Leslie Rees (writer)

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George Leslie Clarke Rees AM (28 December 1905 – 17 August 2000) was an Australian writer for children who was born and raised in Perth, Western Australia.[1]

Leslie Rees

Rees in 1944
Rees in 1944
BornGeorge Leslie Clarke Rees
(1905-12-28)28 December 1905
Perth, Western Australia
Died17 August 2000(2000-08-17) (aged 94)
Sydney, New South Wales
Occupationwriter
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAustralian
Years active1929-1997
Notable worksThe Story of Karrawingi the Emu
Notable awardsChildren's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers 1946
SpouseCoralie Clarke Rees

Career

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He attended Perth Modern School and then the University of Western Australia, where he edited the student magazine, Black Swan.[2] He then worked for The West Australian as a journalist before travelling to London to study at University College on a scholarship. It was while there that he married fellow Western Australian, Coralie Clarke, who had been a sub-editor during his time on the Black Swan.[1]

Rees returned to Australia in 1936 to become the Australian Broadcasting Commission's first federal drama editor in Sydney. In 1938 he helped establish the Playwrights' Advisory Board.

He was also President of PEN (Sydney) for a number of years.

As a writer, Rees is best known as a prolific author of children's books as well as written travel books, plays and an autobiography.

He wrote the first Australian-written drama to air on Australian television, The Sub-Editor's Room.[3]

He died in Sydney on 17 August 2000.[1]

Selected works

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Novel

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  • Danger Patrol (1954)

Children's fiction

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  • Digit Dick on the Barrier Reef (1942)
  • The Story of Shy the Platypus (1944)
  • Gecko : The Lizard Who Lost His Tail (1944)
  • The Story of Karrawingi the Emu (1946)
  • Digit Dick and the Tasmanian Devil (1946)
  • The Story of Sarli the Barrier Reef Turtle (1947)
  • The Story of Shadow the Rock Wallaby (c.1947)
  • The Story of Kurri Kurri the Kookaburra (1948)
  • Bluecap and Bimbi : The Blue Wrens (1948)
  • Mates of the Kurlalong (1948)
  • Quokka Island (1951)
  • The Story of Aroora the Red Kangaroo (1952)
  • Digit Dick in the Black Swan Land (1952)
  • Two Thumbs : The Story of a Koala (1953)
  • The Story of Koonawarra the Black Swan (1957)
  • Digit Dick and the Lost Opals (1957)
  • The Story of Wy-lah the Cockatoo (1959)
  • The Story of Russ the Australian Tree Kangaroo (1964)
  • Boy Lost of Tropic Coast : Adventure Dexter Hardy (1968)
  • The Big Book of Digit Dick (1973)
  • Mokee, the White Possum (1973)
  • Panic in Cattle Country (1974)
  • The Story of Shy the Platypus (1977)
  • Here's to Shane (1977)
  • Digit Dick and the Magic Jabiru (1981)
  • Digit Dick and the Zoo Plot (1982)
  • The Seagull Who Liked Cricket (1997)

Drama

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  • The Sub-Editor's Room (1937) – and 1956 television adaptation of the same name
  • Mother's Day
  • The Man With the Money : A Drama (1948)
  • The Harp in the South (1949) – based on the Ruth Park novel of the same title
  • Modern Short Plays (1951) edited
  • Mask and Microphone : Plays (1963) edited

Travel

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  • Spinifex Walkabout : Hitch-hiking in Remote North Australia (1953)
  • Westward from Cocos : Indian Ocean Travels (1956)
  • Coasts of Cape York : travels around Australia's pearl-tipped peninsula (1960)

Autobiography

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  • Hold Fast to Dreams : Fifty Years in Theatre, Radio, Television and Books (1982)[4]

Awards

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Austlit - Leslie Rees
  2. ^ "The Black Swan". The Sydney Morning Herald. No. 28, 682. New South Wales, Australia. 7 December 1929. p. 12. Retrieved 17 March 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ Vagg, Stephen (17 January 2022). "Forgotten Australian Television Plays: The Sub-Editor's Room". Filmink.
  4. ^ Rees, Leslie (1982), Hold fast to dreams : fifty years in theatre, radio, television and books, Alternative Publishing Co-operative Ltd, retrieved 17 March 2024
  5. ^ "Book of the Year: Children's Story by Leslie Rees", The West Australian, 13 November 1946, p8
  6. ^ "George Leslie Clarence Rees". honours.pmc.gov.au. Retrieved 14 June 2019.