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Esben Storm

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Esben Storm
Born(1950-05-26)26 May 1950
Støvring, Denmark
Died28 March 2011(2011-03-28) (aged 60)
Occupations
  • Actor
  • screenwriter
  • producer
  • director
  • voice artist
  • songwriter
Years active1972–2008
Spouses
  • Pamela Barnetta
  • Lisa Meagher

Esben Storm (26 May 1950 – 28 March 2011) was a Danish Australian actor, screenwriter, television producer, television director, voice artist and songwriter.

Early life

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Storm came to Australia with parents Laurits and Ane in 1958, after Laurits lost the family farm to lawyers. After settling in Melbourne, his father worked as a builder's labourer and built a darkroom, where Esben learned photographic processing, composition and lighting.

Career

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Storm was well known for his work with the Australian Children's Television Foundation, headed by Patricia Edgar, where he worked for 15 years. The company sold programs to 92 countries, and Storm was involved in writing, acting, editing, and directing numerous programs, including Round the Twist.[1] He worked to adapt John Marsden's Tomorrow series but lost the rights to the film.

Film making

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Storm started making films at 18 with his then partner Haydn Keenan. His early work was mostly serious in nature, including a 1983 documentary about the Hilton Bombing in Sydney called With Prejudice. He wrote and directed 27A (1974), In Search of Anna (1978) (with film stills and publicity shots by Carol Jerrems, who was then his girlfriend),[2] Deadly (1991), and Subterano (2003). He directed Devil’s Hill (1988), the Tasmanian film in the Touch the Sun series of bicentennial telemovies. In 2007, he directed the SBS comedy series Kick.[3]

Storm also worked on several television series such as Round the Twist, The Genie from Down Under (as scriptwriter and director), Sky Trackers (as script consultant), Li'l Elvis Jones and the Truckstoppers (as the show's creator, scriptwriter and dialogue director), Blue Heelers (as a director), Crash Zone, and Winners (for which he directed the episode "The Other Facts of Life").

Acting

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In 1976, Storm acted in Hanging About, a film by Carol Jerrems, who was then his girlfriend and living with him in Willoughby. He appeared in Room to Move and in two episodes of Winners. He played Pat in Phoenix and Colin in an episode of Blue Heelers.

Feature film roles included The Coca-Cola Kid, Wrong World (both 1985) and Young Einstein (1988).

Storm’s last acting role was in the medical drama series All Saints.[3]

Death

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Storm died, aged 60, on 28 March 2011.[4]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Type
1969 Doors Short film
1972 In His Prime Short film
1972 Stephanie Short film
1972 A Motion Picture Short film
1976 Hanging About: A Short Film by Carol Jerrems Short film
1981 Making Weekend of Summer Last Out of Work Actior Short film
1992 Monkey Grip Record Producer Feature film
1982 Going Down Michael Feature film
1982 Last Breakfast in Paradise Short film
1983 Birthin' Hips
1984 Stanley Menswear Attendant Feature film
1985 Wrong World Lawrence Feature film
1985 The Coca-Cola Kid Country Hotel Manager Feature film
1985 I Live with Me Dad Blindman Feature film
1986 A Single Life Paul TV movie
1987 Les Patterson Saves the World Russian Scientist Feature film
1987 Pandemonium E.B. De Woolf / Husband Feature film
1987 The Riddle of the Stinson Meissner TV movie
1988 Hard Knuckle Vince TV movie
1988 Young Einstein Wilbur Wright Feature film
1991 Deadly Reporter Feature film
1993 Terrormisu: A Night of Just Desserts
1993 Rusty & the Bathtub Banana
1997 Good Guys Bad Guys: Only the Young Die Good Jerry TV movie

Television

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Year Title Role Type
1983 With Prejudice TV documentary
1984 Special Squad Cox TV series, episode 31: "Brothers"
1985 Winners Leo George / Tom TV series, 2 episodes: "The Other Facts of Life", "Room to Move"
1985 More Winners Waiter TV series, episode: "The Big Wish"
1986 The Fast Lane Lester TV series, season 2, episode 8: "All the World's Going Through a Bit of a Stage"
1986 Alice to Nowhere Raymond 'Frog' Gardiner Miniseries, 2 episodes
1988 Rafferty's Rules Norm Angstrom TV series, season 4, episode 17: "Mum's the Word"
1989–2000 Round the Twist Mr Snapper TV series, 36 episodes
1992 Phoenix Pat TV series, 2 episodes
1994 Law of the Land Peter Bozavich TV series, season 3, episode 2: "Death Before Dying"
1995 Blue Heelers Colin Roper TV series, season 2, episode 6: "Breaking the Cycle"
1995 Snowy River: The McGregor Saga Frobisher TV series, season 3, episode 15: "In Duty Bound"
2002 Don’t Blame the Koalas First AD TV miniseries, season 1, episode 19: "A Star is Born"
2007 Kick Jeff Abbott TV miniseries, episode 2: "You Can't Stop the Music"
2007 All Saints Laszlo Shucs TV series, season 11, episode 28: "Echoes"

