Age, Biography and Wiki
Jim Crawford (playwright) was born on 6 February, 1908 in Australia, is a playwright. Discover Jim Crawford (playwright)'s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 65 years old?
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65 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Aquarius |
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6 February 1908 |
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6 February |
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Date of death |
11 November 1973 |
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Australia |
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He is a member of famous playwright with the age 65 years old group.
Jim Crawford (playwright) Height, Weight & Measurements
At 65 years old, Jim Crawford (playwright) height not available right now. We will update Jim Crawford (playwright)'s Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Jim Crawford (playwright) Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Jim Crawford (playwright) worth at the age of 65 years old? Jim Crawford (playwright)’s income source is mostly from being a successful playwright. He is from Australia. We have estimated
Jim Crawford (playwright)'s net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
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Under Review |
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playwright |
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Timeline
Crawford was an important member of the Roving Reds Revue Company, New Theatre Club and Realist Writers Group. He also made contributions to several other groups. Crawford also spent time in the Army Services after marrying Ursula Hills in 1938. After his divorce from Ursula, Crawford married Pamela Crawford (née Seeman) in 1949. Crawford continued writing right up until his death at Greenslopes Hospital on 11 November 1973.
In Crawford's later years he continued to write plays. For the Queensland Peace Committee, Crawford wrote A Most Important Letter!, in 1962. In the same year, he wrote a three-act play called The Colour of His Money. In 1963, he wrote three plays, Shakespeare at Cedar Creek and A Little Bird Told Me for the Junior Youth League and Under the Bunya for the Wattle Dance Group. In 1969, Crawford created a play titled the Billets or Badges for the Queensland Centenary celebrations. This play was about the famous Tramways Strike in Brisbane during 1912 and made quite an impact among the audience. The last full-length play that Jim Crawford wrote was The Cavern and the Tavern. Jim Crawford died on 11 November 1973 of myocardial infarction in the Greenslopes Respiration Hospital. He had no children but was survived by his wife, Pamela. Crawford was known for his good humour which was aimed at the enemies of the workers.
Jim Crawford became a councillor for the National Council of Groups. On 2 February 1965 Ray Williams wrote to Crawford that after having conversations with Bill Sutton and Wilma and Lauria Hedley he had become aware of Crawford's career as a playwright and to his knowledge had already written 25 plays. Mr Williams invited Crawford to contribute to The Realist! as both a journalist and a playwright. "We should be most grateful if you should write an article for us – on any topic that suits you... Furthermore, I see no reason why we could not publish a portion of one of your plays, say an Act or a few scenes, at least." Crawford agreed to this and went on to also write reviews for other playwrights such as Mary Gilmore as well as write as a freelance journalist. Crawford was also chosen as one of the Queensland representations on the editorial board and the list was published in the Realist Writers magazine, issues 8 - March 1962.
Crawford experienced first hand the working conditions of the Aboriginal people during the time he lived in Western Queensland, the gulf country and the Northern Territory. Lowenstein recalls an interview held with Crawford in which he describes working on cattle stations in Australia. He described to the interviewer the how the cattle industry is built upon the torment and cruelty towards millions of animals, and of the exploitation of Aboriginal labour. However without the Aboriginal labour they would not have been able to run the stations. The Government had control over the Aboriginal people and forced them to work for free as well as forcing them to remain on the stations. After witnessing such injustice first hand, Crawford became involved in movements defending the rights of Aboriginal people. He wrote a number of articles predominantly for the Queensland Guardian regarding the rights of Indigenous Australians. His articles focused on a conference in Cairns on 1–2 December 1962, which Crawford attended. The conference was called together by the Cairns branch of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island Advancement League in order to create equal working conditions for Aboriginals.
Despite this, the play was well received later in 1953 in the Ipswich Play Festival. In 1957, the Rocket Range was banned at a play reading held at the Municipal Library Hall (Brisbane) for being too 'political'.
At the end of 1953, Crawford went to Townsville for several months to assist in reporting for the Guardian newspaper on the very successful North QLD Rank and File Worker's convention. The Playwrights Advisory Board sponsored a playwriting competition in 1955 and Crawford entered a three-act play. This play was titled The Wit to Woo and was about a hospitalised patient who had a dream of finding a hard working life. Crawford wrote another play for the Ipswich Drama Festival of 1956 called They Passed this Way. It was about the old Windmill cum Observatory on Wickham Terrace, Brisbane and was performed in Brisbane by New Theatre. Jim wrote several radio features about this time, The Avenging Ghost of Campbell Town and The Celebrated Mr Barrington with various successes.
