John Shrapnell

Not to be confused with John Shrapnel.
John Shrapnell
Born (1934-12-25) 25 December 1934
London, England
Nationality  New Zealand
Occupation journalist, actor, singer

John Shrapnell (born 25 December 1934) is a New Zealand television journalist turned singer-actor.

Early life and family

Shrapnell was born in London, the son of Lillian Jeannette (née Walker) and Alfred Shrapnell. He is a descendant of British army officer General Henry Shrapnel, inventor of the shrapnel shell. 08:45, 5 December 2009 (UTC)

Television

When television began in New Zealand in the early 1960s, Shrapnell was one of the two editors of NZBC Television Newsreel [1] and producer of The Veteran Statesman.[1] In 1964 Shrapnell returned to the United Kingdom to become reporter on COI's London Line [2] and BBC's Today, as well as Duty Editor at Visnews.[3]

1966 Shrapnell returned to New Zealand as reporter/director Town and Around and Network News.[1] He directed many Sunday's World[1] and documentaries such as Limbs and Impulse Dance Theatre.[4] As coordinator of NZBC's Royal Visit coverage, Shrapnell had met the Queen and members of her family on several occasions.

Actor-singer

As an actor Shrapnell appeared in Clare, Revelations – The Initial Journey, The Insider's Guide To Happiness, Blonde Cargo,[5] Market Forces, The Strip, and A Question of Justice. As a singer Shrapnell has sung with various companies including Wellington City Opera and The NBR New Zealand Opera.[6]

Shrapnell is often confused with his cousin, veteran British actor John Shrapnel. When the two met in London, the English Shrapnel said he was jealous that the New Zealand Shrapnell had met and talked with the Queen. The New Zealand Shrapnell replied that he was jealous the London Shrapnel had got to act with Julia Roberts.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.