Dame Edna Everage
Dame Edna Everage | |
---|---|
Dame Edna in April 2012 | |
First appearance | December 1955, Return Fare |
Created by | Barry Humphries |
Portrayed by | Barry Humphries |
Information | |
Nickname | "Dame Edna" "Mrs Norm Everage" "Mrs Norma Everage" |
Gender | Female |
Title | Dame |
Occupation | Television personality |
Spouse | Norm Everage (until 1988; his death) |
Children | Kenny Everage Bruce Everage Valmai Gittis Lois Everage |
Relatives | Barry McKenzie (nephew) |
Religion | Protestant |
Dame Edna Everage is a character created and performed by Australian comedian Barry Humphries, known for her lilac-coloured or "wisteria hue" hair and cat eye glasses or "face furniture", her favourite flower, the gladiolus ("gladdies") and her boisterous greeting: "Hello, Possums!" As Dame Edna, Humphries has written several books including an autobiography, My Gorgeous Life, appeared in several films and hosted several television shows (on which Humphries has also appeared as himself and other alter-egos).
Humphries has regularly updated Edna, originally a drab Melbourne housewife satirising Australian suburbia. Then he caused the Edna character to adopt an increasingly outlandish wardrobe after performances in London in the 1960s through which his Edna character grew in stature and popularity. Following film appearances and an elevation to damehood in the 1970s, the character evolved to "Housewife and Superstar", then "Megastar" and finally "Gigastar". Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Dame Edna became increasingly known in North America after multiple stage and television appearances.
Edna describes her chat-shows as "an intimate conversation between two friends, one of whom is a lot more interesting than the other". The character has been used to satirise the cult of celebrity, class snobbery, and prudishness and is often used by Humphries to poke fun at the political leaders and fashions of the times. Her exuberant persona and scathing commentary on society and celebrity, as well as her habit of treating celebrities like ordinary people (on her TV shows) and ordinary people like celebrities (in her stage shows) have become signatures.[1]
Although Humphries freely states that Edna is a character he plays, Edna refers to Humphries as her "entrepreneur" or manager. Humphries and his staff of assistants and writers only refer to Edna as "she" and "her", never mixing the character with Humphries himself. It is this precision and richness of identity which gives Dame Edna her unique force as a character.[2]
In March 2012, Humphries announced that the character would be retired at the end of the current stage tour,[3], but later in 2013 he decided to bring her back.[4]
Contents
Character story[edit]
While Dame Edna is a fictitious character (whose life story has been entirely created by Barry Humphries), so complete is her identity as an individual that Macmillan published My Gorgeous Life, Edna's "autobiography" (written by Humphries but credited to Edna herself), on its non-fiction list.[5] Humphries has also written an "Unauthorised Biography" of his life as Edna's manager: Handling Edna, published in 2010.
According to My Gorgeous Life, and statements Edna has made over the years, she was born Edna May Beazley in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, with a sibling who would give birth to Barry McKenzie. Everage started her stage career in a sketch entitled "Olympic Hostess" in the revue Return Fare on 19 December 1955 as Mrs. Norm Everage, an "average Australian housewife" from Moonee Ponds, a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria. She spends her time visiting world leaders and jet-setting between her homes in Los Angeles, London, Sydney, Switzerland and Martha's Vineyard. She is a friend and confidante of the Queen and has advised prime ministers and presidents. Edna once took an on-air phone call from President Ronald Reagan to assure him that he was, indeed, still the president; and at stageshows she has claimed to be giving former Australian Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, elocution lessons.
