The Front Lawn


The Front Lawn was a New Zealand musical/theatrical duo founded by Don McGlashan and Harry Sinclair in 1985. In 1989 and 1990, they were joined by actor Jennifer Ward-Lealand. The Front Lawn were known for their live performances, and toured extensively in New Zealand, Australia, Europe and America. They released two albums and made three short films.
Don McGlashan went on to form New Zealand band The Mutton Birds, and had a successful solo career. Harry Sinclair has written and directed television and feature films, including Topless Women Talk About Their Lives, The Price of Milk, Toy Love, and the reborn 90210.

Performance

The Front Lawn toured Europe, America, Australia and New Zealand with a series of live shows including Songs and Stories from The Front Lawn, The Reason for Breakfast, The Washing Machine, The Story of Robert and "The One That Got Away". They performed at the Edinburgh Festival, in 1988 and 1989, winning The Independent newspaper's theatre award for the festival in 1988, and in both years were included in the "Pick of the Fringe" season at London's Donmar Warehouse.

Music

The Front Lawn released two albums – Songs From The Front Lawn and More Songs from the Front Lawn. They also had two singles in the New Zealand top 50 – "When You Come Back Home" and "The Beautiful Things". Their song "Andy" was voted as number 82 in the APRA Top 100 New Zealand Songs of All Time list. The group won three New Zealand Music Awards in 1989: Most Promising Group, Best Film Soundtrack/Compilation and International Achievement.

Short films

Sinclair and McGlashan made several short films: Walk Short, The Lounge Bar, and Linda's Body. Of their three short films, two – "Walk Short" and "The Lounge Bar" – were screened by Channel 4 in the UK, and "The Lounge Bar" was a finalist in the 1989 American Film Festival.

Discography

Albums

Singles

Music videos

The Front Lawn produced music videos for their singles "When You Come Back Home" and "The Beautiful Things". In 1991, the Front Lawn was one of three artists given $5000 in the pilot scheme for NZ On Air's music video funding. This was for the production of "The Beautiful Things" video. Directed by Fane Flaws, the clip was nominated for Best Video at the 1994 New Zealand Music Awards and was the overall winner at the 1993 New Zealand Music Video Awards.

Awards