Noeline Brown

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Noeline Brown
Born (1938-10-03) 3 October 1938 (age 86)
Occupation Actress, comedienne
Spouse(s) Tony Sattler
Website http://www.noelinebrown.com.au

Noeline Brown (born 3 October 1938) is an Australian actress and comedienne. She has appeared in numerous films, television shows,[1] theatrical productions[2] and radio programs,[3] dating back to 1959.[4]

Biography and career

Brown gained local notoriety in Sydney as a cast member of the famous Philip St Revues and the popular melodrama productions at Sydney's Music Hall theatre-restaurant in the early 1960s. She came to national prominence after joining the cast of the pioneering Australian satirical TV sketch comedy series The Mavis Bramston Show (1964 -1968).[5] After a stint in the UK she secured a regular role in the hit TV sitcom My Name's McGooley, What's Yours?, starring alongside Gordon Chater, John Meillon and Judi Farr.[6]

Throughout the 1970s, Brown enjoyed great popularity in Australia as a co-star of the satirical television and radio series The Naked Vicar Show[7] and the quiz show Graham Kennedy's Blankety Blanks.[8] In 1978 she won a Logie Award for the most popular NSW female personality.[9]

In 2006, she was a competitor in Dancing with the Stars,[10] and played the role of Leonara Biviano in the Australian film Razzle Dazzle.[11]

In 2007, she appeared in Bruce Venables' and Richard Fidler's play Flying Solo,[12] directed by Judy Nunn, starring alongside Barry Quin, Paula Duncan, Enda Markey and Jacinta John.[13] She was portrayed by Jane Allsop[14] in the television movie The King,[15] about the life of Graham Kennedy.

In 2008, she won the Norman Kessell award[16] for best performance for her portrayal of Florence Foster Jenkins in Peter Quilter's play Glorious.[17] She was also appointed Australia's first Ambassador for Ageing by the Rudd government.[18]

In 2009, she co-starred with Barry Creyton in Peter Quilter's play Duet at the Ensemble Theatre in Sydney.[19][20]

She is a longtime member of the Australian Labor Party and appeared in It's Time advertisements for the party before the 1972 election.[21] She has twice (1999 and 2003) run for New South Wales Parliament as an endorsed Labor Party candidate.[22]

Personal life

In 1976, Brown married one of the writer/producers of The Naked Vicar Show, Tony Sattler.[23] The couple were close friends of the late Graham Kennedy, and Noeline was present when Kennedy died in 2005.[24] She and Sattler have lived in Bowral for many years, and Kennedy moved there to be closer to them. When Kennedy's health began to fail, Sattler and Brown reportedly contacted former Nine Network boss Kerry Packer to appeal for financial support to care for the ailing star (Kennedy having earned many millions of dollars for Packer and Nine in his heyday); Packer declined to assist Kennedy financially but, after the story became public, an anonymous benefactor (later revealed as former Nine Network chief Sam Chisholm) came forward and donated a substantial sum (reportedly AU$150,000) for Kennedy's ongoing support and care.[25]

References

External links

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