John Sherman (1910-1966) Actor, writer & furrier

Above: screengrab of John Sherman as “Digger” in The Hasty Heart (1949). The role brought him some immediate publicity but no lasting career.[1]Source of screengrab – cinema Trailer for The Hasty Heart, youtube

The Five Second Version
While a furrier by trade, John Sherman earned his acting chops in Sydney’s New Theatre in the mid 1930s. Following war service he travelled to Britain to pursue acting, like so many other aspiring Australians. An early highlight of his career was as a supporting role in the popular filmed version of the play The Hasty Heart (1949), which starred Richard Todd and Ronald Reagan. A foray into Hollywood was less successful and he returned again to Britain – where radio and television roles gave way to scriptwriting, including three films. In 1958 he returned to Australia for good. He wrote for TV, radio and film, before an early death from lymphomatosis. Tall, generous, good humoured and optimistic, not long before his death he told his good friend Lloyd Lamble “Oh yeah – I’ve been a bit crook, but she’ll be apples. I’ll be OK again soon.”

Life in Australia

John Sherman in late 1942, at the time he joined the Royal Australian Air Force. [2]National Archives of Australia

Born Solomon Sherman in Carlton, an inner suburb of Melbourne, Australia, on 2 June 1910, [3]Sherman apparently believed he had been born on the same day in 1911, as he stated this on his military application. However the Victorian Births, Deaths & Marriages record is quite unequivocal. … Continue reading he was the second child of Erome (Joseph) Sherman, a tailor, and Sara nee Levine, likely refugees from Tsarist Russia. Joseph and Sara had married in Cape Town, South Africa in December 1905, where their first child Minnie was born. They came on to Australia around 1909, where Joseph set up a tailor’s shop in Lygon Street, Carlton.

By 1930, the family had moved on – to High Street, in Melbourne’s southern suburb of Prahran, where Solomon, his brother Leon and his two sisters Minnie and Annie joined their father in running the business. The two boys became expert furriers.[4]Lloyd Lamble (1990) The Strutting and the Fretting p279-283 We know a little more of John Sherman from his Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) application in 1942. This reveals that he had attended Elwood High School until he was 15, and was also fluent in Hebrew or Yiddish,[5]The RAAF paperwork states he speaks “Jewish” could speak some German and Polish, and make himself understood in Russian – an impressive list of language skills.[6]National Archives of Australia: John Sherman, Royal Australian Air Force enlistment November 1942. Service Number – 72271 Sometime around 1935, Australian electoral rolls indicate that family patriarch Joseph moved yet again, to Katoomba in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales, while Annie, Leon and John (as Solomon now called himself) appear to have set themselves up as tailors in Bondi.[7]This writer has seen suggestions that Solomon and John Sherman were two different children. However, the 1971 death certificate of Joseph Erome Sherman is clear. He had four children – who are … Continue reading

Joseph Sherman operating in Katoomba, NSW.[8]The Blue Mountains Advertiser (Katoomba) 9 Sept 1949, p2

Political activism

At about the same time, John Sherman and his brother Leon became very active in the newly established Worker’s Art Club (WAC) in Sydney. WAC’s politics were firmly of the left, and it maintained formal and informal associations with the Communist Party of Australia. As a member of a emigre European Jewish family, John Sherman’s world view was undoubtedly coloured by the family’s own experiences and an acute awareness of the rise of fascism in Europe.

Sherman’s radical politics are reflected in his poem for the Worker’s Weekly in April 1938, entitled Hang out your Swastika, Chamberlain. The poem is a critique of Britain’s foreign policy in Europe and British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in particular. It read, in part;

So hang out your swastika, Chamberlain.
For the tens of thousands that have died in Spain.
For the babes and the crippled that you have slain.
For your betrayal of a democratic cause!
For all these crimes and more
You have earned this mark of shame.

Bowing and scraping before Berlin’s decrees.
You give them gold, unhindered action,
That they smash the cause of peace

And all the while you prate, with high sounding phrases
Of England’s democratic soul, of England’s justice.

But your lies, your hypocritical ravings have no truth with us,
We who are the masses,

Who still fight and struggle
For what we know is right.

For the unity of the workers,
For the smashing of your fascist terror
We fight.

This appeared well before the ‘Munich Agreement’ and Chamberlain’s ‘Peace for our time’ announcement in September 1938.[9]Worker’s Weekly,(Syd) 19 April 1938, p3 Over time, Sherman was a regular correspondent to newspapers – on the arts, acting and politics.

