Tony Le-Nguyen


Tony Le-Nguyen is an Vietnamese-Australian actor, director, producer and writer. Le-Nguyen is perhaps best known for his role as Tiger in the 1992 Australian drama film Romper Stomper. He changed his name to Tony Lee when began working as an actor in 1985. He is currently the Executive Producer for based in Melbourne, Australia.

Early life

Le-Nguyen was born in Sa Đéc, Mekong Delta, Vietnam on 3 October 1968. In 1978, Le-Nguyen and his family moved from Vietnam to Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, when he was 10 years old.

Career

Le-Nguyen was the first Vietnamese-Australian to be appointed as an Official Prison Visitor to Port Phillip and Fulham Correctional Centres by the Minister for Corrections, the Honourable Andre Haermeyer in 2003 to act as an independent voice for the prison system in Victoria.
Le-Nguyen played Tiger in Geoffrey Wright’s 1992 Australian drama film Romper Stomper. He has also appeared in other television productions including: Stingers, SeaChange, Raw FM, G.P., Fast Forward, All Together Now, Embassy, Secrets, The Damnation of Harvey McHugh, Paradise Beach, Australia’s most wanted & Sword of Honour.
Le-Nguyen studied Television Production at RMIT in 1989 and completed his Bachelor of Arts in 1998 and Diploma of Education in 2000 at Victoria University.
He was awarded the Community Cultural Development Fellowship by the Australia Council for the Arts in 2000.
Between 1986 and 1987, Le-Nguyen toured with Mary Coustas in Handspan Theatre’s production A Change of Face written by Andrea Lemon and directed by Carmelina di Guglielmo. He worked on the Victorian Opera 1990 production of Madama Butterfly and performed in 1992 production of Titus, directed by and Robert Draffin
In May 1994, he founded Australian Vietnamese Youth Media with the support of Huu Tran and David Everist, the theatre coordinator at the Footscray Community Arts Centre. The company received its first funding from the Queens Trust in 1995 to produce Chay Vong Vong, a play he wrote and directed with the Vietnamese Community in Footscray, Melbourne. The following year, this organisation received funding from the Australia Council for the Arts and the Sidney Myer Foundation to re-stage Chay Vong Vong as a fully professional production at the Napier Street Theatre, in South Melbourne. In 1998 he was commissioned by Urban Theatre Projects to write and direct "Chay Vong Vong" with the Vietnamese Community in Sydney, Australia.
Le-Nguyen has directed and produced such professional and community productions as A Time of Your Life, and Flemington Community Centre 1996, Now I Lay Me Down, La Mama 1997, Taboo, Next Wave Festival 1998, "Aussie Bia Om, 2001 and directed segments for the in 1997 and 2000, Children of the Dragon 2005, Silent 2007 He co-directed Worlds Apart in 1996 with Gary McKechnie, a half-hour Television drama about generation conflict within a Vietnamese Australian family. Worlds Apart was first screened on SBS Television in December 1997.
Le-Nguyen began teaching drama at Blackbox, Hanoi from December, 2013 and directed his first Vietnamese 30 minutes drama "Mơ Chua" in 2015.

Filmography

Films