TAGGED: early Australian television
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Dive into the personal collection of wildly popular TV presenter Rosemary Eather, now held by the NFSA.

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Fan letter from Ross Crowe to Rosemary Eather, May 1969.

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Rosemary Eather lecturing in astronomy to a group of children in the planetarium at the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, March 1967. 

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People living in regional areas on the east coast of Australia began receiving television for the first time in late 1961 and throughout 1962.

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The Weatherly sisters, wardrobe mistresses, preparing Thelma Afford’s costumes on the opening night of national television, 5 November 1956.

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In 1964 Kay Roberts directed The Never Never Land, a filmed version of the Elizabethan Theatre Trust’s Aboriginal Theatre, featuring 45 performers from the Tiwi I

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This collection brings together stories of some of the women who contributed to Australian television production from the 1950s to the 1980s.

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Director Marion Ord (crouching), 'continuity girl' Betty Barnett (standing) and camera operator Bob Feeney filming Valley of the Sentinels in Newnes, NSW, 1971.

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Excerpt from an Australia Council for the Arts interview with Jean Battersby in 1992.

In this clip she explains how she came to work in television.

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Jean Battersby was an early Melbourne compere of the ABC’s first daytime television program for women, Woman’s World.