galvin, Nick (3 August 2009). "A persuasive push all the way to university". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 18 June 2010.
  6. Usher, Robin (6 February 2010). "Potts wins Malthouse post". The Age. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  7. "Catalogue entry: Us or Them". AustLit. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  8. 1 2 3 4 "Ned Manning". Playwrights. RGM Artist Group. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  9. "Catalogue entry: Milo". AustLit. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  10. Manning, Ned (8 May 2001). "'Milo' coming our way". Braidwood Times. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Ned Manning". AustralianPlays.org. Australian Script Centre, PlayWriting Australia, Currency Press and Playlab Press. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  12. Dunne, Stephen (15 June 2001). "Farming's doped-up morality tale best put out to pasture (review)". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 18.
  13. McCallum, John (8 June 2001). "Wild night a regional gem (review)". The Australian. p. 10.
  14. Lewis, Daniel (5 August 2006). "A new ball game". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  15. "Catalogue entry: Close to the Bone". AustLit. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  16. "Catalogue entry: Luck of the Draw". AustLit. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  17. Hallett, Bryce (12 April 2007). "Last One Standing (review)". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  18. Blake, Jason (15 April 2007). "Memory lost on this crop (review)". The Sun-Herald.
  19. "Actors at Work 2010". Bell Shakespeare Company. 2009. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  20. Abela, Donna; Vanessa Bates; Hilary Bell; Noëlle Janaczewska; Verity Laughton; Ned Manning; Catherine Zimdahl (2012). "No Nudity, Weapons or Naked Flames". Federation Press. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  21. "2011 AWGIE Award Nominations". Australian Writers Guild. 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  22. Calwell, Amanda. "Playground Duty by Ned Manning: 366 Days of Writing". New South Wales Writers' Centre. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  23. Kroenert, Tim (23 December 2008). "Crabs, cars and Peter Carey (DVD review)". Eureka Street. 18 (25): 35–36.
  24. Hawker, Philippa (15 January 2009). "DVDs (review)". The Age. pp. Green Guide, 18.
  25. Maddox, Garry (22 October 2003). "The master's schlock therapy can revive forgotten classics". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  26. Hawker, Philippa, 'Dead-End Drive-In', in Murray p. 189.
  27. "Author Profile: Ned Manning". Currency Press. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  28. Bennie, Angela (9 August 1989). "Cockatoos a little bushed". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 16.

Bibliography

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