Friday 14 December 2018

Robert Rabiah’s long journey from ‘Chopper’ to ‘Safe Harbour’

Yet he soon discovered acting is a fickle profession, as he experienced some lean periods in between roles in Michael Rymer’s Face to Face and in TV series including Stingers, Unberbelly, Fat Tony & Co and Deadline Gallipoli.

A lot of hard work and perseverance paid off for Rabiah when he secured key roles in Jeffrey Walker’s Ali’s Wedding and in Matchbox Pictures’ four-part drama Safe Harbour for SBS.

“It’s been a great year,” he tells IF. “You never stop learning and I am still growing as an artist. Every role is a big role to me. I always pour my heart and soul into every part and every script.

“My hope is that Safe Harbour will enjoy the success that Ali’s Wedding has received and I have no doubt it will. There was such a great vibe on both sets, a lot of love went into making both productions and my feeling is that will translate to an audience. “

Directed by Glendyn Ivin and scripted by Belinda Chayko, Matt Cameron and Phil Enchelmaier, Safe Harbour follows five Aussies as they encounter a broken-down fishing boat full of desperate asylum seekers.

They agree to tow the stricken vessel back to Australia but the next morning it has vanished. Five years later they meet some of the refugees and discover someone had cut the rope, resulting in the loss of seven lives.

Nicole Chamoun and Hazem Shammas play Zahra and Ismail, an Iraqi couple whose nine-year-old daughter dies after the vessel sinks, and Rabiah is Ismail’s brother Bilal.

The actor describes his character as a strong and warm but vulnerable man with a harrowing past who is determined to keep his family together at any cost. His undiagnosed PTSD makes him an outsider, even to his family at times.

To prepare for the physically demanding role he lost 10kg and did boxing and commando-style workouts at 3.30 each morning before the 6am call.

“I felt the weight of the responsibility and I went all out,” he said. “To be frank, it was a small price to pay to do justice to the asylum seekers searching for a better life, and the servicemen and women who suffer in silence from their harrowing war experiences. We come from a place of opportunity where we can be whatever we want to be – we are told that on a daily basis. A lot of people don’t have those opportunities.” 


Robert Rabiah with ‘Safe Harbour’ co-star Jacqueline McKenzie at the SBS Upfronts (Photo credit: Rex Features / SBS)

To stay in character he tried to remain apart from fellow cast members including Phoebe Tonkin, Jacqueline McKenzie, Ewen Leslie, and Leeanna Walsman. Everyone was generous and respectful of each other’s process, he says.

Chayko is one of his favourite writers and he jumped at the chance to work with Ivin, whom he admires as a vivid storyteller, and producer Stephen Corvini.

In Chopper he played Nick, right-hand man to Neville Bartos (Vince Colosimo), an amalgamation of a few real life characters with whom the real Mark Chopper Read associated.

Rymer cast him as Hakim, a disgruntled worker who is the subject of bullying and racial vilification in the workplace, in the 2011 drama Face to Face.

In Deadline Gallipoli he played Mehmet, the only Turkish soldier who could speak English and after being captured served as a translator for journalist Charles Bean (Joel Jackson, who is part of the ensemble cast of Safe Harbour). Before filming started Sam Worthington sent him an email to stress he was determined to tell both sides of the WWI story.

Rabiah studied acting at the Beverly Hills Playhouse in Los Angeles in 1997-1998, living in a mate’s walk-in wardrobe, and he has written several screenplays, shorts and documentaries.

Jericho, the screenplay he co-wrote with Evan Clarry, won the Australian Writers’ Guild’s Monte Miller Award in 2006, which he says gave him a better understanding of story and character.

In Ali’s Wedding he played Mohsen, the father of Dianne (Helana Sawires).

The actor concludes: “I am also very optimistic about where the Australian film and television industry is headed. SBS and diversity have been synonymous for as long as I can remember. Now everyone else is slowly catching up.

“There is a real market for stories with a diverse tapestry of colour, race, gender, class. We need more of them, both here and abroad. The tide is slowly turning and we are seeing what is reflected on our streets finally reflected on our screens.”

Thursday 29 November 2018

Robert Rabiah - Known As A Best Australian Film Actor

Robert Rabiah is an Australian film actor best known for his roles as Hakim in Face to Face, Nick in Chopper, Dario Mancini in Fat Tony & Co., Spiro Politis on TV soap Neighbours, Mehmet in Deadline Gallipoli, Mohsen in Ali's Wedding, Bilal in Safe Harbour[2] and Sami Almasi in Secret City (TV series).
Career

In 2000, Rabiah started his acting in the Chopper, alongside Eric Bana and Vince Colosimo.[3] He got roles in the television series including Stingers, Unberbelly, Fat Tony & Co and Deadline Gallipoli.In 2004, he got the role of Mario in Evan Clarry’s Under the Radar. He got a major role in Michael Rymer’s Face to Face and received nomination for Best Supporting Actor at the AACTA Awards.

His other major work includes Deadline Gallipoli,[5] Down Under,[6] Neighbours, Safe Harbour[7][8] and Ali's Wedding.[9][10] In 2018, he was played the role of Sami Almasi in the drama television series Secret City.

