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Rhoda Roberts

Rhoda Ann Roberts (8 July 1959 – 21 March 2026) was an Australian theatre and arts director, arts executive, television presenter, and actress. She was head of Indigenous programming at the Sydney Opera House from 2012 until 2021, among many other roles. She was also a highly respected Aboriginal elder, being afforded the title "Aunty" (Aunty Rhoda).

Roberts was a co-founder of the Aboriginal National Theatre Trust in 1987; she wrote for, produced, and presented work on television; was a producer at the Indigenous media agency Vibe Australia; founded the Festival of the Dreaming in 1997; and was cultural advisor for the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. She also acted in, wrote and directed numerous stage productions.

Early life and education

Rhoda Ann Roberts was born in Canterbury Hospital in Sydney on 8 July 1959. She was a Bundjalung woman of the Widjabul/Wiyebal clan on her father's side, and her totem was the lizard. She had a twin sister, Lois Roberts, and two brothers (Phillip and Mark), and her parents also raised several cousins with them.

Her paternal grandfather, Frank Roberts (1899–1968), a pastor with the Church of Christ, was active in the Aborigines Progressive Association (APA), and ran an Aboriginal settlement called Cubawee at Tuncester, near Lismore, which was bulldozed in 1964. He was educated at the segregated school on the Aboriginal reserve on Cabbage Tree Island.

Her parents were politically active: her father, Frank Roberts Jnr, also grew up on the reserve on Cabbage Tree Island under the Aboriginal Protection Board. He later attended Oral Roberts University, an evangelical university in Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S., where he prayed with Martin Luther King Jr. and experienced the birth of the American civil rights movement. He then went to the Woolwich Bible College in Sydney. He joined the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra in 1972, and talked to Gough Whitlam about Indigenous land rights there. He was also a pastor with the Church of Christ, and the first Indigenous person appointed to the Australian Board of Missions. He was on the board of the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders, who campaigned for the yes vote in the 1967 referendum. He was also active in the APA. Roberts's mother, Muriel, was white, well-educated "quite middle-class", and worked at David Jones, and was also a dressmaker. They met at church, when Muriel was 26 and Frank 42. Both parents were also interested in the arts.

The family moved to Lismore when the twins were 18 months old, where, unlike Sydney, the local citizens were shocked at the mixed-race children. She attended Lismore Heights Primary and Richmond River High in Lismore. As a teenager she and her family spent some years in Sydney, where she attended Canterbury Girls' School, but they returned to Lismore because her father was so homesick. She completed Year 10 in Lismore, becoming one of the first Aboriginal students to do this. The only reason she did not go on to do year 12 was that it was discouraged for Aboriginal students at her school. In those days, Aboriginal people experienced much discrimination in Lismore, including being refused entry to cafes.

Roberts initially wanted to study journalism, but was discouraged by her mother, who feared that nobody would employ her because of her race. She first trained as a nurse's aide, and was refused access to nurse training by the matron at the Lismore Base Hospital. She then moved back to Sydney, where she qualified as a nurse at Canterbury Hospital in 1979.

After a stint on Hayman Island, Queensland, Roberts went to London, England, in the early 1980s to train in accident and emergency nursing at Westminster Hospital, gaining a certificate. She then travelled to several other countries, including India, volunteering as well as doing paid work as a nurse.

On her return to Sydney, she studied performing arts for three years.

Career

Roberts was a co-founder of the Aboriginal National Theatre Trust (ANTT) with Brian Syron, Lydia Miller (daughter of Pat O'Shane and activist Mick Miller,) and others, with Justine Saunders as adviser. The ANTT arose out of the First National Black Playwrights Conference and Workshop in Canberra, in 1987, becoming formally incorporated in 1988. Second (1989) and Third National Black Playwrights Conferences followed. In 2016, Roberts said that the living person she most admired was Lydia Miller, as a "true Cultural Custodian who pass[es] on knowledge to ensure there is wealth and richness of understanding the environment and country and they do it with such humility and spirit of generosity always astounds me". Miller had also been a nurse, and they became friends and continued to work together. Roberts says that she was the originator of the idea to do Welcomes to Country before the conferences, and galleries and arts organisations followed suit.

In 1989, she presented the SBS Television program First In Line along with Michael Johnson, becoming the first Indigenous presenter on prime-time television. Roberts was employed as presenter of Vox Populi, an SBS Television program, in 1990, becoming the first Indigenous Australian to present a prime time current affairs program. She also wrote, produced, and directed several documentaries for SBS, including In the gutter, no way? in 1990.

From 1992 until 2014, Roberts was a producer at the Indigenous media agency Vibe Australia, where she produced and was broadcaster on its Deadly Sounds national weekly radio program until 2012. During this period she also worked for Network 10 and Radio National (RN). From 2005 until 2007 she was a presenter on the Indigenous culture program Awaye! on RN.