Through the WAC, which soon became the New Theatre, Sherman also came in contact with many of Australia’s young idealistic socialists – including writer Betty Roland (1903-1996), actor-director Victor Arnold (1905-1982) and actor Lloyd Lamble (1914-2008). However, as academics Phillip Deery and Lisa Milner note, for the New Theatre, “artistic liberalism remained as important as political commitment.”[10]Deery and Milner (2015), p115 This was reported even at the time – in 1939 Sydney’s Daily Telegraph wrote that “leftist propaganda and dramatic values [were] neatly blended in Betty Roland’s Are you ready Comrade?[11]Daily Telegraph (Sydney) 20 March 1939, p8 Sherman took one of the leading roles in this play. The Ausstage database, which is not definitive, notes a dozen New Theatre performances by John Sherman between 1936 and 1939. The New Theatre History wiki contains a number of photos of John and Leon performing.

John Sherman and Victor Arnold in the 1938 New Theatre production of Bury the Dead, an anti-war play by US playwright Irwin Shaw.[12]Daily Telegraph (Syd) 28 March 1938, p11

In 1940, Sherman took an uncredited role in Ken G Hall’s (1901-1994) Dad Rudd MP, the last of four popular films based on the “Rudd” family characters.[13]These were, in turn, lifted from Steele Rudd’s humorous books of Australian rural life In the later part of 1942 Sherman was announced as part of Rupert Kathner’s proposed feature film to be made about the recent siege of Tobruk. Despite being a recent event of the war, it came to nothing.[14]Daily Mirror (Syd) 29 Oct 1942, p9 Instead, John Sherman joined the Royal Australian Air Force.

Wartime service

RAAF records list John Sherman’s career as a radio announcer at the time of his enlistment in November 1942.[15]National Archives of Australia NAA: A9301, 72271. Note – Adding to the confusion about his birthdate, his file has been incorrectly titled by the NAA with a birthdate of 6 Feb. However, … Continue reading Other accounts confirm that before enlisting he had been a performer with Sydney’s 2UW Radio Theatre.[16]Sydney Morning Herald, 2 July 1950, p4

Leading Aircraftman (LAC) John Sherman, Wireless Mechanic, and Flight Lieutenant C. J. Amos, on a stage constructed at Aitape, New Guinea, c.1945. Australian War Memorial

Sherman served as a Leading Aircraftman/wireless mechanic, mostly with 100 squadron RAAF – on Goodenough Island and later in New Guinea. While at Aitape in New Guinea, he arranged entertainments and built a stage for performances, although details of these have not survived. He was demobilised in 1945.

On stage in London and a role in The Hasty Heart

After several years in radio and stage managing at Sydney’s Minerva Theatre, in May 1947 Sherman headed for Britain. Most available sources state that he worked his passage, and Sherman himself said he spent five months “peeling potatoes on a tramp steamer.”[17]The Sydney Morning Herald, 2 July 1950, p4 He was not alone in seeking work in London at the time – other Australian actors who travelled then included – Allan Cuthbertson, Gwenda Wilson, Joy Nichols, Dorothy Alison and Patti Morgan. In Britain he apparently found work first as an extra – possibly in the film Bonnie Prince Charlie (1948). But as many would observe, it was hard work – luck and dogged persistence with the agents seemed to have been required. [18]In 1965, The Canberra Times carried a long article on the struggle many Australian actors had faced in post-war London. But this was also true for aspiring British-born actors as well. See The … Continue reading

Sherman’s breakthrough was getting an audition with Sir Ralph Richardson (1902-1983), which won him a modest supporting role in Richardson’s version of the play Royal Circle, a comedy by Romilly Cavan (b 1914).[19]The Stage, 25 March, 1948, p6 It toured, then arrived in the West End in April. On the basis of Richardson’s reputation, expectations were high. But the play was not a success and it closed after only five weeks at Wyndham’s Theatre. One of Richardson’s very few failures, it was reportedly booed on its first night and was reviewed indifferently by newspapers.[20]Evening Standard (London) 30 April 1948, p6 It must have been a disappointment.

In November 1948, on the eve of giving up and returning to Australia, Sherman tested for and won the part of “Digger” in the British-American film The Hasty Heart. There is evidence that the role was offered to other Australians, including Allan Cuthbertson – who had declined it, being worried that if he took it, he would be typecast for only Australian roles thereafter.[21]Patricia Rolfe, The Bulletin (Aust) 8 June 1963, p22

In addition to leading players Richard Todd and Ronald Reagan – shown at right, The Hasty Heart featured (left to right) Ralph Michael as “Kiwi”, Sherman, Howard Marion-Crawford as “Tommy” and Orlando Martins as “Blossom” [22]Screenland, January 1950

Based on a popular play by John Patrick (1905-1995), the action is set at the end of the Second World War. Six allied soldiers are still convalescing in a military hospital. Much of the important dialogue takes place between Sister Parker (Patricia Neal), “Yank” (Ronald Reagan) and “Lachie” (Richard Todd playing a Scot). Sherman’s character “Digger,” is an Australian soldier, played with a laconic style that seems in the manner of Australian Chips Rafferty (1909-1971), who had recently earned good press in The Overlanders (1946) and whom Sherman resembled.

