Travis McMahon is an Australian actor. For his performance in Stingers he was nominated for the 2001 Australian Film Institute Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Guest Role in a Television Drama Series.[1]

Travis McMahon
OccupationActor
Years active1997–present

After graduating from NIDA McMahon began his career in the stage play Kid Stakes for the Melbourne Theatre Company. A regular role on TV's Good Guys, Bad Guys followed, playing Reuben Zeus, a drycleaner with Tourette syndrome.[2] He has toured internationally with Cloudstreet and played a main role in Last Man Standing.[3] He played a soldier Darko Moey in Kokoda[4] and the lead character in Cactus.[5] In 2012 he played in stage play Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, a sequel to Kid Stakes[6] and appeared as a regular in Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries.[7]

Filmography edit

Film edit

Year Title Role Type
2006 Kokoda Darko Moey Feature film
2008 Cactus John Kelly Feature film
2010 I Love You Too Owen Feature film
2020 Miss Fisher and the Crypt of Tears Bert Johnson TV movie

Television edit

Year Title Role Type
1997-98 Good Guys, Bad Guys Reuben Zeus TV series
2001 Stingers Jonah Day TV series (including Season 4, Episode 2: Rich Man's World)
2004 Through My Eyes Frank Morris TV miniseries
2005 Last Man Standing Bruno Palmer 22 episodes
2012 Howzat! Kerry Packer's War Paul Hogan TV miniseries
2012-15 Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries Bert Johnson 29 episodes
2023 Ten Pound Poms Jonah Day 5 episodes

References edit

  1. ^ "AFI Past Winners - 2001 Winners & Nominees". AFI-AACTA. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  2. ^ Brown, Rachel (29 March 1998), "Travis stars in a new guise", The Sun Herald
  3. ^ Miller, Kylie (18 August 2005), "Last but not least", The Age
  4. ^ Brown, Phil (26 April 2006), "Man of War", Brisbane News
  5. ^ Souris, Marie-Christine (27 April 2008), "A love affair gone south", The Courier Mail
  6. ^ Wachsmuth, Lisa (18 August 2005), "Actor grows into the role", Illawarra Mercury
  7. ^ Craven, Peter (26 February 2012), "The trouble with Miss Fisher", The Age

External links edit