Sunday 15 September 2024

Two books to remember Dorothy Hewett's Centenary - 1923 to 2002

Click images for larger size.

Extracts from Singabout - the early songwriters - Dorothy Hewett (1923-2002) & Merv Lilley (1919-2016)

These books have been compiled & published by Dorothy's son Joe Flood & Marilla North, see links for purchasing details. 

Joe's youtube channel - Dorothy Hewett Centenary celebration 

Dorothy Hewett - facebook

Remembering Dorothy   

Dorothy Coade Hewett (1923-2002) was a major Australian playwright, poet and novelist, a true innovator of the theatre and a feminist icon. She fearlessly tackled all kinds of issues and shibboleths, setting her own direction and encouraging others to find their own path.

This is the first book-length biographical work on Dorothy Hewett. Like some of her best-known work, it has multiple perspectives, in which different people give their views of Dorothy, her life and work. This colours her complexity as a writer and as a person, while charting her setbacks along her rise to fame. It is a book of love from all who knew her.

Contents

Part I. Hewett's Wheatbelt 1923-45. "The heart and soul of a nation's literature". Her ancestors, and the matriarchy in which she lived. Her stormy and rebellious early life and her early talent, winning open national poetry prizes at the ages of 17 and 22. Her suicide attempt after a failed love affair, her first marriage and her embracing of activism.

Part II. The Perilous Path 1947-71. As a reporter on the Workers Star, she covered the 1947 Aboriginal Stockman's Strike in the Pilbara and wrote her anthem for the indigenous struggle, “Clancy and Dooley and Don McLeod”.

In 1949 she eloped to Sydney, lived in a squat in Redfern and worked in a spinning mill. This gave her the material for her first novel Bobbin Up and her first play. In 1958 she escaped to Perth, and published her first joint book of poetry What About the People! which included a dozen folk anthems, especially "Weevils in the Flour" which became synonymous with the Depression. In the 1960s, many famous literary and music figures visited the "Crowded House" of five children. Her cycle of great "magic realism" plays began in 1971 with The Chapel Perilous.

Part III. City of Marvellous Experience. In her busiest period, from 1971 to 1979, her plays were performed across the country and her fame multiplied. Her character "Sally Banner" became a feminist icon. As well, she published three more books of poetry. This section has many of the memories from leading directors, actors, composers and literary figures.

Part IV. Mountain Maid. From 1990 to 2002 she won many awards, but she became increasingly immobile from osteoporosis. However, in her last years she published two novels, two more books of poetry and a final end-times play, Nowhere.

The book concludes with an assessment of her original contributions to literature in Australia and worldwide, The real woman, the public figure and the writer are disentangled as separate but intersecting entities.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

3rd edition of  What About the People - poems by Dorothy & her second husband Merv Lilley.



The legendary book What About the People was self-published in 1961 by the poets Dorothy Hewett and Merv Lilley. Twelve of the poems were set to music, most notably the lyrical ballads Wheevils in the flour and Norman Brown, and helped to launch the Australian Folk Revival. The first edition is now a rare collectors' item costing more than $600. This third edition of 120 copies is part of the centenary celebration of the birth of Dorothy Hewett, and is also a collector's item


.

~~


Sunday 8 September 2024

Photos from the 11th Annual John Dengate Memorial Get Together, August 2024

Click images for larger size.




*Photo featured is John’s Stage Plan that he filled out for the year 2000 Jamberoo Illawarra Folk Festival. Supplied by Jason Roweth.

Unfortunately some performers couldn't be wth us, & Doug's video was unable to be shown. 

Photos © Sandra Nixon 


1. MC Max 


2. Doug 

3. Helen, Margaret Bradford, Frank & Anne Maher 

4. Sean, Dale, David

5. audience

6. audience 

7. Leyne setting up camera

8. BigRuss & Dale

9. David & Sean

10. Anne Maher with daughter Helen


11. toast

12. Introduction by Dale 

13. Baton twirling by Mandy 

14. Baton twirling by Mandy  

15. Baton twirling by Mandy  

16.  Dale & Max

17. a special song 

17. Sean 

18. Sean 

19. ComradeSirBigRuss

20. Jenny 

21. Lachlan 

22. audience 

23. audience

24.  Sally

25. audience 

26. Lachlan 

27. Lachlan & Stephanie 

28.  sound check for Stephanie

29.  Margaret Bradford 

30. John Tubridy, winner of the 2019 Illawarra Folk Festival Dengate Parody competition

31. Chris Maltby 

32. Margaret Walters & Chris Maltby 

33. Margaret 

34. Di Clifford from Dubbo

35. Seamus Gill

36. David Iverach 

37. Dale, David Iverach

38. David Iverach

39. Max & Leyne 

40. Max, Leyne & Russel Carey

41.  Leyne & her parents, Gae & Max

42.   Gae, Leyne & Max

43.  Gae, Leyne, Max

.

.

~~


Saturday 7 September 2024

Duplicate publications needing good homes!

Click images for larger size.


Available for a donation - they can be viewed at our Regular Monthly & Weekly activities at Tritton Hall 

They can also be posted out, but would need to be weighed & have postage added.

enquiries - Sandra 

  




.

.

~~