The following two examples of dialogue spoken by Sherman are worthy of note because they illustrate a less distinctive Australian accent, one often spoken in the nation’s seaboard cities, but which, to this day, rarely appears in cinema.

In this clip “Digger” (Sherman) comments to the others on the bravery of Basuto soldiers
Here, “Digger” offers “Lachie” a book to read. Lachie rejects the gift. [23]Sound grabs from the author’s copy. Available from network/studio canal

By July 1950 he was back in Australia and The Hasty Heart was released in cinemas at about the same time. This now brought him good publicity, and amongst his comments he advised young Australian actors to get experience overseas, as he had. Overseas artists were not necessarily better, he said, “but they were different, and acting with them broadened the experience.”[24]The Herald (Melb) 5 July 1950, p11

“The world’s loveliest girls are Australians” Reporting of the comments of returned Australian actors was often so unreliable it is difficult to know whether Sherman really made this claim at all.[25]The Age (Melb) 8 July 1950, p3

While in Australia he took the part of the sheriff in JC Williamson’s musical Oklahoma, which toured through New Zealand, earning a modest salary of £25 per week.[26]JC Williamsons contract, 14 June, 1950. Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre, Melbourne But in 1951 he took passage for the US, to try his luck in Hollywood.

Trying his luck, again

Californian newspapers announced his presence working in several Hollywood films in 1951-52. These stories all have the appearance of being planted by an agent – for example the following report from early 1952 – “John Sherman, top Australian actor, has drawn a featured role in Les Miserables (1952), marking his debut in a Hollywood film.”[27]Los Angeles Evening Citizen News, 24 Jan 1952, p21 But in the end, this role was uncredited. At best, a few of these roles were as a “featured extra” – such as the character John Billington, in Plymouth Adventure (1952).

Lloyd Lamble left several stories about John Sherman for posterity – which appeared in Lamble’s unpublished 1994 autobiography. One of these anecdotes might explain why Sherman made so little headway in Hollywood, whilst friends like Michael Pate (1920-2008) were doing so well.[28]The Sun (Syd) 17 August, 1952, p50 Lamble suggested that John Sherman’s radical politics caught up with him in McCarthy-era USA. It is quite plausible – given that so many with even moderately liberal political pasts found working in Hollywood in the early 1950s impossible.[29]The anecdote Lamble tells is that Sherman proposed a war-victory toast to Joseph Stalin – much to the displeasure of his US hosts Whatever the reason, he arrived back in London in November 1952.

In later life Lamble was embarrassed by his own past as a radical young actor and remade himself as a conservative, but he was genuinely fond of Sherman and they remained friends in later life. However, some of his memoirs about Sherman are difficult to accept at face value. The story that Sherman hung a London agent out of the window of his office – date unknown – after an offensive anti-Semitic remark, holding him only by his ankles, four floors above Charing Cross Road, is one such amusing but probably unreliable memoir.[30]Lloyd Lamble (1990) The Strutting and the Fretting p279-283

John Sherman with Greer Garson. The context is unknown. The photo is inscribed to Sherman’s parents and family and dated, November 1953. London. Courtesy hat-archive – www.hat-archive.com via Flickr.com

In London again, Sherman turned increasingly to scriptwriting, although he occasionally still appeared in guest roles on television and on radio.[31]The Mail (Adelaide)18 Dec 1954 p60 He provided the scripts for several TV programs and at least three British B movies in the late 1950s – Menace in the Night (1957), Black Gold (1957) and Jackpot (1960). In late 1955 he married non-performer Irene Rankin, and in January 1958 the couple packed up and travelled to Australia on the P&O ship Strathnaver. The move was a permanent one.

Sherman as the wicked Signor Diabolo, in a 1956 episode of the British TV series The Count of Monte Cristo entitled “The Devil’s Emissary” [32]screengrab from The Mailman channel on youtube, where the whole episode can be seen

In Australia after 1958

In Australia, television was now well established, and despite the much smaller industry and population to service, there was still a demand for experienced writers. Sherman was soon acting again in radio, and adapting stories for broadcast. As Sherman’s IMDB entry shows, he was also writing original material – for the TV series The Magic Boomerang and The Adventures of Seaspray, and the 1965 film Funny Things Happen Down Under.

Not everything was a success. Sherman was also associated with a failed attempt to make a film about nineteenth century explorers Bourke and Wills with a friend, producer-director William Sterling (b1926). Years later Sterling recalled that “after several thousand feet, the sound equipment broke down (and) the money ran out… The film languished on a shelf, until it was finally made into a documentary.” [33]The Bulletin (Aust) 6 Jan 1973, p24. When released the film was entitled Return Journey and Sherman was credited as Producer.

