Tu Viện Quảng Đức105 Lynch Rd, Fawkner, Vic 3060. Australia. Tel: 9357 3544. quangduc@quangduc.com* Viện Chủ: HT Tâm Phương, Trụ Trì: TT Nguyên Tạng   

Who’s who in the new SBS supernatural thriller ‘Hungry Ghosts’

12/08/202013:37(Xem: 6524)
Who’s who in the new SBS supernatural thriller ‘Hungry Ghosts’
  • blank
    Dr Ben Williams (Ryan Corr), May Le (Catherine Văn-Davies), Roxy Ling (Suzy Wrong) and Stella Le (Susan Ling) (SBS)
 
Catherine Văn-Davies and Bryan Brown lead an ensemble cast in the four-part SBS original supernatural drama series ‘Hungry Ghosts’.
By SBS Guide

5 AUG 2020 - 5:13 PM  UPDATED 6 AUG 2020 - 10:30 AM


Hungry Ghosts
 is a suspenseful, character-driven ghost story with heart, humour and scares. Set in contemporary Melbourne during the month of the Hungry Ghost Festival, when the Vietnamese community venerate their dead, four families find themselves haunted by ghosts from the past. As these hauntings intensify, they threaten to unleash their deepest fears and expose secrets long buried.

Through an ensemble of characters, both Vietnamese and Anglo, Hungry Ghosts explores the concept of the inherent trauma we pass down from one generation to the next, and how notions of displacement impact human identity - long after the events themselves. Can you ever really leave behind the trauma of your past? Is it possible to abandon both spiritual and physical culture, or does it form part of your fundamental DNA?

To free themselves and those they love, each character in Hungry Ghosts must atone for their sins and confront their deepest fears or risk being swallowed by the shadows of their past.

Here is a look at the incredible ensemble cast.

 

CATHERINE VĂN-DAVIES plays May Le 

Hungry Ghosts

MAY LE (Catherine Văn-Davies) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

The show’s protagonist, May Le tried to get a food truck up and running but was swindled by her ex-boyfriend and lost everything. She dives into a slump until she discovers she has special powers that she will need to use to overcome the evil spirit, Quang. Her journey is one of discovery and redemption as she must fight a malevolent spirit who seeks to corrupt her and torment the community. Only by discovering her true heritage and genuine self can May Le help heal a community still afflicted by the anguish of a lost homeland.

Catherine Văn-Davies is an established Vietnamese Australian stage and screen actor who has worked both nationally and internationally. She has worked regularly with Playwriting Australia as an actor and facilitator for their Outreach and Lotus (Contemporary Asian Australian Performance) programs working to foster emerging culturally and linguistically diverse voices. She also has extensive experience developing new Australian work and was an Associate Artist of Milk Crate Theatre, the only national theatre company dedicated to working with and for marginalised and/or homeless adults.

 

JILLIAN NGUYEN plays Sophie Tran

Hungry Ghosts

SOPHIE TRAN (Jillian Nguyen) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Sophie is the youngest daughter of the Tran family. She is a fastidious hard worker, studying to be a doctor like her father. But for the Trans, still battling survivors’ guilt many years after escaping their homeland, a single, terrible moment in time during the exodus returns to haunt them. With three generations living under one roof they must reconcile the inherent trauma of war that has cursed their family, threatening to tear it apart.

You might recognise Jillian Nguyen from her most recent work in Justin Kurzel’s True History of the Kelly Gang where she starred alongside Russell Crowe. Jillian was born as Huyen Dieu at a Sungai Besi refugee camp in Malaysia and immigrated to Australia with her family when she was 14 months old. Apart from Hungry Ghosts you will next see her as the female lead in upcoming romantic US/Australian sci-fi feature Loveland directed by Mystery Road’s Ivan Sen and co-starring Ryan Kwanten and Hugo Weaving.

 

BRYAN BROWN plays Neil Stockton

Hungry Ghosts

NEIL STOCKTON (Bryan Brown) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Neil Stockton is a famed war correspondent now struggling with his retirement and the meaning of his once prestigious career. A retrospective exhibition of his work dredges up ghosts from his years covering the war in Vietnam, and exposes a personal secret shame from the Fall of Saigon.

