Elizabeth Riddell Explained

Elizabeth Riddell
Birth Date:1910 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Napier, New Zealand
Death Place:Sydney, New South Wales
Occupation:medical practitioner and poet
Language:English
Nationality:New Zelander
Awards:Walkley Award, Patrick White Award
Years Active:1928-1998

Elizabeth Riddell (21 March 1910 – 3 July 1998) was a New Zealand-born Australian poet and journalist.[1]

Life

Born in Napier, New Zealand, Elizabeth Richmond Riddell came to Australia in 1928 where she worked at Smith's Weekly and won a Walkley Award.[2]

She married Edward Neville 'Blue' Greatorex (1901–1964) in Sydney in 1935. The couple did not have children. In 1935 she moved to England and during World War II worked for Ezra Norton at The Daily Mirror, chiefly in New York City. Her first short book of poems, The Untrammelled, was published in 1940. After the war she returned to Australia to continue working as a journalist, and in the 1960s became art critic and feature writer for The Australian. She was the first Walkley Award winner for The Australian, winning in 1968 and 1969 for 'Best Newspaper Feature Story'.[3] In 1986 she was awarded Critic of the Year by the Australian Book Review.[4] Riddell's poetry won the Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry in 1992 and the Patrick White Award in 1995.

Widowed in 1964, Riddell died in 1998.

Bibliography

Selected poems

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Riddell, Elizabeth . AustLit . 5 June 2007 . 2007-05-12 .
  2. Web site: "$1,000 for Red Adair interview" . Canberra Times. 16 October 1969. The Canberra Times, 16 October 1969, p9. 26 August 2023.
  3. Web site: Australian Biography: Elizabeth Riddell . . 2022-02-18 .
  4. Book: Adelaide, Debra. Debra Adelaide. Australian women writers: a bibliographic guide. 1988. Pandora. 978-0-86358-148-9.