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Pat McDonald (actress)
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Pat McDonald (actress) : ウィキペディア英語版
Pat McDonald (actress)

Patricia Ethell "Pat" McDonald (1 August 1921 – 10 March 1990) was an Australian radio actress and actress of stage and television and the daughter of one of Australia's most prominent electric radio engineers and public servants, Arthur Stephen McDonald and his wife, milliner Edith Roseina Ethell. Her grandfather, bootmaker John McDonald, was born in Victoria, and married Eliza Mary Stevenson.
McDonald was best-known for two long-running soap opera roles. She played comical malaproping gossip Dorrie Evans in the popular serial ''Number 96'' between 1972 and 1977 and then played Aunty Fiona Thompson in ''Sons and Daughters'' between 1981 to 1987. She was featured in both shows throughout their entire run-about five and a half years in each case. McDonald won four Logie awards, including the 1974 Gold Logie, for her work on ''Number 96''.
==Career==
McDonald acted in the 1939 Australian film ''Seven Little Australians'' based on the novel by Ethel Turner as the twenty-year-old stepmother Esther. She much later appeared in an episode of the 1971 police drama ''The Long Arm''. The role in ''Number 96'' followed; she reprised the role in the 1974 feature film version of the series. McDonald won several Logie Awards as Best Actress for playing Dorrie, and a Gold Logie for Australia's most popular female personality in 1974. After ''Number 96'' she played a regular role in the short-lived Australian situation comedy series ''The Tea Ladies'' (1978).
One of McDonald's final TV appearances was at the Logie Awards on 17 March 1989, when she took part in a production number called "Golden Girls", which celebrated female Gold Logie winners of years past. She performed the song with Lorrae Desmond, Hazel Phillips, Denise Drysdale, Jeanne Little, and Rowena Wallace.
Later in 1989 McDonald appeared in an episode of the hit British TV series ''In Sickness and in Health'' in which she played Raeline's mother. The episode was aired in the UK in October 1989.

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