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WENDY HARMER


Wendy Harmer

Wendy Harmer (born Wendy Brown, 10 October 1955 in Yarram, Victoria) is an Australian author, children’s writer, playwright and dramatist, radio show host, comedian and television personality. She is host of ABC Radio Sydney’s Morning radio program.

Harmer was born in Yarram and grew up in small country towns in Victoria, including Warncoort, Selby, California Gully, Freshwater Creek and Geelong, where she studied journalism at the Gordon Institute of TAFE and Deakin University and became a reporter at the Geelong Advertiser.

Harmer’s journalistic career took her to Melbourne, where she worked for The Sun News-Pictorial newspaper on the rounds of transport, urban affairs and state politics.

As an arts feature writer, she was introduced to a comedy group performing at the Flying Trapeze comedy venue. This group included Ian McFadyen, Mary-Anne Fahey and Peter Moon.

Harmer left The Sun News-Pictorial and worked part-time at the Melbourne Times newspaper and began working in her days off as a stand up comedian. She is acknowledged as the first Australian woman to enter the all-male domain of stand up comedy in the 2015 ABC TV series Stop Laughing This is Serious.

Not long afterwards, Harmer was headlining her own shows at the Last Laugh theatre restaurant, owned by entrepreneur John Pinder and later by Rick McKenna. The shows included Faking It, Sunburn Bloody Sunburn, and Sunburn the Day After, which included the group from the Flying Trapeze and, among others, Mark Neale, Richard Stubbs, and Steve Vizard.

Harmer was on the board of the first ever Melbourne International Comedy Festival in 1987 which featured Barry Humphries and Peter Cook. She has also served on the boards of the Belvoir Theatre and the Malthouse.

She first appeared on television in the ABC children’s show Trap, Winkle and Box. She then joined the satirical political TV series The Gillies Report, along with John Clarke, Phillip Scott, Tracy Harvey, Patrick Cook and Jean Kittson.

Harmer went on to host ABC TV’s, The Big Gig, including, among others, performers Glynn Nicholas, Rod Quantock, Greg Fleet, Jean Kittson and the Doug Anthony All Stars.

She also hosted her own ABC TV talk series In Harmer’s Way, with comedians Greg Fleet, Andrew Goodone, Simon Rogers and Tim Smith.

Harmer performed at the Edinburgh Festival on four occasions: First with a two-handed stand-up show Harmer and Stubbs with Richard Stubbs. Also with the Australian Government’s 1988 OZNOST troupe which included Magda Szubanski, Rod Quantock, Gina Riley, Kate Ceberano and Circus Oz. She also took her one-woman show Love Gone Wrong to the festival where it was awarded “Pick of the Fringe” and was transferred to a theatre in London’s West End for a limited season. Her fourth outing was as a solo stand up comic.[citation needed]

She wrote, performed and sang in two one-woman shows with musicians – Love Gone Wrong and Please Send More Money which was directed by Nigel Triffit. Harmer also appeared on the Ben Elton show Friday Night Live with Dame Edna Everage and the Doug Anthony Allstars.

Her stand up days were recalled in a 2015 episode of the ABC TV series Home Delivery hosted by Julia Zemiro. Her episode was advertised as a “moving account of her life”

Harmer also appeared in Australian Story Operation Wendy in 2005 in which she travelled to Fiji with the team from Interplast

Harmer’s performed her one-woman stand up show Up Late and Loving It at the Sydney’s Wharf Theatre in 2001.

She performed at the 2016 30th anniversary of the Melbourne International Comedy Festival.
In the mid 1980s Harmer started on radio at 3AK with a Saturday night shift she shared with Jane Clifton. Glen Robbins was a regular guest. In 1992 she hosted a drive programme called Kaboom on ABC Radio National. In 1993, Harmer joined 2Day FM, co-hosting the highly rated breakfast radio show The Morning Crew for 11 years. In September 2005, Harmer started in the morning shift at the new Sydney and Melbourne radio station Vega FM, but by March 2006, she had quit her morning show after creative differences with management.

In 2016, Harmer returned to radio presenting the morning program on ABC Radio Sydney

Harmer is the author of seven books for adults: It’s a Joke, Joyce (1989), Love Gone Wrong (1995), So anyway–: Wendy’s words of wisdom (1997) (a collection of her weekly columns from the Sydney Morning Herald’s Good Weekend Magazine), Farewell My Ovaries (2005),Nagging for Beginners (2006), Love and Punishment (2006). Roadside Sisters, was published in April 2009. Her fourth was Friends Like These was published in 2011

Harmer’s books have been described[by whom?] as being in the genre of chick lit or hen lit. Harmer wrote[22] that the genres were misunderstood for The Age newspaper.

“And if it’s all just banal ‘women’s stuff? If children, marriage, friendship and happiness are just of marginal concern? Pass me the pastel-covered girlie book and break out the chocolate!” They are popular light novels, and very humorous.

Harmer has also written a series of children’s books called the Pearlie the Park Fairy series. There are 17 books in the Pearlie series published to date. They are bestsellers in Australia, and have been published in ten countries around the world. The animated series Pearlie has been shown on Australian, Canadian, and American television, and Harmer adapted the first book in the series, Pearlie in the Park, for the stage. In 2005, this play toured around Australia, performed by the Monkey Baa theatre company.

I Lost My Mobile at the Mall (2009) was Harmer’s first novel for teens. The sequel was I Made Lattes for a love God in 2012.

In addition to the Pearlie in the Park adaptation, Harmer has written two plays, Backstage Pass[26] and What Is the Matter With Mary Jane? She also wrote the libretto for Baz Luhrmann’s Opera Australia production of Lake Lost.

She has written for numerous Australian magazines, and has been a contributing columnist for The Australian Women’s Weekly, New Weekly, The Good Weekend, HQ, Sunday Telegraph and Yours magazine.

Harmer contributed to Marie Claire’s What Women Want in 2002, My Sporting Hero, edited by Greg Gowden and published by Random House Australia, and a volume of The Best Ever Sports Writing . . . 200 Years of Sport Writing.

She also wrote a chapter on “Women talk back”, for Destroying The Joint: Why Women Have To Change The World, edited by Jane Caro.

Harmer founded the website The Hoopla, a news and opinion site for Australian women, in 2011. It closed in spring 2015.

Television credits
Harmer was the host of the TV series The Big Gig, had her own TV chat show in 1990, In Harmer’s Way, and co-starred in the World Series Debate with Andrew Denton from 1993 to 1994. Harmer hosted the Logie Awards of 2002, and was caught up in widespread media criticism of the event, with some focusing on her personal performance. In 2005, Harmer was the subject of an ABC Australian Story episode. Stuff, a four-part television documentary series which Harmer produced, wrote, and presented, premiered on ABC TV in 2008. The same year, Harmer commenced writing for the animated series Pearlie, based on her series of books. Harmer wrote many of the episodes, acted as a creative producer on the series, and even made a cameo appearance as Astrid the Dream Fairy.

Harmer is married to Brendan and has two children. She is a co-founder, of the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles’s Angels, the women supporters’ group for the local Rugby League club.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia