Interview with Lyn Collingwood
Wednesday 6 February 2002, 10:40-11:10am
1 L: I think that the Colleen that came in 1989, I think it was in 1989 that
I was first here, she was a more of a pantomine character than she is now and
a lot of the work was with Lance and Martin. I did have a lot of fun then I
don't think I laugh on set quite so much now. We used to sometimes get an attack
of the giggles and go to another take.
I think my role then was more as the sort of mother of Lance. I think that has
remained to a certain extent that now her function in the show is more of a
gossip to pass on the information to the audience as much as anything else.
When a new storyline comes in very often Colleen will be the one to burst through
the doors of the Dinner and says "oh no, oh gosh someone has just had an
accident". There is a lot of people going to the hospital as you know all
the time.
So she is the one, I think and then when a character is not supposed to know
something, if Colleen is within earshot of someone, she is off and the one that
tells- blabbermouth aspect of her character is more important now.
And I think also, well of course Leah was not in it in the early days. The relationship
with the older woman in Leah is quite important.
What I like about Colleen is that she is a very sort of bigotist sort of character
in many ways and she will make up her mind very quickly about many things and
after she is right.
In the case of when Ada's character first came in- Colleen was going on about
foreigners and Greeks and all this sort of stuff and I think she is the sort
of who as a blanket thing will dismiss a whole lot of people.
She has also being recently being saying "once a criminal, always a criminal",
that was once in jail. But in the end she says "what a hero, he is".
She's sort of in a one to one thing, she is often sympathetic to people, that
she will very often dismiss a whole block of people as a group and I think that's
really true to life, I think very often people are racist, or bigots. But when
they actually meet an individual they reassess everything. They do behave differently
one on one that they do with a whole group.
I think also Colleen is there for the human and I like the characters she has
a long relationship with, like Alf, because she has been in and out. Some fans
say "when is Colleen going to get together with Alf. (laughs).
We're sort of fairly intolerant of each other in particular----- he and Fisher.
She will often do things that I think Fisher or someone would actually protest
about.
I think that everyone understands that there is no point in really arguing with
Colleen. I think she's there for laughs. 2. S: What was your first acting role?
L: I started acting when I was in University I was with - there was a group
of us who were quite reknown in Australia. Now I don't know how reknown they
might have been in Britain,
John Bell who has his own Shakesphere Co. in Australia. Richard Ward(?) who
died who ran the Sydney Theatre Co. for a long time. We did a lot of undergraduate
shows. That was really where it started and then when I graduated, I taught
for about 7 years and then while I was teaching I was working with a graduate
group and I also used to do the school plays and it was often I had been teaching
for a while that I did an Australian musical and the director said why don't
I get an agent. That was quite a long time ago and so I did get an agent and
when I first started I did a lot of commercials and some of them were quite
good. I was normally playing someone's mother- usually the dinner table feeding
people in the family.
Some of them were quite good and some of them were like you'd do six ads for
the same product.
That was really the financial support that I needed to keep going and my first
television was probably Number 96 which was a popular Australian series and
I come in right near the end of that.
3.Q?
L: Well I did a lot of different things- I did stage plays- quite a lot of
stage plays and television. Channel 7, which is the production house making
Home and Away are very supportive of Australian drama. I have been up here
quite a lot on shows like A Country Practice, All Saints, Rafertty's World,
there's quite a lot of shows I've done with Channel 7.
I've done a lot of stage plays and my favourite stage play which I did about
3 years ago Purple white (?), I played a bigoted neighbour in that who might
be a bit like Colleen. I had 7 job offers out of that stage play.
4 S
L: I do enjoy playing Colleen. I sometimes look at the script and I'd love
to change some of the words if I feel the vocabulary is funnier and I'd like
to mix the metaphors. So things I like with Colleen is when she is sparking
off another character particularly if there is an antcipity between them and
you can get something going. Particularly there are two blokes that I've just
been working with and their pace is a bit slower than Colleen so there is
a bit of tension and a bit of spark coming off the other person. I like interacting.
I'm a bit conservative- I'm not politically conservative, but I'm conservative
about if I see a building pulled down and another building going up and I
think it is uglier that the building that was pulled down. That sort of thing
bothers me.
Some of the things I say about pay television- Colleen says there's not
much choice there are a few things she says that I tend to agree with, but
I think the similarities might be as much as difference.
I laugh at Colleen's character as a part of characterisation- not as an
extension of myself. I look at her as a separate creation.
5. S: Can you add a bit to life at Home and Away?
L: Well I hope so. I can see that quite scientifically as an actor. I look
at it, I look at the words on the page quite separate from myself and I think
right now that if she said this instead of this would it be funnier and would
it be more concrete. I do like images rather that waffle. It's easy to learn
and you're learning, it's easy to say a little bird told me that than just
say I heard something. It is easy to remember because there is a little image.
