126 episodes

Conversations with amazing women whose journeys and experiences are fascinating, inspirational and educational.

Really Interesting Women Richard Graham

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.9 • 24 Ratings

Conversations with amazing women whose journeys and experiences are fascinating, inspirational and educational.

    Catherine Branson AC KC

    Catherine Branson AC KC

    Really Interesting Women - the Podcast


    Ep. 124

    Catherine Branson AC KC

    In 1984 Catherine Branson made history when a dual appointment saw her became the first woman in Australia to be appointed Crown Solicitor and the first woman to be appointed as permanent head of a government department in South Australia.  

    She went to the bar in Adelaide and then took silk in 1992. An appointment as a judge to the Federal Court of Australia followed in 1994. In 2008 she was appointed President of the Australian Human Rights Commission. The following year she was appointed Human Rights Commissioner. A few months ago, it was announced that my guest would serve a 3rd term as Chancellor of the University of Adelaide. 

    An extraordinary career and her work with the Human Rights Commission gave her the opportunity and the platform to give a voice to immigrants detained indefinitely and to support the rights of Indigenous Australians. 

    Another true pioneer who paved the way for others. 
    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849

    • 29 min
    Amber Lawrence

    Amber Lawrence

    Really Interesting Women - the Podcast 

    Episode 123

    AMBER LAWRENCE

    Amber started her professional career as a Chartered Accountant but she left that to pursue a dream. 

    After a very successful debut in the 2005 Tamworth Country Music Festival  - coming second in the major singing competition to Jessica Mauboy - Amber took that success and started her country music journey in earnest. She put in a lot of hard work and was constantly touring. It paid off as she became one of Australia’s leading female country singers. But that’s not just my opinion. She’s won 6 Golden Guitars, including Female Artist of the Year at the 2023 Golden Guitar Awards. 

    On the way to that success she has toured the world, entertained Australian troops overseas and even went to New York to play a song she wrote to commemorate the 75th Anniversary of the Battle of the Coral Sea - in front of the President of the United States and the Australian PM (and 800 others).

    In July 2022, she released her tenth studio album, Living for the Highlights, which reached number 1 on the ARIA charts and the Australian Country Music charts. 

    Head to Amber's website for info on her touring dates and a link to her albums.
    www.amberlawrence.com.au

    Head to the link in my bio to have a listen to our conversation. 
    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849

    • 30 min
    Prof. Julie Rrap

    Prof. Julie Rrap

    Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Ep. 122

    Professor Julie Rrap

    Julie has been a central figure in Australian contemporary art for 4 decades. Our conversation covers a lot and I guess that was inevitable given her enormous contribution to art both in Australia and internationally. 

    She has worked with photography, painting, sculpture, performance and video in an ongoing project concerned with representations of the body with a particular emphasis on the female body within western art history.

    Julie has been described as one of Australia's leading feminist artists. Since her first exhibition in 1982, she has been consistently committed to the exploration of the role—or absence of roles—of women in the history of art.

    Throughout her career she has exhibited extensively throughout Europe and Australia.

    She completed her PhD in 2010 and is currently  Co-Director and Co-Chair of Sydney College of the Arts.





    Image:  Simon Schluter
    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849

    • 57 min
    Distinguished Professor Jenny Graves AC

    Distinguished Professor Jenny Graves AC

    Podcast Episode 121

    Distinguished Professor Jenny Graves AC FAA

    Jenny Graves is a leading evolutionary geneticist who was a very early adopter of gene mapping. She uses genome comparisons to explore the origin, function and fate of human sex genes and chromosomes. In other words, exploring what is it that makes us male, and female and she’s also explored the evolution of the so called ‘gay gene’ and the genetics of transgenderism. 

    She’s a Distinguished Professor at La Trobe University, is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science and the US National Academy of Science, 2006 L’Oreal-UNESCO Laureate for Women in Science, and she won the 2017 Australian Prime Minister’s Prize for Science (the first woman to win solo). In 2022 she was elevated to our highest honour, Companion of the Order of Australia. 

