Meyne Wyatt

In 2012, he played a supporting role in the musical comedy film The Sapphires and also made his debut with the Bell Shakespeare company.

Meyne Wyatt was born in Kalgoorlie in 1989,[1][2] to Sue, a painter and children's book illustrator, and Brian, who worked for the National Native Title Council.

He won the Best Newcomer accolade at the 2011 Sydney Theatre Awards for his performance as an Aboriginal teenager in Lachlan Philpott's production of Silent Disco.

[4][5] In 2012, Wyatt was cast in the supporting role of Jimmy Middleton in the musical comedy film The Sapphires.Wyatt also made his debut with the Bell Shakespeare company, in a production of The School for Wives.

[8] Wyatt played Frank Leaper, a footballer "who walks away at a key moment of his career", in the segment titled Family, which was directed by Shaun Gladwell.

[13] Wyatt took a break from Neighbours to appear in a Sydney Theatre Company production of King Lear, alongside Geoffrey Rush from November 2015 to January 2016.

[3] The director, Neil Armfield, briefly considered re-casting the role of Edmund, as he was concerned that Wyatt would find it hard to play a man who plots to murder his father.

[18][19][20][1] In 2021 Wyatt joined Shareena Clanton, Sachin Joab and Remi Hii in bringing to light racism on the set of Neighbours.

[24] In June 2020, Wyatt delivered a powerful four-minute monologue from his play City of Gold, on a special episode on ABC Television's Q+A about Black Lives Matter and Aboriginal deaths in custody.