Child star played Joanie on Happy Days
Producers on Happy Days began to pressure Erin Moran to watch what she ate and to wear more revealing outfits.
Death and Memoriam and Birth Notices from The Age are now published online too, so you can share memories with your loved ones. Go there now
Producers on Happy Days began to pressure Erin Moran to watch what she ate and to wear more revealing outfits.
Voluntary advocacy work for veterans, their widows and families earned Ryan an OAM.
Clifton James, Trish Vradenburg, Lady Hambro
Mary Owen's 'first life' revolved around family, home, mothers' clubs and church. But a job and contact with the union movement led her to become a tireless advocate for women's rights, health care and workplace equality.
Guitarist said of Dylan: "Bobby was telepathic, and when I use that word, I mean it. Between the two of us, the communication was always very strong."
John Southwell - 1930-2017
In 1955, a Chicago milkshake machine salesman was so impressed by a California client's assembly line-style restaurant that he bought the franchising rights and opened his own hamburger stand modelled after it in suburban Des Plaines, Illinois.
Roe's strong egalitarian principles meant the ADB became freely available on-line as the great research tool to everybody.
Sign writing was the early beginning to Robin Norling's trajectory.
She had lived in the same small, two-room apartment since 1926, with her collection of watches and her big bed.
Charlie Murphy became best known for a part on Dave Chappelle's acclaimed sketch-comedy series Chappelle's.
Sonographer's desire for the highest quality image led to development of new scanning techniques.
Carme​ Chacón, David Peel, Christopher Morahan
John Stocker, a pre-war child migrant from England who became a professor of English, overcame great adversity in his childhood to achieve success.
A leading light in the folk revival from the 1960s, singer Danny Spooner will be a massive loss to the folk movement in Australia.
Ian Gordon Stewart's boyhood dream to become a foreign correspondent led to a long and storied career as a journalist and author.
Peter Lawler, who became one of the giants of the Australian Public Service, might be said to have started with nothing.
Satirist John Clarke was forever taking himself out of contact and communing with the natural world.
Tim Pigott-Smith, who has died aged 70, was a seasoned Shakespearean stage actor before achieving television stardom as the sadistic police superintendent turned Army colonel Ronald Merrick in The Jewel in the Crown.
The biggest names in show business felt that "if they hadn't been insulted by Rickles, they weren't with it".
Darcus Howe, Arthur Bisguier, Jill Martin
After the United States Supreme Court legalised gay marriage in 2015, more than 26 million people on Facebook changed their profile photos to include the flag.
The best a suburban GP could do for a woman 'in trouble' was to find out who was currently the least dangerous abortionist and advise her where to go.
In spite of a number of health challenges, teacher Gina Sabto threw herself into her love of language and, especially, of poetry.
A brilliant teacher of history, Itiel Bereson was also a highly successful writer of textbooks.
Bert Evans was a prominent and influential advocate for employers in the decades that changed Australia.
Former chair of the National Trust Rodney Davidson was a key figure in the growth of the heritage movement in Melbourne and Victoria.
Leak won 19 Stanley Awards, for excellence by the Australian Cartoonists' Association.
The number of shelters for battered women grew from a mere handful in 1977 to nearly 700 the year The Burning Bed was televised.
Noreen Fraser, Robert Day, Roberta Knie
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