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Description

Did you know Australia is credited with producing the first-ever feature film?

This was during the silent movie era, when Australia had its own thriving industry, filed with glamourous stars and passionate studios.

In 1926, Australia’s first all-female production company released their romantic, expressionistic film, beating that year’s Charlie Chaplin movie at the box office.

Producer and film director Rebecca Barry reveals the story of Paulette, Phyllis and Isabel McDonagh - three sisters who sought to capture hearts and leave their artistic mark on the local film scene – and shows us what that means for Australian creatives today.

Hear as comedian Freya Reviews discovers these remarkable sisters for the first time, despite having a degree in film (we blame the lecturer!).

Hosted by Rachel Rayner, Science Explainer

Transcript

Links for more:

Highlight article by Rachel Rayner, Science Explainer

Rebecca Barry on IMDB and her production company Media Stockade

Rebecca’s film on the McDonagh sisters on Youtube (thanks Rebecca!)

Her more recent film, Mozart’s Sister, which won two AACTAs

Follow Freya and find out what she’s up to now

More resources on the sisters at the National Film and Sound Archive

Credits

Producer: Rachel Rayner, Science Explainer

Guests: Dr Rebecca Barry, Freya Reviews

Studio: Damn Good Production

Music: Michelle Cashman

Editing: HoboHut Media

Made possible through Meta Australia Journalism Fund, administered by the Walkley Foundation, with support from Comedy Victoria.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.