Iconic Australian actor Bryan Brown became an international success in the early eighties gaining critical acclaim for performances in Breaker Morant and TV series A Town Like Alice and more recently big-screen hits Palm Beach and Sweet Country. Bryan’s passion for storytelling behind the camera emerged in the formation of film and television production company, New Town Films. New Town projects include Dead Heart and 12-part series Twisted Tales, featuring some of Australia’s most prolific actors and exciting new directors which screened in over 100 countries. 

 

CLARE BOWEN plays Liz Stockton

Hungry Ghosts

LIZ STOCKTON (Clare Bowen) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Liz is Neil’s daughter and a travel photographer. She has been estranged from Neil for many years until she turns up out of the blue.

Clare Bowen is an accomplished actor, singer and songwriter, beloved by audiences worldwide for both her iconic role as Scarlett O’Connor on TV series Nashville, and her original music, which she tours live globally. Nashville opened a door for Clare’s solo music career, which has flourished. Clare has played to sold-out crowds in iconic venues such as the Royal Albert Hall, the Ryman Auditorium and the O2 Arena. She released her debut self-titled album, ‘CLARE BOWEN’ in 2018.

 

FERDINAND HOANG plays Anh Nguyen

Hungry Ghosts

ANH NGUYEN (Ferdinand Hoang) Photo Credit: Sarah Entiknap
Source: SBS

Anh was a reluctant South Vietnamese soldier and later prisoner of the Communists who suffered terribly in the re-education camps. When his best friend Khoa was killed in battle, Anh married Khoa’s wife, Lien and had a son Paul. Lien and Paul escaped to Australia while Anh was locked up and he joined them a few years later, broken and a stranger to them.

Ferdinand Hoang is a versatile and chameleonic actor. He has worked with some of the world’s most highly acclaimed directors and actors, including Gregory Peck, Michael Caine, Cate Blanchett, Toni Collette, Hugo Weaving, Sam Neill, Bruce Beresford and Phillip Noyce. His feature film credits include appearances in The Quiet AmericanMao’s Last DancerLittle FishThe Home Song Stories and Jasper Jones. He has also appeared in theatre plays, short films and miniseries, including Chris Lilley’s cult TV mockumentary We Can Be Heroes.

 

GABRIELLE CHAN plays Lien Nguyen

Hungry Ghosts

LIEN NGUYEN (Gabrielle Chan) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Lien married Anh after her first husband was killed in battle. Even though Anh and Lien had a child and went on to have a life together in Australia, she still feels guilty about it today. A recent fall and resulting hip injury has reminded her of her mortality and memories of youth have come flooding back. 

Gabrielle Chan is an Australian actor of Vietnamese descent. At the age of 15, she left Vietnam and completed her high school education in Hong Kong, finishing her tertiary studies in Australia. Gabrielle has performed in Chinese opera, short films, television series and in various theatrical productions. Her last short film The Egg was nominated for a Best Short Film award after premiering at the Sydney Film Festival in 2019.

 

GARETH YUEN plays Paul Nguyen

Paul escaped from Vietnam with his mother and was forced to grow up overnight. As they found a new life in Australia, he became the ‘man of the house’ which was then seemingly usurped when his father Anh turned up a few years later. Along with his own trauma from the war years and the escape, Paul has always struggled to have a relationship with his father.

Gareth Yuen’s career has spanned theatre, film, radio and television across Australia, New Zealand and the United States. He played Loc Minh Vu in Headstart and appeared in Ponderosa (US Cable TV’s prequel to Bonanza) and Round the Twist. A NIDA graduate, Gareth has been seen on our TV screens more recently in Underbelly and globally by generations of kids in his role as Dax, the Blue Ranger in the 15th season of the inimitable US action adventure series, Power Rangers: Operation Overdrive

Hungry Ghosts

PAUL NGUYEN (Gareth Yuen) and CLARE NGUYEN (Justine Clarke) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

JUSTINE CLARKE plays Clare Nguyen

Clare fell in love with Paul at university. They married and have two children, but Clare grew dismayed as the young carefree Paul matured into an overly worried and often domineering husband. While Paul wants to leave his past (and culture) behind, Clare has worked hard to ensure her children know their roots and learn Vietnamese.

Justine Clarke is one of film and television’s most familiar faces for Australians of all ages. Her credits include Mad Max: Beyond ThunderdomeBootmenJapanese Story, Red Dog: True Blue, Rake, Love My Way and Tangle. For her 2005 performance in the Australian feature Look Both Ways alongside William McInnes, Justine earned nominations for the AFIs, the IF Awards and the Film Critics Circle of Australia Award for Best Actress in a Lead Role. A Playschool regular, Justine has also won her way into the hearts of many young TV viewers.

