
Jimmy Little
Acting • Born 1937-03-01 – Died 2012-04-02
Biography
Description taken from English Wikipedia. James Oswald Little, AO (1 March 1937 – 2 April 2012) was an Australian Aboriginal musician, actor and teacher, who was a member of the Yorta Yorta tribe and was raised on the Cummeragunja Reserve, New South Wales. Little started his professional career in 1951, as a singer-songwriter and guitarist, which spanned six decades. For many years he was the main Aboriginal star on the Australian music scene. His music was influenced by Nat King Cole, Johnny Mathis and American country music artist Jim Reeves. His gospel song "Royal Telephone" (1963) sold over 75,000 copies, and his most popular album, Messenger, peaked at No. 26 in 1999 on the ARIA Albums Chart. At the ARIA Music Awards of 1999, Little was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame and won an ARIA Award for Best Adult Contemporary Album. On Australia Day (26 January) 2004, he was made an Officer of the Order of Australia with the citation, "For service to the entertainment industry as a singer, recording artist and songwriter and to the community through reconciliation and as an ambassador for Indigenous culture". As an actor, he appeared in the films Shadow of the Boomerang (1960) and Until the End of the World (1991), in the theatre production Black Cockatoos and in the opera Black River. As a teacher, from 1985, he worked at the Eora Centre in Redfern and from 2000 was a guest lecturer at the University of Sydney's Koori Centre.
Filmography
12 credits
Until the End of the World
Movie • 1991
Peter

Somewhere in the Darkness
Movie • 1999
The Bushman

Night Cries: A Rural Tragedy
Movie • 1990
Singer

Shadow of the Boomerang
Movie • 1961
Johnny

Taxi
Movie • 1953
Policeman (uncredited)

The Sleeping City
Movie • 1950
Police Det. Travers (uncredited)

Fright
Movie • 1956
Joe the Bartender

Eadie Was a Lady
Movie • 1945
Jim Tuttle

Hey, Rookie
Movie • 1944
Bert Pfeiffer

The Bob Hope Show
TV • 1950
Self

The Phil Silvers Show
TV • 1955
MSgt. Francis Grover

The Ed Sullivan Show
TV • 1948
Self