User:Roisterer/sandbox

To Do lists
 * CRICKET: Michael Mainhardt, Frederick Hack, Alfred Hack, Leonard Garnsey, Wolverley Fordham, Thomas Sweet, Arthur Powys, Jeryl Woutersz, Marjoribanks North
 * LISTS: 1979/80 Australian cricket season, List of Western Province representative cricketers, List of Berbice cricketers
 * INDIGENOUS: Tendi, Tempe Downs murders
 * AUSTRALIAN RULES: Australian rules football in 2015, Oldest players in VFL/AFL Grand Final, Stan Livingstone, Greg Hodson
 * POLITICS:
 * AUSTRALIAN CULTURE/HISTORY: Parramatta River Murders, Northern Territory Cannonball Run (20 Oct 1994 - review), Pearce family murders, Alexander Crooks, Australian fear of Russian invasion, Basha Felika
 * INTERNATIONAL: "That Kind of Fool", B.B. Cunningham Jr., Roetgener Wald, Jerry Lee Lewis at the Grand Ole Opry, Hans Josef Lazar, Alexandra Colony, J.W. Brown, Goodie Reeve, Hersee Moody Carson, Amelia Le Pelley, 1902 Brussels Sugar Convention, Haney's Big House, Claude Butlin
 * Keep eye on: Bob Quinn (Australian footballer), Bob Pratt, Australian federal election, 1901, Dick-a-Dick, Clémentine of Orléans, Kenneth Gandar-Dower, Lado Enclave, Charles Kilpatrick (cyclist), Everton Weekes

Goodie Reeve (xx January 1897 - 4 December 1978) was a British-born actor, singer, songwriter, radio host, critic and columnist who found fame in Australia, becoming known as the "First Lady of Sydney Radio".

Early life
Reeve was born Lillian Mary Hazlewood in Warwick Garden, London, the second child of famed comedic actress Ada Reeve and actor Bert Gilbert (Joseph Gilbert Hazlewood); her sister Bessie Hazlewood was an actress before becoming a chauffeur in Sydney.

Reeve's parents regularly toured with their acts, sometimes taking Goodie and Bessie with them, including to Australia in 1897/98.

Reeve began violin lessons while very young, before switching to the piano. Due to her parents' travels, Reeve did not attend school until age ten, initially sent to a convent by her mother in order to learn French, before shifting initially to a school in Shropshire and then, with her sister, to attend a school in Bonn, Germany, from which she was forced to flee when World War I broke out.

Following in her parents' footsteps, Reeve established herself in musical comedy during the mid-1910s, appearing in the hit play The Better 'Ole at the Oxford Music Hall in London,, initially in the supporting role of "Suzette" before transferring to the lead female role of "Victorine". The Times theatre critic wrote that Reeve helped "brightly and daintily with the song and dance side of the entertainment."

Australia
In 1917 Reeve came to Australia for the local production of The Better 'Ole, continuing her role as Victorine. Following the end of The Better 'Ole's run, Reeve had great success appearing in her own solo show, singing and playing the piano, on the Tivoli circuit.

Especially early in her career, Reeve's relationship to her mother, with Reeve billed as "Famous Ada Reeve's Fascinating Daughter" in her first one-woman show in Australia and critics claiming she had and was as skilled as her mother. but also having "a quiet charm of her own"

In 1925 Reeve started working in the publicity department of J. C. Williamson's theatre company.

Reeve performed in vaudeville and revues during the 1920s and 1930s, including a tour of New Zealand over the 1927/28 summer.

Music
Wrote the first radio musical commercials in Sydney.

In 1924, Reeve released Auntie Goodie's Bedtime Story Songs, an album of self-written children's songs, including "Come To My Island", "Poor Mummy's Tired, Every Night", "The Puppy Dogs' Parade", "I Jus' P'tend", and "It's Lullaby".

Wrote the famous advertising jingle "Eat Your Uncle Toby's Every Day". She also penned and performed "Here Comes Amy", the song sung at the official welcome of air pilot, Amy Johnson, in Sydney on 4 June 1930.

Radio
Reeve started a 46-year career in radio in Sydney in 1926, with, at various times, 2BL, 2FC, 2GB, 2CH and 2SM.

In 1929 Reeve became the host of 2FCs Children's Session She sings a song then talks to the children, explaining it, while she continues to strum away some ap- propriate tune on the piano. “It seems to take away some of the dullness of the speak- ing voice,” Goodie Reeve explains, “to have an accompaniment in the background; but it is not too easy to keep the piano down quiet enough to be sure of the voice being heard.” It is impossible for anyone to accompany Goodie Reeve as most of her little talks and stories are impromptu, and no one else would know when to start or when to stop. Listen in next Friday night about 6.15 p.m.

Many different programs, including Behind the scenes at Hollywood on 2FC, where she interviewed people involved in the entertainment industry, including her own father.