The character has three adult children, Bruce, Kenny, and Valmai. Her first daughter, Lois, when still an infant, went missing and was believed to have been abducted by a "rogue koala" during a family camp-out in the outback, à la Azaria Chamberlain. In Handling Edna, the Unauthorised Biography, Humphries absolves the koala of any role in the affair and reveals the true fate of Lois, who in fact survived abduction to become a Catholic nun. Edna's surviving daughter, Valmai, has assisted Dame Edna on her most recent programmes for ITV1, including The Dame Edna Treatment and has assisted on her live tour shows. Edna takes great pride in her two sons: Bruce, who works as an engineer in South Melbourne and is married to Joylene from Ivanhoe, and her youngest, Kenneth (or Kenny), who is a fashion designer in London and designs all of her frocks. Dame Edna refers often to him and his partner, Clifford Smale, both of whom Edna believes are searching for "Miss Right", although she admits they are looking "in some very strange places". Kenny appeared in Sir Les Patterson's documentary Les Patterson and the Great Chinese Takeaway as a boutique owner in Hong Kong.
Dame Edna's mother is incarcerated in a "maximum-security twilight home for the permanently bewildered". Valmai and Kenny are the only family members (so far) who have appeared on stage or screen with their mother. Her husband, Sir Norman Everage, died in 1988 after many years in hospital suffering from prostate problems and a "testicular murmur"; Edna founded the non-profit "Friends of the Prostate" in his honour. Dame Edna was not with Norm when he died. And due to his insistence that all his organs be donated; by the time she reached his bedside, Norm had been "globally recycled" and all that remained was "a dent in the pillow". As a result, Dame Edna almost believed that Norm's cremation was a "waste of money".
In recent years,[when?] Edna has demonstrated her social conscience and sensitivity, telling audiences of her intention to adopt an African child from "the country where Madonna shops for loved ones".[6]
Dame Edna spent many years accompanied by her bridesmaid and constant companion Madge Allsop (played by Emily Perry), a New Zealander from Palmerston North who assisted Dame Edna with her appearances and television shows. (Perry died at the age of 100 in 2008 and now Dame Edna's daughter Valmai has replaced her on stage). Madge never spoke a public word (although she sang on Comic Relief), and while she was often the butt of Dame Edna's jokes, the two were devoted.[7] In Handling Edna, the Unauthorised Biography, Humphries gives Madge a voice and explains the sad loss of her own husband in New Zealand's boiling mud, whilst the couple were on their honeymoon.
On some of her shows (The Dame Edna Experience) Dame Edna was joined on stage by 'Chuck' (Charlton Heston) where he would be mildly humiliated and mistreated.
Dame Edna is praised for her insights into her homeland. When asked why Australians are so good at sport she commented: "Good food and diet; open air life; juicy steaks; sunshine — and the total absence of any kind of intellectual distraction".[citation needed]
Dame Edna launched a campaign to be appointed as a BBC newsreader in 2009 after the corporation announced it wished to seek a female newsreader over 50 years old.[8]
Honours[edit]
On 7 March 2007, Melbourne renamed a city street in her honour: Dame Edna Place,[9] formerly Brown Alley off Little Collins Street, was officially opened by the Lord Mayor of Melbourne, John So. Dame Edna Place is opposite Royal Arcade and The Causeway, between the major roads, Elizabeth Street and Swanston Street; it was, until its renaming, a service alley for adjoining buildings. Dame Edna was not at the renaming ceremony but was represented by ten look-alike Dames. Everage Street in suburban Moonee Ponds has also been named in her honour.
In 1982, Dame Edna's alter-ego Barry Humphries was made an Officer of the Order of Australia for "services to the theatre"[10] and on 16 June 2007 he was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for services to entertainment.[11]
In MAC Cosmetics 2008 Winter Line-Up, a Dame Edna collection of cosmetics were released including eye shadow, lipstick, powder, and nail polish.
A bronze statue was unveiled at Melbourne Docklands in January 2009.[12] It is located by the Yarra river near Harbour Town which also includes statues of singer John Farnham, Dame Nellie Melba, and Graham Kennedy.
