Acting
After Men at Work Hay has also performed in a number of films and TV shows, usually in small roles.
- The Uninvited (2008) as Nick
- The Wild (2006) as Fergus Flamingo (voice)
- Scrubs (TV series) (2002, 2007, 2009)
- Episode – My Overkill as Troubador (Performing "Overkill")
- Episode – My Hard Labor as Troubador (Performing "Down Under")
- Episode – My Finale as Troubador (Cameo)
- The Country Bears (2002) (singing voice - uncredited)
- The Mick Molloy Show (TV series)
- Episode No. 1.4 (1999) as Gay Builder
- Episode No. 1.2 (1999) as Artist
- The Craic (1999) as Barry
- Heaven's Burning (1997) as Jonah
- JAG: Judge Advocate General (TV series)
- Episode - Trinity (1997) as Miles
- Cosi (1996) as Zac
- Blue Heelers (TV series)
- Episode - Shadow Man (1995) as Brad Fielding
- Episode - Theft (1994) as George Patterson
- Raw Silk (TV movie) (1988) as Parker
- Wills & Burke (1985) as Publican
Read more about this topic: Colin Hay
Famous quotes containing the word acting:
“When committees gather, each member is necessarily an actor, uncontrollably acting out the part of himself, reading the lines that identify him, asserting his identity.... We are designed, coded, it seems, to place the highest priority on being individuals, and we must do this first, at whatever cost, even if it means disability for the group.”
—Lewis Thomas (b. 1913)
“If I were a woman, I would never trust men who say they are feminists. Either they are acting out of guilt, trying to establish credentials, or they think they might be able to pick up more girls. If I were a woman, I would say, go away and have your first period. Then come back and tell me you are a feminist.”
—David Thomas (b. 1959)
“It especially helps if you know that were all faking our adulthoodeven your parents and their parents. Beneath these adult trappingsin our president, in our parents, in you and melurk the emotions of a child. If we know that only about ourselves, we become infantile; if we understand that about everybody, then we have nothing to be ashamed ofunless, of course, we go around acting like a child and expecting everyone else to act like grownups.”
—Frank Pittman (20th century)