Ted Roberts
This article includes a improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (December 2023) ) |
Ted Roberts | |
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Born | Edwin Dudley Roberts 17 April 1931 Richard Lane Award |
Edwin Dudley Roberts (17 April 1931 – 23 February 2015) was an Australian television screenwriter and supervising producer.
Early life and education
Roberts was born to Lesley Roberts and Louise Kearney in Strathfield, New South Wales. After completing his education at Marist Brothers College in Randwick, Roberts worked in advertising and sales promotion before commencing his career as a freelance writer for television and film.
Television screenwriter
Ted Roberts began his career in television in the 1960s, writing early episodes of Skippy the Bush Kangaroo. The series was screened in over eighty countries and its theme tune, composed by Eric Jupp, is one of the best known and most recognisable Australian tunes. The long version (the B side on the 45rpm record) has lyrics written by Roberts.
Ted Roberts' other television credits include major Australian television series:
Film screenwriting
Roberts' film credits include Bush Christmas, which starred Nicole Kidman in her first film, playing "one of three children searching for a stolen racehorse... The 1983 film, directed by Henri Safran, gives us a skinny, pink-cheeked, abundantly plainted Nicole, many moments of good humour, some fine location shots filmed in Queensland's Lamington Plateau, and music from band the Bushwackers."[1]
Awards
He won four Australian
He won the 1974 Australian Writers' Guild in the Original Television Drama Category for Three Men of the City.
He was also winner of the Henry Lawson Prize (for the TV miniseries Lindsay's Boy (ABC, 1974).
In 2003 he was awarded the prestigious
Death
His death on 23 February 2015 was announced two days later in a press release by the
Songs
One of his first songs (1965) was "Bound for Hobart Town" with music by S.E. Libaek. Recorded by
A later commission was for the Decimal Currency Board. An advertising jingle for the introduction of decimal currency on 14 February 1966, the tune is to "Click Go the Shears".
In come the dollars and in come the cents
To replace the pounds and the shillings and the pence
Be prepared for change when the coins begin to mix
On the fourteenth of February 1966.
Chorus:
Clink go the coins, clink, clink, clink
Change over day is closer than you think
Learn the value of the coins and the way that they appear
And things will be much smoother when the decimal point is here.
In 1968, he composed My Pal Skippy to music by Eric Jupp.
Select credits
- The Amorous Dentist (1983)
References
- ^ Weekend Australian, 26–27 December 2009
- ^ "Obituary: Ted Roberts – TV and movie writer". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
Sources
- Ann Atkinson; Linsay Knight; Margaret McPhee (1996). The Dictionary of Performing Arts in Australia. St Leonards, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86448-005-X.
- Albert Moran (1993). Moran's Guide to Australian TV Series. additional research by ISBN 0-642-18462-3.
- Lindsay's boy by Ted Roberts in Alrene Sykes, ed. (1977). Five Plays for Stage, Radio and Television. St. Lucia, Qld.: University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0-7022-1444-2.
External links
- Ted Roberts at IMDb