Invention of the character[edit]
Barry Humphries was invited to join the fledgling Union Theatre Repertory Company early in 1955 and toured Victorian country towns performing Twelfth Night, directed by Ray Lawler. On tour, Humphries invented Edna gradually as part of the entertainment for the actors during commutes between country towns. Humphries gradually developed a falsetto impersonation of a Melbourne housewife, imitating the Country Women's Association representatives who welcomed the troupe in each town. At Lawler's suggestion, Mrs Everage (later named Edna after Humphries' nanny) made her first appearance in a Melbourne University's UTRC revue at the end of 1955, as the city prepared for the 1956 Olympic Games. The sketch involved a houseproud "average housewife" offering her Moonee Ponds home as an Olympic billet, spruiking her home as possessing "burgundy wall-to-wall carpets, lamington cakes and reindeers frosted on glass dining-room doors".[13]
At this time the character was billed as "Mrs Norm Everage" (Humphries describing this name as "Everage as in 'average', husband Norm as in 'normal'")[14] and had none of the characteristic flamboyant wardrobe of later years.
His mother (whom the interviewer William Cook said "sounds like a frightful snob") was a major inspiration for Edna, although he denied it when she was alive to protect her feelings. Her first monologue in 1955 was about her "lovely home", reflecting young Barry’s own site visits accompanying his builder father. Originally she was a "mousy" character and too quiet to please the raucous crowd at The Establishment club in London.[15]
According to John Lahr, Edna came into her own during the 1980s when the policies of Thatcherism—and what he described as the "vindictive style of the times"—allowed Dame Edna to sharpen her observations accordingly.[16] Lahr wrote that Edna took Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's "seemingly hypocritical motto" of "caring and compassion" for others and turned it on its head, Edna became the voice of Humphries' outrage.[16][dubious ][vague]
Stage and screen performances[edit]
1950s–1999[edit]
Humphries played the character at comedy clubs, satirising the atmosphere of 1950s Melbourne suburbia. An interview with "Mrs Everage" was one of the programmes screened on HSV-7's first day of programming in 1956. Another revue called Rock'n'Reel followed in 1958 at the New Theatre in Melbourne. She appeared in a televised revue shown on New Year's Eve, 1958, Wild Life and Christmas Belles.
The character's overseas debut, now as Edna Everage, was in the early 1960s at comedian Peter Cook's nightclub, The Establishment, in London's West End, where she received a poor review from Bamber Gascoigne, then the drama critic for The Spectator. Barry Humphries cites Cook as being instrumental in launching Edna's UK career. While her first appearances at the Establishment Club was a flop, the mousy Edna being too quiet to please that raucous crowd, a 2016 interviewer William Cook saw the early failure as a blessing, so that Humphries spent the sixties as a jobbing actor rather than as a pampered star.[15]
In 1972, the character appeared as Barry McKenzie's "Aunt Edna" in the film, The Adventures of Barry McKenzie. In the sequel Barry McKenzie Holds His Own, the Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam cameos at the close of the film to confer upon Edna the title of Dame, henceforth to be known as "Dame Edna".
Following the lukewarm reception to Edna's early appearances in Humphries' 1969 stageshow Just a Show and the BBC television series The Barry Humphries Scandals,[17] a growing awareness and appreciation among British audiences for Edna emerged and Humphries devised a stage show titled Edna Everage Housewife Superstar which was successfully presented in London's West End in the mid-1970s. The show featured monologues, songs and what was becoming an Edna trademark – interaction with the theatre audience.
In April 1976, Edna made an appearance in A Poke in the Eye (with a Sharp Stick) – the first of what became Amnesty International's Secret Policeman's Ball series of benefit shows. Edna performed a song for the show and was featured in the film of the show. She also appeared in the 1981 Amnesty show The Secret Policeman's Other Ball. Edna made a cameo appearance in the 1978 film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. In 1979 she was the subject of a BBC Arena mockumentary: La Dame aux Gladiolas.
Humphries debuted the character off-Broadway in New York City in the late 1970s, but the show received such a poor review from The New York Times that Humphries later joked that he thought, "Well, I'll go back to Broadway but I'll wait till the critic's dead – and I had to wait 25 years. I had to wait a quarter of a century for that critic to die".[18]
Dame Edna's success grew in the UK throughout the 1980s and early 1990s with semi-regular stage and television shows. Her first TV specials were in 1978/79 on BBC, but she became popular with broadcaster ITV after her initial performance on An Audience With...Dame Edna Everage in 1980, in front of an audience of invited celebrities. She went on to perform two more An Audience With... specials (in 1984 and 1988), the only performer ever to make three shows in the series.