 

RYAN CORR plays Dr Ben Williams

Hungry Ghosts

Dr BEN WILLIAMS (Ryan Corr) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

An intern doctor, Ben struggles with the fact that he can’t always prevent patients from dying. His path crosses and becomes intertwined with May Le’s when he treats her dying grandmother.

Ryan Corr is a NIDA graduate and star of the stage and screen. You'll recognise him from TV hits like Love ChildUnderbelly: The Golden MileTangle, Redfern Now and Packed to the Rafters, plus Australian films like Holding the Man. Ryan was named the GQ Breakthrough Actor of 2015 and he has been the recipient of the Australians in Film Heath Ledger Scholarship and the IF Out of the Box award. A favourite among audiences he has received Logie nominations in the categories of Most Outstanding New Talent and Most Popular New Male Talent.

 

SUSIE PORTER plays Catherine Taylor

Hungry Ghosts

CATHERINE TAYLOR (Susie Porter) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Catherine Taylor is a worker in a minesweeping NGO in Vietnam who inadvertently uncovers Quang’s tomb.

Nominated for multiple AFIs, Logies and AACTA awards, Susie Porter has built a reputation as one of Australia’s most outstanding actors. Her remarkable list of credits include feature films Summer CodaBootmanBetter Than SexParadise RoadTwo Hands and the award-winning Little Fish. You may have seen Susie in critically acclaimed film Ladies in BlackCargoDon’t Tell and Hounds of Love. On the small screen, she played the lead role in East West 101Love My WayThe Secret Life of UsSisters of War and has most recently appeared in international hit Wentworth

 

SUZY WRONG plays Roxy Ling

Hungry Ghosts

ROXY LING (Suzy Wrong) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Roxy is May Le’s closest friend. She is also a clairvoyant of sorts, which in this situation may come in very handy.

Suzy Wrong started her acting career with the Singapore Armed Forces Music & Drama Company, where she received formal training and intensive stage experience all over Singapore and in neighbouring countries, culminating in a Best Performance of the Year Life Theatre Award for the play Purple in 1998. Aside from performing, Suzy is also a theatre critic and blogger for the Sydney main stage and independent scenes, publishing at ‘Suzy Goes See’ and also at the Europe-based ‘Auditorium Mag’. 

 

OAKLEY KWON plays Diane Tran

Hungry Ghosts

DIANE TRAN (Oakley Kwon) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Diane is the mother of Sophie, a successful woman who busies herself with charity work. She carries a terrible secret from when, as a young girl, she escaped from Vietnam by boat.

Melbourne local Oakley Kwon graduated with a law degree before moving into acting. Oakley completed her actor’s training through NIDA, and since formally commencing her acting career in 2017, Oakley has appeared in several Australian productions, including Homecoming QueensHarrowNeighbours and Danger Close: Battle of Long Tan. Oakley’s portrayal of Diane Tran in Hungry Ghosts is her first major supporting role in a television miniseries.

 

LAP PHAN plays Dr Sang Tran

Hungry Ghosts

Dr SANG TRAN (Lap Phan) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Sang Tran is a successful, hard-working doctor who lost his mother when his village in Vietnam was bombed and has carried this unspoken trauma his whole life.

Queensland actor Lap Phan has a lengthy list of screen and stage credits, including TV shows Sea PatrolWildside and Maximum Choppage, and movies including Phillip Noyce’s The Quiet American and Abe Forsythe’s Down Under. When not on screen, Lap is a stand-up comedian and keen filmmaker, who won an audience award for his Tropfest short film, Bird Therapy.

 

HAIHA LE plays Tracy Tran

Hungry Ghosts

TRACY TRAN (Haiha Le) and her son ETHAN (Timothy Nguyen) Photo Credit: Sarah Enticknap
Source: SBS

Tracy is the eldest daughter in the Tran family. She is a tiger mum to 6-year-old Ethan and a massive over-achiever.

HaiHa Le has worked extensively in theatre and TV since 2003. HaiHa received a Green Room Award nomination for her performance in Shrimp and was a regular cast member of Bed of Roses and Kick. You may also have seen HaiHa in Miss Fisher’s Murder MysteriesNeighboursSea PatrolRakeCity HomicideThe Elephant Princess or The Code or most recently in Mr Inbetween 2 directed by Nash Edgerton.

