Tracey Callander | |
|---|---|
| Occupation | Actress |
| Years active | 1983- |
| Notable work | |
| Partner | Simon Palomares |
Tracey Callander is an Australian actress. She had featured roles in the film Future Schlock[1] and the TV series Acropolis Now[2] and Possession.[3]
On stage she appeared in Shakers (Universal Theatre, 1987),[4] Dizzy Spells (The Last Laugh, 1987),[5] A Fault-Line (Seymour Centre, 1986),[6] Globos Shock (Kinselas, 1986),[7] and Spring Awakening (St Martins Youth Arts Centre, 1983).[8][9]
In 1997 she made the documentary Was That Really Me? based on her experiences of postnatal depression after the births of her and her husband Simon Palomares's two children.[10][11]
References
- ^ Spratt, Mark (July 1984), "Future Schlock", Cinema Papers, p. 181
- ^ Wilson, George (12 August 1990), "Tracey. Still serving up laughs", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Lee Lewes, Jacqueline (13 January 1985), "Showdown in the soapies set", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Thomson, David (6 November 1987), "Shaking cocktails, bouncing patter", The Age
- ^ Schembri, Jim (6 November 1987), "Music lets the jokes and illusions down", The Age
- ^ Barnes, Mick (24 August 1986), "Italian master's rare brain-teaser", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Evans, Bob (21 October 1986), "Globos back into dress-ups, nostalgia and Tom Jones", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Radic, Leonard (8 April 1983), "Demands met with strong heart", The Age
- ^ Spring Awakening, AusStage
- ^ Porter, Liz (8 June 1997), "Out of the blues", The Age
- ^ Loane, Sally (9 June 1997), "Out of the abyss", The Sydney Morning Herald
External links
- Tracey Callander at IMDb