Jim Crawford wrote for the Junior Youth League of Queensland to perform at a Youth Carnival in Sydney. He wrote a one-act play called Bushland Picnic, in 1952, and afterwards, he wrote another one-act children's play called The Man-eating Clock. In March 1953, Crawford wrote a one-act play the People's Paper for the Land Guardian Festival. This play contrasted the reporting of events in Progressive newspapers and the capitalist press.
The Union of Australian Women was first started in Sydney in August 1950 and spread to other states quite quickly. In 1956 it was decided that a national organisation would be formed uniting each state branch. Many of the founding members included those who were communists, Australian Labor Party supporters, Christian activists and Members of the New Housewives Association. The main goals of the Union of Australian Women included "improving the status of women and children, disarmament and a halt to nuclear testing and mining, equal distribution of wealth, increased welfare services, equal pay for Indigenous Australians, abortion law reform, and opposition to the White Australia policy." Crawford also wrote the sketch titled "Bus Stop Sketch" for the Union of Australian Women, which is a discussion between three women about unequal pay.
The separation of the war had caused damage to his relationship with his wife and he divorced Ursula, in 1946. During the latter part of 1948, Jim worked with the Queensland Guardian in Brisbane on a temporary basis. He lived in Brisbane for the rest of his life. In 1948, Crawford got a serious case of pneumonia and was given up for dead. However, he managed to pull through and got married six months later to Pamela Mary Seeman on 22 December 1949. Pamela was an artist, and once married they bought several acres of rainforest on Tamborine Mountain and settled on the mountain.
With a strong belief in supporting the needs of the working class, Crawford was actively involved om the Communist Party of Australia (CPA). The party was formed in Sydney in October 1920, following the Russian Revolution. While the CPA never made a significant political challenge to the social order already established in Australia, it did however make an imprint on the trade unions, and help to establish and pioneer social movements. Crawford also contributed to the Eureka Youth League (EYL), which is an organisation associated with the CPA. According to the EYL constitution its objective was to unite all young fighters for socialism, to work and fight for a socialist Australia. Crawford also wrote the play called Refugee, which the EYL held a production for. The production was reported on in an article published on 11 November 1949. Crawford's participation in the CPA is highlighted by his invitation to the party's 40th anniversary celebration. Furthermore, the invitation reveals the ideology of the CPA where it says, "The Communist Party of Australia is a working class Party, having no interests separate and apart from those of the working class". Crawford also wrote a short sketch titled "The Remedy" in 1961, which was to be performed by New Theatre Club at their rallies, as a part of their election campaign.
His second play was Rocket Range which explored the unfair treatment of Aboriginals in Central Australia. Rocket Range was first produced in Melbourne in 1947 and afterwards the Sydney New Theatre. This play received awards and entered the British Drama League Festival in 1947. Crawford wrote several plays in support for Aboriginal Rights but Rocket Range would become the most well known and the most controversial. The play was entered into the British Drama League Festival in 1947 and although the play received a score of 75 out of a possible 100 it was thrown out for being 'ideological propaganda'. The play received 10/10 for Stage Presentation, 40/40 for Acting and 25/30 for Overall Production. However, the play received no marks under the section 'Choice of Play' and festival adjudicator Mr Harvey Adams had the following comments to make about the reasons behind the plays zero score:
In 1947, Jim Crawford also wrote a play Refugee which addressed the issues around antisemitism. During the late 1940s Crawford wrote Uneasy Stages, Miner's Right, and Frame-Up. Crawford wrote another three-act play called Governor's Stables which was entered into the Theatre Council of West Australia's playwriting competition in 1951. It won the first prize which was one hundred and fifty pounds. Of all the Australian male playwrights produced at the New Theatre only Jim Crawford and another playwright, Dick Diamond, author of Reedy River had their plays performed in Sydney and more than one production.
Crawford's first play to be performed by a New Theatre group was Welcome Home by the Melbourne branch in 1946. The views held on social and political problems by the New Theatre group aligned with Crawford's. Some the topics covered by other New Theatre writers included racial discrimination, war and peace, unemployment and other social problems. Some themes of Crawford's plays include the impact of military armament testing on Aboriginal society (Rocket Range), post war housing shortages (Welcome Home) and political commentary plays (Frame Up) just to name a few. Many plays were written to be entered into competitions on behalf of the New Theatre club. Crawford continued working with the New Theatre group for many years and wrote many plays that were performed by them.
