Dan Ilic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dan Ilic

At the 2009 Australian Power Shift Conference
Born (1981-11-20) 20 November 1981
Sydney, Australia
Occupation Comedian, actor, filmmaker, broadcaster
Known for The Ronnie Johns Half Hour, Beaconsfield: The Musical, Hungry Beast, So where the bloody hell are you?
Website
http://www.danilic.com/

Dan Ilic (born 20 November 1981) is an Australian presenter, comedian and filmmaker.[1] Ilic has been known for his parody work, including videos and Beaconsfield: The Musical, which he authored, and more recently for his work on the show Hungry Beast.

Performing

Ilic started his performing career with Cumberland Gang Show and eventually joined the production team in 1994 as a junior producer at the age of 13. He spent 11 years performing and producing Cumberland Gang Show, and in the late nineties he was also was regular fixture in Sydney's amateur musical theatre scene.[2][3][4]

At Macquarie University he performed in several shows including, Chris McDonald’s The Beatification Of Newt Berton and the Great Viagra Robbery which performed with Heath Franklin, and James Pender.[5] The show toured to the Melbourne International Comedy Festival and a short run in Canberra in 2003.[6]

Ilic was also part of the university sketch comedy The 3rd Degree which formed the base of the Network Ten's cult sketch comedy television show The Ronnie Johns Half Hour with Ilic not only a cast member and writer, but also animator and producer of several sketches.

In 2007 he started the Sydney sketch comedy club night Comicide and in 2008 toured a "best of" show, Comicide: Death by Funny, to the Melbourne International Comedy Festival.[7][8]

Ilic is currently a reporter/presenter on the Andrew Denton produced show Hungry Beast, aired on ABC1, and as a writer/performer on Can of Worms on Network Ten. After Hungry Beast finished its second season in 2010, Ilic was one of nine members of the team to be selected by Denton to develop online content for Zapruder's Other Films.[9]

Other television appearances include Romper Room (Seven Network), 9am with David & Kim (Network Ten), 4 Corners (ABC-TV), and ADbc (Special Broadcasting Service)

Beaconsfield: The Musical

Ilic's production Beaconsfield: The Musical, which premiered in Melbourne in late 2008, focused on the media circus that surrounded the events of the 2006 Beaconsfield mine collapse.[10] The show received strong reviews,[11][12] but its original title, Beaconsfield: A Musical in A Flat Minor, was strongly criticised, leading to the change in name.[10]

Directing

In 2008 Dan moved to Melbourne to direct The Comedy Channel's satirical news program, The Mansion starring Michael Chamberlin and Charlie Pickering. He has also filmed and produced a selection of short video parodies, along with other related online work. These have included filming and editing for the Axis of Awesome's Election '07 Rap Battle;[13][14] an anti-web censorship advertisement, Censordyne, produced for GetUp;[15] a parody website describing a fake television series about the murder of Michael McGurk;[16] and a parody video of the Freeview advertising campaign produced for Massage My Medium, a comedy stand-up routine featuring Ilic and Marc Fennell, which in turn was removed from YouTube when it was accused of being a copyright violation, as the work employed footage from the advertisement being parodied.[17]

At times his work has been the subject of criticism – his parody of the Where the bloody hell are you? advertising campaign, designed to attract tourists to Australia, received threats of legal action from Tourism Australia.[18] Ilic was also behind Vicroads' controversial "Don't be a dickhead" campaign, which makes fun of "gingers" and "emos" in an attempt to create awareness of using mobile phones while driving.[19][20]

References

  1. Blundell, Graeme (30 May 2009). "Is this the future of television?". The Australian. Retrieved 11 March 2010. 
  2. http://www.gangshow.asn.au/yabb/YaBB.pl?num=1210489287/0
  3. http://www.symt.org.au/pastprds/h2$.pdf
  4. http://www.mosmanmusicalsociety.com.au/past.html
  5. http://www.laughingstock.com.au/index.php?mod=event&id=1
  6. Newt Berton Review
  7. "Comicide". Retrieved 7 April 2010. 
  8. "Comicide: Death by Funny". Comedy Festival Season 2008. Retrieved 7 April 2010. 
  9. Jackson, Sally (12 April 2010). "Digital natives held to spin new web". The Australian. Retrieved 8 March 2010. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 McDonald, Patrick (12 March 2009). "Comics mining the media circus". The Advertiser (Adelaide, Australia). p. 15. 
  11. Woodhead, Cameron (16 April 2009). "Beaconsfield: The Musical". The Age (Melbourne, Australia). Retrieved 11 March 2010. 
  12. Paul, Margaret (10 October 2008). "Panning for comedy gold". The Age (Melbourne, Australia). p. 15. 
  13. Hills, Rachel (21 October 2007). "Video wars rock the vote". The Age (Melbourne, Australia). Retrieved 11 March 2010. 
  14. "Election ‘07 Rap Battle". Axis of Awesome. 15 October 2007. Retrieved 11 March 2010. 
  15. Moses, Asher (9 July 2009). "Censordyne: net censoring gets a toothpasting". Brisbane Times (Brisbane, Australia). Retrieved 11 March 2010. 
  16. Nicholls, Sean; Dunn, Emily (11 September 2009). "It Jumped the Shark". Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney, Australia). Retrieved 11 March 2010. 
  17. Moses, Asher (9 March 2009). "YouTube yanks Freeview parody clip". Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney, Australia). Retrieved 11 March 2010. 
  18. "Internet parody of Tourism Australia's controversial "Where the bloody hell are you?" campaign". The Times (London, England). 28 March 2006. p. 3. 
  19. Levy, Megan (30 March 2010). "'Dickhead' creator tickled pink over red-head fury". The Age (Melbourne, Australia). Retrieved 30 March 2010. 
  20. Sexton, Reid (30 March 2010). "Road safety campaign risks spinning out of control". The Age (Melbourne, Australia). Retrieved 30 March 2010. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.