Particularly as Colleen I try to get her to talk fast, so I've really got
to know my words absolutely off by heart. I don't have time to pause, so if
I make it easier for myself to learn and also funnier then it works better
because I think she's a bit manic.
6.S: Do you have any embarrassing moments?
L:I really can't think of anything off the top of my head.
S: What about when you first started?
L: Yes- oh I know once they but the camera up and it was static because they
weren't going to move it at all and we started the scene and I looked up because
there was no camera operator behind the camera because the camera was just
still. And I can remember looking up and there no one behind the camera. Well
that was a bit embarrassing I suppose.
Once we were up at Palm Beach where a lot of the fans go and sometimes you
play and it's almost like playing to an audience in the theatre. And instead
of saying I live in my mobile home- I went on about living in my mobile home
and I did that for the whole speech which obviously didn't make any sense
at all. So we had to do that again.
That was a bit embarrassing because it was infront. I'd rather work privately
that rather all the fans around. I just find it a bit distracting. I can't
really think of anything apart from those two.
I try to when I'm learning it, also to do the geography in my head, I like
to keep things physically moving so that they wouldn't do a scene like us
two sitting here. It would be too boring to look at. Like I'd be getting up
and down. Before we do the first take, I like to know exactly what I'm doing
and to try and do it in 1 take or 2 takes.
7. S: Have you travelled outside of Australia?
L: Well I have been overseas quite a few times. The first time was when I
was about 30. I travelled to Europe then and I went skiing, I fell over a
lot but in winter- I was in Paris and London in the winter- I can remember
that quite clearly.
Then about 10 years ago I went overseas for a year and I went to Europe-
everywhere really- Germany, Norway, Switzerland, Italy- we went to Sicily
which I like. I learned Italian before I went to Sicily. We lived in Glasgow
for three months, I stayed in London with friends.
We did go to Ireland- we went to the Aran Islands off the west coast of
Ireland. I loved Ireland, I love Dublin, I was there before it became the
expensive city in the world. We were in Rosslare. We got the ferry from France
to South Ireland. So I was very keen on Ireland. I found the people very friendly
and very talkative and in Dublin we were at a university and there was a law
student who talked to us all afternoon and he had his exams the next day and
he just wanted to talk and I couldn't believe that you know he had exams the
next day and he just wanted to talk and I couldn't believe that he had exams
the next day and was wasting so much time talking to us. I thought Ireland
was terrific.
I haven't been to a pantomine. I have been asked. My agent wants me to go
and I'm a bit, I'm not sure, to me it's raw. I do take everything really seriously.
Sometimes by the end of the year, I'm exhausted. I'm very much involved in
a local theatre company here and I'm putting up a review soon and we're doing
an Oscar Wilde season and Marty Dingleroo (?) who is in the show is going
to read. 3 others are going to be reading Oscar Wilde fairy stories. We're
doing that in about 2 weeks time. So I do have a lot of other things I do.
So by the time Christmas comes around I just want to have a rest.
I have only passed through America. I really haven't any desire to go to
Hollywood. Not interested.
8. S: How long were you in Ireland for?
L: Oh only a couple of weeks I think and then we got the ferry over to Wales.
That was about ten years ago. My daughter was having a birthday in England
and we had to get over for her 21st birthday.
S: Was it cold?
L: No it wasn't- it was about October when we were in Glasgow about Christmas
time, that was cold, it was freezing. I don't mind the cold- I have been to
Iceland. I love Iceland. Its one of my favourite places, but it was snowing
in Iceland. We were there about six weeks- but that was in the winter. I think
it would be too expensive to go there in the summer anyway.
9. S: Do you have any kids and would you like Colleen to rear them?
L: Well I have a daughter. I think I should say yes to that because you obviously
expect me to say no. She believes in education and family values, heart. I
don't think I'd object at all. I think I'd be keener on her rearing them.
I can't think of any other character in the play, I think Shelley's character
might be the ideal mother, but I don't think there would be a problem with
Colleen and if they were bright, they'd work out how to handle her (laughs).
10. S: Would you like Lance as a son?
L: Well the real person- the person who plays Lance is very much different
to what he was at the beginning. So he is in about his early 30s now and he
is doing a postgraduate degree somewhere. I don't think I'd like someone who
is quite so easily dominated by women because she dominates him and the new
wife dominates him. But no I don't think so, I think I'd want to give him
a kick up the bum.
S: Lance is like a mammy's boy?
L: Oh he's very much like a mammy's boy. He is a bit hopeless with work and
everything. He is a bit of a fool.
11. S: Who would you like to be stuck on an island with?
L: Oh dear that's a hard one isn't it. People I'd admire are Nelson Mandela,
I'd hate to be stuck with most of the politicians I know about. I think Paul
McCarthy is terrific- quite a wise person and he's about my age I think.
Interviewer: Stephen Gilligan
Recording: Stephen Gilligan
Interview transcriber: David Walker
Photos: Stephen Gilligan, Victoria Supple
Questions: Stephen Gilligan, Eileen
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