The Custodian


04:00 am - 05:30 am, Friday, November 28 on WBQM-LD3 Cornerstone (51.3)

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About this Broadcast
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Disturbed by corruption in his police force, an honest cop (Anthony La Paglia) teams with a reporter and a lawyer to expose the problem. Hugo Weaving. Ferguson: Barry Otto. Reynolds: Kelly Dingwall. Jilly: Essie Davis. Josie: Gosia Dobrowolska. Written and directed by John Dingwall.

1993 English
Crime Drama Crime

Cast & Crew
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Anthony LaPaglia (Actor) .. Quinlan
Hugo Weaving (Actor) .. Church
Barry Otto (Actor) .. Ferguson
Kelly Dingwall (Actor) .. Reynolds
Essie Davis (Actor) .. Jilly
Gosia Dobrowolska (Actor) .. Josie
Bill Hunter (Actor) .. Managing Director
Skye Wansey (Actor) .. Claire
Wayne Pygram (Actor) .. Massey
Tim McKenzie (Actor) .. Beetson
Rick Hill (Actor) .. Hanrahan
Bogdan Koca (Actor) .. Psychologist
Kerry Mack (Actor) .. 1st Policewoman
Waverney Ford (Actor) .. Arnott
Bob Baines (Actor) .. Blewett
Russell Newman (Actor) .. Commissioner
Joy Smithers (Actor) .. Helen
Christina Totos (Actor) .. Pixie
Naomi Watts (Actor) .. Louise
Andrew Sharp (Actor) .. Delhunty
Andrew Gilbert (Actor) .. Cameraman
Gandhi McIntyre (Actor) .. Bartender
Emily Lumbers (Actor) .. Camille
Steven Grives (Actor) .. Brennan
John Samaha (Actor) .. Tony
Shane McNamara (Actor) .. Joker
Kee Chan (Actor) .. Chief Executive
John Batchelor (Actor) .. Waiter
Richard Hill (Actor) .. Constable Hanrahan
Norman Kaye (Actor) .. Judge
Ken Snodgrass (Actor) .. Claire's Father
Ella-Mei Wong (Actor) .. Chinese Woman

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Anthony LaPaglia (Actor) .. Quinlan
Born: January 31, 1959
Birthplace: Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Trivia: Despite spending the first 25 years of his life in Adelaide, Australia, Anthony LaPaglia is best known for playing street-savvy Italian New Yorkers. This was not, however, LaPaglia's original plan. Rather than testing the waters of show business, LaPaglia traveled to the United States intending to pursue a full-time teaching career. As luck would have it, however, one of LaPaglia's odd jobs was a small role in Cold Steel (1987), a low-budget detective drama. LaPaglia began pursuing theater and television in his spare time -- one of his more notable early performances was in 1988's Frank Nitti: The Enforcer -- and considered himself a full-time actor by 1989, when he made his feature-film debut in Slaves of New York. It was 1990, however, when the young actor earned critical recognition for his role as an exceedingly polite mobster in Betsy's Wedding.LaPaglia continued to build his résuméthroughout the early '90s, most of which he spent playing either kindly policemen or good-hearted mobsters, and was delighted to work alongside a variety of noted actors so early in his career. Among those actors were Alan Alda in Betsy's Wedding, Michael Keaton in One Good Cop (1991), and Nathan Lane, Sharon Stone, and Kevin Bacon in He Said, She Said (1992). Later in 1992, LaPaglia could be found playing his first leading role in George Gallo's gangster farce 29th Street. Though the film did not fare particularly well, audiences were nonetheless impressed with LaPaglia's intensity, and he played a more serious gangster with great success opposite Susan Sarandon in The Client (1994). The actor switched gears for his next handful of films; in Mixed Nuts (1994) he played a disillusioned Santa Claus, while Empire Records (1995) found him as a down-on-his-luck store manager, and the Australian-helmed Brilliant Lies (1996) featured him as the defendant in a sketchy sexual-harassment case.Despite a smattering of mediocre films between 1995 and the early 2000s, LaPaglia continued to earn critical acclaim for many of his endeavors, such as Steve Buscemi's directorial debut, Trees Lounge (1996), for which LaPaglia joined a star-studded supporting cast, as well as for his role as a detective in Spike Lee's Summer of Sam (1999). Luckily for him, 2000 and 2001 proved excellent for his career, as it was during this period that he played a wealthy businessman in The House of Mirth and an adulterous police detective in Lantana. In addition to receiving international success, Lantana earned LaPaglia the prestigious Best Actor award from the Australian Film Institute, as well as a nomination from the Film Critics Circle. In the meantime, he was adding several major television credits to his résumé, including a starring role as the head of the FBI's Missing Persons Squad on CBS's Without a Trace, and a recurring role on the long-running sitcom Frasier, a performance for which he would receive an Emmy in 2002. Far removed from his fledgling days as a teacher, 2002 also found LaPaglia working with Val Kilmer for The Salton Sea; Sigourney Weaver for The Guys; Robert De Niro and Billy Crystal in Analyze That; and Eric Stoltz in Happy Hour. In 2003, after filming Manhood with Janeane Garofalo and the late John Ritter, LaPaglia agreed to star in director Josh Sternfeld's Winter Solstice (2004).Over the next several years, LaPaglia would appear in a number of big screen projects, like Balibo (2009), Overnight (2012) and A Good Marriage (2014).
Hugo Weaving (Actor) .. Church
Born: April 04, 1960
Birthplace: Ibadan, Nigeria
Trivia: A graduate of Australia's National Institute of Dramatic Art, blond, idiosyncratic leading man Hugo Weaving made his feature film debut in the socially conscious low-budget drama The City's Edge (1983), purportedly one of the first Australian films to sympathetically portray the adverse conditions suffered by aborigines. In 1991, Weaving received Best Actor kudos from the Australian Film Institute for his portrayal of a blind photographer in Jocelyn Moorhouse's Proof. In 1994, the actor earned international acclaim playing Tick, a drag queen with a secret, in the cult favorite The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994). The following year, Weaving was involved in another audience pleaser when he lent his voice to play the sheep dog Rex in Babe. Weaving occasionally appears in U.S. television productions, notably the CBS miniseries Dadah Is Death, in which he played opposite Julie Christie and Sarah Jessica Parker. He also continues to work steadily in Australia, in addition to appearing in big-budget Hollywood affairs such as The Matrix, in which he starred as an evil agent opposite Keanu Reeves and Laurence Fishburne. Following his turn in The Matrix with a few low-key romantic comedies (Strange Planet [also 1999] and Russian Doll [2001]), Weaving made a return to big-budgeted special effects extravaganzas with his involvement in director Peter Jackson's enormous adaptation of author J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. For the sequels to The Matrix, Weaving would return with a vengeance; with hundreds of Agent Smith clones sent to stop Neo (Keanu Reeves) from leading the revolution against the machines. An affiliation with another hit sci-fi series emerged when Weaving provided the voice of Megatron in Michael Bay's Transformers (as well as its two sequels), though it was the actor's affecting performance in 2009's Last Ride that earned him a nomination for Best Lead Actor at that year's Australian Film Institute awards. Cast as a dangerous Australian fugitive who flees from the law with his young son in tow, Weaving gave viewers a glimpse of the talent that was often overshadowed in his many larger-than-life roles, though it was his scenery-chewing performance as Johann Schmidt/Red Skull in Captain America: The First Avenger that got him back on the big screen in the U.S. following the disappointment of The Wolfman. Meanwhile, the busy screen veteran prepared for roles in Cloud Atlas (a sprawling sci-fi epic from Tom Tykwer and Andy and Lana Wachowski), and Peter Jackson's Hobbit trilogy.
Barry Otto (Actor) .. Ferguson
Born: January 01, 1941
Birthplace: Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Trivia: Began drawing at age 4 and trained as a graphic artist at Brisbane's Central Technical College. Worked in fashion illustration for advertising agencies. First professional acting role was in the TV soap opera Until Tomorrow. Breakthrough film role was Harry Joy in Bliss (1985), for which he received his first AFI Award nomination. Has acted in films with his daughter Miranda and starred in films directed by his daughter Gracie. Displayed an exhibition of his paintings in Sydney in 2011. In 2013, was billed to star in an adaptation of Tolstoy's The Kreutzer Sonata, but withdrew from the one-man play 48 hours before its opening, citing exhaustion.
Kelly Dingwall (Actor) .. Reynolds
Essie Davis (Actor) .. Jilly
Born: January 19, 1970
Birthplace: Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Trivia: While at drama school, lived with classmate Cate Blanchett. A week after graduating, cast as Juliet in Bell Shakespeare Company's 1993 production of Romeo and Juliet and as Jilly in the film The Custodian (1993). Met husband Justin Kurzel in 1996, when he was a set designer at the Sydney Theatre Company and she was in a Belvoir Street production of A View from the Bridge. Sprained her ankle, dislocated her knee and broke a rib doing stunts for Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries.
Gosia Dobrowolska (Actor) .. Josie
Born: June 02, 1958
Trivia: Polish-born leading lady of Australian films, Gosia Dobrowolska first appeared onscreen in Australia in the '80s.
Bill Hunter (Actor) .. Managing Director
Born: February 27, 1940
Died: May 21, 2011
Birthplace: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Trivia: Lead actor, onscreen from the '70s.
Skye Wansey (Actor) .. Claire
Wayne Pygram (Actor) .. Massey
Born: October 13, 1959
Birthplace: Cootamundra, New South Wales, Australia
Trivia: Has played the drums since he was a teen. While in college, was a member of the theatre troupe Riverina Trucking Company. Before working in films, had a prolific career on the stage, most notably with the Sydney Theatre Company. Played a young Grand Moff Tarkin in Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith (2005) due to his resemblance to Peter Cushing; 28 years earlier, Cushing played the same role in the original Star Wars movie. Rose to fame playing the villainous Scorpius on the TV series Farscape from 2001 to '03. Plays drums for the band the Signal Room; Farscape co-star Anthony Simcoe is also in the band. Teaches drums at Kildare Catholic College.
Tim McKenzie (Actor) .. Beetson
Rick Hill (Actor) .. Hanrahan
Born: January 26, 1953
Bogdan Koca (Actor) .. Psychologist
Born: February 21, 1952
Kerry Mack (Actor) .. 1st Policewoman
Waverney Ford (Actor) .. Arnott
Bob Baines (Actor) .. Blewett
Birthplace: Australia
Trivia: First film role was in 1978's TV movie Bud and Lou. Has played a police officer in several dramas, including Prisoner: Cell Block H in 1983, Blue Heelers in 1995 and Redfern Now in 2013. Starred as Giles in the 2011 short film Colin the Dog's Fabulous Midnight Adventure and Another Story. Profile was raised when he played Principal Bartlett on Home and Away from 2008 to '10. Played Les Kendell in the 2014 Sydney Lyric Theatre's production of Strictly Ballroom: The Musical.
Russell Newman (Actor) .. Commissioner
Joy Smithers (Actor) .. Helen
Born: July 15, 1963
Christina Totos (Actor) .. Pixie
Naomi Watts (Actor) .. Louise
Born: September 28, 1968
Birthplace: Shoreham, England
Trivia: Naomi Watts had already been a working actress for over a decade when she earned notice as a promising newcomer in David Lynch's Cannes Film Festival prizewinner Mulholland Drive (2001).Born September 28th, 1968, Watts began acting in her teens, landing her first film role in For Love Alone (1986). Watts subsequently appeared with future Hollywood headliners Nicole Kidman and Thandie Newton in John Duigan's disarming teen romance Flirting (1991). Watts's next film with Duigan, Wide Sargasso Sea (1992), was not so well received. After her first taste of Hollywood with Joe Dante's schlock movie homage Matinee (1992), Watts nabbed a starring role as Jimmy Smits's disturbed student in George Miller's little seen courtroom drama Gross Misconduct (1993). Watts then starred as Jet Girl to Lori Petty's Tank Girl (1995), but the science fiction fantasy suffered an ignominious box office fate. After a series of TV movies and thrillers, including Sleepwalkers (1997) and Children of the Corn IV (1996), Watts appeared in Marshall Herskovitz's high-toned Venetian courtesan costumer Dangerous Beauty (1998) and successful TV docudrama The Hunt for the Unicorn Killer (1999). Watts's breakthrough finally arrived when David Lynch cast her in his ABC pilot Mulholland Drive. Though ABC canceled the project in 1999 after Lynch turned in a typically mood-drenched work, StudioCanal financed its transformation into a feature that debuted to acclaim at Cannes in 2001. A Los Angeles dreamscape akin to Lost Highway, Mulholland Drive featured Watts as the blonde half of a female duo caught in a mystery of shifting identities. Drawing attention for her not-for-network TV love scene with co-star Laura Harring, Watts also earned praise as a rising "new" actress.Though ignored for an Oscar nomination, Watts's tour-de-force dual performance earned her numerous accolades and critics' awards, igniting her career. Working steadily in the wake of Mulholland Drive, Watts scored a box-office as well as critical success a year later with The Ring (2002), the Hollywood remake of the Japanese horror blockbuster. Starring Watts as an intrepid reporter investigating the origins of a lethal videotape, The Ring overcame studio doubts to become a sleeper hit, solidifying Watts's new star status. Watts subsequently donned period dress for the Showtime western The Outsider (2002), and to co-star alongside fellow Aussie Heath Ledger in The Kelly Gang (2003). Balancing her genre work with potentially headier fare guided by notable directors, Watts also appeared with Kate Hudson, Glenn Close and Stockard Channing in the Merchant-Ivory romantic comedy Le Divorce (2003), and won a leading role opposite formidable actors Sean Penn and Benicio Del Toro in Alejandro González Iñárritu's 21 Grams (2003).In 2004, Watts worked opposite Mark Ruffalo for the independent film We Don't Live Here Anymore, and reteamed with Sean Penn for The Assassination of Richard Nixon. She landed the starring role of Ann Darrow in director Peter Jackson's remake of King Kong (2006), and starred in the 2006 remake of The Painted Veil. Watts was praised for her work as a British midwife who accidentally gets involved in the Russian mafia in director David Cronenberg's psychological thriller Eastern Promises. Watts starred along with Clive Owen in 2009's The International, for which she played the part of an assistant district attorney who participates in a plan to rob a bank, and co-starred alongside Samuel L. Jackson, Annette Benning, and Kerry Washington for the drama Mother and Child. Watts was later cast in Dream House (2011), a thriller starring Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz, and worked with Leonardo DiCaprio in the 2011 biopic J. Edgar. In 2012 she played the mother of a family trapped in a catastrophic storm in The Impossible, garnering a Best Actress nomination for her work in the film.
Andrew Sharp (Actor) .. Delhunty
Andrew Gilbert (Actor) .. Cameraman
Gandhi McIntyre (Actor) .. Bartender
Born: October 02, 1939
Emily Lumbers (Actor) .. Camille
Steven Grives (Actor) .. Brennan
Born: March 16, 1951
John Samaha (Actor) .. Tony
Shane McNamara (Actor) .. Joker
Kee Chan (Actor) .. Chief Executive
John Batchelor (Actor) .. Waiter
Born: September 25, 1969
Richard Hill (Actor) .. Constable Hanrahan
Norman Kaye (Actor) .. Judge
Born: January 17, 1927
Trivia: Costarring actor, onscreen from Lonely Hearts (1982). He is a major stage actor.
Ken Snodgrass (Actor) .. Claire's Father
Ella-Mei Wong (Actor) .. Chinese Woman

Before / After
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