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Brian James (actor)

Brian James (5 July 1918 – 2 November 2009) was an Australian radio, stage, television and film actor.

Brian James was born in Melbourne, the son of the Bishop of St. Arnaud and started his career as a teacher at Ivanhoe Grammar School for four years. He joined the Royal Australian Navy in 1933. After being demobilised five years later, he decided to pursue a career as an actor, attending Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London, and making his stage debut in 1947. He featured in the 1952 J.C. Williamson production of Seagulls Over Sorrento, and also appeared in the 1960 TV production of the play.

According to screenwriter Richard Lane "in that first decade of television it seemed that Brian James was everywhere."

James appeared in several ABC drama plays in the late 1950s, including Duke In Darkness and Killer in Close-Up: The Wallace Case in 1957, Gaslight, The Small Victory, The Public Prosecutor, and The Governess (all 1958), Crime Passionel, Treason, and The House By The Stable (1959).

He had the lead role as Dr Geoffrey Thompson in the early medical drama Emergency (1959). He also appeared in commercial dramas Shadow of a Pale Horse and Seagulls Over Sorrento in 1960, along with ABC dramas Heart Attack, Eye of the Night, and Mine Own Executioner, and was awarded the TV Week Logie award for "Best Actor" for the plum role of Governor William Bligh in the 1960 ABC drama serial Stormy Petrel (a role which he reprised in a 1974 episode of the anthology series Behind The Legend).

Other ABC drama play appearances included The Ides Of March (1961), The Physicists, Luther, and The Wind From The Icy Country (all 1964).

In 1962, he took the lead role of Jonah Locke in the ATN-7 drama series Jonah.

In 1964, James appeared as a presenter on This Is It!, the opening night program for ATV-0 in Melbourne.

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