Dawn Fraser AO, MBE (born 4 September 1937) was an Australian champion swimmer and politician. She is one of only two swimmers to win the same Olympic event three times – in her case the 100 meters freestyle.
Within Australia, she is known for her controversial behaviour and larrikin character as much as for her athletic ability.
Fraser was born in the Sydney suburb of Balmain in 1937 into a working-class family. She was spotted at the early age of 14 by Sydney coach Harry Gallagher swimming at the local sea baths.
Fraser won eight Olympic medals, including four gold medals, and six Commonwealth Games gold medals. She also held 39 records. The 100 meters freestyle record was hers for 15 years from 1 December 1956 to 8 January 1972.
She is the first of only two swimmers in Olympic history (Krisztina Egerszegi of Hungary being the other) to win individual gold medals for the same event at three successive Olympics (100 meters freestyle – 1956, 1960, 1964).
In October 1962, she became the first woman to swim 100 metres freestyle in less than one minute. It was not until 1973, eight years after Fraser retired, that her 100m record of 58.9 secs was broken.
Bernard Tomic (Croatian: Bernard Tomić; born 21 October 1992) is an Australian professional tennis player. As of 24 October 2011, Tomic is the highest ranked Australian male tennis player and the youngest player in the top 219. The highlight of Tomic's career thus far has been a quarterfinal appearance at the 2011 Wimbledon Championships, which included a straight sets third round victory over the world Number 5 ranked player, Robin Söderling, before losing in four sets to eventual champion Novak Djokovic.
Tomic was born in Stuttgart, Germany, on 21 October 1992. Tomic's parents, John (Ivica) and Ady (Adisa), left Croatia, then a part of Yugoslavia, several years before his birth. In an interview, Tomic stated that his parents "have a Croatian background". Other sources, such The Australian and The Guardian, have written that Tomic's parents are also of Bosnian heritage. They were both working in Germany when Tomic was born. The family migrated to Queensland, Australia when Tomic was three years old. His younger sister, Sara, is a junior tennis player.
1964: Dawn Fraser, an Aussie swimming icon
Dawn Fraser Slur Against Nick Kyrgios
Dawn Fraser
Olympic Swimming Great Dawn Fraser Talks London 2012 & The Aussie Team
Dawn Fraser Becomes First Woman To Retain Swimming Gold - Rome 1960 OIympics
Dawn Fraser Wins 100m Final Melbourne 1956 Olympics Colour Footage
Swimming legend Dawn Fraser 'racist' attack on Nick Kyrgios
Swimming Legend Dawn Fraser 'Racist' Attack On Nick Kyrgios
Swimming Legend Dawn Fraser 'Racist' Attack On Nick Kyrgios
Wimbledon 2015 : Nick Kyrgios calls Dawn Fraser a 'blatant racist
Dawn Fraser on the feeling of competing in her first Olympics | Words of Olympians
DAWN FRASER pływanie (swimming) lata 56-64
Dawn Fraser - Swimming Icon & Sporting Legend
Nick Kyrgios'S Brother Says Dawn Fraser'S Apology 'Means Nothing'
Plot
The true story of Tony Fingleton, a young man from a troubled family who found the inner strength to become a champion. Always overshadowed in his father's eyes by his brothers, it is only when Tony displays an extraordinary swimming talent that he feels he has a shot at winning his father's heart.
Keywords: 1950s, 1960s, abuse, abusive-father, airliner, airplane, airport, alcoholic, alcoholic-father, ambulance
The pride of a nation. The heart of a champion.
Tony Fingleton: [narrating] I was always a little afraid of my father. From my earliest memory there was nothing I could do to please him. I just... never connected to him. So I fell between the cracks.
Harold Fingleton: [to Tony while having Harold Jr. beat him up in a boxing lesson] What're you crying for?::Young Harold Jr.: [whilst boxing] You are. You're crying!::Young Tony: [sobbing] I'm not!::Young Harold Jr.: [punches Tony again] You are now!
Harold Fingleton: [in a drunken stupor, to Tony] When I was your age, I was tougher.::Tony Fingleton: What are you talking about?::Harold Fingleton: You're far too weak. You make me feel ashamed. I wish you didn't exist.::Dora Fingleton: Oh, Tony, come to bed.::[Tony leaves]::Harold Fingleton: They were a bunch of animals. Bastards.::Dora Fingleton: Harold, what happened? What happened today, hmm? What happened? How'd you get that mark on your face?::Harold Fingleton: Coppers came out and, um... I think I fell over. Coppers...::Dora Fingleton: Was it...::Harold Fingleton: It was all so long ago that they were animals. And my mother... My mother, she was there. THEY WERE ANIMALS!::Dora Fingleton: What?::Harold Fingleton: You're a very good woman, Dora. Where's Tony?
Dora Fingleton: [about Tony, proudly] Your son's just won the junior championship.::Harold Fingleton: [to John] Wait'll these mugs see what you can do.
