Coral Drouyn

Coral Drouyn née O'Neill, (born in Doncaster, England in 1945),[1] also billed as Coral Kelly, is an English Australian actress, singer and screenwriter/story editor best known for her work in television, including Prisoner, Neighbours, Blue Heelers, Pacific Drive and Home and Away

Coral Drouyn
Born
Coral O'Neill

1945 (age 7778)
Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom
Other namesCoral Kelly
Occupations
  • Actress
  • screenwriter
  • singer
  • theatre critic
Years active1949,[1] 1960s-2009 (Actress, singer and screenwriter), 2009-present (theatre critic)

Biography

Drouyn was born in Doncaster, South Yorkshire, to Terry O,Neill who was born Terry Norris in Ireland in 1922, who was an actor and son of an Irish tenor, her matarnel uncle was the British actor Jack Haig and her maternal grandparents where Charles Coppin and Bertha Baker, who where both music hall performers billed as "Haig and Esco". Drouyn emigrated to Australia in the 1960s, where she wrote comedy for her father's Melbourne-based program "Time for Terry" and worked as a singer, whilst writing material for theatre restaurants.[1]

At the age of four, she appeared in an uncredited role as "Precocious Child in I Was a Male War Bride,[1] During her acting career, when she was often billed as Coral Kelly<"AL" />,she featured in the ill-fated TV soap opera Arcade as health studio receptionist Consuela McPhee.

Retiring from acting, Drouyn began writing for television, working as a scriptwriter for Grundy Productions series such as The Restless Years, Prisoner and Neighbours. During her time on Prisoner, Drouyn worked her way up from freelance writer to in-house story editor, creating characters and stories before leaving the series prior to its 600th episode.

Drouyn subsequently was involved in the creation of serial Pacific Drive before performing story editor duties on Blue Heelers and Home and Away.

Her book 'Big Screen, Small Screen', detailing the craft skills involved in screen-writing, was published in 1994.

Drouyn now works as a theatre critic.[2]

In 2022 Drouyn gave extensive interviews with podcast series 'Talking Prisoner' where she delved deep into her time writing and working on Prisoner.

Select credits

Title Year Work
Neighbours (TV series) 1985 Written by episode #1.62
Prisoner (also known as Prisoner Cell Block H) 1980-1985 Storyline 196 episodes, Story Editor 138 episodes, Written by 63 episodes
The Local Rag (TV movie) 1986 Written by
The Gerry Connelly Show 1988 Written by
Pacific Drive (TV series) 1996-1997 388 episodes
Chuck Finn (TV series) 1999 Written by - episode Visitor from the Outer Weft
Change of Heart 1999 Written by
Blue Heelers (TV series) 2000 Written by - 2 episodes
Wild Kat (TV series) 2001 Written by - 2 episodes
Home and Away: Hearts Divided (video) 2003 Written by
Home and Away (TV series) 2002-2004, 1995 Written by - 8 episodes
Parallax (TV series) 2004 Written by - episode Seek an dYou Shall Find
Streetsmartz 2005-2006 Written by 9 episodes
Stormworld (TV series) 2009 Written by 3 episodes

[3]

Talking Prisoner 2022 Self

References

  1. "AustLit".
  2. "Coral Drouyn Interview". Back to the Bay. 6 December 2007. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  3. "Neighbours : Interviews > Coral Drouyn". The Perfect Blend. 6 March 2004. Archived from the original on 21 March 2005. Retrieved 7 April 2016.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.