The Realist Writers Group was a collective of writers, usually communists but also composed of left wing supporters and established in Australia in 1944. The first collective began in Melbourne and the movement spread to Brisbane in 1950, then to Sydney in 1952, Perth in 1960 and Newcastle in 1963. In 1960 a National Council of Groups was established to internationally link the branches with groups in New Zealand, Canada, the US and countries under communist rule. The Realist Writers intentions were defined by their constitution as 'literary organizations of the working class movement... to carry forward the revolutionary and democratic traditions of Australian literature'. The first published journal came from the Melbourne branch titled Realist Writer and appeared quarterly from March 1952 to April 1954 when it was incorporated into Overland. The first two issues were edited by Bill Wannan and by Stephen Murray-Smith for the next seven. Noteworthy contributors included David Martin, Frank Hardy, Laurence Collinson, John Manifold, John Morrison, Eric Lambert and Katharine Susannah Prichard. A version of the Realist Writer appeared from the Sydney branch in renewed form in 1958 edited by Frank Hardy and from 1960 appeared three times a year until the groups began to disintegrate in the 1970s. When the National Council of Groups was formed in 1960 the Realist Writer came under its responsibility. In 1964 the name was changed to The Realist! and from 1962 to 1970 was edited by Ray Williams. Its contributors included Len Fox, Wilma Hedley and Ron Tullipan.
On 21 January 1942, Jim Crawford enlisted in the Australian Army Medical Corps. Crawford wanted to enlist earlier but he had not been medically fit. When Crawford grew tired of peeling spuds he was discharged in September and worked as a stoker in the Royal Australian Naval Reserve, serving aboard mine-sweepers guarding the B.H.P steel works at Whyalla. While working as a stoker, Crawford founded a Worker's study group. Crawford also spoke at War Loan Rallies. At one rally he spoke on a platform with future Australian Prime Minister, Harold Holt, who shouted Crawford to a double whisky after his speech. Jim was charged with mutiny for organising to stop work of naval stokers until they were paid trade union rates. They stood firm and gained the Union rates they were after, however, Crawford was transferred to New Guinea to the Naval Depot HMS Ladava. In 1944, he experienced the bombing by the Japanese in New Guinea. He also served aboard an Icelandic fishing trawler converted to minesweeper HMS Beryl. While working on the minesweeper Crawford had to shovel coal into the furnace. This coal shovelling had caused permanent damage to Crawford's lungs and he developed emphysema. In January 1945, he was discharged from the navy with a pension as he was suffering from a duodenal ulcer. Once discharged from the navy, he arrived back in Melbourne and wrote for large newspapers, such as the Sporting Globe and the Melbourne Guardian. He worked for the Melbourne Guardian for ten years, writing mostly about political issues.
While working at the Victorian Guardian newspaper, he wrote a weekly column under the name Jim Crawford. In 1940, he adopted the name 'Jim Crawford' by deed poll as he became well known through his weekly column. In the same year, Crawford had to go underground when the Australian Government outlawed the Communist Party. Because the Victorian Guardian Newspaper wrote about Communist issues, it was also prohibited. Crawford wrote illegal newspapers in Communist follower's basements. His friend Cecil Sharpley used to deliver the supplies. As Crawford was still involved with the illegal newspaper he was continuously on the run from the police. Towards the end of the war he discovered that Sharpley was the one who exposed his involvement with the newspaper. It was only when the Soviet Union entered the war that the ban on the Communist Party was lifted and the paper became legalised. However, due to the censorship of the war period, the paper had reduced in size.
On 8 August 1939, Crawford married Ursula Mary Hill using his birth name John Oakden-Potter.
In 1935, Crawford went to Melbourne where he stayed for eleven years, excluding the five years he spent in war service. He was involved in groups during his time in Melbourne such as the Left Book Club, the Victorian Communist Party, The Unity Theatre and the Worker's Voice, which was the forerunner of the Victorian Guardian. During pre-war period, the Worker's Voice had the largest circulation of any Communist Party paper in the Southern Hemisphere. During the years he worked as a journalist, Crawford passionately helped to expose the struggles of the times. For example, he helped to expose the spy mission of the German naval submarine commander, Count von Luckner also known as the 'Yachtsman adventurer'. Luckner was a Nazi who travelled around the world spying for Adolf Hitler. Due to his participation in the 'No Scrap Iron for Imperialist Japan' demonstrations in Melbourne, Crawford spent two days in the jail cell that Ned Kelly was incarcerated in just before he was hung. Alan Marshall and Crawford interviewed Hewlett Johnson, The Red Dean of Canterbury, together for the Worker's Voice. The Red Dean, also known as Dr Hewlett Johnson, was the dean of Canterbury in 1931 and has been described as "one of the most famous men in the world". Marshall noted Crawford as being an outstanding journalist and one of the best at the Worker's Voice.
The Roving Reds was a performing theatre group formed in Brisbane in 1933. Many of the performers, playwrights, musicians and production team were gathered from the unemployment camps set up in several parks around Brisbane. Crawford, otherwise known as 'Anarchy, the Ball-Bearing Bum', was the scriptwriter for the Roving Reds, as well as one of the founding members of the group. Most of the plays' themes centred on the social and political problems associated the depression and war. The topic of Soviet Russia and their workers' state was also popular with the militant unemployed. The play, The Metro Ticket Trial was quite a popular production as the theme of the play was about the 'contemporary press attacks on all aspects of Soviet life'.
