We acknowledge Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and give respect to their Elders, past and present.

Read our Statement of Reflection

Your Cart

Your cart is empty right now...

Discover what's on
Your Stuff
Lists
No lists found
Create list
List name
0 Saved items
Updated: a few seconds ago
Getting Started
Get started with Your Stuff

A free Your Stuff account allows you to save, list and share your favourite collection items and articles. This account will give you access to Your Stuff, NFSA Player and Pro. You will need to create an additional account for Canberra event tickets.

Confirm
Skip to main content
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

Australia's Amateur Hour, a Pioneering Radio Talent Show

The Search for Radio Talent

Australia's Amateur Hour was a pioneering radio talent show that became a pop-culture phenomenon.

Written by Chris Arneil
13 February, 2017
3 minute read

Australia's Amateur Hour was a pioneering radio talent show that became a pop-culture phenomenon.

Warning: this article may contain names, images or voices of deceased Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Australians Entertaining Australians

It was heard across Australian radio stations from 1940 to 1958 after beginning on home station 2GB Sydney, hosted by Harry Dearth. Read a preview that was published in The Australian Women's Weekly ahead of its debut.

Dick Fair took over as compere when Dearth joined the air force in 1942. By 1950, Fair had moved to 2UW to host a similar program, and Terry Dear (pictured above) became the host of Australia's Amateur Hour until it ended after a total of 925 episodes. The format was also adapted for television in 1957, where it lasted only seven months.

Australia's Amateur Hour was broadcast nationally, as well as on Radio Australia and a number of war theatres. During the year the program travelled around the country, showcasing local talent from a different town or city each week. The finals were held at the end of the season in Sydney. Just like today's reality shows, listeners voted by phone (as well as by letter).

According to John Potts in his 1989 book Radio in Australia, the program was derived directly from the American show Major Bow's Amateur Hour, and its lengthy run allowed Lever Brothers to obtain an Australian record for continuous sponsorship of a program.

Potts says that its success 'has been attributed to its basic idea of "Australians entertaining Australians" (the winner of each show was determined solely by listeners' telephoned or postal votes), and its combination of raw talent and human interest embodied in many of the contestants'.

Chad Morgan performs 'I'm the Sheik of Scrubby Creek' on Australia's Amateur Hour, 23 October 1952.

National Film and Sound Archive5N92TBZZ

Several popular performers made an appearance, including Johnny O'Keefe, Jimmy Little, Olive and Eva and Frank Ifield.

Potts explains that 'a great diversity of aspiring talent (including Aboriginal and ethnic contestants) was paraded before the listeners, all with the sense of the program actually venturing into the heart of the land, investigating every corner in the search for Australian raw material, the whole enterprise being transmitted everywhere in the nation. Especially during the tension of wartime, Australia's Amateur Hour both comforted and reassured its listeners as to the strength of the "national spirit" embodied in the project the show entailed.'

Visit our online curated collection to listen to clips featuring:

This article was first published in 2017. The text was updated in 2023.

Main image: Terry Dear, one of the hosts of Australia's Amateur Hour.

Collections to explore

  • Terry Dear

  • 1940s

  • Talent TV show

  • Start your own collection

    A free Your Stuff account allows you to save, organise and share your favourite videos, audio and stories.

More in Stories+

Personalized your experience

Save, create and share

With NFSA Your Stuff