Sherman’s last appearance on screen was in one episode of the TV series Whiplash, an imaginative Australian historical adventure made in 1961-2, that has been described as an “Australian-western.” Produced with an eye to the US market, the series starred US actor Peter Graves as Chris Cobb, owner of Cobb & Co, a gold-rush era stage coach company, in a series of thirty-minute adventures.[34]Cobb & Co really existed, and was really established by American Freeman Cobb, but there the similarity ended

Sherman as Elkins, in “The Actress” an episode of the Australian frontier TV series Whiplash, 1961. [35]screengrab from the Bernice Jiminez channel on youtube. NB the episode has been mis-titled.

Although aged only in his mid 50s, Sherman was now struggling with lymphomatosis. However, despite his increasing frailty in later years, Lloyd Lamble could recall his good humour and generosity when he visited him in Melbourne. “Oh yeah – I’ve been a bit crook, but she’ll be apples. I’ll be OK again soon.”[36]Lloyd Lamble (1990) The Strutting and the Fretting p283 John Sherman died in March 1966, at his home in East Bentleigh, aged 57. He had no children, and this writer has found no Australian newspaper obituaries on his passing.

Leon Sherman remained a furrier all his life, and was active with Sydney’s New Theatre until late 1969. He died in 2007.


Nick Murphy
September 2024


References

Film and TV

Primary sources

  • Victoria Births Deaths & Marriages
    Birth Certificate 7641/1910 : Solomon Sherman, 2 June 1910
    Death Certificate 6371/66 : John Sherman, 26 March 1966
    Death Certificate 4042/71: Erome Sherman, 20 February 1971
  • South African Marriage certificate (via Family search)
    Marriage Certificate, Capetown #306, Joe Sherman and Sara Levin, 28 December 1905.
  • National Archives of Australia
    NAA: A9301, 72271 SHERMAN JOHN. Service Number – 72271. Date of birth – 06 Feb 1911(Sic) Place of birth – CARLTON VIC. Place of enlistment – SYDNEY. Next of Kin – SHERMAN JOSEPH

Text

  • Phillip Deery and Lisa Milner (2015) “Political theatre and the state. Melbourne and Sydney 1936-1953” in History Australia. Vol 12, No 3, December 2015.
  • Lloyd Lamble (c1990) The Strutting and the Fretting. First draft of autobiography. Unpublished. Private collection.
  • Lloyd Lamble (c1994) Hi diddle dee dee, An Actor’s Life for Me. Final draft of autobiography. Unpublished. Australian Performing Arts collection. Also at National Library of Australia.
  • David McKnight and Greg Pemberton, “Seeing Reds” The Age (Melb), Good Weekend Magazine (insert) P35+
  • Lisa Milner (Ed) (2022) The New Theatre. The people, plays and politics behind Australia’s radical theatre. Interventions Inc
  • Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper (1980) Australian Film 1900-1977. Oxford University Press/AFI
  • Hal Porter (1965) Stars of Australian Stage and Screen. Rigby Ltd

New Theatre History Wiki – Various articles on the history of the New Theatre and players, including John and Leon Sherman, and some photographs.

Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University

This site has been selected for preservation in the National Library of Australia’s Pandora archive

