John Cundill | |
Birth Date: | 30 May 1936 |
Birth Place: | Germiston, South Africa |
Death Date: | February 2016 (aged 79) |
Death Place: | Maleny, Queensland, Australia |
Occupation: | Television and film scriptwriter playwright journalist |
Nationality: | South African |
Education: | Bachelor of Arts |
Alma Mater: | University of Cape Town |
Period: | 1976–2001 |
Genre: | Television |
Subjects: | --> |
Notablework: | --> |
Spouse: | Mirella Cundill |
Children: | Liam, Nicky and Scott |
Relatives: | Algy Cundill (father) |
John Cundill (1936–2016) was a South African born television scriptwriter, playwright, journalist and actor. He is best known in South Africa as the television scriptwriter for The Villagers and Westgate series. He would later write several screenplays for Australian films and television shows.
Cundill was born on 30 May 1936 in Germiston, South Africa.[1] His father, Algy Cundill was a mine manager at a large mine owned by Gold Fields.[1] He would be educated at St John's College in Houghton, Johannesburg.[1] After high school, he attended the University of Cape Town where he wanted to study drama, but on his father's insistence, obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree.[1]
Before becoming a journalist, he appeared on stage in Cape Town in Doctor in the House with Nigel Hawthorne in 1958.[1] By 1963, he had joined the Johannesburg-based newspaper, The Star, and would also serve as their foreign correspondent in London and New York.[1] Leaving the newspaper, he would work for a public relations firm Group Editors.[1]
In 1966, writing plays as a hobby, he would win a SABC English radio play prize for To The End of the Road.[1] With the introduction of television at the SABC in 1976, he would write the scripts for the television drama series The Villagers, set on a mine in the Witwatersrand and ran from 1976 until 1978.[1] His next television series was a 26-episode comedy called Oh George.[1] Other television series during the 1980s included Westgate, a boardroom family drama and 1922, a historical mining drama set during the Rand Rebellion.[1] In 1986, he would write the screenplay for Jock of the Bushveld, based on the book of the same name by Percy Fitzpatrick.
In 1988, he immigrated to Australia and worked in Perth and Sydney where he co-wrote screenplays for television and films. He would retire later to Maleny, Queensland, where he continued to write plays such as Unforced Errors, The Eulogy and Up The Tiber and acted on stage.
He was diagnosed with cancer in 2015 and died aged 79 in February 2016 in Maleny, Queensland. He left behind a wife Mirella and three children, Liam, Nicky and Scott.[2]
Following is a list of his works:[3]