In 1987, Edna starred alongside Humphries's vulgar alter-ego Les Patterson in the comedy feature Les Patterson Saves the World. In the same year The Dame Edna Experience, ostensibly a talk show which she described as "really a monologue interrupted by total strangers" aired, featuring high-profile "celebrity guests" such as Sean Connery, Mel Gibson, Joan Rivers, and Germaine Greer (an old friend of Humphries'), as well as Madge, her silent, sour-faced "bridesmaid and travelling companion". In 1989, the show was back for a second season, this time taking place in her "luxury penthouse suite" where her guests stayed and, in the case of Douglas Fairbanks, Jr, did her grocery shopping. Subsequently, these shows were aired in the U.S. on PBS, broadening her audience and enlarging her fame. Dame Edna's Neighbourhood Watch a reality/game show hybrid, aired in 1992, and saw her and Madge having a look at her "by invitation only, ladies audience" member's houses, and evaluating their housekeeping skills. U.S. television specials followed, as did an unsuccessful series which aired only one episode. She appeared as a guest of Phil Donahue on his talk show on 17 February 1993.
In 1997, she appeared in another television talk show Dr Dame Edna Kisses It Better. Edna continued her Australian stage and television appearances including a record five appearances as guest presenter at the TV Week Logie Awards[19] and a role as a co-narrator (along with Humphries and Les Patterson) of the ABC's Australian social history series Barry Humphries Flashbacks in 1999.
2000–2009[edit]
In 2000 and 2004, Dame Edna appeared on Broadway, and toured America with both shows. These were ostensibly not "performances", but rather "appearances", with Dame Edna giving monologues and interacting with audience members. Her 2000 show, The Royal Tour, won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding One-Person Show, and a Tony Award.
During 2001 and 2002, Dame Edna appeared in the fifth season of the television show Ally McBeal playing the guest role of Claire Otoms, a client of the show's law firm who later became a secretary at the same firm. The character shared Dame Edna's voice and style and was explicitly listed in the opening credits as being played by Dame Edna Everage (although Barry Humphries received a credit in the closing credits). Claire Otoms is an anagram of "A Sitcom Role".
In the 2002 motion picture Nicholas Nickleby Dame Edna plays the role of Mrs. Crummles, an actress and wife of the manager of a provincial theatre company. Barry Humphries also appears in the film as Mr. Leadville.
Dame Edna appeared at the Party at the Palace in London in 2002 where she referred to the Queen as the "jubilee girl".[citation needed]
The nostalgic "Barry Humphries: Back to my Roots" tour featured Humphries, Edna, Sir Les and Sandy Stone around Australia in 2003.[20]
In 2003, she had an interview punctuated with NPR Weekend Edition's host Scott Simon's table-pounding laughter.[21]
The character celebrated her 50th "birthday" in 2005. She appeared in the 2005 Myer Christmas advert. To mark the occasion, in 2006, Australia Post featured Edna on a postage stamp[22] and the Lord Mayor of Melbourne presented Edna with the key to the city.[23] She toured Australia with the stageshow "Barry Humphries Back With a Vengeance" and appeared on camera "together" with Humphries for the first time in an interview by Ray Martin for Australia's 60 Minutes.[24] She also appeared on screen at the Closing Ceremony of the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne while 1000 "Commonwealth Dames" danced around the arena wearing purple wigs, garish costumes and gladioli, singing along to her song, "We've Made The Most Of Melbourne" : "It's not as small as Adelaide, Compared to Canberra, it's bliss, And if you've been to Melbourne, You can give Sydney a miss."[25]
On 20 May 2006 she appeared on ITV's coverage of The Prince's Trust 30th Birthday Concert. During the telethon-style segments of the event, she took part in a game of Blind Date picking former X Factor contestant Chico Slimani over actors Roger Moore and Richard E Grant.
