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National Film and Sound Archive of AustraliaNational Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive

Penny Spence on being a pioneering female newsreader

1999

Penny Spence on being a pioneering female newsreader

1999

  • NFSA ID7V9TVPPK
  • TypeOral History
  • MediumMoving Image
  • FormOral history, Series
  • Duration1 hr, 19 mins, 31 secs
  • GenresBiographical
  • Year1999

Penny Spence was a trailblazer in Australian television. She was part of a pioneering group of women who were the first to read television news in Australia. When Brian Henderson was reading the evening news, Spence presented the afternoon bulletin for Channel 9 in NSW in the early-mid 1970s. Before that, she hosted a women’s current affairs program on TCN9, presented the weather, and was twice awarded a Logie for Most Popular Female Personality in NSW (1969 and 1972).

She later became a key figure behind the scenes, leading children’s programming at the Nine Network and serving as Executive Producer of the European Broadcasting Union's children's unit. Her work as a producer is represented in the NFSA collection, including The Water Trolley (1988), which was nominated for an International Emmy, along with Shipmates (1987), Sovereign Hill (1990), and Hinkler: The Aviator (1990).

In this excerpt from her 1999 oral history interview with the NFSA, Spence reflects on how she came to read the afternoon news at TCN9 during a formative moment in Australian broadcasting.

Penny Spence was a trailblazer in Australian television. She was part of a pioneering group of women who were the first to read television news in Australia. When Brian Henderson was reading the evening news, Spence presented the afternoon bulletin for Channel 9 in NSW in the early-mid 1970s. Before that, she hosted a women’s current affairs program on TCN9, presented the weather, and was twice awarded a Logie for Most Popular Female Personality in NSW (1969 and 1972).

She later became a key figure behind the scenes, leading children’s programming at the Nine Network and serving as Executive Producer of the European Broadcasting Union's children's unit. Her work as a producer is represented in the NFSA collection, including The Water Trolley (1988), which was nominated for an International Emmy, along with Shipmates (1987), Sovereign Hill (1990), and Hinkler: The Aviator (1990).

In this excerpt from her 1999 oral history interview with the NFSA, Spence reflects on how she came to read the afternoon news at TCN9 during a formative moment in Australian broadcasting.

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