Wayne Blair is an Australian writer, actor, and director. He was on both sides of the camera in Redfern Now, and directed the feature film The Sapphires. He played a prominent role in the 2021–2024 drama series Total Control.
As Blair's father was a soldier, the family moved around. While Blair was still young, his father was posted to Woodside in South Australia. When he was a teenager, Blair's family were sent to Rockhampton, Queensland. In Rockhampton he excelled at cricket and rugby, then later became interested in acting and dancing at school.[2]
After a failed audition for NIDA in 1992, he eventually did a three-year course at the Queensland University of Technology in acting,[3] at their Academy of the Arts. While a student there in 1997, he said "I' ve played Chinese, Puerto Rican, English, and Russian people, but I haven't played an Aboriginal person yet and I'd love to".[4]
Career
Blair's first recorded on-screen appearance was in a 1997 Australian TV film called The Tower. The following year he appeared on All Saints and Wildside. He has also appeared in Water Rats and Fireflies. 1998 was also the year he was one of the first four film makers to be mentored under the Metro Screen Indigenous Mentor Scheme for which he made a short film called Fade 2 Black. Ten years later he was to become a mentor himself under the same scheme.[5]
Blair starred in the original stage production of Tony Briggs's play, The Sapphires in 2005.[6] This play was later turned into a filmscript to be directed by Blair.[citation needed]
In 2007 he starred as Othello for Bell Shakespeare, a show that toured Australia with stops at Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra as well as other cities. He also directed three episodes of Lockie Leonard with a further four in 2010.[citation needed]
In 2008 Blair directed all thirteen episodes of the Australian children's TV series Double Trouble, about twin Indigenous girls separated at birth. In 2009 he wrote an episode of the second season of The Circuit. 2010 saw Blair direct four episodes of the Australian-British children's supernatural comedy TV series, Dead Gorgeous. He directed British-Jamaican Debbie Tucker Green's play Dirty Butterfly and co-directed the biographical play, Namatjira, with Scott Rankin who also wrote the play, both plays at Sydney's Belvoir St Theatre.[7] He was also chosen in the same year as one of the stars of the Sydney Theatre Company's revival of Sam Shepard's True West, directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman.[8]
Blair was awarded the Bob Maza Fellowship for 2011 by Screen Australia to provide opportunities for career development.[9] 2012 was a big year which saw the making of his hit film, The Sapphires, which brought him recognition around the world with a very positive response at Cannes.[2] Later in the year he starred in three episodes of the ABC's TV drama series, Redfern Now and directed another of the episodes. To finish the year Blair was included in Variety Magazine's top ten directors to watch in 2013.[10]
In 2020, Blair was named in the cast for ABC's Aftertaste.[11]
In 2021, he was announced for the second season of ABC political drama Total Control (TV series) in the role of Paul Murphy and in 2023 Blair would join the filming for the third and final season. Blair also served as a director in the series directing 9 episodes.[12][13][14] Blair also appeared in Netflix's Irreverent.[15]
In 2023, he was a director on ABC's Bay of Fires and directed four episodes.[16]
In 2024, Blair was announced as part of the directing team for the ABC drama Plum.[17] Blair was announced as part of the directing team for the second season of Mystery Road: Origin.[18]
^For most of the information in this paragraph: "'In the Frame' Wayne Blair". ABC. 10 July 2011. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
^Myler, Carmen (12 October 1997 – 16 February 1998). "It's 'showtime' for acting graduates". INSIDE QUT: Queensland University of Technology Newspaper (170). Queensland University of Technology: 1. Two of Mr Stewart's fellow acting students, Wayne Blair and Rebecca Clarke, said they were realistic about their futures after graduation and were willing to take acting work in whatever form it came...
^Erin Free (1 June 2008). "Mentoring success". Film Ink. Retrieved 5 January 2013.