Episodes
Bryce Courtenay remains one of the highest selling Australians writers of all times, with sales of more than 20 million of his blockbuster stories of life in Africa and in Australia. Beginning with the Power of One, which became a classic, he took off as a novelist in his fifties after a successful career in advertising. But his beginnings were far from promising and it took all his willpower and drive to overcome poverty, illegitimacy and hard physical labour to achieve his childhood...
Published 01/12/23
The family biography is a popular pastime, but few family biographies get published or are as colourful and bohemian as Sharon Connolly’s account of her vaudevillian relatives, including her great Aunt Gladys who was best known for her prowess as a whistler. Featuring a roll-call of rogues and eccentrics, My Giddy Aunt goes beyond biography to become a culture history of the disappearing age of traveling troupes of entertainers in the era before cinema.
See omnystudio.com/listener for...
Published 01/06/23
How has Lachlan Murdoch managed to live comparatively below the radar given his immense power and influence as a media player? And why is it so important to him that he identifies strongly as an Australian ?
Journalist biographer Paddy Manning answers these and many other questions about the heir to Rupert Murdoch’s dynasty and the threat posed by his siblings in The Successor, a biography whose title winks knowingly at the TV drama Succession.
Providing a balanced portrait based on...
Published 12/29/22
As a society figure in Georgian England, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu was more than a hostess, gossip and subject of scandal. A sharp wit, she wrote essays that were radical in their ideas, and way ahead of their time. She was also an early pioneer of inoculation, a technique she observed and experimented with on her own children as a diplomat’s wife in Turkey. Friend to the good and the great, including Alexander Pope and Voltaire, she was also susceptible to financial scam artists, much like...
Published 12/22/22
In their heyday, Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh were the most glamourous and famous couple of stage and screen in Britain, he for his patriotic and patrician roles as Lord Nelson and Shakespeare’s heroes and villains, she as the beautiful actress who won Hollywood’s most coveted role in Gone with the Wind as Scarlett O’Hara.
But the chemistry between them had a dangerous side, overshadowed by her mental health problems and his ambition. When they fought, it was bruising for both of...
Published 08/18/22
In between the two world wars, a group of lesbian expatriate women from the US and UK found freedom in Paris to explore and foster creativity. They dressed differently and lived and loved with abandon. Some are well known to us today, like Gertrude Stein, some have been forgotten, among them Sylvia Beach, who took a risk and published James Joyce’s Ulysses when no one else would touch it.
In this conversation biographer Diana Souhami revisits these free spirits who sought creative...
Published 08/11/22
Award winning author Kate Grenville has an ambivalent attitude to biography. She leverages this by using its materials, particularly letters, to create an alternative version of events in her novel A Room Made of Leaves, about the colonial figure of Elizabeth Macarthur.
But when she came to editing the original letters for a recently published collection, what else did she discover about Elizabeth and the ambiguities of correspondence in the eighteenth century, when news took so long to...
Published 08/05/22
In this episode, First Nations guest interviewer Daniel Browning talks to first time author Alec O’Halloran about The Master from Marnpi, his biography First Nations artist Mick Namarari Tjapaltjarri.O’Halloran had never written a biography before, but had bought a painting by the artist and become fascinated by his way of expressing his place and his culture. Over several years and many visits to the Western Desert, Alice Springs and Kintore, he earned the trust of his subject’s widow...
Published 07/28/22
Few biographers can equal Claire Tomalin’s reputation as the queen of British biography. After her beginnings in journalism, she’s had a long and glittering career writing about the illustrious lives of Dickens and Pepys, Mary Wollstonecraft, Henry James, Jane Austen, Thomas Hardy, and Katherine Mansfield - an amazing roll call.
Modest and self-effacing herself, Tomalin has also shed life on women who have been forgotten by history or overshadowed - like the actress Nelly Tiernan, who...
Published 07/21/22
Katharine Susannah Pritchard (1883 -1969) enjoyed early success as a writer, travelled internationally and married a war hero. Despite seeming privilege, her life was anything but smooth.
In this episode, Caroline Baum talks to her biographer Nathan Hobby about uncovering the identity of her married lover, and how she became a passionate and uncritical follower of Soviet Communist ideology while writing novels that were well ahead of their time. What emerges is the portrait of an...
Published 07/14/22
When Charmian Clift returned to Australia with her husband George Johnston and their children, they left behind a creative Greek idyll and returned to suburban Sydney at a time of social upheaval.
Charmian threw herself into her weekly column on the women’s pages of a major newspaper and used it to question whether the country had changed as much as people claimed it had during their absence. Seeing herself as both a migrant and returning expat gave her a unique outsider perspective. She...
Published 07/07/22
Caroline Baum talks to the doyenne of Australian biography Brenda Niall on the publication of her memoir, An Accidental Career, about her evolution as a biographer, which coincided with fresh interest in figures in Australian cultural history.
Niall reflects on how the status of biography has changed, how she came to write about figures like the Boyd dynasty and the recurring themes of home and displacement as central to her understanding of her subjects, whether writing about painter Judy...
Published 06/30/22
One of the most perplexing figures in modern Australian literary biography, Eve Langley used her experiences as a teenager with her sister in rural Victoria as the basis for her bestselling novel The Pea Pickers.
But many other aspects of her life remain a mystery to this day.
