Auriel Andrew


Auriel Andrew was an Indigenous Australian country musician of the Arrernte people of Central Australia. Andrew was born in Darwin, and grew up in Alice Springs, Northern Territory, leaving for Adelaide, South Australia aged 21 to pursue her music career.

Biography

Auriel came from the Arrernte people in Alice Springs. Her skin name was Mbitjana and her totem is the hairy caterpillar. The youngest of seven children, she started singing at the age of four, and began her professional career in the late 1960s working with Chad Morgan in the Adelaide and Port Lincoln areas, and appeared on live TV music broadcasts, including shows hosted by Roger Cardwell, Johnny Mack and Ernie Sigley, and then becoming a regular on Channel Nine's Heather McKean & Reg Lindsay Show. In 1973, she moved to Sydney, and toured with Jimmy Little, performing at popular clubs and pubs around New South Wales.

Career

In the 1970s, Andrew was a regular guest on The Johnny Mac Show, The Reg Lindsay Country Hour' and The Ernie Sigley Show. Her first album Truck Driving Woman was the second by an Indigenous woman in Australia.
She performed at the Sydney Opera House for the venue's grand opening, and sang "Amazing Grace" in Pitjantjitjara for Pope John Paul II during his Australian tour. Auriel's well-known recordings include the country classic "Truck Drivin' Woman" and Bob Randell's "Brown Skin Baby". She performed at the Adelaide Cabaret Festival, Woodford Dreaming Festival, and regularly performed at various clubs around the Newcastle area.
She appeared in the SBS documentary
' about Aboriginal country music, singing "Truck Driving Woman".
Other Tv and film appearances include.
Short film: BeDevil
Play school
A country practice
Blue Healer's
HeartLand
Short film: Hush
Andrew appeared in the stage show
Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word, written and performed by English artist Christopher Green at the Adelaide Cabaret Festival in 2007, and at the Beckett Theatre in Melbourne in 2011. She also appeared on several Australian television programs including episodes of A Country Practice, Blue Heelers, Playschool and the mini-series Heartland.
Her 2013 album
Ghost Gums included new original songs about her life and childhood.
She has taught Aboriginal culture in classrooms for 20 years, passing on her knowledge in schools in Queensland, the Northern Territory and New South Wales, and in 2016 joined the cast of the stage adaptation of Clinton Walker's
Buried Country'', which made its premiere in her hometown of Newcastle on 20 August.

Awards and honours

At the Deadly Awards 2008, Auriel was presented a Lifetime Achievement Award for contribution to Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander music.
In 2011, she was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for her work as an entertainer and contribution to her communities through charity events.

Death

Auriel Andrew died of cancer in Hunter Valley Private Hospital, Shortland, New South Wales, on 2 January 2017. She was 69 years old.

Discography

Albums