 

Hungry Ghosts premieres on SBS at 9:30pm Monday 24 August and airs over four consecutive nights till Thursday 27 August. Episodes will be available at SBS On Demand each day at the same time as broadcast.


(Vietnamese Version)


Source:
https://www.sbs.com.au/guide/article/2020/07/27/whos-who-new-sbs-supernatural-thriller-hungry-ghosts

 

Gửi ý kiến của bạn
Tắt
Telex
VNI
Tên của bạn
Email của bạn
03/05/2021(Xem: 6464)
In the Dhammapada, the Buddha says, “What we are today comes from our thoughts of yesterday, and our present thoughts build our life of tomorrow: our life is the creation of our mind.” The Covid-19 pandemic has given many millions of people worldwide time to reflect on their lives and habits of thought, speech and action. I know quite a few who have found a refuge of peace in their gardens. Cultivating, planting seeds, adding water and nutrients all help in maintaining a healthy garden. They are also a necessary part in taking care of our bodies. But what about the mind? Generosity, ethics, loving-kindness, compassion, meditative concentration and wisdom are the food for our inner spiritual garden. Without them there is no harvest, no fruit of Awakening, Buddhahood.
03/05/2021(Xem: 5900)
As a child my parents encouraged questions, as did my Heart Lama. However, the latter person gave me two questions to ask before speaking: “will what I am wanting to say, and the way I say it, be helpful or harmful to myself/others? Also, does the question come from ‘I don’t know’ (beginner’s mind), or from a place of judgement and opinions?” The aim was/is to cultivate the mind to be like an empty vessel, not one filled to the brim and overflowing where nothing new can enter.
31/03/2021(Xem: 3600)
Today, once again, I have another opportunityto talk to you through this online Dharma Talk, proposed by Master Hui Siong. He is Vice President of the World Buddhist Sangha Counciland General-Secretary for Chinese Language Department. He is alsoabbot of Beeh Low See Temple, Mahakaruna Buddhist Center and Vihara Mahavira Graha Medan Temple in Singapore and Indonesia. The connections which lead to this opportunity could be traced back through the founding Congress of the WBSC in Colombo, Sri Lanka in 1966 and the second Congress held at Vinh Nghiem Pagoda in Saigon, Vietnam in 1969 by the Most Venerable Thich Tam Chau, co-founder of WBSC. At that time, I had just moved from Hoi An to Saigon; so I did not have theopportunity to participate.
25/02/2021(Xem: 3018)
Today is the first day of the Lunar New Year, on the 12 February 2021 of western calendar. From the faraway Germany, I have had the honor of being invited by the most Venerable Master Hui Siong, abbot of Beel Low See Temple in Singapore and other temples in Malaysia and Indonesia, to have a talk online with you all today. First, I want to thank Master Hui Siong for the invitation, also his secretary miss Jackie and all of you for this opportunity. Buddha has taught us that everything arises with conditions, and the true nature of everything is emptiness. I am sure, as Buddhists, you are familiar with this teaching. He also taught us other teachings, according to Theravada traditions such as: impermanence, suffering and non-self or according to Mahayana traditions: impermanence, suffering, emptiness and non-self. No matter which traditions, these teachings are the common guidelines for us to practice Buddhism. So, when things as sufferings arise, how do we approach and deal with i
08/07/2020(Xem: 13189)
Coronavirus (COVID-19) is not over yet. We need to keep looking after ourselves and our community to stop the virus spreading. Due to increased cases in Victoria, some restrictions have changed. From 22 June 2020: · You cannot have more than five visitors in your home · You cannot gather outdoors with more than 10 people · Schools, libraries, places of worship and businesses remain open · Stay close to home and do not travel if possible
22/06/2020(Xem: 6130)
Balangoda Ananda Maitreya Thero (Sinhala: අග්ග මහා පණ්ඩිත බලංගොඩ ආනන්ද මෛත්‍රෙය මහා නා හිමි;23 August 1896 – 18 July 1998) was a Sri Lankan scholar Buddhist monk and a personality of Theravada Buddhism in the twentieth century.[3][4] He was highly respected by Sri Lankan Buddhists, who believe that he achieved a higher level of spiritual development through meditation.[2][5] Sri Lankan Buddhists also considered Balangoda Ananda Maitreya Thero as a Bodhisattva, who will attain Buddhahood in a future life.