Footnotes

Footnotes
1 Source of screengrab – cinema Trailer for The Hasty Heart, youtube
2 National Archives of Australia
3 Sherman apparently believed he had been born on the same day in 1911, as he stated this on his military application. However the Victorian Births, Deaths & Marriages record is quite unequivocal. See Solomon Sherman Birth Certificate 17484/1910
4 Lloyd Lamble (1990) The Strutting and the Fretting p279-283
5 The RAAF paperwork states he speaks “Jewish”
6 National Archives of Australia: John Sherman, Royal Australian Air Force enlistment November 1942. Service Number – 72271
7 This writer has seen suggestions that Solomon and John Sherman were two different children. However, the 1971 death certificate of Joseph Erome Sherman is clear. He had four children – who are named on the document. The explanation is that John dropped Solomon as a name
8 The Blue Mountains Advertiser (Katoomba) 9 Sept 1949, p2
9 Worker’s Weekly,(Syd) 19 April 1938, p3
10 Deery and Milner (2015), p115
11 Daily Telegraph (Sydney) 20 March 1939, p8
12 Daily Telegraph (Syd) 28 March 1938, p11
13 These were, in turn, lifted from Steele Rudd’s humorous books of Australian rural life
14 Daily Mirror (Syd) 29 Oct 1942, p9
15 National Archives of Australia NAA: A9301, 72271. Note – Adding to the confusion about his birthdate, his file has been incorrectly titled by the NAA with a birthdate of 6 Feb. However, proceeding documents correctly record it as 2 June – ie 2/6 not 6/2
16 Sydney Morning Herald, 2 July 1950, p4
17 The Sydney Morning Herald, 2 July 1950, p4
18 In 1965, The Canberra Times carried a long article on the struggle many Australian actors had faced in post-war London. But this was also true for aspiring British-born actors as well. See The Canberra Times (ACT) 24 Apr 1965, p9
19 The Stage, 25 March, 1948, p6
20 Evening Standard (London) 30 April 1948, p6
21 Patricia Rolfe, The Bulletin (Aust) 8 June 1963, p22
22 Screenland, January 1950
23 Sound grabs from the author’s copy. Available from network/studio canal
24 The Herald (Melb) 5 July 1950, p11
25 The Age (Melb) 8 July 1950, p3
26 JC Williamsons contract, 14 June, 1950. Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre, Melbourne
27 Los Angeles Evening Citizen News, 24 Jan 1952, p21
28 The Sun (Syd) 17 August, 1952, p50
29 The anecdote Lamble tells is that Sherman proposed a war-victory toast to Joseph Stalin – much to the displeasure of his US hosts
30 Lloyd Lamble (1990) The Strutting and the Fretting p279-283
31 The Mail (Adelaide)18 Dec 1954 p60
32 screengrab from The Mailman channel on youtube, where the whole episode can be seen
33 The Bulletin (Aust) 6 Jan 1973, p24.
34 Cobb & Co really existed, and was really established by American Freeman Cobb, but there the similarity ended
35 screengrab from the Bernice Jiminez channel on youtube. NB the episode has been mis-titled.
36 Lloyd Lamble (1990) The Strutting and the Fretting p283

Gwenda Wilson (1921-1977) – from ‘Janie’ to ‘the Archers’

Enlargement of Gwenda Wilson, playing Margaret the nurse in the 1946 JC Williamson production of John Patrick‘s The Hasty Heart, with John Wood. Courtesy the Australian Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne Australia.

The five second version
When Melbourne-born Gwenda Wilson died in 1977, fans of the BBC radio series The Archers mourned the actor’s passing. For twenty years she had played Aunt Laura, a “crusty, bossy, but lonely widow,”[1]The Guardian 19 August 1977, P 14 via Newspapers.com a New Zealand interloper who had moved into the village of Ambridge, having inherited Ambridge Hall. One correspondent felt it would be difficult to find a replacement actor “who could exactly imitate (her) distinctive Antipodean whine and put such righteous indignation into the part.”[2]Birmingham City Post 23 August 1977 P4. Via British Library Newspaper Archive
In addition to her role in The Archers, she appeared occasionally on the British stage, on TV and in a handful of British films. Before she left Australia in late 1948, she had enjoyed six busy years on the stage and in radio in Australia. She was aged only 55 at the time of her death.

Gwenda Wilson, undated. Ritter-Jeppesen Studios, 107-111 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne. Frank Van Straten Collection, Melbourne.

Gwenda Olive Wilson was born in September 1921,[3]Gwenda Wilson, UK Death Certificate in Melbourne, Australia, to Albert Wilson, a furniture manufacturer, and Elsie nee Field. She grew up in the inner eastern suburb of Kew, and attended nearby Methodist Ladies College, where she developed a passion for performance. She won a scholarship to study music at the University of Melbourne, (she later said that her father had dreams of her being a soprano) but it is clear that her passion from a young age was acting. While at the University she regularly featured in amateur performances, including with the University’s Tin Alley Players. She also studied with speech and drama teacher Maie Hoban, in company with Patricia Kennedy, Coral Browne and others.[4]The Australasian (Melb), 24 Feb 1945 P16, Via National Library of Australia’s Trove

Gwenda Wilson, photographed by Athol Shmith, 1946. Australian Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne.

In 1942, having saved £20, she moved to Sydney. After some radio performances she won a breakthrough role as Janie, in the new US play of the same name, which opened at the Minerva Theatre in 1943.[5]ABC Weekly, Vol. 10 No. 21, 22 May 1948, P30. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove

Gwenda’s role as Janie was celebrated by Jim Russell, a cartoonist for Smith’s Weekly. [6]Smith’s Weekly 5 June 1943, P19. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove

Janie concerned a small town girl who hosts a party for US servicemen that gets out of control while her parents are absent – perhaps the idea was a novelty for Australian audiences at the time. On stage with Gwenda were well established Australian performers like Fifi Banvard, and new faces including Margo Lee and Betty McDowall.[7]It was directed by Melbourne-born Alec Coppel, who already had experience as a writer in England and had come back home in 1940. He later went on to a Hollywood career – writing numerous … Continue reading The play found an audience and it ran for two months – thus establishing Gwenda’s credentials, but it was generally dismissed by most as lightweight entertainment. One newspaper wrote that it was without “real character development, plot construction… (and had) the appeal…of a nice whopping chocolate soda.”[8]The Daily Telegraph, 9 May 1943, P23, Via National Library of Australia’s Trove

