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Enid
Lorimer (1888-1982), actress, was born in London into a reasonably
comfortable family, the elder of two girls. Interviewed in her old
age, she said that Lorimer was a stage name, and that her real name
was May Enid Bosworth Nunn. She went to a boarding school in Folkestone
and then a finishing school in Switzerland. She believed that she
rebelled against the rigid hypocrisy of the Victorian class system
while still a young child, objecting to a prohibition on her as
a gentleman's daughter from having a merchant's daughter for a friend.
She left home in 1913 to join Herbert Tree's theatre, after a disagreement
with her parents about her choice of acting as a career. From there
she went to Lawrence Irving's company where she met and married
a fellow actor after a whirlwind courtship. Her husband volunteered
for the war, and was killed.
Enid came to Australia through her connection with theosophy, as
a travelling lecturer, on behalf of the Krishnamurti. She decided
to stay in Australia. As well as theosophy, she taught speech, diction
and dramatics at the 'Garden School' run by theosophists in suburban
Sydney. Among her notable pupils were the singer Joan Hammond and
actor Peter Finch. The school shared premises with radio 2GB and
when programming error left a fifteen minute gap to be filled, Enid's
drama class performed the play they had been rehearsing; it may
well have been Australia's first radio play.
Radio developed into a strong medium for drama in Australia: several
commercial stations competed with serials, four hours a day four
days a week. Commercial and national stations also offered serious
drama, classical and modern. Enid returned to professional acting
on radio. Her actors' club negotiated terms with J. C. Williamson.
She became a member of Actors' Equity, and served some years on
its Ethics Committee during the late 1940s when it was consolidating
its power and imposing restrictions on use of imported talent.
During a stay in London in the 1950s she joined Lawrence Olivier's
National Theatre, worked for the BBC in television, winning an award
for best television actress of the year (in 'Corinth House' by Pamela
Hansford Johnson). She returned to Sydney when television started
in Australia. Although she had been an enthusiast for the 'little
theatre' stage drama movement in the 1930s, she declared she preferred
film and television acting to the stage. Her face became very familiar
to viewers of television as she appeared in grandmotherly roles
in many dramas and series. She modestly attributed some of her success
to the parts she played, saying when a writer took the trouble to
write a part for an old person, it was usually a very good one.
Her last public appearance was in a wheelchair at the Australian
Film and Television Awards in 1981 when she was presented with the
Chips Rafferty Memorial Award for her contribution to the industry.
She died on 15 July 1982
Susan Hogan
Enid Lorimer, Australia Council archive film 1979.
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