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Edith Campion | |
---|---|
![]() in 1946 as "Mary Boyle" in "Juno and the Paycock" | |
Born | Beverley Georgette Hannah 13 December 1923 Wellington, New Zealand |
Died | 16 September 2007 83) Ōtaki, New Zealand | (aged
Occupation(s) | Actress, writer |
Spouse | |
Children | 3, including Jane Campion |
Relatives | Alice Englert (granddaughter) Sheilah Winn (cousin) [1] |
Edith Campion MBE (born Beverley Georgette Hannah; 13 December 1923 – 16 September 2007) was a New Zealand actor, writer, and a co-founder of the New Zealand Players theatre company. [2] [3]
Campion was the only child of George Alfred Hannah (1891—1931), the youngest child of Robert and Hannah Hannah [4] [5] [6] and his wife Jessie McLean Hannah (née Armstrong). [7] Robert Hannah founded the R. Hannah and Co. shoemaking business, owning shoe factories and a chain of shops throughout the country. [1]
Her father died when she was 8 and her mother 2 years later but her maternal grandmother did not die until 1944. Campion was educated at Queen Margaret College and Nga Tawa Diocesan School as well as receiving a private education from governesses. [2] In 1942 she attended Victoria University of Wellington. [2] In 1945 Campion married Richard. [8] She then travelled with him to London in 1948 to attend the Old Vic Theatre School, training as an actor. [9]
Campion founded the New Zealand Players Theatre Company in 1953 with her husband Richard, using some of her inheritance to finance the company. [10] [11] [12] She acted numerous leading roles in many productions put on by the company and by the 1950s was regarded as one of New Zealand's pre-eminent actresses. [2] In 1955 Campion took the lead role of Saint Joan in the play of the same name and garnered very favourable reviews. [13] This production was also notable as Douglas Lilburn composed the incidental music for it. [13] In 1959 Campion became a Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. [14]
In the late 1970s Campion began writing more, producing works of fiction and of poetry. [9] In 1977 she published A Place to Pass Through and Other Stories and in 1979 had her novella The Chain published in a co-publication called Tandem along with En Route, a novella by Frank Sargeson. [9]
She was divorced from Richard in 1987. [2] In 1990 Campion had a cameo role in her daughter Jane's movie An Angel at My Table . [2] Jane's 1993 film The Piano was also dedicated to her. [9] Campion died in September 2007. [2]
Dame Elizabeth Jane Campion is a New Zealand filmmaker. She is best known for writing and directing the critically acclaimed films The Piano (1993) and The Power of the Dog (2021), for which she has received two Academy Awards, two BAFTA Awards, and two Golden Globe Awards. Campion was appointed a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit (DNZM) in the 2016 New Year Honours, for services to film.
Patricia Frances Grace is a New Zealand writer of novels, short stories, and children's books. She began writing as a young adult, while working as a teacher. Her early short stories were published in magazines, leading to her becoming the first female Māori writer to publish a collection of short stories, Waiariki, in 1975. Her first novel, Mutuwhenua: The Moon Sleeps, followed in 1978.
Kerry Lauren Fox is a New Zealand actress. She came to prominence playing author Janet Frame in the movie An Angel at My Table directed by Jane Campion, which gained her a Best Actress Award from the New Zealand Film and Television Awards.
Philippa Campbell is a New Zealand film and television producer and the Literary Manager at the Auckland Theatre Company.
'The Arts Foundation of New Zealand Te Tumu Toi is a New Zealand arts organisation that supports artistic excellence and facilitates private philanthropy through raising funds for the arts and allocating it to New Zealand artists.
Martyn Sanderson was a New Zealand actor, director, producer, writer and poet.
The Hannah Playhouse is a theatre venue situated on the corner of Courtenay Place and Cambridge Terrace in central Wellington, New Zealand. The Hannah Playhouse was given by Sheilah Winn and named after her grandfather, Robert Hannah, a very successful businessman. It was carefully designed and built to house Downstage Theatre.
Joanna Ruth Randerson is a New Zealand writer, director and performer. She is the founder and artistic director of Barbarian Productions, a Wellington-based theatre production company.
The New Zealand Players were one of New Zealand's first professional theatre companies, active between 1952 and 1960. The company's director was Richard Campion, who with his wife and co-founder Edith Campion were former members of the New Zealand branch of the Unity Theatre people's theatre movement. Edith was a member of the Hannah family, and the company was funded by the Hannah Trust.
Richard Meckiff Campion was a New Zealand actor, theatre director, and producer. Campion and his wife Edith Campion co-founded New Zealand's first professional theatre company, the New Zealand Players.
Kate JasonSmith is a New Zealand actor, film producer, playwright, filmmaker, photographer, and businesswoman. Based in Wellington, she has studied and worked elsewhere, including Australia, Ireland, and the United Kingdom. A feminist, as a theatre and film practitioner, she has been most recognised throughout her career for her role in establishing and producing Hens' Teeth, a platform for dozens of Kiwi female actors, musicians, and comedians that became a staple of the New Zealand theatre and comedy scene between 1988 and 1996. Her short film, Xmas for Lou (1992), won the Best Drama – Television award in the New Zealand Film and Television Awards of 1994. From 2018 on, the one-woman show I'll Tell You This for Nothing: My Mother the War Hero has received national and international praise for both the play, which she wrote, and her performance. JasonSmith is a member of the New Zealand Society of Authors/Te Puni Kaituhi O Aotearoa.
Raymond Stanley Boyce was a British-New Zealand stage designer, costume designer and puppeteer and puppet designer. Boyce was part of the start professional theatre movement in New Zealand influencing the artistic landscape with his design knowledge. Boyce designed hundreds of theatre shows and was named an Arts Foundation of New Zealand Icon in 2007.
Sunny Amey is a theatre director and educator born in New Zealand. She worked at the National Theatre of England during its formative years alongside Laurence Olivier, as artistic director of Downstage Theatre in the 1970s and the director of New Zealand's national drama school Toi Whakaari in the late 1980s.
Margaret Greville Foster, best known by her pen name Greville Texidor, was an English fiction writer, notable for her work written while living in New Zealand from 1940 to 1948.
Catherine Patricia Downes is a New Zealand theatre director, actor, dramaturg and playwright. Of Māori descent, she affiliates to Ngāi Tahu. Downes wrote a one-woman play The Case of Katherine Mansfield, which she has performed more than 1000 times in six countries over twenty years. She has been the artistic director of the Court Theatre in Christchurch and the director of Downstage Theatre in Wellington. She lives on Waiheke Island and works as a freelance actor, director and playwright.
Silo Theatre is a theatre production company based in Auckland, New Zealand established in 1997 directed by Sophie Roberts.
Miriama McDowell is a New Zealand actor, director and playwright. She is a graduate of Toi Whakaari.
Sheilah Maureen Winn was a New Zealand arts patron and philanthropist. Having received a large inheritance, she used her money to support her love of the arts and particularly the theatre. Notably, she was the founding donor of the Hannah Playhouse in 1966, co-founder of the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship in 1970, and principal sponsor of the National SGCNZ Sheilah Winn Festivals of Shakespeare in Schools in 1992.
Hannahs is a New Zealand footwear retail company.
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