| Marieke Hardy | |
|---|---|
| Born | Marieke Josephine Hardy 26 May 1976 Melbourne, Australia |
| Occupation | Writer, Actress, Producer |
| Language | English |
| Citizenship | Australian |
| Notable work(s) | Laid Packed to the Rafters Last Man Standing Short Cuts Neighbours |
| Relative(s) | Alan Hardy, Galia Hardy, Frank Hardy, Mary Hardy |
Marieke Josephine Hardy (born 26 May 1976) is an Australian writer, broadcaster, television producer and former television actress.
Hardy is the granddaughter of Frank Hardy, author of Power Without Glory,[1] and the grandniece of comedian Mary Hardy. Her parents Alan and Galia Hardy were writers, producers and editors on several Australian television series including The Sullivans and All the Rivers Run.[2]
Hardy was educated at Carey Baptist Grammar School and Swinburne Senior Secondary College in Melbourne.
Hardy co-hosted Melbourne's 3RRR radio show "Best of the Brat" on Tuesday nights from April 1996 to December 2007, under the pseudonym Holly C. The show was known as "the most immature show on Australian radio".[3] Almost immediately following her departure from RRR, in January 2008 she began co-hosting the breakfast show on Triple J, the ABC's youth radio station, with Robbie Buck and Lindsay 'The Doctor' McDougall.[4] In December 2009, Hardy announced she was leaving Triple J to concentrate on her writing career.[5]
Working in the entertainment industry from a young age as an actress, Hardy appeared in such television programs as The Henderson Kids II, All Together Now, Neighbours, A Country Practice and various television commercials before pursuing a career as a scriptwriter.
In 2005, Hardy created, wrote and produced a 22-episode drama series for the Seven Network called Last Man Standing. The series struggled to gain ratings for its prime-time slot[6][7] and was cancelled after one series.
Hardy is a regular panelist (or 'Book Club Member') on the ABC1 literary review show, First Tuesday Book Club.[8]
After leaving Triple J in 2010, Hardy returned to television writing, working on the Comedy Channel advertising industry sitcom 30 Seconds.
Since 2008, Hardy has written 11 episodes of Packed to the Rafters, starting with the third episode of the first series. She has written episodes for every series up to the fourth.
In 2011, with Kirsty Fisher, she co-created and co-wrote a six-part TV series called Laid for the ABC.[9]
Hardy formerly penned a blog called Reasons You Will Hate Me under the pseudonym "Ms Fits"[10] which won a Bloggie award for Best Australia/New Zealand blog in 2008.[11]
She wrote commentary columns for The Age newspaper's Green Guide TV section ("Back Chat") and Life & Style (formally A2) section, as well a contributing to Frankie magazine. She resigned from the Green Guide in November 2009 due to other writing commitments.[12]
Hardy signed a two book deal with publishers Allen & Unwin, and the first of those books, You'll Be Sorry When I'm Dead, was published in 2011. She will begin working on the second, a novel, in 2012.[13]
Hardy started a left-wing political apparel brand with designer Sara-Jane Chase called Polichicks in 2003.[14]
As of October 2008, Hardy became a committed vegan[15][16][17][18] after completing a one week challenge set by her Triple J co-presenter Lindsay McDougall.
In October 2010, an article on the Liberal Party politician Christopher Pyne written by Hardy on the ABC 'The Drum' blog site was withdrawn on the grounds that it "failed to meet the standards for argument and well-thought opinion". A public apology was issued to Pyne by 'The Drum' editor Jonathan Green "for both the attack and for its deeply personal nature".[19]
| Feature Films | |||||
| Year | Title | Crew Role | Role | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | True Love and Chaos | Out of it Woman | [20] | ||
| Television | |||||
| Year | Title | Crew Role | Role | Notes | Ref. |
| 2011 - Present | Laid | Co-Creator, Series Writer and Co-Producer | All Episodes | [21] | |
| 2010 | Spirited | Writer | "Cats in the Cradle" (#1.6) | [22] | |
| Talkin' 'Bout Your Generation | Herself | Episode: #2.5 | [23] | ||
| 2008 - Present | Packed to the Rafters | Series Writer | Various Episodes | [24] | |
| 2007 | Marx and Venus | Writer | Unknown Episodes | [25] | |
| 2005 | Last Man Standing | Series Writer and Producer | All Episodes | [26] | |
| 2003 | The Sleepover Club | Writer | Various Episodes | [27] | |
| 2002 | Short Cuts | Series Writer | Josephine Coxon | All Episodes | [28] |
| 2001 | McLeod's Daughters | Writer | "Playing to Win" (#1.16) | [29] | |
| Always Greener | Writer | Various Episodes | [30] | ||
| Horace & Tina | Writer | Various Episodes | [31] | ||
| Wild Kat | Writer | Various Episodes | [32] | ||
| Something in the Air | Writer | Various Episodes | [33] | ||
| 1998 | Thunderstone | Writer | Sophie | Various Episodes | [34] |
| Stingers | Lara Kelly | "Jelly Babies" (#1.9) | [35] | ||
| Raw FM | Lucina | "Raw'n'Sore" (#1.8) | [36] | ||
| 1995 - 2003 | Neighbours | Writer | Rhonda Brumby | Various Episodes | [37] |
| 1994 | Ocean Girl | Script Assistant | Unknown Episodes | [38] | |
| A Country Practice | Yesterday Hubble | "Over The Edge" (#1.23) | [39] | ||
| 1993 | The Late Show | Passer-by in 'Kelvin, Son of Melvin, Son of Alvin' | Uncredited (#2.17) | [40] | |
| R.F.D.S | Zoe Solomon | [41] | |||
| 1991 | All Together Now | Writer | Unknown Episodes | [42] | |
| 1987 | The Henderson Kids II | Sally Marshall | [43] | ||
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