In 1995, Roberts was appointed Indigenous Cultural Advisor for the Olympic Games in Sydney. She was artistic director of the Aboriginal event in the first of four years of festivals, "The Festival of the Dreaming" held in 1997. In 2000, she oversaw Awakening, the Indigenous segment of the opening ceremony of the 2000 Olympics.

On the morning of each Australia Day (26 January) between 2003 and 2013, she directed the Woggan-ma-gule ceremony at Barangaroo in Sydney, which celebrated First Nations' culture, honouring the past and celebrating the future.

From 2008 until 2011, she was creative director for the Sydney New Year's Eve celebrations, which in 2016 she regarded as her greatest achievement. In December 2012, she co-hosted the inaugural broadcast of National Indigenous Television (NITV) with Stan Grant from Uluru.

In 1998 she founded the Dreaming Festival, an Indigenous arts festival which ran in Sydney until 2004, relocating to become part of the Woodford Folk Festival, Queensland in 2004. She remained artistic director of the festival until 2009. The success of this event let to further appointments as director of large-scale public cultural events.

Roberts was appointed head of Indigenous programming at the Sydney Opera House in 2012, a job which was created for her. She held the position until March 2021. During her tenure there, in 2014 she established an annual free outdoor festival celebrating Indigenous music, dance, and culture, called Homeground (2014). Roberts presented the weekly national program Deadly Voices from the House, which included live talks and a monthly podcast. In 2016 she oversaw Songlines, when the roof was lit up with Indigenous artwork, and on the eve of NAIDOC Week in 2018, one side of the Opera House was lit with art, as part of the daily "Badu Gili" projections.

Other major cultural event work included the 2003 Rugby World Cup, Vivid Sydney, the Garma Festival, the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup opening ceremony, the Parrtjima Festival in Alice Springs, and Dubai Expo 2021.

She worked on several film and TV projects, including documentary films about Tom E. Lewis (Balang) for SBS, and Henrietta Marrie (Bukal).

In late 2025, Roberts was consulting development director on the NITV documentary The Colleano Heart, about the Colleanos, an Aboriginal circus family, created by Pauline Clague.

Stage productions

In 1988, Roberts performed in Akwanso, Fly South, which went on tour, playing at the Belvoir St Theatre in Sydney, ANU Arts Centre in Canberra, and Space Theatre in Adelaide.

She co-starred with Rachael Maza and Lydia Miller in Belvoir's 1993 production of Louis Nowra's play Radiance. This was a groundbreaking play, that ushered in a number of touring performances of Indigenous plays.

In 1998 she performed in a one-woman show Please Explain, written by Mick Barnes and directed by David Field at the Belvoir, and created the solo production Bible Boxing Love, which toured the east coast in 2008.

In October 2009, Roberts directed an international production of the opera Miracle in Brisbane by the Italian composer Giorgio Battistelli for the Brisbane Festival at the Judith Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts. In 2010, she directed and produced BodymARKS, which featured at the 2010 Darwin Festival.

In 2012, she wrote and directed Yarrabah the Musical for Opera Australia, as well as directing and producing BodymARKS, which featured at the 2010 Darwin Festival.

In October 2019, Roberts's production Natives Go wild was staged at the Sydney Opera House.

She was involved in the creation of the World Indigenous Art Orchestra from 2021 until her death.

In late August 2024, Roberts presented a new play, My Cousin Frank with Northern Rivers Performing Arts (NORPA) in Lismore and Byron Bay. It was about her cousin Frank Roberts, a boxer who was the first Aboriginal Australian to participate in the Olympics Games, at Tokyo in 1964. Directed by Kirk Page, Roberts narrated the story of "a family's journey from the tumultuous era of dispersal and silence to navigating a world controlled by government policy". The show included the story of Cubawee, the self-managed reserve established by her grandfather. My Cousin Frank was a lead-in to a planned production in 2025, called The First Aboriginal Olympian, and Roberts hoped to unite the community of Lismore in their pride in being the home of this significant man and family history. Despite having been diagnosed with terminal cancer, she performed the play at Sydney Opera House in December 2025, which was her last performance.

Other acting credits

Roberts appeared in the 1988 Australian teenage horror film Kadaicha (Stones of Death in the US), the German director Wim Wenders' 1991 film Until the End of the World, as well as several short films. She also had guest appearances in Home and Away, A Country Practice, and Blue Heelers.

Other roles and activities

From 1979 until 1982, Roberts taught windsurfing.

Roberts worked with the museum Quai Branly in Paris for its opening ceremony in 2006, and with other First Nations groups worldwide.

In 2010 she was consultant festival director of the Garma Festival, and in the same year worked on the opening of the Japan Expo.

After Ruby Hunter died in 2010, Roberts was artistic director of a series of tribute concerts to the musician and partner of Archie Roach, called Nukkan Ya Ruby. She was an ambassador for the Archie Roach Foundation.