In the summer of 2006, Dame Edna appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno alongside Billy Crystal. On 23 September 2006, during an interview on Parkinson, she revealed that she would be returning to ITV in 2007 with a new chat show called The Dame Edna Treatment. The show began on Saturday 17 March 2007, with the set-up being that Edna runs a health spa where various famous guests come for treatment.
On 17 December 2006, Dame Edna appeared as a guest panellist on the ABC TV Show Spicks and Specks where she sang with presenter Adam Hills. On 16 December 2007 she appeared as the last guest on the final episode of the Parkinson UK talk show. On 29 May 2008 she appeared on The Graham Norton Show alongside Ray Mears and Alanis Morissette. On 8 August 2008 she appeared on Loose Women on the final show of that year's series. On 12 September and 15 December 2008, and also on 27 May 2009, she made guest appearances on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.[citation needed]
Accompanied by her daughter Valmai in America and Sir Les Patterson in the UK, Dame Edna again toured with what was declared My First Last Tour. On television in early 2009, she appeared in adverts to publicise the insurance company Norwich Union's change of name to Aviva, quoting her change of name from Mrs Everage. On 9 June 2009, she appeared as a guest on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. On 17 July 2009, she appeared as a guest on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross. On an episode of The One Show in September 2009 a piece of graffiti on Sunderland's Penshaw Monument read "Edna Woz Ere 09" and a pair of Everage's signature glasses were drawn next to it. Dame Edna performed the "Last Night of the Poms" at the Royal Albert Hall accompanying the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra on 15 September 2009 and on 21 September, she appeared as a guest on Channel 4's "The Paul O'Grady Show".[citation needed]
2010–present[edit]
In 2010, Dame Edna collaborated with cabaret pianist and singer Michael Feinstein for a two-person revue in the US entitled "All About Me", based on the premise that the pair were rivals who were forced to work together for the show's sake. The show opened as the second production for the newly refurbished Henry Miller's Theatre and was planned to run from 18 March through 18 July 2010 (with previews beginning on 22 February), but lukewarm reviews and low ticket sales led to the limited engagement being cut short and closing on 4 April 2010, after 27 previews and 20 regular performances.[26] On 25 March 2010, she appeared on the television talk show The View as a guest host to promote the production.[citation needed]
On 29 April 2011 she appeared on the BBC-1 broadcast "William and Kate: The Royal Wedding", with Karl Stefanovic and Lisa Wilkinson, covering the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton at Buckingham Palace, along with Tracy Grimshaw and Kathy Lette at Westminster Abbey.
On 18 March 2012, Humphries announced he would "retire" the Dame Edna character because he was "beginning to feel a bit senior".[3]
On 15 March 2013, Dame Edna Everage appeared on Red Nose Day 2013 as a guest star and judge for the Comic Relief Does MasterChef competition between Jack Whitehall and Micky Flanagan.
In June 2013, Dame Edna returned in a Sydney Opera House production of Peter and the Wolf.
In 2013, Dame Edna announced her final tour of the UK. The show opened in November 2013 at the London Palladium[27] before beginning a UK tour in January 2014.[28]
On 11 February 2015 she appeared on The Great Comic Relief Bake Off in aid of Comic Relief.[29]
"Dame Edna's Glorious Goodbye – The Farewell Tour" – began in Seattle, Washington at The Moore Theatre (15–18 January 2015) and continued on to The Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles (24 January 2015 through 15 March 2015) next traveling to San Francisco's Orpheum Theater (17–22 March 2015) then on to the McCallum Theatre in Palm Desert, California (30 March 2015 – 4 April 2015) then Toronto, Ontario, Canada's Princess of Wales Theatre (9–19 April 2015) and concluding in Washington, DC at the National Theatre (21–26 April 2015.)[citation needed]
Dame Edna was a guest on Michael McIntyre's Big Christmas Show, broadcast by BBC1 on Christmas Day 2015.[citation needed]
Dame Edna appeared briefly in Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie (2016) in a non-speaking cameo, one of two characters played by Humphries in the film.
