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Simon Mead as Gus: Manager of the vines and physical 'grunt' of the Oakley vineyard. Cohen Holloway as Vic Grimes: A local lawyer managing the sale of Oakley Vineyard and also a small time winemaker and husband of Nic Grimes. Carrie Green as Nic Grimes: a clay sculptor with a quest to improve her fertility and have a child.
Good for Nothing is a 2011 New Zealand-made Western film starring Inge Rademeyer and Cohen Holloway, and directed by Mike Wallis. The film along with director Mike Wallis has been included in Leonard Maltin’s ‘Fifty Notable Debut Features of the Past Twenty Years’ list in The New York Times bestseller – Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide. [2]
In 2021, she joined the cast of Under the Vines. [10] in 2024, she appeared in the Stan series Prosper. [11] On 4 September 2024, Gibney was announced as part of the 2025 Sydney Theatre Company season for the play Circle Mirror Transformation, marking Gibney's return to theatre in almost 20 years. [12]
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In 2021, Edwards worked on a New Zealand TV mini series Under The Vines, filmed in Central Otago wine region of the South Island and released on 19 January 2022. [22] In 2022, Edwards played the key role of Celebrimbor, the elven smith responsible for forging the Rings of Power in The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power. [23]
Jarrod Parkin (Cohen Holloway) (Hadleigh Walker EP 51 Onward) Lucille Menzies (Sara Allen) Terry Prichard (Paul Gordon Harrop) Gavin Beesley (Barnaby Fredric) Celeste McKinnely (Sarah Boddy) Magnus Mouat (Tim Gordon) Dave McKinnely ; Katherine Paterson (Amy Tarleton) Joel Parkin (Simon K Leary) Wiremu Johnson (James Tito) Max Cooper (James Kupa)
Short Poppies is a New Zealand mockumentary TV series starring, created and written by Rhys Darby and directed by Jemaine Clement and Michelle Walshe.. It follows real-life entertainment reporter David Farrier as he talks to "extraordinary" New Zealanders who happen to live in the same small fictional town known as "The Bay". [1]
Under the Window: Pictures & Rhymes for Children (London, 1879) was Kate Greenaway's first children's picture book, composed of her own verses and illustrations. [1] Selling over 100,000 copies, the toy book was a commercial success, helped launch Greenaway's career as a children's book illustrator and author in the late 19th century as well as starting what became known as the "Greenaway vogue".