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Nina
Murdoch 1890 - 1976 writer
Madoline
(Nina) Murdoch (1890-l976), writer, was born on 19 October 1890
at North Carlton, Melbourne, third daughter of Rebecca Murdoch (born
Murphy) and John Andrew Murdoch, law clerk. The family moved to
Woodburn, New South Wales, where Nina grew up. She conveyed her
love for the bush in lyric poetry which she began writing while
at Sydney Girls' High School 1904-07. She taught at Sydney Boys'
Preparatory School. In 1913 she won the Bulletin prize for
a sonnet about Canberra and in 1915 she published a book of verse
Songs of the Open Air. She became one of the first women
general reporters on the Sydney Sun.
On 19 December 1917 at St Philip's Anglican church, Church Hill,
Nina married James Duncan Mackay Brown, ex-teacher and journalist.
They were part of the literary and journalistic coterie clustering
round the Bulletin, before moving to Melbourne in 1922, where
they worked on the Sun News-Pictorial, Nina often using the
pen-name 'Manin'. She was the first woman allowed to cover Senate
debates. An independent woman, in 1927 she travelled alone in England
and Europe, developing a lifelong obsession that she expressed in
travel books, beginning with Seventh Heaven, a Joyous Discovery
of Europe (1930). She followed it with a novel, Miss Emily
in Black Lace (1930), the first in a trilogy featuring a Birmingham
grocer's niece being taken up by French aristocracy on the Continent.
By 1934 Seventh Heaven reached its fifth edition; it abounded
in ecstatic enthusiasm for European art, antiquity and graciousness.
In Melbourne in 1930 Nina and other married women were retrenched
from the Herald because of the depression. She gave travel
talks on the wireless and, from the inception of the Australian
Broadcasting Commission in 1932, managed Children's Corner at 3LO.
She formulated the idea for, and as 'Pat' began running, the Argonauts'
Club. Its pledge epitomized her style: 'I vow to stand faithfully
by all that is brave and beautiful; to seek adventure, and having
discovered aught of wonder or delight, of merriment or loveliness,
to share it freely with my comrades'. Members were known by the
name of a Greek ship and their number in its crew; their original
creative contributions were read over the air. It was novel children's
programming which introduced cultural content to an area previously
dominated by bunnies, kookaburras and birthday calls. She believed
in treating children 'as intelligent young people'. Brown moved
to Adelaide to work for News Ltd in 1933 and Nina followed next
year, so having to leave the ABC. The club ceased but was revived
along similar lines in 1941 and ran very successfully till 1972.
Nina was in Europe in 1934-35 and wrote She Travelled alone in
Spain (1935). On her way home she journeyed down the Amazon.
She was abroad again in 1937. She loved the Austrian Tyrol but wrote
for the Australian press warning against Nazism. Murdoch published
two more travel books and undertook war work and some broadcasting
in Adelaide before returning to Victoria about 1942. She was a member
of the Lyceum Club, the Incorporated Society of Authors (London)
and the Fellowship of Australian Writers.
In 1948 her last book appeared, Portrait in Youth, a biography
of John Longstaff. She enjoyed walking, boating, Russian ballet
and good films; but looking after her mother, who was blind and
lived to 105, left her little time: 'You can't hold a pen in one
hand and an egg-beater in another', she commented. She died on 16
April 1976 after spending her last years in an Anglican nursing
home at Camberwell.
Suzanne Edgar
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