Amanda Bishop

Amanda Bishop
Born
Amanda Diana Bishop

(1979-12-10) 10 December 1979
Other namesMandy Bishop
EducationUniversity of New England
OccupationsActress, comedian
Years active1996–present
Known forImpersonation of Julia Gillard

Amanda Diana Bishop (born 10 December 1979) is an Australian actress and comedian, known for her comedy portrayals of Julia Gillard, the former Prime Minister of Australia, in the television comedy At Home with Julia. Bishop had previously portrayed Gillard in the series Double Take, when Gillard was Deputy Prime Minister of Australia.

Early life and education

Raised in Bunnan in the Hunter Region of New South Wales, Bishop gained a degree in music from the University of New England,[1] and then trained at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts.[2]

Career

Bishop has collaborated with producer Michael Bourchier on two children's television series: The Upside Down Show, on which she played the role of Mrs. Foil in every episode, and Penelope K, by the way, on which she played the title role.

Bishop first impersonated Julia Gillard as part of Waiting for Garnaut, the 2008 Wharf Revue by the Sydney Theatre Company's Jonathan Biggins, Phillip Scott and Drew Forsythe.[3] She reprised the role for the short-lived sketch comedy Double Take. A clip filmed for Double Take of Bishop performing "9 to 9", a parody of "9 to 5" mocking Kevin Rudd's reputation for working his staff hard, was a hit on YouTube after Gillard became Prime Minister and the skit was mentioned on Q&A by Magda Szubanski.[1] In 2011 Bishop co-wrote, and portrayed Gillard in, the four-part sitcom, At Home with Julia, on ABC1 lampooning the relationship between Gillard and her real partner Tim Mathieson (played by Bishop's Myles Barlow co-star, Phil Lloyd).[4] Bishop reprised the Gillard character once again, among other roles, in the comedy series Wednesday Night Fever.[5]

In 2017, she appeared in the children's television series Drop Dead Weird.

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1996 Gunsmoke Short film
1998 Big Sky Perilous Date 1
1999 Fresh Air Candy
2001 The New Crusaders Short film
The Big Check Out Tempe Short film
2003 Survival of the Fittest Penelope Brambles Short film
2005 Amorality Tale Amanda Short film
2008 When the Eye Winks at the Hand Beth Short film
2010 Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole Additional Voices
Des: The Reality of a Digital Stuntman Sally Short film
2012 Prudence Pecker Prudence Pecker Short film
2013 The Outlaw Michael Howe Susan Television film
2017 The Rip Voice role
Next Is the One Alice Short film
2018 The Way It Goes Trudy Short film
2021 Canvas Jackie Rohan Voice role
Ladies First Short film
Odette Odette Short film
2023 Fighting Xavier's mother Short film
TBA Black Canvas Woman in Bar Short film

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1996 Heartbreak High Cult Girl 1 1 episode
1997 Big Sky Female Officer 1 episode
1999 BackBerner 1 episode
1999-2004 Blue Heelers 1 episode
2002-2006 All Saints Theresa Pye/Ms. Alexander
2006 The Upside Down Show Mrs. Foil
2008-2010 Review with Myles Barlow Catherine Barlow
2009 Double Take Various Characters
My Place Janice
2010 Penelope K, by the Way Penelope
Rescue: Special Ops Anna Jacoby 1 episode
Rake Scarlet's Lawyer 1 episode
2011 At Home with Julia Julia Gillard
Some Say Love Various Characters 1 episode
2013 Wednesday Night Fever Various Characters
2015 Maximum Choppage Angela Newdice 1 episode
Pypo 1 episode
2016 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Heidi Aronson 1 episode
2017-2019 Drop Dead Weird Mum
2022 Remember My Name Aunt Janine
2024-2025 Home and Away Dr. Liz Shaw

References

  1. ^ a b Playing not so 'real' Julia, Newcastle Herald, 8 September 2010.
  2. ^ Applause: Just a few of the ongoing achievements of WAAPA alumni Archived 15 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Inside WAAPA, Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts, September 2011.
  3. ^ Byrnes, Holly: Meet Prime Minister Julia Gillard's comic double Amanda Bishop, The Daily Telegraph, 2 July 2010.
  4. ^ Amanda Bishop in At Home with Julia, ABC News, 8 September 2011.
  5. ^ Moran, Rob (4 July 2013). "Wednesday Night Fever gets off to a lukewarm start – TV review". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 August 2013.