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Ivar Kants


Guest buffygirl

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The promo on Wednesday was totally unnecessary.

I was crying from when Irene read the letter, with Ivar Kant's voice sounding out over the shore line scene it was very effective. I think he is such a good actor. He really is a great loss, in more ways than one.

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Ivar Kants got everything into that one episode this last week. Those resonant dulcet tones could make the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end. He is such a good actor, and I think the show will be the poorer for his departure. He conveyed such a wide range of emotions, and showed both the depth of his emotions and his softer and more vulnerable side. I really am going to miss him very very much, almost as much as Kim and Irene will miss him.

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I agree with everyone else about Ivor Kants. He is a very good actor, they wasted his talents, and he is going to be missed.

I thought his scenes with Lynne McGranger, Chris Hemsworth and Cornelia Francis over the last few weeks were excellent.

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Ivar was wasted in within the character he played, there was a lot of layers there to use but they did'nt.

His last scene was beautifully written. he was a great actor and the show will have lost one of its best underused actors.

The voice over scene really made you appreciate that golden voice of his. made you melt, it was so effecive.

I agree about the promo as others have said when he left should gone straight to the closing credits.

Ivar will be missed,

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He was a great character, and there was loads of story lines there for him to explore. I am hoping that he will return in a year or so. As he left to spend more time with his family. Meaning he could be let off from a leagal blimp or something. We never know with haa.

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Did he leave for that reason? I did not know that. I thought he had been written out, and was a bit disgruntled because I thought it was short sighted of them. I hope he comes back too, he is a very good actor.

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I have to agree that Ivar's talents have been soooo wated in H&A, he needed some more decent storylines so we could've seen more of his great acting...lets just hope he makes another appearance one day, maybe to come back and sweep Irene off of her feet!!

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Coming face-to-face with Josh West’s murderer, we were expecting Ivar Kants to be as serious and stern as Summer Bay’s fiercest school principal, Barry Hyde! Instead Ivar Kants has such a friendly smile and gentle manner it’s hard to believe he’s the same person as two-time killer, Mr Hyde!

"I was so lucky to get such an enigmatic character as Barry Hyde to play," Ivar remarks. "Barry Hyde was a damaged man who never opened up. He was an autocratic head master who would pick up little kids by the scruff of the neck."

"I would get mail from little kids saying: 'Leave the children alone!'," he chuckles. "Barry Hyde was a character who was not meant to be liked, but in the process of the series he has become less awkward and more human, especially with his son Kim [Chris Hemsworth]. The irony is that the one person Barry Hyde couldn’t control was his son!”

On the topic of the younger actors, Ivar comments on one of his favourite things about the profession - the interaction between generations. “It’s weird when you first encounter it: you’re working with people your parents’ age – and because you’re young and have your eyes and ears open, you can learn a lot,” he says. “ If you’re older being in the company of young people, you learn a lot too. So both benefit. You wouldn’t get that in say, a bank or corporation - there’s a hierarchy. In acting, everyone’s on the same level.”

Ivar’s parents fled from Latvia to Australia in 1948. Like so many other children of immigrant parents, Ivar grew up in Australia with the knowledge there was another country on the other side of the world their parents ached and longed for. Because of the Iron Curtain years, Ivar’s parents could never visit their homeland, but Barry was able to visit Latvia while on a film shoot in the early ’90s.

“I was terribly moved for the people there and for the hard life they’d had,” Ivar says. “For the first four weeks I was shellshocked: this was the place I had heard so many stories about as a child. I stood at the house from where my mother had fled in World War II. I was standing there on a sunny afternoon – it could have been anywhere, it was just like the suburbs of Adelaide where I grew up. You just can’t believe that once there were tanks rolling down the streets, people shooting one another, mothers with babies in their arms, running in fear. But I realised I am who I am because of what happened there.”

These days Ivar, his wife Jenny and their four children live amongst the gumtrees and crisp air in Sydney’s Blue Mountains. “Thirty years ago my children started us on living an alternative lifestyle, caring for the environment, saving on energy,” he explains. “We put in a combustion stove, we grew out own vegetables, we shop at the Co-op in Katoomba. It’s a good lifestyle.”

But after two and a half memorable years, you'll be sad to hear Ivar is leaving Home and Away at the end of this month. “The last scene I did for Home and Away will stay in my mind,” Ivar recalls. “As I’m driven away, Colleen stands there with her hands on her hips, Beth is sympathetic and tries to communicate, and Irene is angry. It’s lovely, there’s humour there for me in each character.

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