Neighbours star unrecognisable in childhood photo

He made his appearing debut on one of many longest operating tv reveals in Australian historical past, however would you recognise this star from a childhood photograph?

Kristian Schmid was simply three weeks into an appearing course in Melbourne when he received the decision he had landed a spot on Neighbours.

The then 12-year-old would play Todd Landers, the nephew of Jim Robinson’s spouse Beverley.

He arrived on Ramsay Street together with his sister Kate however he was killed off the present simply 4 years later when his character was hit by a truck.

But, the 48-year-old went on to star within the 90s reboot of The Tomorrow People and iconic Australian tv present Sea Patrol.

He additionally had an enormous position on Packed to the Rafters, starring within the sequence because the brother of Jake, who was performed by James Stewart. Schmid’s character, Alex, had cerebral palsy.

Schmid hasn’t simply caught to tv although, starring alongside enormous names akin to Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze Jr and Matthew Lillard in Scooby Doo.

He’s additionally appeared in theatre productions, akin to William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream as Puck and The Lion in Winter as Prince John.

His most up-to-date roles embrace a 30-episode arc on Home And Away – Australia’s different enormous cleaning soap opera.

He performed Mick Jennings who was initially launched to viewers because the lengthy misplaced son of Irene Roberts, who has been performed by Lynne Granger for 3 a long time after she joined the forged in 1993.

But, it wasn’t all that appeared after it was quickly revealed Mick assaulted one other character, who gave start to his baby earlier than she handed away from most cancers.

Schmid additionally seems in 2023 tv sequence North Shore, which follows the story of British and Aussie detectives teaming as much as resolve a tangled homicide thriller.

Originally revealed as Neighbours star unrecognisable in childhood photograph

Source: www.dailytelegraph.com.au