Why did she spend seven years in a mental institution? Why did she change her name to Oscar Wilde? Why did she lose contact with her husband and three children? Why were she and her sister, to whom she was once so...
Published 06/23/22
In one of the most remarkable seafaring stories of stowaway adventure, Suzanne Falkiner tells the story of Rose de Freycinet, who could not bear to be parted from her husband and so, wearing men’s clothes, snuck on to his ship in 1817 to join his scientific expedition to the South Seas.
In doing so, not only was Rose doing something highly illegal, but she also became the first woman to circumnavigate the world and leave a record of that perilous journey. In letters and her journal , she...
Published 06/16/22
Multi-award winning novelist Colm Toibin tackles his second biographical novel in The Magician, about the German novelist Thomas Mann and his eccentric family.
After writing The Master, his first biographical novel about Henry James, Toibin turns to another writer with a secret inner life as a homosexual who, like James, also lived in exile from his homeland.
The Magician takes us from the strict and formal high bourgeois home of young Thomas Mann in Lubeck to France, Switzerland and...
Published 06/09/22
When Mary Beauchamp, a musical young woman from a middle class family in Sydney married a German count, she became Elizabeth von Arnim. Soon disenchanted with marriage and motherhood, she shut herself away at her country estate and began writing bestselling books about her garden and the society around her.
She continued to write while married to her wayward second husband, Lord Russell, and had an affair with HG Wells and a young man half her age, while entertaining lavishly at her Swiss...
Published 01/06/22
It’s thirty years since David Marr wrote his landmark biography of Australian Nobel laureate, novelist Patrick White. In this provocative and revealing conversation, Marr reflects on his relationship with his subject and its enduring impact on him, admitting that although White could be a curmudgeon, Marr came to adore him.
He talks about the significance of White’s snobbish Anglophile mother, the discovery of a substantial cache of letters after his death, the break up of his...
Published 12/30/21
For the first time, in Miss Dior, British biographer Justine Picardie tells the unknown story of couturier Christian Dior’s younger sister, Catherine, and her courage as a member of the French resistance during the Occupation.
With unparalleled access to the Dior archives and homes, Picardie builds a portrait of the close relationship between brother and sister during the war and the terrible price Catherine paid when she was captured by the Nazis and sent to Ravensbruck concentration...
Published 12/23/21
Kathleen Kennedy was JFK’s beloved sister. They shared a unique combination of physical charisma and personal charm, and a passion for politics and people. And they both had tragic, untimely deaths.
In 'KICK', Paula Byrne’s affectionate biography, Kick comes to life as a woman of irreverent wit, who defied her formidable mother to marry out of her religion and into the British aristocracy.
Privilege, glamour, family, high society and war all collide in this fascinating story.
Life...
Published 12/16/21
Gillian Mears lived and loved with uninhibited intensity and produced novels
about rural Australia written in prose that was poetic and visceral, in a unique
combination of gritty and mythical award-winning novels and short stories.
She also had a shrewd and playful sense of posterity. When she left a vast
archive to the State Library of NSW, it was with the clear intention that one day, a
biographer would trawl the many boxes for treasure. Which is exactly what her
biographer, Bernadette...
Published 10/28/21
Setting off into the remotest corners of the outback in her campervan, Eleanor Hogan retraces the journeys of controversial self-styled ethnologist Daisy Bates and gung-ho journalist Ernestine Hill, investigating the contested dynamic of their writing collaboration on the 1938 international bestseller, The Passing of the Aborigines.
From today’s perspective, many of their ideas seem racist or sentimental. They were certainly an odd couple, not just in their age difference and backgrounds;...
Published 10/21/21
British biographer and monarchist Andrew Lownie exposes the character flaws in two of the most glamorous but morally dubious couples in the history of the Royal family - the Mountbattens and the Windsors.
The Mountbattens - Louis and Edwina - share charisma, ambition and privilege as Viceroy and Vicereine of India in the turbulent period leading up to Partition. Their open marriage and numerous infidelities test their bond, but they remain a couple, bound by their social status, privilege...
Published 10/14/21
In Joan of Arc : A History, media-savvy medievalist Helen Castor goes back to original sources to strip away the myth from the story of Joan of Arc. What emerges from her forensic approach is a fresh take on the remarkable events that led to an illiterate teenage peasant girl being placed in command of the French Army.
Castor is bold in her interpretation of Joan’s voices and sheds new light on the significance of what she wore in battle, at court and in her final days in jail. The result is...
Published 10/07/21
Born in the former Czechoslovakia, Tom Stoppard became one of Britain’s most celebrated
playwrights, famous for his wit and intellectual dazzle in plays like Rosencrantz
and Gildenstern Are Dead, Jumpers, Travesties, Arcadia, and more recently
Leopoldstadt. He wears success well, mixing with famous and glamorous friends, marrying
talented women and breaking up with them amicably. As he grows older, his
politics shift, and he becomes interested in his hidden identity.
In 2013 Stoppard invited...
Published 09/30/21
When Hazel Rowley died, the Australian biographer was at the peak of her career, having cemented a reputation for writing richly engaging and throughly researched biographies of figures including Christine Stead, black American writer Richard Wright, and power couples Simone de Beauvoir and Jean Paul Satre, and Eleanor and Franklin D Roosevelt.
But how did the Adelaide academic achieve her success? A new anthology of her writing on biography, Life As Art, by her sister Della Rowley, with...
Published 09/23/21