Judy Morris


Judith Ann Morris is an Australian character actress, as well as a film director and screenwriter, well known for the variety of roles she played in 58 different television shows and films, starting her career as a child actress and appearing on screen until 1999, since then she has worked on film writing and directing, most recently for co-writing and co-directing a musical epic about the life of penguins in Antarctica which became Happy Feet, Australia's largest animated film project to date.

Early career

Morris’s first role came at the age of 10 when she was part of the cast of the television episode "Picture of the Magi" a Family Theater production which aired about 1957 on the Mutual Broadcasting System in the United States. She then performed in two other roles in the USA, at the age of 10 on the Loretta Young Show, and in 1960, at the age of 13, on The Chevy Mystery Show hosted on that occasion by Vincent Price.

Career

Returning to Australia, Morris's next role was not to come until she reached the age of 20 when, in 1967, she worked in the ABC television series, Bellbird. Impressing casting agents, she was cast in numerous well known television series, including seven episodes in Division 4, four episodes in Matlock Police and three episodes in Homicide series.
In 1970, she starred in the short portmanteau film 3 to Go. During this time she also moved to more provocative television, especially in the sex series of Alvin Purple, and then under the direction of Tim Burstall as Sybil the babysitter in Libido: The Child. In this part Morris awakens the sexuality of the boy that she is babysitting. For her part, Morris won the 1973 Australian Film Industry Best Actress in a Lead Role. Morris then played the part of "Sam" in the 1978 movie In Search of Anna, before receiving top billing as the wife "Jill Cowper" in the 1979 black comedy The Plumber, which began its life as a small 6 week television series directed by Peter Weir but following its success was produced as a DVD titled The Mad Plumber.
The 1980s brought further success. She starred in Maybe This Time, Strata, Phar Lap as Bea Davis, the wife of Phar Lap's owner David J. Davis, and played the part of "Catherine Faulkner", the mother of the main character, "Kat Stanton", in Bangkok Hilton. In 1986 Morris was cast as Margaret 'Meg' Stenning in the miniseries The Last Frontier, that also starred Jason Robards as her father Edward Stenning, fellow Australian Jack Thompson as her brother, the black sheep of the family, Nick Stenning, and American actress Linda Evans as Kate Adamson-Hannon.. During and after this work she also played the role of "Liz Beare", the daughter in law of "Maggie Beare" in the Mother and Son series that ran from 1984 to 1994. She also starred as an American photographer in Razorback.
Following this, amongst other work, she was cast in the role of "Mrs Muggleton" in eight episodes of the Spellbinder television series.
In 1996, she had voiced Melba the Crocodile from an animated tv show called Crocadoo.

Writing and directing

Morris wrote and directed the comedy Luigi's Ladies in 1989. Later she teamed up with George Miller and Dick King-Smith to write in 1998. An episode of Dinotopia in 2002 and then most recently co-wrote the story to the film Happy Feet. Happy Feet was the first Australian animated film to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, and for her part in writing it Morris was nominated for an Annie Award. She later wrote the screenplay for Fred Schepisi's 2011 film, The Eye of the Storm, based on the novel of the same title.

Awards

Morris has been nominated for several awards in her career including:

Film

Television

Other works

YearTitleNotes
1989Luigi's LadiesWriter, director
1998'Writer
2002DinotopiaWriter, "The Matriarch"
2006Happy FeetWriter, co-director, co-producer
2008Meerkat ManorWriter
2009LegendWriter
2010Before the RainWriter
2011'Writer
2011Happy Feet TwoWriter
2013AdorationScript editor
2013GoddessMusical director
20??Musical director, script consultant
20??Emu PlainsWriter

Awards