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Jack Charles

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Jack Charles (born 5 September 1943) is an Australian aboriginal actor, musician, potter, elder and 'national treasure'.[1]

Jack Charles was taken from his mother, a Yorta Yorta woman named Blanche, at 10 months of age. He was raised at the Salvation Army's Box Hill Boys' Home in Melbourne, where he was the only indigenous child.[2]

Charles was involved in establishing indigenous theatre in Australia.[3] In 1971 he co-founded Nindethana ('place for a corroboree') at the Pram Factory in Melbourne, Australia's first indigenous theatre group. Their first hit play was called Jack Charles is Up and Fighting.[4] In 2010, Ilbijerri Theatre staged his powerful one-man show called Jack Charles v The Crown.[5]

In 1972 Charles auditioned for the role of an Australian indigenous character in a television show but was knocked back because they were "looking for an actor with blue eyes." The job infamously went to an actor of Sri Lankan descent.[6]

His film and television career includes the landmark Australian film ''The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith''[7] (1978), Bedevil (1993), Blackfellas (1993) and Tom White (2004), among others.[8]

Jack Charles was the subject of Amiel Courtin-Wilson's 2008 documentary Bastardy[9] which followed him for 7 years. The film's tagline described him as: 'Addict. Homosexual. Cat burglar. Actor. Aboriginal.' The film was in the official selection for Singapore, Melbourne, Sydney and Sheffield Doc/Fest film festivals.

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