Robert Rabiah
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. (May 2018) |
Robert Rabiah [1] | |
---|---|
Nationality | Australian |
Alma mater | Beverly Hills Playhouse |
Occupation(s) | Actor, writer, filmmaker |
Awards | Australian Writers Guild Award (Monte Miller); Monaco Charity Film Festival Award (Best Actor) |
Website | Official Website |
Robert Rabiah is an Australian film actor best known for his roles as Hakim in Face to Face, Nick in Chopper, Dario Mancini in Fat Tony & Co., Spiro Politis on TV soap Neighbours, Mehmet in Deadline Gallipoli, Mohsen in Ali's Wedding, Bilal in Safe Harbour and Sami Almasi in Secret City (TV series).
Career
[2]In 2005, Rabiah established Sunrise Films. He also started DJ'ing at an early age and had a number No. 28 hit on the Australian Dance Charts with DJ trio RMR. Their club track was released by Standard Records, Australia.
Rabiah's first major acting role was in the film, Chopper, alongside Eric Bana and Vince Colosimo. Other works include, Michael Rymer's Face To Face[3] and Deadline Gallipoli.
Awards
Rabiah was nominated for Best Actor at the 2011 Inside Film Awards[4] in Sydney and in 2011 was nominated for Best Supporting Actor at the AACTA Awards.[5]
Rabiah has also won the Australian Writers Guild Award (Monte Miller) and Best Actor in an Ensemble Cast (Monaco Charity Film Festival).[6][better source needed]
Filmography
- Face to Face (2011)
- Chopper (2000)
- Ali's Wedding (2017)
- Deadline Gallipoli (2015)
- Safe Harbour (2018)
- Under the Radar (2004)
- Neighbours (2017)
- Down Under (2016)
- Secret City (TV series) (2018)
References
- ^ Groves, Don (18 December 2017), Robert Rabiah’s long journey from ‘Chopper’ to ‘Safe Harbour
- ^ "Robert Rabiah is an Actor based in Victoria, Australia". StarNow. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ McCarthy, Todd. "Robert Rabiah Played As Hakim in Face To Face". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ "Jameson IF Awards Sydney announces nominations for 2011". IF Magazine. 11 October 2011. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ "Past Awards | AACTA". www.aacta.org. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ "Monaco Charity Film Festival". IMDb.
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External links
- Living people
- Australian male writers
- 20th-century Australian male actors
- 21st-century Australian male actors
- Australian male film actors
- Australian male television actors
- 21st-century male writers
- Male actors from Melbourne
- Australian male stage actors
- Australian male voice actors
- Australian television presenters
- Writers from Melbourne
- Club DJs
- Australian DJs
- Male actors from Sydney