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Brian Abbot


Brian Abbot (1911–1936), real name George Rikard Bell, was an Australian actor best known for playing the male lead in Orphan of the Wilderness (1936) and the circumstances of his death.

George Rikard Bell (known professionally as Brian Abbot) ran away from school at aged 15 and worked as a jackeroo. He had a great love of sailing and originally wanted to be a sailor for a career, but worked on two vessels which later sunk, TSS Kanowna and SS Christina Frazer. In the words of a later newspaper profile, "As Mr. Abbot didn't believe in for the third time to prove that fate was against him he promptly decided that there were other adventurous jobs to be had which didn't carry the risk of drowning." He subsequently turned to acting, taking the stage name of Brian Abbot.

In early 1930 in Katoomba he married Phyllis Curley and in September they welcomed their son, Hal Beaumont Rikard Bell into the world, named after his father, Harry (Hal), The October 1929 Wall Street crash reverberated around the world and Australia's unemployed rose from 10 percent in 1929 to 21 percent by the mid-1930s and by 1932 more than 31 percent of the Australian work force was unemployed. Brian (still known as George Rikard Bell) pursued a variety of jobs to support his struggling young family but it was difficult to find work.

Sometime later, in 1935, divorced from his first wife and known as Brian Abbot he found his way into show business, getting a small role in Thoroughbred (1936) which led to him being cast by Ken G. Hall to play the lead in Orphan of the Wilderness (1936), although Hall later felt the actor's inexperience was evident in the final film.

By 1936 he had a new wife, Grace, and they were captured in a photo by Samuel Hood taken at Walsh Bay published on page 2 of The Australian Women’s Weekly on 24 October 1936 (that later became famous in Australia in 2014) just before he set sail on the SS Morinda to Lord Howe Island to star in the film Mystery Island

His grandson Philip Powers has also worked extensively in the Australian film industry, producing forty Australian feature film soundtrack albums as well as working for the Sydney Symphony Orchestra.

In October 1936, after completing work on Mystery Island (1937) on Lord Howe Island, Abbot and Leslie Hay-Simpson, a fellow actor, set out for Sydney in a 16-foot open longboat called The Mystery Star. They were never seen again, despite a search of over a week involving a number of vessels, including the naval destroyer HMAS Waterhen.


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