Rachel Ward
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Rachel Ward | |||||||
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Rachel Ward in 2007 |
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Born | Rachel Claire Ward 12 September 1957 |
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Occupation | actress, producer | ||||||
Years active | 1979–present | ||||||
Spouse(s) | Bryan Brown 1983- | ||||||
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Rachel Claire Ward AM September 12, 1957) is an English actress (and more recently, a director) who has primarily pursued her career in Australia.
Ward was born at Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, granddaughter of William Ward, 3rd Earl of Dudley and of the cricketer Giles Baring. She is also the great-granddaughter of William Ward, 2nd Earl of Dudley, Governor-General of Australia 1908–11, and sister of environmental campaigner and former actress Tracy Louise Ward. She attended the Byam Shaw School of Art in London before leaving at 16 to become a top fashion model. She briefly dated David Kennedy, son of Robert F Kennedy. In 1983 she was voted one of the ten most beautiful women in the United States.
She became well known when she starred opposite Richard Chamberlain as the lead role portraying Meggie Cleary in the television mini-series The Thorn Birds. She also starred in the films Sharky's Machine with Burt Reynolds, Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid with Steve Martin and Against All Odds with Jeff Bridges.
Ward then disappeared from pictures for three years to study acting. She reappeared in 1987 playing opposite her husband, Bryan Brown (whom she met on the set of The Thorn Birds), in The Good Wife. Married since 1983, they have three children: Rose (Rosie), Matilda (who has followed her parents into the acting profession), and Joe.
In 2001, Ward won the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Short Fiction Film for The Big House.[1] In 2003, a portrait of Rachel Ward by artist Jan Williamson won the Packing Room award at the Archibald Prize competition. In 2005, Ward was made a Member of the Order of Australia "for service to raising awareness of social justice through lobbying, mentoring and advocacy for the rights of disadvantaged and at-risk young people, and support for the Australian film and television industry."[2]
The Australian Film Commission provides grants to stimulate film production in Australia. The funding is required to be repaid from first cash flow after release. Bryan Brown and Rachel Ward have publicly criticised the NSW Government for failing to help finance their next project. But documents show the couple's New Town Films has yet to pay back Australian Film Commission grants for their 2003 short film Martha's New Coat, which received at least $18,250 in 2002. The 50-minute production was directed by Ward, produced by Brown and their daughter Matilda made her film debut in it. [3]
In 2007, Ward returned to television, headlining the new ABC Drama Rain Shadow. She played a country veterinarian named Kate McDonald, a free spirit who confronts personal and professional obstacles in a rural, drought-affected town.
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[edit] Filmography
[edit] Actress
- Christmas Lilies of the Field (1979) TV Movie
- Dynasty, in episode "The Dinner Party" (1981)
- Night School (1981)
- Sharky's Machine (1981)
- Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982)
- The Thorn Birds (1983) TV miniseries
- The Final Terror (1983)
- Against All Odds (1984)
- Fortress (1986)
- Hotel Colonial (1987)
- The Good Wife (1987)
- How to Get Ahead in Advertising (1989)
- Shadow of the Cobra (1989) TV Movie
- After Dark, My Sweet (1990)
- And the Sea Will Tell (1991) TV Movie
- Black Magic (1992) TV Movie
- Christopher Columbus: The Discovery (1992)
- Double Jeopardy (1992) TV Movie
- Wide Sargasso Sea (1993)
- Double Obsession (1994)
- The Ascent (1994)
- Twisted Tales, in episode "Third Party" (1996)
- My Stepson, My Lover (1997) TV Movie
- Seasons of Love (1999) TV Movie
- On the Beach (2000) TV Movie
- And Never Let Her Go (2001) TV Movie
- Bobbie's Girl (2002) TV Movie
- Johnson County War (2002) TV Movie
- Blackbeard (2006) TV miniseries
- Monarch Cove (2006) TV Movie
- Rain Shadow (2007) TV series
[edit] Director
- The Big House (2000)
- Blindman's Bluff (2000)
- Martha's New Coat (2003)
- Two Twisted, in episode "Heart Attack" (2006)
[edit] Writer
- The Big House (2000)
- Blindman's Bluff (2000)
[edit] Self
- The 54th Annual Academy Awards (1982) TV
- The 62nd Annual Academy Awards (1990) TV
- In the Name of Love (1994) TV Series
- The Big Schmooze, in episode "Episode #1.4" (2000)
- What's Going On?, in episode "Indigenous Children in Australia" (????)
- Enough Rope with Andrew Denton, in episode "Episode #1.26" (2003)
- Uccelli di rovo: vecchi amici, nuove storie (The Thorn Birds: Old Friends New Stories) (2003) VHS
- Retrosexual: The 80's (2004) TV miniseries (Archive Footage)
- La tele de tu vida, in episode "Episode #1.6" (2007) (Archive Footage)
[edit] References
- ^ Australian Film Institute official site, retrieved March 15, 2008.
- ^ It's an Honour website. Australian Government. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Aussie film flops cost taxpayers $90m. News Ltd. Retrieved on 2008-04-14.