As director / writer / producer

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Film

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Year Title Role Type
1969 Doors Director Short film
1972 In His Prime Director Short film
1972 Gentle Strangers Production assistant Short film
1973 Flashpoint Production assistant Short film
1973 A Motion Picture Director Short film
1973 Floating This Time Editor Short film
1973 Avengers of the Reef Production manager Feature film
1974 27A Writer / director / editor Feature film
1974 A Handful of Dust Unspecified assistant Short film
1975 Grace Crowley Director Short film
1978 In Search of Anna Writer / director / producer Feature film
1982 With Prejudice Director Feature film
1984 Stanley Writer / director Feature film
1988 Touch the Sun: Devil’s Hill Director TV movie
1990 The Crossing Story consultant Feature film
1991 Deadly Screenplay / director Feature film
1992 de Vil's tas Mania (aka Three Cornered Island) Script advisor Feature film
2003 Subterano Writer / director Feature film
2004 The Tasty Bust Reunion Writer / producer Documentary film
2006 The Bridge at Midnight Trembles Writer / co-director / editor / co-producer Documentary film
2012 Aspects of a Life: Working with Indigenous Australians Editor Video documentary

Television

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Year Title Role Type
1985; 1990 Winners Director TV series, 2 episodes: '"The Other Facts of Life", "The Big Wish"
1989 Round the Twist Script consultant TV series, season 1, 13 episodes
1989; 2000 Round the Twist Director TV series, seasons 1–3, 18 episodes
1992; 2000–01 Round the Twist Writer / screenplay / storylines TV series, seasons 2–4, 31 episodes
1995 Sky Trackers Script consultant TV series, 26 episodes
1995 Blue Heelers Director TV series, season 2, episode 6: "Breaking the Cycle"
1996 The Genie from Down Under Director TV series, season 1, 6 episodes
1996; 1998 The Genie from Down Under Writer TV series, seasons 1–2, 15 episodes
1998 Li'l Elvis and the Truckstoppers Creator / scriptwriter / dialogue director Animated TV series, season 1, episode 1: "Caught in a Trap"
1999 Crash Zone Director TV series, 4 episodes
2001 The Lost World Director TV series, season 3, episode 4: "True Spirit"
2007 Kick Creator TV series, season 1, episode 7: "And the Singer Is..."
2007 Kick Director / producer TV series, 13 episodes

Unmade films

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  • Angel Gear (mid-1970s)
  • Bondi Blue (early 1980s) – Reg Grundy withdrew financing just before filming was to start[5]
  • Dirty Barry (1980s)[5]
  • Doctor Flatus (1994)

Theatre

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Year Title Role Type
1994 Anaheim Magic Playwright Lion Theatre, Adelaide, Malthouse Theatre, Melbourne with Magpie Theatre Company

[6]

Awards and nominations

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Year Nominated work Award Category Result
1979 In Search of Anna Australian Film Institute Awards Best Screenplay Won[7]
1979 In Search of Anna Australian Film Institute Awards Best Film Nominated
1979 In Search of Anna Australian Film Institute Awards Australian Film Institute Award for Best Director Nominated
1991 Deadly Mystfest Best Film Nominated
1991 Winners: The Big Wish Australian Film Institute Awards Best Achievement in Direction in a TV Drama Nominated
1993 Round the Twist Australian Film Institute Awards Best Screenplay in a TV Drama Nominated
1999 Crash Zone (episode 1) Australian Film Institute Awards Best Direction in a TV Drama Nominated

References

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  1. ^ Esben Storm, 1950 - 2011., The Sydney Morning Herald, 18 April 2011.
  2. ^ Cover, July 1977, Cinema papers, Global Village Cinema Publications, 1977
  3. ^ a b Finney, Sarah: Vale Esben Storm (1950 – 2011) Archived 14 April 2013 at archive.today, Australian Film Institute, 29 March 2011.
  4. ^ Industry mourns Esben Storm Archived 1 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Encore, 29 March 2011.
  5. ^ a b "Interview with Esben Storm", Signis, 22 August 1995 Archived 3 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed 21 November 2012.
  6. ^ https://ausstage.edu.au/pages/contributor/252269
  7. ^ AFI Award Winners Feature Categories 1958-2009 Archived 7 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Australian Film Institute.
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