Discography[edit]
- Single: Disco Matilda (Big Time Records BZS-312) (1979)
- Disco Matilda
- Disco Matilda (Inst.)
- Album: The Dame Edna Party Experience (Epic Records, 1988)[30]
- Bad / When Will I Be Famous / Layla (Alias Edna) / I Should Be So Lucky / The Locomotion / Bad 'Nice' (Reprise)
- Waltzing Matilda (Instrumental Intro) / The Twist
- Venus / Like A Virgin / Girls Just Want To Have Fun / Venus (Reprise)
- Shout (Part 1)
- Shout (Part II)
- I Got You Babe (Who Needs You Babe) [with Sir Les Patterson]
- I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me) / Stop! In The Name Of Love / Dancing In The Street / I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me) (Reprise)
- Neighbours
- Leader Of The Pack / It's My Party
- Single: "Theme From Neighbours" (Epic Records, 1988)
- Theme From Neighbours (Caring And Sharing Mix) / Spooky Christmas
- Shout (Parts One And Two)
In 1997 Naxos released a CD in the Children's Classics series (catalogue number 8.554170)[31]
- S. Prokofiev: "Peter and the Wolf", Op. 67, narrated by Dame Edna Everage
- F. Poulenc: "The Story of Babar, the Little Elephant", narrated by Barry Humphries
- B. Britten: "The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra", Op. 34, narrated by Dame Edna Everage
- Appears on Loudon Wainwright III's 2012 album, Older Than My Old Man Now, accompanying him on track 11, "I Remember Sex".
Satirical advice column[edit]
In 2003, Vanity Fair magazine invited Dame Edna to write a satirical advice column. She created controversy with a piece published in the February 2003 issue. Replying to a reader who asked if she should learn Spanish, she wrote:
- "Forget Spanish. There's nothing in that language worth reading except Don Quixote, and a quick listen to the CD of Man of La Mancha will take care of that ... Who speaks it that you are really desperate to talk to? The help? Your leaf blower?"[32][33]
Some members of the Hispanic community read this reply as a racist remark and complaints flooded in to the magazine. Actress Salma Hayek responded angrily, penning a furious letter in which she denounced Dame Edna.[34] After Vanity Fair received death threats, the magazine published a full-page apology to the Hispanic community.[35]
Humphries commented later: "If you have to explain satire to someone, you might as well give up".[36] When Dame Edna was questioned about the controversy on the eve of her 2003 Australian tour, she retorted that Hayek's denunciation was due to "professional jealousy", and that Hayek was envious because the role of painter Frida Kahlo (for which Hayek received an Oscar nomination) had originally been offered to Edna:
When I was offered the part of Frida I turned it down, and she was the second choice. I said 'I'm not playing the role of a woman with a moustache and a monobrow, and I'm not having same-sex relations on the screen' ... I'm not racist. I love all races, particularly white people. You know, I even like Roman Catholics.[37][38]
TV credits[edit]
- Wild Life and Christmas Belles (1958)
- The Barry Humphries Show (1976–7)
- La Dame Aux Gladiolas (1979)[39]
- Christmas Snowtime Special (1979)
- An Audience with... (three editions, 1980, 1984, 1988)
- Last Night of the Proms (1981)
- An Aussie Audience with Dame Edna Everage (1986)
- The Dame Edna Experience (1987–1989)
- A Night on Mount Edna (1990)
- Dame Edna's Hollywood (1991–1993)
- Dame Edna's Neighbourhood Watch (1992–1993)
- Edna Time (1993)
- Dame Edna's Work Experience (1996)
- Dr Dame Edna Kisses It Better (1997)
- Flashbacks with Barry Humphries (1999)
- Ally McBeal (2001–2002)
- Dame Edna Live at the Palace (2003)
- The Dame Edna Treatment (2007)
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Lahr 1992, p. 187
- ^ Lahr 1992, pp. 8–9
- ^ a b "Curtains for Humphries' Dame Edna Everage". ABC News/AFP. 18 March 2012.