Roberts was guest curator of the Queensland Performing Arts Centre's Clancestry Festival from 2012 until 2014. Around 2014, she established Dance Rites, a dance competition for Indigenous dancers.

As of 2016, she was creative director of Rhoda Roberts Gallery & Events, and festival director of the Boomerang Festival at Byron Bay. She also undertook consultancy work for Northern Rivers Performing Arts (NORPA), JUTE Theatre in Cairns, and Opera Australia. In January 2022, she was still directing Boomerang, and was First Nations consultant for NIDA, curator of the Parrtjima festival in Alice Springs, and First Nations programming creative director at NORPA.

In September 2024 she was appointed a member of First Nations Arts, a newly established division of the government arts funding body Australia Council focused on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts, for a term of four years.

She was writing a novel, Tullymorgan, at the time of her death.

Late in life, Roberts was appointed the cultural lead at the national Aboriginal-owned newspaper, The Koori Mail, which was co-founded by her father Pastor Frank Roberts, along with Owen Carriage, in May 1991.

Roberts also served on many boards, including the NSW Anti-Discrimination Board, Welcome to Country, Actors Equity, National Aboriginal and Islander Skills Development Association (NAISDA), the NSW Australia Day council, the Yothu Yindi Foundation, Indigenous Tourism Australia, Australia International Cultural Council, Playwriting Australia (chair), Sydney Opera House Trust, and Darling Harbour Authority.

Recognition

Awards and honours

Other recognition

British photographer Penny Tweedie's image of Roberts, taken around 2000, is held by the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra.

In 2021 actress Deborah Mailman paid tribute to Roberts's power as a role model as well as her achievements and legacy during her tenure at the Sydney Opera House: "Her ability to change things. Her fierceness in making sure the Opera House doors are open to our mob. Creating those events not just for our mob but for all audiences alike to celebrate First Nations stories".

In September 2021, Roberts was named as the inaugural elder-in-residence at SBS Television, a new position, in which the office-holder was intended to be a "guide and counsel" on Indigenous content. The initial term of one year was extended, and she held the position until her death in March 2026.

Also in 2021, she was appointed First Nations Consultant at the National Institute of Dramatic Art.

She was a highly respected Aboriginal elder, by the 2020s being afforded the title "Auntie".

Personal life

Roberts's twin sister Lois, a hairdresser, was involved in a car accident around 1980, aged 20, and received severe brain damage. In July 1998, aged 38, Lois went missing, after being seen getting into a white car while hitchhiking near Nimbin. Police were dismissive and would not file a missing person's report when her family went to them within two days. Her body was found in Whian Whian State Conservation Area six months later. Investigators believe that she was held captive for around 10 days, and tortured and sexually abused before being murdered. The crime was still unsolved as of 2024, and the trauma continued to affect the family. Ivan Sen made a documentary film about the event and the grief of the family, called A Sister's Love. The film was screened in Lismore and aired on ABC TV in 2007.

Roberts had three children, the eldest being her twin sister's biological daughter, whom she raised from birth.

In 1993, she married actor Bill Hunter, and they lived together and raised Emily together until around 1999, when he suddenly announced that he wanted to leave the marriage. She did not know why until he visited her shortly before his death from liver cancer in 2011 when he told her that he did not want her to have to nurse him. They did not, however, get divorced.

Her later partner was Steven Field, a landscape designer and stonemason whom she met around the time of her sister's disappearance, and he stepped in as stepfather to Emily. They had two children together. As of 2019 they were building a home at Jacky Bulbin Flats, in Bundjalung country. Roberts intended to hold a number of "women-only cultural retreats" in places across the Northern Rivers.

She also had a cousin called Frank, who was a champion boxer. There were a number of other boxers in the Roberts family, and the Robertses became known as "the fighting family of Lismore".

Later life, death, and legacy

Roberts was diagnosed with a rare form of ovarian cancer in late 2025. An event to celebrate her life and pay tribute to Roberts was held in December 2025 at the Sydney Opera House, attended by around 200 people, including the Governor-General of Australia, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, and many prominent arts leaders. A GoFundMe was set up to help fund medical costs and family needs. She continued her work at NORPA and NIDA until her last few days.

She died on 21 March 2026, at the age of 66. A funeral was held for her on Bundjalung country in northern New South Wales on 31 March, with over 1,000 people in attendance. A smoking ceremony was held before the service, and Troy Cassar-Daley and Casey Donovan performed songs in the church. Djakapurra Munyarryun sang a song in his Yolngu language, and there was ceremonial dancing, including by the Jannawi Women's Dance Group.

Roberts is credited with coining the term "Welcome to Country" in the 1980s, and her legacy continues in the festivals she created.

Roberts raised the voices on Indigenous Australians on the international stage, and many Indigenous creatives and advocates paid tributes to her enormous influence on their careers and personal lives. At the end of an interview in 2025, Roberts she shared a mantra passed down from her father:

Footnotes

References

External links