Filmography:
  • Face to Face (2011)
  • Chopper (2000)
  • Ali's Wedding (2017)
  • Deadline Gallipoli (2015)
  • Safe Harbour (2018)
  • Under the Radar (2004)
  • Neighbours (2017)
  • Down Under (2016)
  • Secret City (TV series) (2018)

References:

  1. Hadfield, Shelley (21 February 2009), "Crime doesn't pay for Underbelly actor Fined for Botox bill", Herald-Sun
  2. "[Trailer] Australian Psychological Thriller Series "Safe Harbour" Finds Home On Hulu - Bloody Disgusting". bloody-disgusting.com. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  3. Groves, Don (18 December 2017), Robert Rabiah’s long journey from ‘Chopper’ to ‘Safe Harbour
  4. McCarthy, Todd (2011-02-07). "Santa Barbara Festival Winner 'Face to Face' Is Feisty, Engaging". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2018-05-21.
  5. "Nine CEO admits Gallipoli audiences are a 'disappointment' as network prepares to 'burn' drama series - Mumbrella". Mumbrella. 2015-02-26. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  6. "Follow the actors onto the red carpet for the AACTAs". Dailytelegraph.com. 31 January 2012.
  7. "Australian mini-series brings migration debate back to the fore | Iman Zayat | AW". AW. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  8. Buckmaster, Luke (2018-03-07). "Safe Harbour review – tense, compelling asylum seeker drama offers no easy answers". the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  9. "Audiences will say: 'I do'". NewsComAu. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  10. Petski, Denise (2018-08-06). "Australian Psychological Thriller 'Safe Harbour' Heads To Hulu". Deadline. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  11. "Foxtel's 'Secret City' sequel shines a light on the Australian/US alliance". IF Magazine. 2018-02-04. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  12. "Jameson IF Awards Sydney announces nominations for 2011". IF Magazine. 2011-10-11. Retrieved 2018-05-21.
  13. Roach, Vick (2011). "film red dog starring rachael taylor and josh lucas leads nomination for 2011 if awards in november". Daily Telegraph.
  14. "Monaco Charity Film Festival". IMDb.
  15. Kalina, Paul (31 August 2006), "Short Cuts", The Age

Friday 23 November 2018

Safe Harbour Sync : Provactive and powerful Australian Drama


Safe Harbour is helmed by a stellar ensemble cast featuring award-winning actor Ewen Leslie (Rake, Janet King, Top of the Lake: China Girl), acclaimed actress Leeanna Walsman (Seven Types of Ambiguity, Cleverman, Looking for Alibrandi), AACTA and Logie award-winner Joel Jackson (Peter Allen: Not the Boy Next Door, Deadline Gallipoli), Australian making waves internationally Phoebe Tonkin (The Vampire Diaries, The Originals, H2O Just Add Water), Hazem Shammas (Underbelly), rising star Nicole Chamoun (Romper Stomper), Robert Rabiah (Tomorrow When the War Began), and award-winner Jacqueline McKenzie (Romper Stomper, The 4400, The Water Diviner).

SBS Director of Television and Online Content, Marshall Heald said:

“Safe Harbour is one of SBS’s proudest achievements – it’s not only a gripping thriller that will keep audiences guessing, but an exploration of the ethical decisions people make under pressure. It combines high concept drama with relatable characters that put a human lens on an issue usually only discussed in news and current affairs programs and political debate.

“Safe Harbour forces us to ask hard questions of ourselves.”

Filmed on location in the underused backdrop of beautiful Brisbane, Safe Harbour is directed by Glendyn Ivin (Seven Types of Ambiguity, The Beautiful Lie) and executive produced by SBS’s Sue Masters (The Principal, Deep Water, The Family Law) and Matchbox Pictures’ Debbie Lee (Mustangs FC, Hyde & Seek, Oddlands) and produced by Stephen Corvini (Better Man, Hyde & Seek). Based on an original concept by Simon Kennedy and Phil Enchelmaier, showrunner and writer Belinda Chayko (Barracuda, Secret City) headed a strong writing team that included Matt Cameron (Sunshine, Secret City) and Phil Enchelmaier (Jar Dwellers).

The 4-part series will air over 4 weeks on TV as well as available on SBS Demand, it is already a critic success and must not be missed.

Thursday 15 November 2018

Robert Rabiah Biography




 
Robert Rabiah was nominated for Best Actor alongside Geoffrey Rush, Hugo Weaving, Sam Neill and David Wenham at the 2012 AFI/AACTA Academy Awards and 2011 Inside Film Awards.

Robert Rabiah has also won Best Actor (Monaco Charity Film Festival) Best Writer at the Australian Writer's Guild (Monte Miller Award) and Best Writer at the National Literary Awards (Fellowship of Australian Writers)

Robert Rabiah's other notable distinctions include a top 5 Award at the first SPAAMART (Screen Producer's Association of Australia Film Market) and a SPARK Award given by the Australian Film Commission.

Robert Rabiah's passion for film was inspired by growing up across the road from a cinema. The door was never left ajar and he never sneaked in without paying.

Robert Rabiah was mentored early in his career by Dominic Minghella (brother of the late Anthony Minghella) Robin Swicord (Writer "Practical Magic" & "Memoirs of a Geisha") and legendary Australian icons Linda Aronson and Bud Tingwell.

Robert Rabiah has also branched out into music and had a number 28 hit on the Australian dance charts in the 90's with pop outfit RMR. Their song was released by Standard Records, Australia.