Country life made the new world home
During two years in Wee Waa, Rosemary Neill at last started to feel she was having a truly Australian childhood.
During two years in Wee Waa, Rosemary Neill at last started to feel she was having a truly Australian childhood.
It’s an extraordinary dispute involving two cultural icons and allegations of racism and left-wing hypocrisy – and it was sparked by differing views of a third icon, Donald Bradman.
As he makes his film directing debut, ex-footy player and boxer Matt Nable says the toxic masculinity debate is being reduced to a ‘bullshit’ cliche.
The Matilda composer opens up on his bruising early rejection and the perils of fame as Netflix’s highly-anticipated version of his stage musical is unveiled.
‘Militant atheist’ Richard Dawkins gets combative on the ‘mimetic epidemic’ of childhood gender dysphoria, the heroic genius of Elon Musk and the obliteration of humankind.
Film director Charlotte Sieling attacks our ‘sick society’ for pressuring women to go under the knife, as she launches her film about a largely forgotten Danish queen
The Teacher’s Pet podcast was the inspiration for ARIA-nominated singer and author Holly Throsby’s latest crime novel — even down to a lead character’s name.
Wendy Whiteley opens up about her own infidelity, marital abuse and ‘scary’ violence at the hands of celebrated painter Brett Whiteley.
A few months ago Heather Mitchell was so frail, she struggled to stand up. Now, the cancer survivor is reprising her award-winning TV role and playing legendary US judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
If you think language policing is largely being practised by US arts students, think again.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/rosemary-neill/page/13