Georgia Van Cuylenburg
is possibly the busiest ex-pat that Australia has ever produced.
She moved to LA to pursue a career in the entertainment industry
and discovered that Hollywood is more than just an industry factory,
it’s a mecca for creative types. Her immersion in that
atmosphere has re-doubled her enthusiasm and her commitment to
her ambitions.

LA offers up opportunities in just about every aspect of entertainment,
so much so that someone determined to break into the industry is
almost spoilt for choice. What exactly is it that Georgia
is doing in the US?
‘I’m living, laughing, smiling, and learning so much
about life! And in between I am doing stand up comedy every night
of the week - I am a junkie, I am teaching stand up to kids, I
do kids theatre shows, I am auditioning for TV, voice overs and
film, doing the odd TV, voice over or film spot doing the odd commercial,
developing a number of pilot ideas with some awesome people and
kids , counseling other actors on making the move into the Hollywood
industry, running an Actor Talk Radio Show, writing a feature film
based on a play I produced in Australia, producing two comedy shows
and then every now and then I think about sleeping.’
Of course, the story is not a new one. The idea of moving to LA
is now an almost integral part of the American Dream, so much so
that it has provided the storyline for a hundred movies. What
exactly was it that Georgia was looking for when she moved to LA?
Has she found it?
‘A new life. A place where I can do all I have ever wanted,
a place where anything is possible if you work for it. I wanted
to be able to love my life, have fun and work every second of the
day and love it. I wanted to be able to change the world.
I'm not completely there yet but everything else - yes I have got
from LA! I have found the community and 'family' that I just never
would have been able to find anywhere else in the world. And thanks
to doing stand up comedy I now have the power of the microphone
and when you have that and you use it for good I think you can
change the world eventually- in your own little way!’
Most comics find themselves drawn to the idea from an early stage,
whether through playground recognition or the discovery of an innate
desire to make people laugh. How did Georgia decide to
get into stand up?
‘I have always been a huge, huge, stand up fan - I was brought
up on the best - Billy Connelly! So when I got to LA I started
a stand up class and just fell in love. So I started open micing
and open micing every night of the week. I wrote and wrote and
watched and watched and, slowly but surely, I am now at a stage
where I perform in booked shows every night of the week and people
are really laughing at me I think - what an awesome feeling!’

While stand up comedy is one of the most rewarding jobs in entertainment,
it comes with its legs. The anxiety that some performers go through
is legendary. Does Georgia find making people laugh as
nerve-wracking as it’s supposed to be?
‘For me - no! I love it, I crave it! If I go a day with out
it I get all shaky! No joke! I think that same nervousness most
people talk about I see as an amazing adrenalin rush - and I am
a true adrenalin junkie!!! I kinda love that most people's greatest
fear is my greatest love! I love that nervous energy- it makes
me giggle and keeps my blood pumping. And once I am on stage it’s
a blur I am just having a blast up there And when the audience
laughs- oh boy talk about a rush!’’
One of the major projects Georgia worked on while still in Australia
was the writing and development of the play ‘readMylips’,
which was concerned with the problem of eating disorders. Georgia
is working on developing it into a film - how is the process going?
‘That one has been a much slower process than I would have
hoped. We are still waiting on the final rights for the DVD from
the Australian production - soon, soon I promise! But the film
will get written it has gone into development and I have workshopped
it to a stage where the film will now be based on my experience
of producing readMylips... in Australia rather than just a direct
translation of the stage production to screen. I am still so excited
about it and can't wait to take my self to a deserted island to
get it done – soon, soon I promise!’
Aside from the consequences that it had for her working environment,
the move to LA must have come with repercussions to Georgia personally,
as well. Moving by herself to the US, has she ever doubted
herself at all?
‘I guess I have had moments of doubt but I try not to even
keep them in my memory bank. There has never ever been a moment
where I have wanted to leave. Just moments when I have been presented
with a challenge and I have to hold myself down and remind myself
that going through it will bring an even better life than the one
I was living before the hurdle presented itself.
I think to really succeed in life you have to live in constant
doubt. If you aren't then you aren't really living. That risk and
fear is what makes anything worth while doing so every doubt I
overcome makes me feel one step closer to where ever it is that
I am headed.’
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With some big moves coming up on the horizon, if she
had complete control over the future, how would Georgia want
2007 to unfold?
‘Oh wow - that's dangerous (how big is your magazine?) Well I would be
a series regular on a sitcom and in talks to write and star in my own one (thats
a few years off I know!) My one woman show "News From the Father Country" would
be a sell out hit in the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, I would be
a regular at the Improv, Comedy Store and the Laugh Factory (the major clubs
in LA), Someone would be paying me to write and create the film readMylips...,
I would be voicing my animation pilot "Adrenaline- The Happiest Superhero
Ever" , I would be filming my kids talk show pilot and comedy competition
and a major network would have picked them all up... I would be making my wonderful
manager lots of money and I would have lots and lots of money to spend on the
things that matter - the people I love, the people that really need it and my
quest to make everyone in the world smile! Can’t wait!’
There are a million hopefuls in LA, all waiting for the big break, and Georgia,
because of her nationality, is the odd woman out. Does she think her
outsider status has been a help or a hindrance?
‘I think it has been much easier! A lot of comics call me Aussie or Australia,
so much of my comedy is about the hilarious difference between the cultures,
people love my accent (crazy hey), girls don't compete with me the same way they
do with other US gals. But most importantly there is a vibe and an approach to
life that is so uniquely Aussie and when you put the smiling Aussie foot forward
into life people in the US really like you.
I have so often found myself thinking "it's called trying to be a good person
you should try it" but then I wouldn't say that cause I wouldn't be being
a nice person! I thank my lucky southern cross everyday that I am an Aussie here!
It's all in the phrase "She'll be right" Without that in my back pocket
the Hollywood vibe may have killed me by now! ‘

Georgia’s Australian accent may be a great calling card, but no-one enjoys
being a thousand miles from home. What does she miss the most about Australia?
My dog! I try not to think to much about what used to be. I miss my family of
course. Every now and then I miss the way that I knew how everything worked back
in Melbourne but I still love the challenge of learning the new way here.
I miss fresh food - like food where the first ingredient isn't high fructose
syrup and then peanut oil - everything everything I tell ya its so yuck!! I miss
not getting charged when people call your cell phone and I miss cricket and Aussie
rules footy (specially those little shorties!’)
There’s no denying that Georgia has been more successful than most who
try the track she’s chosen- what are the skills that have helped
her along the way in LA?
‘See my comment on Aussieness - honestly that has helped me the most. But
also my years and years of developing a personality that just loves people and
performing for them. Doing kids theatre for such a long time has allowed me to
be a child in everything I do, talk to anyone and make great friends everywhere
(ie check out lines, change rooms, parking lots - no jokes!).
My PR degree has given me the knowledge to back up so many of my whims and in
general my well rounded Aussie education makes me a genius in LA! And my experience
on producing readMylips… has armed me with a understanding and patience
with the production process which has made my life much easier to live.’

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