Anna Jullienne

Anna Jullienne Kermode (born 7 November 1982) is a New Zealand actress, best known for her role as Nurse Maia Jeffries in the television series Shortland Street.[1]

Anna Jullienne Kermode
Born (1982-11-07) 7 November 1982
Notable work
Nurse Maia Jeffries in Shortland Street
Spouse(s)James Kermode (2010 - present)

Career

Jullienne attended Corran School for Girls,[2] and was active in drama, with lead roles in productions of Amadeus, Julius Caesar and Anything Goes, and she won several awards, including the 1999 NZ Young Performer of the Year, 1st prize in the 1999 Auckland National Independent Schools Speech Competition, and 1st prize in the Auckland Drama Championship at the North Shore Performing Arts Festival. In 2007, she won the Air New Zealand Screen Award for Performance by a Supporting Actress, for her role on Shortland Street.[3]

Jullienne holds an ATCL Teacher Practical Certificate from the Trinity College of London Drama Examination, and studied camera technique under Jan Saussey. She is fluent in French and Japanese, as well as English.

Her professional career started during her time at the University of Auckland with roles in Mercy Peak and Secret Agent Men, and she put her studies (a BA in English and Film and TV) on hold to take up her first major dramatic screen role on Shortland Street.[1] She took a six-month break from filming Shortland Street from October 2007 and left the show in late 2010 with Maia's last scene airing 9 February 2011. Throughout her career Jullienne has been a prominent spokeswoman and model for the Red 11 modelling agency. Jullienne has appeared in photo shoots for such brands as: NZ Performance Car, Red Bull, XCDR and Car50.

Controversy

The lesbian relationship in Shortland Street between Jullienne's character Maia and Jay (Jaime Passier-Armstrong), which was introduced in June 2004, has been controversial, although the overall response has been positive. On 26 April 2005, New Zealand's Civil Union Act came into effect, which allowed both heterosexual and homosexual couples to register their relationships officially, as distinct from traditional marriage, and on 14 February 2006, the first fictional portrayal of a civil union on New Zealand television took place between Maia and Jay.

Personal life

In real life, Anna has close friendships with Fleur Saville, Faye Smythe, Beth Allen, Amanda Billing, Te Kohe Tuhaka and Alison Quigan. She married commercial property manager James Kermode in 2010. She had her first child, a son (Theodore), in January 2014, and her second son (Jude) was born in November 2016.

Filmography

Film and television
Year Title Role Notes
2004-2012 Shortland Street Maia Jeffries Regular role
2011 Underbelly NZ: Land of the Long Green Cloud Deb Masters "Dominoes", "Thirty of Silver/One of Gold"
2012 Sione's 2: Unfinished Business Librarian
2012 Auckland Daze Anna "1.2"
2013 The Blue Rose Krystle Wilkinson Recurring role
2013 Harry Jenny Chisholm "He's the Weak Link", "Play with Fire"
2013 Over the Moon Connie Radar Short film
2013-2014 Jono And Ben At Ten Herself Recurring Role
2014 Agent Anna "2.10"
2015–2018 800 Words Katie Regular Role
2016 Bombshell Frederique TV Movie
2019 Falling Inn Love
Charlotte Wadsworth Netflix movie
2019–present Mean Mums Heather Regular Role
gollark: You can have "universal truth" with things like logical statements, where you can come up with things that are always true given some set of axioms. For physical/sciencey things you can just do "it's very unlikely for this to not be the case".
gollark: They... can be... good for explaining things. They aren't proofs but demonstrations.
gollark: Your analogies are bad because you can't derive ultimate universal truth from a few instances of something being true.
gollark: I guess something something precision errors.
gollark: Hmm, according to this normal CDF thing the probability of a negative IQ is just "zero".

References

  1. Barry, Rebecca (16 September 2004). "On the street with Anna Jullienne". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2009-07-07.
  2. "Results: 1999 Secondary Schools Cross Country Champs - Race Position #204". Cool Running New Zealand. 12 June 1999. Archived from the original on 4 October 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-23.
  3. "Outrageous Fortune scoops up awards". The Dominion Post. 2 August 2007. Retrieved 2009-07-07.
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