23/05/2020(Xem: 8869)
Dr. Gagan Malik Interview: Mother Nature's Fury with Human Beings | 4 ways to 'overcome' Covid-19, With the rapidly rising number of covid-19 cases in the world's second most populous country, India, and the world's largest lockdown still continuing, I caught up with my friend who is a Bollywood actor, UN Peace Ambassador for South-East Asia and a passionate Buddhist, Dr. Gagan Malik. In this fascinating 47min interview, he shares his various concerns about the covid-19 situation, such as the lack of clear information available on how covid-19 patients are being treated in hospitals, the wastage of time during the lockdown, our mistreatment of Mother Nature/Earth, and also addresses his Buddhists friends on some concerning matters. He also provides some wise suggestions to everyone from a Buddhist point of view on how we can make the most of the lockdown and how collectively as a human race, we can do something about our current dire plight. Thank you so much Dr. Malik for al
21/05/2020(Xem: 6281)
Victorian United Nations of Vesak 2644 (Saturday, 23 May 2020)
23/04/2020(Xem: 6308)
In June of 1957, the senior members of the Youth Circle of the Penang Buddhist Association formed a committee to explore the possibilities of forming a Dharma school to convene each Sunday morning for the systematic instruction of Buddhist children in the truths of our religion. Fifteen members of this committee volunteered to prepare themselves to take over teaching duties. This group of volunteers found no great lack of material suitable for instructing adults in the Dharma, but when they turned their search towards lesson material for children, they found a most startling lack of anything remotely approaching the needs of a modern Sunday school. A certain amount of Buddhist literature for children was found in Chinese and Japanese language presentations, but there are few Chinese in Malaya who are completely at home in written Chinese. Moreover, even the children enrolled in the Dharma classes are well versed only in colloquial Chinese, in Penang usually the Hokkien dialect, and the
22/03/2020(Xem: 6752)
Hòa Thương Thích Như Điển đã làm lễ khánh thọ lần thứ 70 trong năm qua. Thầy đã mang truyền thống dòng Thiền Lâm Tế Việt Nam sang nước Đức và là người truyền thừa có ảnh hưởng sâu rộng của Phật Giáo tại đây. Đồng thời, Thầy đã đóng góp triệt để cho sự hội nhập của người Việt trong nước Đức – và do đó cũng là một đoạn đường quan trọng cho tính đa dạng của Phật Giáo trong đất nước này. Trong bài tiểu luận này, ông Olaf Beuchling đã vinh danh cuộc sống và những Phật sự của vị Pháp Sư đồng thời giới thiệu tổng quan dòng Thiền Lâm Tế Việt Nam.] Người ta đứng chen chúc trong khuôn viên an bình của ngôi Chùa Viên Giác tại Hannover: Có hàng ngàn người khách hiện diện trong những ngày hè của tháng sáu năm 2019. Họ đến hỷ chúc 70 năm khánh thọ của Hòa Thượng Phương Trượng Chùa Viên Giác – Thầy Thích Như Điển, vị Tỳ Kheo người Đức gốc Việt.
facebook youtube google-plus linkedin twitter blog
Nguyện đem công đức này, trang nghiêm Phật Tịnh Độ, trên đền bốn ơn nặng, dưới cứu khổ ba đường,
nếu có người thấy nghe, đều phát lòng Bồ Đề, hết một báo thân này, sinh qua cõi Cực Lạc.

May the Merit and virtue,accrued from this work, adorn the Buddhas pureland,
Repay the four great kindnesses above, andrelieve the suffering of those on the three paths below,
may those who see or hear of these efforts generates Bodhi Mind, spend their lives devoted to the Buddha Dharma,
the Land of Ultimate Bliss.

Quang Duc Buddhist Welfare Association of Victoria
Tu Viện Quảng Đức | Quang Duc Monastery
Senior Venerable Thich Tam Phuong | Senior Venerable Thich Nguyen Tang
Address: Quang Duc Monastery, 105 Lynch Road, Fawkner, Vic.3060 Australia
Tel: 61.03.9357 3544 ; Fax: 61.03.9357 3600
Website: http://www.quangduc.com ; http://www.tuvienquangduc.com.au (old)
Xin gửi Xin gửi bài mới và ý kiến đóng góp đến Ban Biên Tập qua địa chỉ:
quangduc@quangduc.com , tvquangduc@bigpond.com
VISITOR
110,220,567