During 1932, Crawford joined the Unemployed Workers Movement, which was active in protests in Cairns and participated in riots in Mackay. While unemployed and living at the 'Bagman's Camp' in Victoria Park, Brisbane, he gave lectures on William Shakespeare to his unemployed acquaintances. Whilst based at the camp Crawford was introduced to The Communist Manifesto and after reading and agreeing with its political stand point joined the Communist Party of Australia in 1934. Jim regarded himself as a socialist and was very impressed by Engels' work which was the Origin of the Family and Private Property and the State (1984). These inspirations gave Jim knowledge about Aboriginal law and society. Crawford also studied the science of Marxism and Leninism.
Crawford left for New Zealand in 1929 and stayed there until 1932. His intention was to travel to South America and then head back to England, but when boarding a ship that was supposedly going to Valparaíso, it landed in Australia. Australia was going through the depression which forced Crawford to join the unemployed bagman.
In 1924 Crawford finished up at his grammar school with the intention of traveling. At the young age of 16 he found himself on a ship destined for Australia, and arrived on its shores in 1924. Crawford had originally intended to travel to Canada, however, his father suggested Australia because of the warmer climate. Crawford described his younger self as a "starry eyed idealist". Once in Australia, Crawford worked as a stockman on a cattle station known as 'Kamileroi'. For the next five years, he worked as a station hand in the Gulf Country. Working in the Gulf Country alongside the Indigenous Australian people and seeing the brutal way in which they were treated spurred Crawford's passion for equal rights. His empathy for the Indigenous Australians can be seen in this quote taken from an interview, "the Aborigine has always been a very good, humane person". Crawford's first brush with the law was because he gave meat (intended for white people) to Aboriginal stockmen while he worked as a butcher. He considered himself lucky as he was not thrown in gaol but given a warning by the police. He used this personal experience as inspiration for his plays. With the intention of travelling around Australia, Crawford undertook menial work to make the necessary money. Although his time working and travelling around Australia was an experience, Crawford stated "you wouldn't get me back there".
The New Theatre movement started in America in the late 1920s. It was motivated by the depressed economic climate which resulted in widespread unemployment, more people on welfare and evictions of those who could not pay their rent. Most of the pieces performed where agit prop which attempted to capture social reality. When New Theatre groups were formed in Australia (beginning mainly as Worker's arts groups) they continued using agit prop in their plays. They were also committed to developing the highest possible theatrical standards as well as to introduce it to the Australian people by infusing theatre into cultural groups in all industries, organisations and districts. Active participants in the groups were a mix of communists, members of the Labor Party and political unaligned who wanted to be actively involved in the group.
Crawford's life on a cattle station was the inspiration for his short sketch/play 'The Cattle King' as well as other pieces that explored the treatment of Aboriginals. He also drew inspiration from contemporary socio-political issues such as nuclear testing at Woomera ('Rocket Range') and the 1912 Tramway Strike in Brisbane (Billets and Badges). He also took an interest in the Beatnik culture which arose in the US and which spread to Australia in the sixties as their values reflected some of the socialist values and goals of the local Communist Party. This became the inspiration for 'The Ice Age Delinquents'.
James "Jim" Crawford (6 February 1908 – 11 November 1973) was an Australian playwright and commentator who wrote political plays, feature articles for newspapers and was very involved in many social and political groups. He was best known for his plays Rocket Range and Billets and Badges. Crawford wrote twenty-four plays and twenty-one skits which are known about. Some of the plays were turned into radio dramas. Crawford also wrote numerous newspaper articles in relation to political and social problems at the time which led him to be well respected in the community.
Crawford was born in Manchester, England, in 1908 and arrived in Australia in 1924. As a playwright, Crawford was influenced by William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe. He was also greatly influenced by the Communist Party of Australia and the ideals it stood for. In an article written by Crawford about Elizabethan Theatre he wrote that "In the Elizabethan Theatre, Marlowe spoke with the voice of the radical intellectual. Shakespeare spoke with the voice of the people." From the themes of the plays written by Crawford it is clear he has tried to emulate both Marlowe and Shakespeare.
James Crawford was the son of John 'Oakden' Potter, a civil engineer, and Janet Keer, who was originally from the island of Arran. He was born in Manchester, England on 6 December 1908 as John Oakden. Crawford was the youngest of the family with four other brothers and sisters. Crawford's mother died when he was eleven years old, leaving his eldest sister to run the household, as Crawford's father travelled for work. Whilst attending a school in Manchester, Crawford began to develop an interest in Shakespeare which he was taught to perform instead of reading it out aloud.