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Brian Wenzel

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Brian Wenzel
Born
Brian Thomas Wenzel

(1929-05-24) 24 May 1929 (age 95)
Years active1945–2000, 2010-2014[1]
Known for
  • Actor
  • comedian
  • director
  • singer
[1]

Brian Thomas Wenzel (born 24 May 1929) is an Australian former actor, comedian, director and singer.[1] He has been in the entertainment business for 75 years, including circus, stage, television and film (including made for TV movies and theatrical release films).

After numerous character roles in Crawford Productions serials and films and after appearing in serial Certain Women, he was cast in the permanent role of Sgt. Frank Gilroy, he played from 1981 and 1993.

He had a small role in 1995 in serial Neighbours as Gordon "Flakey the Clown" Orchard. He was also briefly a cast member of Rove Live in 2009.

Early life

Wenzel was born to Harold Wenzel, a grocer who served with the RAAF and Kathleen Wenzel in 1929.[2] One of eight, he grew up in South Australia suburbs Mile End, Torrensville and Thebarton. He had an unsettled early life and spent much of his childhood in remand homes run by various organisations including the Christian Brothers and the Salvation Army. Wenzel ran away several times. At age 14, he left school and joined the Sole Bros. circus as a pony groom and dog trainer. During World War II, he was greatly criticised because of his German sounding surname[2] but nevertheless started acting professionally in 1946 when his first performance in an acting role came at the age of 17 in a comedy stage play. He subsequently appeared in numerous stage plays, musicals, pantomime and children's theatre, including production's of Death of a Salesman, The Crucible, The Imaginary Invalid and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, he has worked with the Adelaide Festival of the Arts and the South Australian Theatre Company.[3]

Professional career

Television

After many years in the entertainment industry, primarily in live comedy and theatre, Wenzel appeared on the small screen from the late 1960s including in the drama series Division 4, Matlock Police, Homicide, The Young Doctors, Cop Shop and Certain Women. It was the role in the latter that won him the part of old-fashioned and affable policeman Frank Gilroy, originally a constable later sergeant in A Country Practice, he would appear in the series from its inception in 1981, winning a Silver Logie for his role, later episodes would later eventually see Gilroy retire from the police force to become the local RSL clubs barman and chef, after "Cookie" (Syd Heylen) retired. He also had the guest role playing NSW Police Officer in the series Home Sweet Home with John Bluthal.[citation needed] Wenzel became very popular with the NSW Police due to his role as Sgt. Gilroy, and was once presented with a leather police jacket from former commissioner John Avery as the fictional country town of Wandin Valley was located in New South Wales.[citation needed]

Film

He appeared in many Australian films during the 1970s and 1980s including Caddie (1976), The Odd Angry Shot (1979) and Alison's Birthday (1981) however more recently in the crime thriller in 2014 John Doe: Vigilante.

Theatre

He appeared in the David Williamson play Travelling North in 2000.

Controversy

In 2009 Wenzel appeared in a TV advert in the role for a sexual dysfunction therapy.[4] His Sgt. Gilroy (now 80 years old), arrives to save the day when a newlywed wife complains about her husband "speeding" in the sack – and then prosecutes him in court. This advert created much controversy[5][6] and Wenzel was featured on A Current Affair, defending the advert and stating that he was "an actor and this is what I do" and being thrown into the spotlight after almost 20 years out of it. In May, he appeared on a spoof of the ad that was aired on Rove Live.

A Country Practice re-boot

Wenzel, as well as Shane Porteous and Joyce Jacobs appeared in the first episode of A Country Practice in November 1981 and stayed with the series until it ended in 1993. However, after the series was cancelled that year by the Seven Network the series was picked by rival Network Ten for a single season in 1994, with a new setting and mostly new cast, Joyce Jacobs was the only original who stayed with the show, with the returning Joan Sydney, Andrew Blackman and briefly Michelle Pettigrove, both Wenzel and Shane Porteous did not reprise their roles in the reboot.

Awards

Association Year Award Production Results
Logie Awards 1981 Silver Logie Award for Best Actor A Country Practice as Sgt. Frank Gilroy Won

Personal life

Wenzel has been married to his English-born wife Linda Wenzel for 67 years.

He is an Australia Day ambassador for the state of Victoria, and a lifelong supporter of the Carlton Football Club.

Brian suffered 2 mini strokes in the last three years[7]

Filmography

Year Title Role
1968 Hunter Harrison – Sargeant Reynolds
1970 The Long Arm Det. Sgt Harrison
1972–1973 Boney Sgt. Cox
1967–1973 Homicide 8 roles
1971–1973 Matlock Police 7 roles
1969–1973 Division 4 10 roles
1974 Movin' On
1973–74 Ryan 3 roles
1973–74 The Evil Touch Mr. Jiggs
1973–1976 Certain Women Barry Gardiner
1976 Caddie Doctor
1976 The Young Doctors Mr. Cox
1979 Glenview High
1979 The Odd Angry Shot Bill's Dad
1979 Ride on Stranger Detective
1980 Skyways Frank Richmond
1980 Young Ramsay Ken Cooper
1981 Punishmnent Wally Webber
1981 Alison's Birthday Police sergeant
1982 Deadline ASIO agent
1981–1993 A Country Practice Frank Gilroy
1995 "Neighbours" Gordon "Flakey the Clown" Orchard
2002 Marshall Law Murray
2014 John Doe: Vigilante Judge

[8]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Wenzel, Brian". Trove, National Library of Australia. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Brian Wenzel, better known as Sgt Frank Gilroy, on his troubled childhood and a lifetime in showbiz".
  3. ^ "Brian Wenzel".
  4. ^ "AMI Bedroom Police Ad". YouTube. Archived from the original on 19 December 2021.
  5. ^ "Country Practice cop patrols bedrooms in weirdest role". Archived from the original on 10 March 2009.
  6. ^ "Men's sexual health TV ad scrapped". WA Today.
  7. ^ Phillip Koch. "EXCLUSIVE: Brian Wenzel: 'I miss Lorrae dearly'". New Idea.
  8. ^ "Brian Wenzel". IMDb. Retrieved 6 May 2019.