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Doris
Fitton 1901 - 1985 actress
Doris
Fitton (1897-1985), founder of the Independent Theatre, Sydney,
was born in November 1897 in Manila, the Philippines, where her
English father, Walter Fitton, a chartered accountant, broker and
manufacturer of cigars, had taken his Australian bride, Janet Cameron,
in 1894. In 1902 Doris, her elder sister Janet Ethel, and their
mother, returned to Melbourne where the climate and education were
considered more appropriate for white children than Manila. Walter
Fitton died shortly afterwards.
Doris was educated at Loreto Convents in Portland and Ballarat.
She was not very interested in academic study but enthusiastic about
school plays. After leaving school she became a secretary, but acting
classes with the renowned Gregan McMahon, led to her first acting
role in 1915. Professional engagements with J. C. Williamson Ltd
followed, along with continued performances and acting classes with
the Melbourne Repertory Theatre.
In 1922 in Sydney Doris married Norbert 'Tug' Mason, solicitor.
When Gregan McMahon founded the Sydney Repertory Company in 1924,
Doris began her long association with Sydney theatre, playing in
Bernard Shaw's Dark Lady of the Sonnets. Roles with J. C.
Williamson Ltd followed, in hits such as Somerset Maugham's Rain.
However good parts in Sydney's fledging theatre were few. Doris,
now a mother of two sons, was frustrated in those years, coming
out from 'domestic' duties to perform small parts in various productions
around Sydney.
In 1930 she teamed up with nineteen other actors and 100 associated
members each subscribing 10/- a year, to launch the Independent
Theatre. The guidelines of Constantin Stanislavsky, the founder
of the Moscow Arts Theatre, were used as the model for the Independent.
It existed for 47 years, closing finally in May 1977, with Doris
directing Thornton Wilder's Our Town.
Throughout the entire history of the Independent, Doris earned accolades
as actress, director, stage producer and drama teacher, combined
with cleaning jobs to keep the theatre open in difficult times.
Despite the often precarious financial problems encountered by the
Independent Theatre (it received no government support), with Doris
Fitton at the helm she guided it through good times and bad. The
contribution of the Independent Theatre was indispensable in creating
an environment where young Australian actors could develop their
skills and perform plays; and playwrights could have their plays
produced. Sumner Locke Elliott's 1948 classic Rusty Bugles
is one example. Ironically a 'guiding light' in culturally stifling
times, the Independent closed in the beginning of the renaissance
of Australian theatre.
In recognition of her work in theatre, Doris Fitton received an
OBE in 1955, a CBE in 1975 and was created DBE in 1982. Despite
a peppery and rather dictatorial personality, she commanded respect
and love from her peers, students and the community. Her diligence,
hard work, commitment and passion for theatre and the Independent,
ensured its success for over four decades. The 'ageless matriarch
of Sydney theatre' died on 2 April 1985.
Melanie Oppenheimer
Doris Fitton Not Without Dust and Heat, My Life in Theatre
1981.
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