Gwenda repeated her breakthrough character Janie for radio in 1944 [9]ABC Weekly 27 May 1944, P12. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove

In October 1943, she took a leading role in Kiss and Tell, another play about modern youth from the US that had opened on Broadway only a few months before. It enjoyed a record 53 week run in Melbourne, and long runs in other Australian cities.[10]Viola Tait (1971) A Family of Brothers. P165 Heinemann 21 year old Gwenda gave a “finished and charming interpretation” as Corliss Archer.[11]The Argus (Melb) 13 Dec 1943 P6, Via National Library of Australia’s Trove It was while working on this play that she was caught up in the 1944 “theatrical dispute,” between JC Williamsons, the Australian theatrical monopoly, and Actor’s Equity, over conditions and the use of non-union performers. Gwenda was one of the striking performers issued with a writ to prevent them appearing in an Equity fund-raising performance. The strike was resolved after three weeks and the principle of the “closed shop” for the Australian theatre firmly established – so Equity succeeded.[12]For a contemporary account of the strike see The Age (Melb) 29 May 1944, P3. For a management view of the strike see Viola Tait (1971) A Family of Brothers. P172-175

In January 1945, Gwenda married former serviceman and Tasmanian-born actor Don Sharp.[13]Births Deaths & Marriages Victoria, Marriage certificate 1945/4791 The couple announced their plans to go to London to perform, even though the war was still on.[14]The Argus (Melb),13 Mar 1945, P7. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove In the meantime, there was no shortage of opportunity to perform in radio and on the stage, with Gwenda being heralded as “the new find.”(see Note 1)

Left: Gwenda and Madge Aubrey in Kiss and Tell c1943-45. Right: John Wood with Gwenda in The Hasty Heart c1946. J C Williamson Collection of Photos, via National Library of Australia’s Trove.

In mid 1947, Gwenda and Don joined a company formed to take The Hasty Heart and While the Sun Shines, to occupation forces in Japan. Don Sharp used his service connections to help establish the tour, John Wood, 2 years after his release from a Japanese POW camp, produced and took a leading role. Gwenda reprised her role as nurse Margaret. Also in the company was Wood’s English wife Phyl Buchanan. By late 1947 the Japan tour had concluded and the company returned to Australia. However, as Don Sharp explains in his 1993 interview with the London History Project, instead of returning, he made his way to England, by finding passages on various interconnecting cargo ships. Although Gwenda and Don seem to have maintained an cordial relationship in later years, this was apparently the end of the marriage.

Gwenda, as a leading young performer in Australia, had little trouble finding more work in Australia. She appeared on radio again, and in two Fifi Banvard productions at the Minerva Theatre in Sydney in 1948, Ah Wilderness and Philadelphia Story. But the truth was, as Don Sharp remarked, that the choice for post-war Australian performers was stark. They could either stay – meaning they would continue to work for JC Williamsons, or on radio, or if they were lucky in a rare Australian film. Alternatively, they could try their luck overseas – where the opportunities seemed boundless. Not surprisingly, in December 1948, Gwenda boarded the Shaw Saville ship Arawa for England, joining the great post-war exodus of Australian performers.

Gwenda (left) farewells John Wood (rear) and other Australians heading for England in September 1948. [15]ABC Weekly 18 Sept 1948, P14 Via National Library of Australia’s Trove

Newspaper reports of the doings of Australians in London were usually celebratory, sometimes tinged with nationalistic patter. After all, who wanted to read that someone, well known in Australia, struggled to find work in the heart of the Empire. In March 1949, Truth newspaper reported Gwenda as one of a number of “Sydney actors having a busy time in London,” while she lived with old friends John Wood and Phyl Buchanan.[16]Truth (Syd) 20 March 1949, P35. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove[17]For other articles like this see The Sydney Morning Herald, 14 Aug 1950, P3, Australian Actor Praised, The Newcastle Sun, 14 Jul 1951, P4 Film Role For Young Australian Actor, The Sun (Syd) 12 Nov … Continue reading

But an unusually frank report in a 1965 newspaper finally acknowledged that for many Australian actors, finding work in London was a constant challenge. Gwenda’s friend Betty McDowall described it as “tough as hell.”[18]The Canberra Times, 24 Apr 1965, P9. The struggle from Down Under to acting up top. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove All the same, records show Gwenda found small roles in films and on stage not long after she arrived. One of her first outings was a minor role in Ha’penny Breeze (1950). In his 1993 interview, Don Sharp outlined the extraordinary effort required to make this, his very first British film, which he helped write, produce and took a leading role in. Despite the effort, and Sharp’s later reputation as a British director of note, this film met with a mixed response. Gwenda also appeared in rep with Robert Raglan, touring Britain in Summer in December and Born Yesterday. She then had a small role on stage in London as a nurse in the farce To Dorothy a Son at the Savoy Theatre,[19]Theatre World, 1951, Vol 47, issue 313, via the Internet Archive and in the film Gift Horse, where she played a WREN.[20]The Sun (Syd)18 Oct 1951, P36, Film news from Hollywood and London, via National Library of Australia’s Trove

