|
|
|||
|
He's been a drag queen. He's been a blind photographer. He's been a sci-fi psycho, a lawyer and a talking dog. He's appeared in shoestring budget short films and multi-million dollar Hollywood extravaganzas. It seems that everything that is thrown at Hugo Weaving ends up coagulating to create the image of a man whose artistic experimentation has no bounds.
In many ways, Hugo Weaving's disparate filmography could be compared to that of some of America's finest actors, including Johnny Depp and Robert Duvall, both of whom fail to be categorised into generic stereotypes. Certainly, Hugo's ambitious approach to his public self-reflection could be seen as a reflection of the Australian film industry's constant desire to veer away from the codes and conventions established in mainstream Hollywood cinema. In any case, Hugo has proven time and time again that he can deliver convincing, multi-dimensional character portrayals in a plethora of situations. Mr Weaving was trained at Australia's National Institute of Dramatic Arts (NIDA - the school that has also produced the likes of Mel Gibson and Baz Luhrmann). Though his career advanced slowly during the 1980s, Mr Weaving revealed early in life that he was never so narrow-minded as to baulk at the opportunity to play a challenging character. Hugo dabbled in both the dramatic and comic spheres in his early performances, his virtuosity in which led to his catching the eye of upcoming Post New Wave star Jocelyn Moorehouse, who subsequently cast Hugo in the role of Martin the cynical blind photographer in Proof (1991). The film, and Hugo's portrayal, earned acclaim from the Australian Film Institute, highlighting the actor as one of Australia's hidden treasures. His critically-acclaimed performance led to roles in the Yahoo Serious comedy Reckless Kelly (1993) and two Stephen Elliott films, Frauds (1993) and the worldwide box-office success Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994). Mr Weaving moved on to provide the voice of Rex, the dog from Babe (1995), as well as starring in the commercially unsuccessful but critically-acclaimed True Love and Chaos (1996). Go To Page: 1 2
The copyright of the article In Focus: Hugo Weaving in Australian Cinema is owned by . Permission to republish In Focus: Hugo Weaving in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
For a complete listing of article comments, questions, and other discussions related to Joshua Smith's Australian Cinema topic, please visit the Discussions page. |
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||