Picture of author.

Barry Humphries (1934–2023)

Author of More Please: An Autobiography

60+ Works 1,006 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: WTCA

Series

Works by Barry Humphries

More Please: An Autobiography (1992) 140 copies, 1 review
My Life as Me (2002) 125 copies
Dame Edna Everage : My Gorgeous Life (1989) 117 copies, 1 review
Women in the background (1995) 78 copies
Handling Edna: The Unauthorised Biography (2009) 57 copies, 1 review
Bizarre (1988) 42 copies, 2 reviews
The Traveller's Tool (1985) 31 copies, 1 review
The Complete Barry McKenzie (1988) 26 copies
The Olivia Audio Collection (2009) — Narrator — 16 copies
Flashbacks (1999) 9 copies
The Adventures of Barry McKenzie [1972 film] (2009) — Screenwriter/ Actor — 8 copies
Bazza comes into his own (1979) 7 copies, 1 review
Les Patterson's Australia (1978) 7 copies
Moonee Ponds Muse 1 (1999) 1 copy
Shades of sandy stone (1989) 1 copy

Associated Works

Finding Nemo [2003 film] (2003) — Actor — 2,111 copies, 15 reviews
Mary and Max [2009 film] (2009) — Narrator — 50 copies, 3 reviews
Night Voices: Strange Stories (1985) — Foreword — 41 copies
The Best Australian Essays: A Ten-Year Collection (2011) — Contributor — 32 copies, 1 review
The Best Australian Essays 2008 (2008) — Contributor — 28 copies, 1 review
The Best Australian Essays 2003 (2003) — Contributor — 14 copies
Justin and the Knights of Valor [2013 film] (2015) — Voice — 14 copies
Oliver!: Original 1962 Broadway Cast Recording (1963) — Performer — 14 copies
Da Kath & Kim Code [2005 film] — Actor, some editions — 7 copies
Blinky Bill the Movie [2015 film] (2015) — Actor — 4 copies
Kath & Kim: Yuuuige Pack : Komplete Kollection (2002) — some editions — 3 copies
Hotel Amour (2019) — Contributor — 2 copies
The Secret Policeman's Balls — Actor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Discussions

Barry Humphries in Legacy Libraries (March 2024)
Oz Bizarre: Barry Humphries in The Chapel of the Abyss (April 2023)

Reviews

9 reviews
This is a difficult book to categorise – is it an autobiography? A memoir? Fictionalised truth? Here, Barry Humphries tells us of his discovery of Moonee Ponds (i.e. Melbourne suburbia) housewife, Edna Everage in 1950s Melbourne and how that young woman became one of the grandest dames of history. Barry lays the rumours to rest that he and Edna are one and describes his tumultuous relationship with Edna through death, alcohol, bankruptcy and gladioli.

Barry paints for us a beautiful show more picture of 1950s and 60s Melbourne (of which a few points are still recognisable today) and Edna’s life with an ill husband, jealous live-in Kiwi bridesmaid and children. Barry is of course nothing like the common bourgeois that Edna represents, he shudders in her attempts at class and social climbing. But which of them has the better insight into the average (or ‘everage’) Australian? Edna becomes a hit much to Barry’s dismay on the stage and screen and he reluctantly becomes her manager while trying an acting/comedy career for himself. Edna’s dreams become true beyond her wildest fantasies while Barry becomes a shadow of his former self. Eventually they will work out that they need each other (but not that greasy Les Patterson).

Humphries has written a wildly witty work of his time with Edna. I fear that Edna herself may not understand all the words he uses in various descriptions (an ebook version would be useful at times to use the inbuilt dictionary, but I’m probably showing my bourgeois side my even suggesting it). Barry paints himself as the perfect Toorak snob (upper class suburb of Melbourne) reacting to Edna’s feisty middle class suburban roots and the need to keep up and then overtake the Joneses. In some ways, she represents Australia itself.

While it’s debatable how much of the plain truth is in this book, it’s a fantastic tale and a great read for any possum, if only for the photos of Dame Edna’s outlandish outfits from the past through to today.

http://samstillreading.wordpress.com
show less
½
This was a rollicking good read. Dame Edna is a powerhouse in the entertainment business. Any of her fans will certainly love this. If you can hear Dame Edna in your head, you will have a fantastic time as she narrates her life from being an obscure Australian housewife to universally loved megastar.

Reading it in 2023, some of the humor may be a bit dated, and thinking may have changed...but it's quite fun to escape into this book and just get lost in the world of Dame Edna.
The title says it all. Everything offensive and strange; decadent, pornographic, scatalogical, surreal, dadaist, and horrorific. Freaks, psychos, and weirdos. Perfect coffee table sized book to offend everyone. I bought this remaindered when I was about 12 and have treasured it ever since. Half of it I didn't even understand then. I cannot believe they sold it to me.
This is the most absurdly offensive thing I've ever read. It was still pretty funny in places, but holy shit, times have changed.

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
60
Also by
15
Members
1,006
Popularity
#25,630
Rating
3.9
Reviews
9
ISBNs
90
Languages
2
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs