Rod Quantock | |
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Rod Quantock as featured in an art piece at the Trades Hall. |
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Born | 1949 |
Medium | Cabaret, theatre, television, radio, print, corporate sector |
Nationality | Australian |
Years active | 1975 - present |
Genres | Political satire |
Spouse | Mary Kenneally (1972 - present) |
Website | www.quantock.com.au |
Rod Quantock (born 1949[1] [2]) is an Australian stand-up comedian and writer. He is known for his peculiar style of stand-up comedy, which is often politically driven, as well as being the face of bed retailer Capt'n Snooze for many years. Described as "a living Melbourne treasure" by The Age newspaper, he has also achieved great prominence with his involvement in political activism and social justice and as a speaker at many public and corporate events.
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Quantock grew up in Coburg. His father worked in Fitzroy in a metal-polishing factory and as a tram conductor. Before venturing into professional comedy, Quantock studied architecture at the University of Melbourne for 5 years. His interest in comedy started at the university Architect's revue in 1969, where he felt extremely comfortable once onstage. It was here that he met his future wife Mary Kenneally who was studying Law at the time. He went on to marry her in 1972 and they had two children.
Quantock's break into theatre came in the early '70s. Quantock played a large part in the re-birth of live theatre in Australia in the '70s, conceiving and performing more than 20 full scale productions for many of Australia's comedy venues including The Flying Trapeze Cafe, Foibles Theatre Restaurant, The Last Laugh, The Comedy Café and the Trades Hall.
Quantock became more involved in television in the early 80s and the 90s, working on the series Ratbags, Australia You're Standing In It, Fast Forward, Denton, Backberner and was a regular on The Big Gig and Good News Week.
In 2005, he appeared as the subject of an art exhibition displayed at Crown Casino.
Quantock has been a founding member on the Melbourne International Comedy Festival board, a consultant to the Melbourne Moomba Festival and a member of the Arts Committee of the Bicentennial BHP Awards For Excellence. Along with Kenneally, Geoff Brooks and Stephen Blackburn, Quantock opened and operated The Comedy Cafe and Banana Lounge.
Quantock starred in a series of television advertisements for bed retailer Capt'n Snooze from the '80s to the late '90s for which he has become most well known. In a working relationship spanning 18 years, Quantock explains that there were "a lot of things about Capt'n Snooze that were good and a lot of things that were bad"[3] but concedes that his main reason for continuing to be the face of Capt'n Snooze was financial:
They said, “All you've got to do is wear a little nightshirt and put a hat on and jump up and down on beds and you can have that semi-trailer full of money.” But I think it made me a bit less ambitious in terms of comedy. I mean I won’t go into the details, but we’ve had a lot of medical problems in our family, so that money took a lot of pressure off working professionally as a comedian. So I regret it at that level. I think I probably would be a better comedian, doing more interesting things if I hadn't have had that in my life.[4]
Quantock became well known for conducting various evening bus tours of Melbourne and other parts of Victoria since the early '80s, a concept called Bus, Son of Tram or just Bus, where a group of people would travel on a bus with him to a surprise location to meet other people who had no idea of their coming. The success of the bus tour depended largely on the element of surprise and the results were almost always comical. Quantock saw it as a way of seeing how frightened people have become:
We've got gated communities; we've got car alarms; we've got people putting steel shutters over their windows at night. People are frightened - of other people taking what they've got, of being killed, I suppose - so the thing I am going to find most interesting is how severe security has become[5]
but also as a way of
introduc[ing] unsuspecting people to this idea that the world's not such a frightening place and you can have fun with strangers.
The audience members where all given Groucho Marx masks and Rod carried a rubber chicken on a stick name Trevor.
Quantock is a strong leftist and was the host of the 1997, 1998 and 2004 Ska-TV Activist awards which were broadcast on community television around Australia.
He gave a speech at the 17 January 2010 rally at closure of The Tote Hotel.
From 1989-1994, Quantock was a weekly columnist for the Sunday Age and in September 1999, Double Disillusion, a compilation book of these columns and some of his live performances, was published.
In 1997, Quantock received a Green Room Award for his one man show Sunrise Boulevard.[6]
In 2004, Quantock received the Individual Award at the Sydney Myer Performing Arts Awards.[7]
In 2005, Quantock was the recipient of the Adelaide Justice Coalition Romero Community Award for his contribution to Australian social justice.
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