Tony Fingleton: [after losing to John] You reckon I could swim from here to America?::Dora Fingleton: You just gonna sit here feeling sorry for yourself?::Tony Fingleton: No, John's the star. He's a better swimmer than me. He always was. He's good, Mum. John's number one.::Dora Fingleton: You know it's just one race. There's gonna be plenty of races for you.::Tony Fingleton: Mum, it's too late, all right? How many years have I been swimming? I wanted to win a medal. I wanted to be a champion and win a medal at the Olympics.::[sighs]::Tony Fingleton: You know? You know, I wanted to BE somebody.::Dora Fingleton: Oh, you think you're nobody, hmm? Winning a medal isn't gonna change that...::Tony Fingleton: Look, Mum, it's not about that, all right? I wanted... I had this plan, all right? I thought that... maybe... if I could get to the top in swimming, then it would lead to something and then I could... get so I could just... I could... I could just GO!::[sobs]::Dora Fingleton: You can't let this break you, okay? You gotta be very strong up here in the head, okay? Listen. Listen. My darling boy, I love you. I love you. I'm so proud of you.::Tony Fingleton: I love you, too.::Dora Fingleton: My darling boy. Only you can make something of yourself. Not your father and not me. Now, if swimming is what you're after, then there's always next year. But, you know, there might be something completely different for you - nothing to do with swimming - that'll get you... get you out of here, if that's what you want.
Brother Campbell: Oh, Harold, uh, Father Dillon is hearing confession right after mass.::Harold Fingleton: Is he? That's nice.::Brother Campbell: Probably been awhile?::Harold Fingleton: I'll pop along next week.::Brother Campbell: Since you're here, and since your boys will be coming here...
Harold Fingleton: [on his way to confession] Hot in here, isn't it?::Dora Fingleton: Not for us Protestants.
Dora Fingleton: I'll wait till you kids are all grown up and don't need me.::Tony Fingleton: Which will be never.
Tony Fingleton: [struggling to connect with his dad prior to leaving Australia for Harvard College in the United States] Do you remember the first time you took me to the pool, Dad? Put me in the water?::[Harold shakes his head]::Tony Fingleton: I do. At the old Spring Hill Baths. I remember being terrified of drowning. You had me there and then you just... you just... let me go.::Harold Fingleton: Oh. I remember that.::Tony Fingleton: Yeah. But I didn't go under. I floated. And then, uh... and then I swam away from you, and... I swam away across to the other side maybe, but...::Tony Fingleton: [suddenly embarrassed at how directly this childhood story connects to his current actions] I should go. I've got things to do.
Tony Fingleton: [narrating] It's funny how the stumbling blocks of life can help make us better people. I never had the support of my father, but in the end that's what gave me the strength to seek something more than I could've ever imagined. Something in another world.
Dawn Fraser. Tomboy...Rebel...Champion...
She's a killer. She's a champion. She's a rebel.
The movie reveals what the headlines concealed.
The true story of swimming legend Dawn Fraser.
She broke the rules and she broke the records
1964: Dawn Fraser, an Aussie swimming icon
Dawn Fraser Slur Against Nick Kyrgios
Dawn Fraser
Olympic Swimming Great Dawn Fraser Talks London 2012 & The Aussie Team
Dawn Fraser Becomes First Woman To Retain Swimming Gold - Rome 1960 OIympics
Dawn Fraser Wins 100m Final Melbourne 1956 Olympics Colour Footage
Swimming legend Dawn Fraser 'racist' attack on Nick Kyrgios
Swimming Legend Dawn Fraser 'Racist' Attack On Nick Kyrgios
Swimming Legend Dawn Fraser 'Racist' Attack On Nick Kyrgios
Wimbledon 2015 : Nick Kyrgios calls Dawn Fraser a 'blatant racist
Dawn Fraser on the feeling of competing in her first Olympics | Words of Olympians
DAWN FRASER pływanie (swimming) lata 56-64
Dawn Fraser - Swimming Icon & Sporting Legend
Nick Kyrgios'S Brother Says Dawn Fraser'S Apology 'Means Nothing'
Nick Kyrgios'S Brother Says Dawn Fraser'S Apology 'Means Nothing'
Dawn J. Fraser: 'Hamster 911' Story at The Moth
Dawn Fraser Live at the People's Improv Theater for RISK!
Fireside with Dawn Fraser AO MBE on time in Politics
Swimming great Dawn Fraser says players like Nick Krygios should
Dawn Fraser tells Nick Kyrgios and Bernard Tomic to 'go back where their parents came from'
Dawn J. Fraser performs 'My Special Twin: One in a Million'
Speaker and Storyteller - Dawn J. Fraser
THE PROJECT Dawn Fraser under fire
Dawn J Fraser - Unchained interview
Matt Black ArFM Interview with Dawn Fraser-Nicholls November 2011
Interview with head Barista at Food Alert
Buju Banton Before the Dawn Concert 2011 Backstage Interviews & More
Chatting to Olympic Legend Dawn Fraser
NRMA Carfit with Dawn Fraser
Replas Media - Dawn Fraser Pool Large Profile Installation
Dawn Fraser AO MBE Recommends Revitive Circulation Booster
Dawn Fraser speaks out and supports solar power
Speaker on Leadership & Storytelling - Dawn J. Fraser
Dawn Fraser
Dawn Fraser
Dawn Fraser about Live Life Villages
Ask Me Stories "Body Talk" Dawn Fraser
The Spirit of Australian Sport: Swimming
Dawn J. Fraser: Yum's the Word