Wendy Blacklock

Wendy Blacklock AM (born January 1932)[2] is an Australia-born retired theatre, radio and television actress, comedienne, producer, writer, singer, dancer and choreographer and theatre entrepreneur, who has appeared in numerous radio and stage roles, both locally and in the United Kingdom, and has been referred to as "The Grand Dame of the Stage".

Wendy Blacklock

BornJanuary 1932 (aged 90)
EducationConservartorium of Sydney, Rathbone Academy of Dramatic Art[1]
Occupation
  • Actress
  • comedienne
  • producer
  • writer
  • singer
  • dancer
  • choreographer
  • theatre entrepreneur
Years active? - 2011
Notable work
Number 96

The first half of Blacklock's career was exclusively in theatre, in revue, pantomine's and musicals[1]

However she became famous for her comic role in the TV soap opera Number 96 as Edie McDonald.

Biography

Blacklock was born in January 1932[2]in Sydney, New South Wales to David Blacklock, manager of British sports company Slazenger and Lillian Ava Miller[1]

Blacklock is a noted comedienne, she also toured England and worked in TV, appearing with luminaries such as Benny Hill and Bernard Bresslaw and also opposite Prunella Scales[3]

She has worked alongside numerous performers including comedian Barry Humphries and is a theatrical entrepreneur, who founded the Australian Content Department, "Performing Lines", that she ran for 21 years, part of the Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust, to coach, produce and showcase new productions and artist's for the stage, and her theatre museum, features several alumni of entertainers and performers including Graham Kennedy, Jill Perryman, Gordon Chater an her Number 96 co-star Carol Raye[4]

Blacklock, although initially reluctant to go into a TV series, became famous for her long-running role in the 1970s television soap opera Number 96 of comedy character dizzy Edith "Edie" MacDonald, at the time the series was the highest rated drama in Australia, and she joined the series in January 1974, alongside Mike Dorsey as her regimented husband Reg McDonald, who referred to her character as "Mother" and by daughter Marilyn, played by Frances Hargreaves, who in turn referred to her as "Mummy" :

Edie, was a typical ditzy suburban housewife with a fondness for gin, daytime soap operas and analgesics,[4] the character became such popular and enduring comedy elements, there had been plans for a spin-off series in late 1976 based on "Edie and Reg" called "Mummy and Me", the series was however not picked up by a Network, and she and Dorsey remained in Number 96, until it finished in August 1977, and she indeed spoke the final dialogue in the final episode.

Although the characters of Reg and Edie where enormously popular, much to the disappointment of fans, they never appeared in the feature film version[5]

Umbrella Entertainment, released several DVDs of the series, showcasing several of the more iconic episodes and storylines, in which Blacklock, creator and screenwriter David Sale and co-stars Sheila Kennelly, Elaine Lee and Deborah Gray, recorded a commentary.

Blacklock's acting career began on the stage and from 1953 she spent two years in England acting in repertory theatre. She returned to Australia and had a solid career in the theatre which included stage tours of Australia and New Zealand; she was also a regular cast member of the satirical revues staged at Sydney's Phillip Street Theatre in the 1960s. Prior to the role in Number 96 she had played in theatrical productions of Don's Party and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, and since the late 1970s, post-Number 96 until retiring in 2001, her career has been exclusively related to theatre, including a tour of stage version of British TV series George and Mildred as an actress and theatre company entrepreneur.[6]

Although a staple of theatre, she appeared in numerous TV roles, including guest parts in police procedural series Homicide and Boney and had been a presenter on children's show Play School and had a role on Skippy the Bush Kangaroo, she also took part opposite fellow comedian Spike Milligan in a special when he toured Australia, and took the title role in the TV musical Pardon Miss Westcott.[7] and during 1977 occasionally featured as a panellist on the game show Graham Kennedy's Blankety Blanks

Honours

Association Year Award Work
Australian Government 1992 Member of the Order of Australia Service to the Arts

Awards

Association Year Award Work Results
Helpmann Awards 2003 Lifetime Acheivement Award Won
Helpmann Awards Contribution to Theatre Won

[8]

Screen roles and appearances

year title role
1957Pantomime QuizGuest (as herself)
1959Pardon Miss Westcott (TV movie) Elizabeth Westcott
1959Pardon Miss Westcott (soundtrack)Performer "Send for Me"
I'm on My Way,/br >HowCould i See
You Walked By
1967Australian Playhouseunknown
1968Play SchoolHerself as Presenter
1970Skippy the Bush KangarooHattie McDougall
1970HomicideAnn "Aunty" Turner
1971The Comedy GameHerself
1972Carry on Spike in AustraliaHerself (TV special)
1972BoneyJanet Asworth
1974Me and MerleGuest
1976The Celebrity GameHerself
1977Blankety BlanksPanellist
1978The Peter Coackman ShowGuest as herself
1974-1977Number 96Edie "Mummy", "Mother" McDonald 227 episodes
2006Number 96...The Final Years DVD "96 special"Commentary

Theatre

Source = AusStage For further information: see Wendy Blacklock Theatre

Production
Dear Charles
Two to One
Around the Loop
The Happiest Days of Your Life
Cinderella
Phillip Street Revue
Mistress Money
The Playboy of the Western World
The Rage
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Revue at the Loo
Spring and Port Wine
Gone Potty
The Prince and the Firebird
The Hostage
Dick Whittington
An Aweful Rose
Don's Party
Bon-Bons and Roses for Dolly
Habeas Corpus
Incompletions
George and Mildred
Blood of the Lamb
Corporal Mime Theatre Workshops
Face Value

References

  1. "Wendy Blacklock: The Transformation of Australian Theatre".
  2. "The Illustrated Encyclopaedia af Australian Showbiz".
  3. "WENDY BLACKLOCK AM". LIVE PERFORMANCE AUSTRALIA.
  4. Joyce Morgan (14 June 2011). "Grand Dame of the Stage Takes Her Bows". Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. Giles, Nigel "Number 96: Australia's Most Notorious Address" published by Melbourne Books 2007
  6. "Wendy Blacklock AM".
  7. Vagg, Stephen (4 November 2020). "Forgotten TV Plays: Pardon Miss Wescott". Filmink.
  8. "JC Williamson Award recipients". Helpmann Awards. Live Performance Australia. Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.