Underbelly (TV Series) - Cast and Characters

Cast and Characters

Underbelly features four regular cast members, with 27 actors who recur throughout the series.

The regular cast includes Rodger Corser, Caroline Craig, Gyton Grantley and Kat Stewart. Corser stars as Detective Senior Sergeant Steve Owen, a prominent member of Task Force Purana. Craig stars as Senior Detective Jacqui James, Owen's partner in Task Force Purana and also narrates the series. Grantley stars as Carl Williams, a seemingly harmless and half-witted driver who becomes a killer and convicted criminal. Stewart stars as Roberta Williams, Carl's wife.

The recurring cast includes:

  • Daniel Amalm as Dino Dibra
  • Vince Colosimo as Alphonse Gangitano
  • Les Hill as Jason Moran
  • Lliam Amor as Greg Workman
  • Nathaniel Dean as Sidney Martin
  • George Kapiniaris as Lawyer (George Defteros)
  • Frankie J. Holden as Garry Butterworth
  • Neil Melville as Todd McDonald
  • Martin Sacks as Mario Condello
  • Caroline Gillmer as Judy Moran
  • Marcus Graham as Lewis Caine
  • Don Hany as Nik "The Russian" Radev
  • Ryan Johnson as Rocco Arico
  • Robert Rabiah as Paul "PK" Kallipolitis
  • Gerard Kennedy as Graham "Munster" Kinniburgh
  • Callan Mulvey as Mark Moran
  • Damian Walshe-Howling as Andrew "Benji" Veniamin
  • Simon Westaway as Mick Gatto
  • Kevin Harrington as Lewis Moran
  • Robert Mammone as Tony Mokbel
  • Madeleine West as Danielle McGuire
  • Lauren Clair as Tracey Seymour
  • Alex Dimitriades as Victor Brincat (Mr.T in original broadcast)
  • Ian Bliss as Thomas Hentschel (Mr.L in original broadcast)
  • Dan Wyllie as "Mad" Richard Mladenich
  • Brett Swain as Tibor Cassadae
  • Jane Harber as Susie Money
  • Kim Gyngell as Keith Faure (Uncredited in original broadcast)
  • Andrew Gilbert as Victor Peirce

Read more about this topic:  Underbelly (TV Series)

Famous quotes containing the words cast and/or characters:

    Nothing is so foolish, they say, as for a man to stand for office and woo the crowd to win its vote, buy its support with presents, court the applause of all those fools and feel self-satisfied when they cry their approval, and then in his hour of triumph to be carried round like an effigy for the public to stare at, and end up cast in bronze to stand in the market place.
    Desiderius Erasmus (c. 1466–1536)

    The business of a novelist is, in my opinion, to create characters first and foremost, and then to set them in the snarl of the human currents of his time, so that there results an accurate permanent record of a phase of human history.
    John Dos Passos (1896–1970)