Grant Taylor (actor) - Australian Work

Australian Work

Taylor was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in England, but moved to Australia with his parents as a child. For a time he worked as a professional boxer in Melbourne under the name of Lance Matheson. Cinesound Productions were looking for someone with wrestling skills to play the part of a gorilla in Gone to the Dogs (1939), so Taylor auditioned. He did not get the part but met Alec Kellaway who persuaded him to join Cinesound's Talent School.

Ken G. Hall said that one of the problems of the Australian industry of this time was they "were consistently short of trained juveniles and ingenues". Cinesound in particular had a great deal of trouble finding male romantic leads. They either left to work in radio (Dick Fair), returned overseas (John Longden, Billy Rayes), left for overseas (Frank Leighton), or died (Brian Abbot). Cinesound Talent School was partly founded with an intention to rectify this.

Taylor's physique, good looks and charm saw Ken G. Hall cast him in Dad Rudd, MP (1940). He was then selected by Charles Chauvel to play the lead role of 'Red' Gallagher in the war film Forty Thousand Horsemen (1940). This movie was a massive international success and a Hollywood or English career beckoned, but Taylor elected to stay in Australia. Career-wise it proved to be a bad decision, as film production in Australia declined sharply with the advent of World War II and Taylor was unable to follow up his success immediately.

Taylor enlisted in the Australian army on 7 October 1942. During the war he served as a military policeman and in the Australian Army Entertainment Unit alongside Smoky Dawson. He also appeared in some propaganda shorts as well as the feature The Rats of Tobruk (1944), which reunited him with Chauvel and Chips Rafferty. In 1945, it was announced that he would star in another Chauvel film, Green Mountain, but by the time the movie was actually made in 1949 (as Sons of Matthew), he did not appear in it. He was discharged on 26 February 1946.

After the war Taylor was unable to consolidate his position as a film star, and saw the majority of leading man roles go instead to actors such as Charles Tingwell and Chips Rafferty. However he remained busy as a character actor, and in radio and theatre, and played the title role in Captain Thunderbolt (1953).

In 1954 Taylor co-starred as a pirate with Robert Newton in Long John Silver, and it's television spin off, The Adventures of Long John Silver. His son Kit played Jim Hawkins.

In 1959 Taylor appeared in a brief role in Stanley Kramer's On the Beach. In 1964 he appeared in the ABC-TV children's adventure serial The Stranger, Australia's first locally-produced science fiction TV series, which was also sold to the BBC.

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