Peter Fisher (actor)
Peter Fisher (born 29 March 1954) is an Australian film and television actor who was most active in the period from the mid-1970s to the late-1990s. In the early 1990s he started to move into the area of corporate communications. In 1995 he created "Act One!" (Act One Theatre based Learning Pty Ltd) in Sydney, a company that specialises in corporate training and development.[1] In the early 2000s he became involved with The University of New South Wales' Australian Graduate School of Management,[2] particularly the Middle Manager Program.[3][4]
Peter Fisher | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Television actor, corporate trainer |
Years active | Acting 1972–1994, corporate training 1994–present |
Website | www.peterf.com.au |
Born in Katoomba, New South Wales, he studied architecture at Sydney University, graduating in 1974.[2]
Filmography
Film | Year | Character | |
---|---|---|---|
Danny Deckchair | 2003 | Film | Fire Captain Robbo |
Murder Call | 1998 | TV episode | Leonard Hertzberg |
Water Rats | 1998 | TV episode | Bruce Johnson |
Big Sky | 1997 | TV episode | Detective Darren Taylor |
Reprisal | 1997 | TV | Chandler |
A Country Practice | 1993 | TV series | 6 episodes 1991–1993 |
My Two Wives | 1993 | TV series | Geoffrey Kennedy (26 episodes) |
Ratbag Hero | 1991 | TV mini series (8 hours) | Frank Kelso (Pop) |
More Winners: Second Childhood | 1990 | TV episode | Bob |
Elly & Jools | 1990 | TV mini series (12 parts) | David Traveller |
The Flying Doctors | 1990 1988 | TV episode TV episode | Phil Guthrie Johnnie |
The Dirtwater Dynasty | 1988 | TV mini series | Nevertire Postman |
Tudawali | 1987 | Film | Harry Wilkins[5] |
Richmond Hill | 1987 | TV series | Ron Stacey (4 episodes) |
Jack Simpson: A Willesee Documentary | 1987 | TV | Private Grimshaw |
Alice to Nowhere | 1986 | TV mini series | |
Robbery | 1985 | TV movie | Williams |
Five Mile Creek | 1984 | TV episode | Slim |
Special Squad | 1984 | TV episode | |
Kingswood Country | 1984 | TV series | Craig Bulpitt (89 episodes)[6] |
Chopper Squad | 1979 | TV episode | Jack |
The Secret Life of John Chapman | 1976 | TV | Factory Clerk |
Sweet Revenge | 1976 | Film | Floor Walker |
Footnotes
- Director and Players Archived 24 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine, peterf.com.au
- Peter Fisher, Australian School of Business, UNSW
- Middle Manager Program, Australian Graduate School of Management
- Program brochure 2010, Middle Manager Program, Australian Graduate School of Management
- Tudawali Archived 9 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Australian feature films shot in or set in or first shown in or partly financed by Western Australia.
Tudawali (Steve Jodrell, 1987) prod. Paul D. Barron, Julia Overton, wr. Alan Seymour, dop. Michael Edols, prod. design Phil Peters, ed. Kerry Regan; Ernie Dingo, Jedda Cole, Peter Fisher, Frank Wilson, Charles Tingwell, Suzanne Peveril, Bill McCluskey, Michelle Torres; WA; made for TV, 91 min. docu-drama about Aboriginal actor, Robert Tudawali (star of Jedda) - Kingswood Country Archived 13 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Memorable Australian TV.
gollark: Well, your current implementation lets them do stuff to OS files, so no.
gollark: I would recommend against #1, because weirdly enough people like being able to write, download and run programs.
gollark: In potatOS I do #2. Unfortunately the sandboxing implementation is about 500 lines of code, very version-specific because it runs half the BIOS for weird internal reasons, and has several known holes.
gollark: There are two ways around this:- make your "OS" unable to run arbitrary code and instead use a highly limited shell/GUI- sane sandboxing via providing no/a limited FS API to environments where you can run arbitrary code
gollark: The crux of the issue is that people can via a variety of methods write and run code which can edit your thing even if you pointlessly meddle with the shell.
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