Jude Kuring

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Jude Kuring
Born
Judith Kuring

OccupationActress
Years active1968–95; 2003-2017
AwardsNominated, AFI Award Best Actress in a Supporting Role, for Maybe This Time (1980)

Judith Kuring is an Australian actress who appeared in theatre, film, and television during the late 1970s and early 80s. She remains best known for her stint as the recurring character of petty criminal Noeline Bourke in the soap opera Prisoner in 1979 until 1980.

Contents

Early life and education

Judith Kuring, later known as Jude, was born in Windsor, New South Wales.[ citation needed ]

Career

Stage

Kuring started her acting career in theatre in 1968. She joined the Australian Performing Group in Melbourne in the early 1970s, performing in a number of plays, variety shows and other stage productions.[ citation needed ] Along with Helen Garner and four other women, she devised and performed in the 1972 seminal performance at the Pram Factory, Betty Can Jump , which influenced feminist theatre and thought across Australia for the rest of the decade. [1] [2]

in 1981, alongside Chris Westwood, Kuring formed a women's group as a subgroup of APG, they had been discussing the lack of roles for women in local theatre, relegated to the "hooker with a heart" or mother, and began organising members at the Nimrod Theatre, they were given a 110.000 grant from Limited Life Project" which they utilised for play readings and a series of workshops and included a seminar on women, comedy and music.[ citation needed ]

Screen

Although making her first appearance on the police drama Homicide in 1971, Kuring would not begin television acting for another four years until being cast in a minor role in the 1975 television movie They Don't Clap Losers . During the next few years, she was seen on the television series Alvin Purple as well as playing various characters on comedy shows, including Wollongong the Brave .[ citation needed ]

In 1977, Kuring made her film debut in The Singer and the Dancer as Mrs Herbert, the nagging daughter of Mrs Bilson (Ruth Cracknell). [3] Later that year, she appeared in her breakout role as Grace in the cult film Journey Among Women . [ citation needed ]

She had supporting roles in Newsfront and The Journalist . [4] [5]

She was subsequently cast as Noeline Bourke in the soap opera Prisoner . [6]

Noeline was largely portrayed as a "bogan" thief and the head of a small family of petty thieves, Bourke was introduced to the series as an inmate emerging to fight Monica Ferguson (Lesley Baker) for position of "top dog" while Bea Smith (Val Lehman) is recovering in hospital. One of the subplots during the first and second seasons of the series focused on her criminal family, and in one episode, her dimwitted brother Col is killed by police during a hostage situation. Her character was released shortly after, however she was again caught breaking into a warehouse with her daughter Leanne and returned to Wentworth where she served another brief stint. [7]

Taking time off from the series, Kuring appeared in the 1980 film Maybe This Time for which she was nominated for Best Actress in a Supporting Role by the Australian Film Institute. [8]

Kuring reappeared on the series, her character being reintroduced shortly after the death of her daughter Leanne, who had been killed during a protest at the prison. After being accepted into the prison's work release program, she is coerced to help one of the employees, Kay White (Sandy Gore), by using her family to steal fabric from the factory. She is set up by White however and, with the work release canceled, she is transferred to Barnhurst (another prison) for her own protection. [7] [9]

After guest appearing on Waterloo Station in 1983, Kuring subsequently moved away from acting.[ citation needed ]

After a long tenure away from acting, Kuring once more returned to her former career in 2013 to play a prominent role in the movie Prisoner Queen, which centred on an obsessed fan of the Prisoner television series. [6]

In 1995, Jude featured in the pilot of an LGBTQI+ sitcom called Buck House, playing the lead role of Phyllis Buck. Originally filmed before a live studio audience at the Australian Film, Television & Radio School, Buck House underwent considerable rewrites following its initial popularity.[ citation needed ] A new 8-episode series was created for streaming on the internet in 1997. [10]

In 2013, she appeared in film The House Cleaner and in 2017 7 from Etheria.[ citation needed ]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1975 The Firm Man ConservationistFeature film
1975 They Don't Clap Losers TV movie
1976 Summer of Secrets Shop AssistantFeature film
1977 The Singer and the Dancer Mrs. HerbertFeature film
1977 Journey Among Women GraceFeature film
1978 Newsfront Geoff's WifeFeature film
1979 Temperament Unsuited Mr. RedmondShort film
1979 The Journalist KateFilm
1989 Maybe This Time MeredithFeature film
2003Prisoner Queen: Mindless Music and Mirror BallsMumFeature Film
2013The House CleanerDame Judith
20177 from EtheriaAgnesSegment: "Little Lamb"

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1971 Matlock Police ReporterTV series
1971/72 Homicide Sister/Claudia JonesTV series
1972 Division 4 Nurse/Miss WestTV series
1975 Wollongong the Brave 3 rolesTV miniseries
1976 Alvin Purple ArleneTV series
1977The Of ShowVarious charactersTV series
1979 The Garry McDonald Show Various charactersTV series
1978-80 Prisoner Noeline BurkeTV series
1983 Waterloo Station TV series
1995Buck HousePhyllis BuckTV series
2023Celebrity House CleanerDame JudithTV series

Theatre

YearTitleRoleNotes
1973 Dimboola: The Stage Play Mavis McAdam, Aunt of the GroomStage play

References

  1. "Betty jumps high". State Library of New South Wales . Retrieved 28 January 2025.
  2. Kenny, Kath (29 September 2022), "Friday essay: 'with men I feel like a very sharp, glittering blade' – when 5 liberated women spoke the truth", The Conversation (website) , The Conversation, doi:10.64628/aa.3cnvpsp4m, archived from the original on 3 October 2025, retrieved 5 November 2025
  3. Reade, Eric. History and Heartburn: The Saga of Australian Film, 1896–1978. Rutherford, New Jersey: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1979. (pg. 251); ISBN   0-8386-3082-0
  4. Ingleton, Suzanne (2006). "Australian Theatre History. The Australian Performing Group at the Pram Factory". PramFactory.com.
  5. Milne, Geoffrey. Theatre Australia (un)limited: Australian Theatre Since the 1950s. Amsterdam: Rodopi B.V., 2004 (pg. 281); ISBN   90-420-0930-6
  6. 1 2 "ACMI tributes Jude Kuring". 12 January 2009. if.com.au. 12 January 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
  7. 1 2 "PCBH Characters: Noeline Bourke (Jude Kuring)". wwwentworth.co.uk. 3 March 2001. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  8. "The woes of Women in Theatre". The Sydney Morning Herald. 16 September 1980. p. 16. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
  9. Watson, Sophie. Playing the State: Australian Feminist Interventions. London: Verso, 1990. (pg. 219); ISBN   0-86091-970-6
  10. "Buck House". aussiegaysitcom. Retrieved 5 November 2025.