Built herself to become "one of the best woman announcers on the air" and has "a large army of listeners, renowned for bringing novel features into radio.

Reeve was absent from the airwaves for a year in 1933 before returning to Radio 2UE with her new program Woman. Through the break she remained one of the best known personalities in Australian radio.

Reeve or "Auntie Goodie" of program Tiny Tots on 2GB Sydney, urged nieces and nephews in her 1930 Christmas message, to ‘specially appreciate your presents this year, because most Mummies and Daddies have not had too many pennies to spend’. The iconic Aeroplane Jelly jingle was first sung in the early 1930s on the Goodie Reeve radio show.

At 2FC in the early 1930s, Reeve inadvertently performed the first interview on the ABC, when a visiting actor froze during a talk and Reeve was required to encourage him to speak.

in the 1930s Called "perhaps the greatest favourite in the air in Australia to-day", to the point that a letter from the UK addressed "Goodie Reeve, Sydney" found her.

However, Reeve's popularity had its drawbacks, including death threats and Christmas cakes containing screws, needles and other objects sent to her. to a listener travelling hundreds of kilometres to personally lecture her on the benefits of using a parrot to rub face creams on ones.

Reeve gave Australian author Kylie Tennant her big break in the early 1930s, hiring Tennant to write plays for Reeve's children program.

Reeve was well known for her "extraordinarily sympathetic nature", coming from surviving life-threatening illness and wanting to spread kindness in the world. "Knack of radiating her happy personality at the mike."

In 1937 Reeve started For Men Only, a program on 2GB. Men would write to Reeve about personal issues in their life, including complaints about their wives, loneliness, lack of employment, Reeve would read out letters and respond.

"Auntie Goodie's Good Deeds", where listeners would write in with stories of good deeds. and Reeve was known for her ongoing charity work, in particular for the Royal Society for the Blind.

After World War II, Reeve ran on 2GB Session for the Blind, a popular program for the blind that included a backing band of blind musicians. Described in her "quiet, pleasant way, has deservedly achieved some remarkable results from her cheerful little programme."

a children's show called Chickabiddies and a show for blind ex-serviceman.

Writing
Reeve was the Referees “Theatrical Gazette” columnist and wrote for Theatre Magazine.

Wrote on a variety of issues, including education, using the latest technology, including in 1936 looking at the future of education in Australia.

Personal life
Reeve was married three times:

The first to Dr Reg McGillicuddy, a physician and former Australian rules footballer with Victorian Football League (VFL) club University, at St Patrick's Cathedral, Melbourne, on 5 December 1919. Reeve left the Sydney run of My Lady Frayle, in which she played a leading role, at short notice, to travel to Melbourne to wed McGillicuddy. Reeve was replaced by her understudy Trilby Clark.

The couple moved to Queensland where they had a daughter, Patricia Mary "Yuki", before McGillicuddy died in Cunnamulla in 1922, aged 30. Reeve was in Sydney visiting her father when she heard of McGillicuddy's illness but he died before Reeve was able to return to Cunnamulla.

Reeve and her daughter returned to Sydney where Yuki attended Normanhurst Convent.

Reeve's second marriage was to Walter Geoffrey Martin, an executive with Amalgamated Wireless, in St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney on 22 October 1932, followed by a honeymoon in Suva, Fiji. Up to 400 fans were outside St Mary's, throwing rose petals and mobbing Reeve, leading to near suffocations in the resulting crush and many children screaming in fright. Reeve, while stopping to kiss and calm many of the children present, momentarily lost her gold plaited headwear.

The third was to Australian Army Major Paul Frederick Dawson on 21 October 1948. Dawson, who had served with the New South Wales Lines of Communication Unit in World War II, was critically ill from injuries sustained from the war, and died less than a month later, on 16 November 1946.

As Reeve married Dawson only three hours after her decree nisi for divorce from her second husband Walter Martin was made absolute on 21 October 21 1946, there was confusion over the validity of the marriage.

Under the law at the time, remarriage was forbidden within 21 days of the granting of a decree nisi. As Dawson's wife, Reeve would be entitled to Dawson's estate and war pension, and the case went before the court which ruled that the marriage was invalid.

Although not eligible for a widow's war pension, as the sole beneficiary of Dawson's will, Reeve inherited his estate valued at £258 (the equivalent of $AUD in 2022). Reeve continued to refer to herself as "Mrs Dawson" after the court case.

Additionally, it was reported in early 1919 that Reeve had become engaged to British humourist Bruce Bairnsfather, and that they would marry when Bairnsfather came to Australia later that year. However, Bairnsfather was too ill to undertake travel.

Reeve died on 4 December 1978 in a nursing home in Springwood, Queensland, aged 80. She was survived by her daughter and two grandchildren.