The Lawsons (radio serial) Blue Hills (radio serial)
Spouses
Lionel Lawson (married 1931–1940)
Frederick John Cover (married 1946–1999)
Children
2
Awards
Macquarie Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Ethel[a] Muriel AshtonAM[1] (11 November 1903 – 21 October 1999), known professionally as Queenie Ashton, was a character actress, born in England, who had a long career in Australia as a theatre performer and radio personality, best known for her radio and television soap opera roles, although she did also feature briefly in films.
Ashton alongside her contemporaries Grace Gibson, Amber Mae Cecil and Ethel Lang,[2] has been described as a pioneer for females in radio. Her best known role was in the long-running Gwen Meredith radio serial Blue Hills, as Lee Gordon[2]and later Grannie Emily Bishop a role she would later reprise for television, with the first Australian-produced soap opera Autumn Affair.[3]
Biography
Early life and stage
Ashton was born in London. She was an accomplished ballet dancer, and specialist in voice production and drama, who started performing when she was fourteen. She appeared in musical comedy on the London stage, on occasion appearing with playwright Noël Coward. She left England in 1927, and performed for Dame Nellie Melba while travelling to Australia through the Suez Canal.[2] She first appeared in Melbourne as a soprano on the concert stage,[4] then in musical comedy, alongside such stars as Gladys Moncrieff,[5] whom she understudied,[6] and Strella Wilson.
Radio
Ashton featured in radio from the 1930s, she appeared in musical comedy opposite Dick Bentley in Oh! Quaite. Her first straight drama role was in 1939, a period piece playing Marie Antoinette.[7]
She played Budge's mother in "Budge's Gang", a segment of the ABC Children's Session (c. 1941–45, and it was so popular it was made into a comic book). Most notably, she played the wife of Dr. Gordon[2] and the long-running role of Granny Bishop (a character many years her senior) in the radio serial Blue Hills, for the entire 27 years of the serial's run (1949–1976 – hers were the very first and last spoken parts). Ashton, as Granny Bishop, spoke:
"We don't have to see people every day of the week/to imagine them in their surroundings or even to live their lives with them. We can still use our imagination ... they can still be in our minds. They can still be with us and so you see, and it is isn't really very hard to say goodbye. to say goodbye and God bless."[8]
Television and film
Ashton also played this role on Australia's first television serial Autumn Affair. In 1957 she appeared in a one-off television play called Tomorrow's Child and played in Certain Women (as "Dolly Lucas"), She was a semi-regular cast member of A Country Practice (as "Lillian Coote") and G.P. (as "Mrs Sculthorpe").[9]
Film roles included both theatrical and telefilms Always Another Dawn in 1948 and The Farrer Story in 1949, she also had cameo's in Mama's Gone A-Hunting in 1977 and The Year My Voice Broke in 1987. She also appeared in many television commercials, most notably for Sara Lee. She was still performing in stage and cabaret plays in her nineties and was one of Australia's last great grand dames and one of the oldest entertainers still performing.
Personal life
Ashton married Lionel Lawson in 1931 (who died in 1950), a violinist, who became leader of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra; they had a daughter, nurse Janet Lawson, in 1933 and a son, Tony Lawson, in 1935.[10] They divorced in 1940.[1]
Ashton remarried in 1946 to Frederick John Cover, a theatrical agent, and founder and managing director of the actors' casting firm, Central Casting.
^ ab"Rift in Violinist's Lute". Truth. No. 2638. New South Wales, Australia. 28 July 1940. p. 21. Retrieved 1 November 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
^ abcdeCrocker, Patti Radio Days (with foreword by Queenie Ashton), Simon and Schuster 1989 ISBN0-7318-0098-2
^"Music and Drama". The Argus (Melbourne). No. 25, 240. Victoria, Australia. 4 July 1927. p. 18. Retrieved 21 August 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
^""Rio Rita"". The Sunday Times (Sydney). No. 2202. New South Wales, Australia. 15 April 1928. p. 34. Retrieved 22 August 2022 – via National Library of Australia.