Screengrab of Joan Rice and Gwenda in Gift Horse, aka Glory at Sea (1952)

In May 1952, she married again, to Malcolm Halkeston MacDougal, a lawyer.[21]Chelsea News and General Advertiser, 9 May 1952, P1, Via British Library Newspaper Archive[22]Butterworth’s Empire Law List, 1961, P32. Butterworth’s. Via Google Books MacDougal, an Australian-born man standing well over 6 feet in height, gained some notoriety in 1953 when he was taken to court for “lightly boxing the ears” of several British Union speakers in Chelsea, apparently while in the company of Gwenda.[23]Chelsea News and General Advertiser, 3 July 1953, P1 The Shutterstock Photo Archive holds a photo of Gwenda on her wedding day, here. But it appears this marriage ended sometime in the late 1950s.[24]Eric Lambert’s 1965 book MacDougal’s Farm is apparently based on MacDougal’s experience as a wartime POW. Known in the army as “Big Mac,” MacDougal died suddenly in … Continue reading

There was coincidentally, another role in a film scripted by Don Sharp – Conflict of Wings in 1954, but it appears much of Gwenda’s modest output in the 1950s was on radio and in TV guest roles. While the reviews of her work are sparse, a few film roles are still accessible to us today – including the thoroughly unpleasant character Jean in the enjoyable and well acted B-film Dangerous Afternoon (1961).

Above – screengrabs from Dangerous Afternoon (1961) with Ruth Dunning as Letty and Gwen playing the nasty (and soon to be murdered) Jean. Screen grabs from copy in the author’s collection.

Gwenda first appeared as the character Aunt Laura on The Archers in May 1957. Non-Britons (including the present writer) are at a decided disadvantage regarding The Archers – for the simple reason most of us have not heard it. This radio drama of English rural life in the fictional village of Ambridge began in 1951, and is still running today, in 12 minute daily episodes on the BBC.[25]See the BBC’s website devoted to the Archers The series was broadcast for a while in Canada, Australia and other Commonwealth countries, but appears to have been dropped by most in the late 1960s.[26]William Smethurst (1988) The Archers. The true story : the history of radio’s most famous programme. P97-101. Michael O’Mara, London For those not familiar with the show and who cannot understand its popularity for 70 years, Lyn Thomas from the University of Sussex provides an explanation, here at the Conversation.com

Gwenda’s death from lung cancer in August 1977[27]UK General Register Office, Death Certificate Gwenda Olive Wilson or MacDougal was quite sudden and apparently unexpected. BBC producer Tony Shryane recalled losing a much loved colleague, mid show: “Gwenda and I had been friends for many years, even before she joined The Archers… She was a delightful artiste whose infectious gaiety made her popular with everyone and she had that indefinable Australian quality that kept her going at parties when everyone else was beginning to fade. When she died, I could not believe that her energy and enthusiasm would no longer be there to enliven our rehearsals and recordings.[28]William Smethurst (1988) The Archers. The true story : the history of radio’s most famous programme. P148-149. Michael O’Mara, London

Gwenda Wilson in the early 1970s. Photo from the Gwenda Wilson collection, Australian Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne, Australia. [29]The context and photographer is unknown

Many might have expected Aunt Laura would now be written out of the series, but fans need not have worried. Another Australian born actor, Betty McDowall, the same one who had appeared with Gwenda in Janie back in Sydney in 1942, immediately took over the role. Aunt Laura lived on for another eight years.


Note 1 – Some recipes from Gwenda.

A lengthy article in Melbourne’s Argus newspaper in 1946 presented Gwenda as the “new theatrical find” and reported that her passions were cooking and gardening. Also listed were some of her favourite recipes which are included below. (The author has tried the Ham and Macaroni pie)


“With nightly performances, matinees, and rehearsals, the Don Sharps naturally have little time for entertaining, but they love having people in for Sunday night supper. Here are some of the dishes Gwenda serves her guests on such occasions:

HAM AND MACARONI PIE
Line a pie dish with macaroni which has been cooked till soft. Cover with minced ham (or any meat) and chopped parsley. Season to taste. Then layer of tomatoes. Moisten with a little stock or gravy. Cover with mashed potatoes to which has been added a little butter and milk. Glaze top with beaten egg and bake 15 to 20 minutes in hot oven.

RABBIT IN ASPIC
One rabbit, cut up and cooked with enough water to cover. Add few bacon rashers and small chopped onion. Season to taste. When cooked remove all bones. Measure liquid and dissolve 1 dessertspoon gelatine, 1 cup liquid. Place hard-boiled eggs and green peas around inside mould, then arrange cooked rabbit and pour over liquid, and leave to set. Turn out and garnish with parsley or chopped mint.”
[30]The Argus (Melb) 8 Jan 1946 P8 Young Actress is Hostess at Sunday Night Suppers


Nick Murphy
February 2022 and May 2023


Special Thanks

  • To Claudia Funder at the Australian Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne, who alerted me to their collection of photos and ephemera – that once belonged to Gwenda herself. After her early death, it found its way, via her friends, to the collection.

Further Reading

Text

  • Eric Lambert (1965) MacDougal’s Farm. Frederick Muller Ltd, London.

Media

  • Teddy Darvas and Alan Lawson. (2 November 1993). London History Project – Film, Television, Theatre, Radio. “Interview with Don Sharp” (8 parts)

Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University

Newspaper & Magazine Sources

  • National Library of Australia’s Trove
  • National Library of New Zealand, Papers Past
  • Newspapers.com
  • British Library Newspaper Archive
  • Lantern, the Media History Digital Library

Primary Sources

  • Familysearch.com
  • Ancestry.com
  • Victoria, Births, Deaths and Marriages
  • New South Wales, Births, Deaths and Marriages
  • General Register Office, HM Passport Office.

This site has been selected for preservation in the National Library of Australia’s Pandora archive

Footnotes

Footnotes
1 The Guardian 19 August 1977, P 14 via Newspapers.com
2 Birmingham City Post 23 August 1977 P4. Via British Library Newspaper Archive
3 Gwenda Wilson, UK Death Certificate
4 The Australasian (Melb), 24 Feb 1945 P16, Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
5 ABC Weekly, Vol. 10 No. 21, 22 May 1948, P30. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
6 Smith’s Weekly 5 June 1943, P19. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
7 It was directed by Melbourne-born Alec Coppel, who already had experience as a writer in England and had come back home in 1940. He later went on to a Hollywood career – writing numerous screenplays, including Vertigo (1958)
8 The Daily Telegraph, 9 May 1943, P23, Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
9 ABC Weekly 27 May 1944, P12. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
10 Viola Tait (1971) A Family of Brothers. P165 Heinemann
11 The Argus (Melb) 13 Dec 1943 P6, Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
12 For a contemporary account of the strike see The Age (Melb) 29 May 1944, P3. For a management view of the strike see Viola Tait (1971) A Family of Brothers. P172-175
13 Births Deaths & Marriages Victoria, Marriage certificate 1945/4791
14 The Argus (Melb),13 Mar 1945, P7. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
15 ABC Weekly 18 Sept 1948, P14 Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
16 Truth (Syd) 20 March 1949, P35. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
17 For other articles like this see The Sydney Morning Herald, 14 Aug 1950, P3, Australian Actor Praised, The Newcastle Sun, 14 Jul 1951, P4 Film Role For Young Australian Actor, The Sun (Syd) 12 Nov 1953, P39 ACTOR SAYS OPPORTUNITY IN ENGLAND, News (Adel)10 Nov 1954, P2 SA actor gets film contract. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
18 The Canberra Times, 24 Apr 1965, P9. The struggle from Down Under to acting up top. Via National Library of Australia’s Trove
19 Theatre World, 1951, Vol 47, issue 313, via the Internet Archive
20 The Sun (Syd)18 Oct 1951, P36, Film news from Hollywood and London, via National Library of Australia’s Trove
21 Chelsea News and General Advertiser, 9 May 1952, P1, Via British Library Newspaper Archive
22 Butterworth’s Empire Law List, 1961, P32. Butterworth’s. Via Google Books
23 Chelsea News and General Advertiser, 3 July 1953, P1
24 Eric Lambert’s 1965 book MacDougal’s Farm is apparently based on MacDougal’s experience as a wartime POW. Known in the army as “Big Mac,” MacDougal died suddenly in September 1962, without recounting his experiences himself. Lambert’s book was not well received
25 See the BBC’s website devoted to the Archers
26 William Smethurst (1988) The Archers. The true story : the history of radio’s most famous programme. P97-101. Michael O’Mara, London
27 UK General Register Office, Death Certificate Gwenda Olive Wilson or MacDougal
28 William Smethurst (1988) The Archers. The true story : the history of radio’s most famous programme. P148-149. Michael O’Mara, London
29 The context and photographer is unknown
30 The Argus (Melb) 8 Jan 1946 P8 Young Actress is Hostess at Sunday Night Suppers