- ^ "Dame Edna with the Sydney Symphony". Sydney Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
- ^ Lahr 1992, p. 5
- ^ "ACO Home". Aco.com.au. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
- ^ Everage & 1989 (For all of this section)
- ^ "'I would be stimulating to sit with'". BBC News. 26 September 2009. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
- ^ "Melbourne alley named after Dame Edna". ABC News. 7 March 2007. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
- ^ "It's an Honour – Honours – Search Australian Honours". itsanhonour.gov.au. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
- ^ News.com.au Dame Edna wins Queen's award Archived 2 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ "Dame Edna Everage statue unveiled in Australia". The Sun. 22 January 2009. Retrieved 24 September 2013. (registration required)
- ^ Blundell, Graeme (7 February 2009). "Barry Humphries, the clown prince of suburbia". The Australian.
- ^ St. Pierre, Paul Matthew (2004). A portrait of the artist as Australian: l'oeuvre bizarre de Barry Humphries. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 176. ISBN 0-7735-2644-7.
- ^ a b "The consummate amateur" by William Cook, The Oldie [London], September 2016 pp. 15-18.
- ^ a b Lahr 1992, p. 1
- ^ "Barry Humphries". Archived from the original on 10 April 2011. Retrieved 14 July 2011.
- ^ "ENOUGH ROPE with Andrew Denton – episode 11: Barry Humphries (26/05/2003)". ABC. 26 May 2003. Archived from the original on 8 December 2012. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
- ^ Aussie TV Fan. "TV Week Logie Awards 2008". logies2008.blogspot.com. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
- ^ "Back to my roots and other suckers, Barry Humphries". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ "A Bit of a Chat with Dame Edna". Weekend Edition. 25 January 2003. NPR.
- ^ "Hello Possums, as Dame Edna comes in for a good licking". The Sydney Morning Herald. 21 January 2006.
- ^ "The World Today – Melbourne fetes Dame Edna". Abc.net.au. 23 August 2006. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
- ^ "Great Dame". Sixtyminutes.ninemsn.com.au. 3 September 2006. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
- ^ "Melbourne, we did it!". The Sydney Morning Herald. 26 March 2006.
- ^ Hetrick, Adam."Brief Duet: Broadway's All About Me, with Feinstein and Everage, to Close 4 April" Archived 31 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine playbill.com, 29 March 2010
- ^ "Dame Edna Everage announces farewell UK tour". The Guardian. 15 July 2013. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
- ^ Stephenson, John-Paul (21 January 2014). "Alreet, Possums? Edna Everage begins farewell tour in Newcastle". Giggle Beats. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- ^ "BBC One – The Great Comic Relief Bake Off, Series 2, Episode 1". BBC. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
- ^ Discogs. "Dame Edna Everage discography". Retrieved 14 May 2009.
- ^ "PROKOFIEV: Peter and the Wolf / BRITTEN: Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra (Children's Classics) – 8.554170". Naxos.com. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
- ^ "Sorry, Wrong Cover". Vanity Fair. 4 September 2013. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ "Dame Edna: Why the fuss?". BBC News. 18 February 2009. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ "Dame Edna treads on Spanish toe". The Guardian. 14 February 2003. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ "Dear Edna: Why Can't We Laugh Anymore?". Los Angeles Times. 16 February 2003. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ Feneley, Rick (25 October 2014). "Poetry professor Barry Spurr: master of parody or bigotry?". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
- ^ "Still playing the dame". The Age. 1 May 2003. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ "A brush with Edna". Independent.ie. 26 November 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- ^ La Dame Aux GladiolasBanks-Smith, NancyThe Guardian (1959–2003); Mar 20, 1979;
Bibliography[edit]
- Lahr, John (1992). Dame Edna Everage and the Rise of Western Civilization; Backstage with Barry Humphries. United States: Farrar, Straus, Giroux. ISBN 0-374-13456-1.
- Everage, Dame Edna (1989). My Gorgeous Life. Australia: The Macmillan Company. ISBN 0-7329-0140-5.
External links[edit]
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