    She knows what she's talking about. 

    Join me for a really interesting discussion.  Head to the link in my bio to her podcast episode.
    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849

    • 34 min
    Del Kathryn Barton

    Del Kathryn Barton

    Really Interesting Women - The podcast


    Episode 120     

    Del Kathryn Barton


    Del Kathryn Barton is one of Australia’s most recognisable and collectable artists. 
     
    She’s now widely recognised as one of Australia's leading figurative painters and a 2-time Archibald Prize winner. Only the second woman to do that in the 103 year history of that portrait prize. 
     
    Her first year out of art college she had the extraordinary honour of being hung in the prestigious Sulman Art Prize at the Art Gallery of NSW.
     
    All of this is a very long way from her isolated and unconventional rural upbringing where her father was attempting to build a house from scratch (as an untrained builder) while the family lived in tents and other temporary shelters. 
     
    She openly talks about her mental health issues which went largely undiagnosed. It was her mother that suggested she take up drawing as a child to overcome these crippling attacks. And that’s where it started. 
     
    It’s a fascinating, open, fun, funny conversation. And she gave me the secret to her success. It’s no secret.... it’s been discussed by most of the women on this podcast series. Hard work. Really hard work. And passion for the work. 
     
    Head to the link in my bio to listen to Del’s episode. Or go to your usual podcast platform and search Really Interesting Women. It’ll be there. 
     
     
    Image: Eugene Hyland
     
     
     
     
    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849

    • 37 min
    Anna Funder

    Anna Funder

    Really Interesting Women - Podcast 

    Revisited on 'Throwback Thursday'

    Anna Funder Ep. 105.   

    Anna Funder is one of Australia’s most acclaimed and awarded writers and an international success. One of her books is currently being made into a film with a Hollywood household name as its protagonist. 
     
    ...and she dreamed of being a writer since she was a child.
     
    Anna spent her early childhood in Paris where her father was working. First day at primary school was a little tricky. Didn’t understand what anyone was saying. She subsequently learnt to read and write in 2 languages. And from that moment, words were her obsession. 
     
    She started her working life as a lawyer and gave up what she called “probably the best lawyer job in Australia”, working in the Attorney General’s department on treaty negotiations and international law. But she didn’t feel like it was her ‘real life’.
     
    She made a life changing decision to move to Berlin and become a writer. The full story can be heard on the podcast including, while promoting her book ‘Stasiland’, going on a public stage in Germany where the first 2 rows were occupied by ex-Stasi, all taking notes!
     
    That 2003 book Stasiland won, amongst many other things, the Samuel Johnson Prize which is for the best non-fiction writing in the English language (!!). Actor Tom Hanks described it as 'fascinating, entertaining, hilarious, horrifying and very important.'
     
     Her 2012 novel, All That I Am, won a myriad of awards including the very prestigious Miles Franklin Award. 

     In her recently released book, Wifedom, Anna uncovers George Orwell’s ‘forgotten’ wife Eileen O’Shaughnessy, and rewrites her into history. Geraldine Brooks described the book as, 'Simply, a masterpiece'.
     
    Her books are important because of the truths they reveal. They are beautifully researched and exquisitely told. 
     
    Have a listen to this fascinating conversation. Head to the link in my bio or copy and paste this link into your browser:
     
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849?i=1000619409426
     


    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.



    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849

    • 49 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
24 Ratings

24 Ratings

Shells-a-bell ,

Loving all your Ladies

Thanks for your interviews, feeling a little inferior but love to be inspired. Like your questions and love that you let them talk.
Keep going Mr Graham

caro J A ,

So good

Loved listening to your interview with Nanette. Your easy, warm interview style was compelling listening. What an inspirational woman. Shed a tear, had a laugh - great way to spend a Sunday afternoon in the car. Well done

Sazzathon ,

Great interview of an inspirational woman

Loved this podcast ! Definitely sharing with my daughters who will gain a lot from Nanette’s extraordinary story. What a wonderful interview of an inspirational down to earth lady .

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