Janice Dinnen
Janice Dinnen was an Australian actor of stage, film, and theatre.
Early life
Dinnen's parents emigrated to Australia from Finsbury Park, London in 1940. Dinnen was born in Bondi, New South Wales. She was a member of the Great Synagogue Youth Teens and after appearing in a J.Y.C. Drama Festival at the Independent Theatre in Sydney, she became a student of the Independent Theatre Study Group.Career
Dinnen started out as a model and a child actor. Her first film role was in comedy-drama Smiley Gets a Gun in 1958, before landing the role of Anna Koschek at age eleven, in the American Cinerama documentary film South Seas Adventure. She was hired on the spot after only one audition. By the age of 15, she had already acted in two stage productions at Sydney's Independent Theatre, made two television commercials and completed a modelling course at the June Dally-Watkins School of Deportment. In 1961, she had a part in the children's film Bungala Boys.In 1963 and 1964, Dinnen acted in several stage productions for Sydney's Old Tote Theatre Company, including The Cherry Orchard, Hamlet, The Importance of Being Earnest and Days of Glory.
Dinnen also appeared in the Australian TV plays Ballad for One Gun and A Sound of Trumpets. From 1964 to 1965, she played the role of Jean Welsh in the first season of Australian children's science fiction series The Stranger. In 1965, she played Margaret-Anne Baxter in the British miniseries The Flying Swan, and also appeared in the British television play Auto Stop.
In 1968, Dinnen played the recurring role of Donna McCall in Australian series The Battlers, about an Aboriginal boxer, inspired by the true story of Lionel Rose. From 1969 to 1970, she had guest roles in British series The Troubleshooters and Fraud Squad. Her final role was in the 1970 British folk horror film Tam-Lin alongside Ava Gardner and Ian McShane.