Antonella Gambotto-Burke

Antonella Gambotto-Burke (née Antonella Gambotto, born 19 September 1965[1] is an Italian-Australian author, journalist and singer-songwriter based in England and known for her writing about sex, death and motherhood.[2]

Antonella Gambotto-Burke
BornAntonella Gambotto
(1965-09-19) 19 September 1965 (age 59)
North Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Pen nameAntonella Black, Clavis Lumen, Ginger Meggs
Occupation
  • author
  • critic
  • columnist
  • singer-songwriter
NationalityItalian/Australian
Period1980–present
Genrememoir, literary nonfiction
Notable worksThe Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide (2004)
Mama: Love, Motherhood and Revolution (2015)
Apple: Sex, Drugs, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine (2022)
Notable awards1988: Cosmopolitan UK New Journalist of the Year Award
PartnerGavin Monaghan
Children1
Website
www.mamaftantonella.com

Gambotto-Burke is best known for her memoir The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide, and her memoir/maternal feminist polemics Mama: Love, Motherhood and Revolution and Apple: Sex, Drugs, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine. In 2004, The Sydney Morning Herald named her as a high-profile member of Mensa International.[3]

Her first single with band Mama ft. Antonella was released in 2023.[4]

Early years

edit

Gambotto-Burke was born into a Northern Italian Catholic family in North Sydney and lived in East Lindfield on Sydney's North Shore.[5] She is the first child and only daughter of the late businessman Giancarlo Gambotto, whose High Court win against WCP Ltd. changed Australian corporate law, scuppered the NRMA float,[6] made the Australian front pages, is featured in Oxbridge law exams,[7] and was the subject of a book edited by Ian Ramsay, Professor of Law.[8]

She did not speak English until she went to school, where she was known for her academic excellence and her singing.[9] Gambotto-Burke began contributing to magazines and major newspapers while still at school, where she captained two debating teams and was selected for the State Debating Trials. Paul Fletcher (politician), who later became a Liberal Party MP and held ministerial office in the Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison governments from 2015 to 2022, was her first speaker; she was third. Gambotto-Burke has said that despite their "wildly" differing political opinions, the two have remained friends.[10]

"I was raised to believe that I could achieve anything", Gambotto-Burke said in a North Shore Times cover story.[11]

Fiction and poetry

edit

Gambotto-Burke was first published under the pseudonym "Clavis Lumen"[12] in The Sydney Morning Herald at the age of sixteen: a satire of poet Les Murray's "An Absolutely Ordinary Rainbow", which was later included in Michele Field's anthology Shrinklit: Australia's Classic Literature Cut Down to Size.[13]

Her first short story was published in the first on-sale issue of the Australian literary magazine Billy Blue in July 1982.[14]

Gambotto-Burke contributed to Peter Blazey's [15] short story anthology Love Cries: Cruel Passions, Strange Desires (1995). In The Sydney Morning Herald, Gail Cork described her contribution as "outstanding"[16] and in Who, Margaret Smith noted its "darkly sinister" overtones.[17] "The Astronomer", a short story presaging many of the themes in her first novel, was published in 1989.[18] Eight years later, Gambotto-Burke's novel The Pure Weight of the Heart (also featuring an astronomer-protagonist) was published by Orion Publishing in London, and went to number six on The Sydney Morning Herald's best-seller list. It was also Tatler magazine's book of the month in the UK.

Gambotto-Burke was commissioned by artist David Bromley to write his series of short films, I Could Be Me,[19] which were narrated by Hugo Weaving and premiered at the Adelaide Festival in 2008.[20] In an essay, Gambotto-Burke noted that, "As scripts are founded on what Alan Alda calls the 'subsurface tectonics of emotion', the result can sometimes be a psychic slam dunk."[21] Bromley, in a separate interview, described the film as "like a kaleidoscope of images and it is run by my poetry and short stories by Antonella. And it has a large animation component."[20]

Journalism

edit

Gambotto-Burke was first published in The Australian at the age of eighteen.

After moving to England in 1984, Gambotto-Burke worked for the music press in London - notably, the NME and Zig Zag. She won UK Cosmopolitan magazine's New Journalist of the Year Award in 1988. She also worked for The Independent on Sunday, notably a cover story on cardiothoracic surgeons.[22]

In 1989, Gambotto-Burke returned to Sydney, where she resumed working for The Australian as a senior feature profile writer and literary critic. She also began writing for The South China Morning Post, The Globe and Mail, Harper's Bazaar, Elle, Vogue and other major global publications. Channel Nine Entertainment Director Richard Wilkins said in an interview that, "if you're on her wavelength, the interview is a most enjoyable experience. If not, it could be quite disconcerting. The key is to be open and honest with her."[23]

Of her journalism, author Matthew Condon wrote, "Her razor eye for the architecture of pretension and her ability to record untidied dialogue, especially the way it can betray the human mind and soul, have made her an object of fear and derision. To have been 'Gambottoed' is to have had a vein opened."[24]

Gambotto-Burke's interviewees include Martin Amis, Elle Macpherson, Gérard Depardieu, Morrissey, Thierry Mugler, Marc Newson, Deepak Chopra, Flavio Briatore, Robert Smith, Erica Jong, Colleen McCullough, Jeffrey Archer, Princess Haya bint Al Hussein, Jerry Hall and Naomi Wolf.[25]

Her best known comic interview – with Warwick Capper,[26] a retired Australian rules footballer, and his wife – is included in The Best Australian Profiles (Black Inc., 2004). "The best profiles lodge deep in the public mind, such as ... Antonella Gambotto's cheerfully dopey Warwick and Joanne Capper, which presaged by years the arrival of Kath & Kim", Professor Matthew Ricketson wrote in 2005.[27]

“The Blonde leading the Blonde” (Gambotto-Burke's interview with the Cappers) was, as writer Richard Cooke reported, reprinted several times, "and its descriptive passages – one of which described Joanne's pubic hair as 'white as the froth on a pint of Castlemaine' – became legend."

In the interview with Cooke, Gambotto-Burke said, "Warwick was voluble, enthusiastic, wild, mad, emotional, straightforward, carnal, intense, passionate, ambitious, unintelligent and hysterically funny, if not always intentionally. I loved his spirit if not his avidity, which I found disconcerting ... It was so shocking – I'm laughing here – but not because of the sexuality. The whole thing was shocking – the frankness, the spa bath, the chocolate-covered nuts (or raisins, or whatever they were). They were so artless. I felt as if I'd entered another universe."[28]

In Undercover Agent, Murray Waldren noted that "an interview with [Gambotto-Burke] often has the studied savagery of the corrida amid the crystal cruet ambience of high tea at the Ritz. Such ritualistic disembowelling, highly entertaining and in stark contrast to the asinine, PR-driven pap of most modern profiles, leave the gored stirred and very shaken."[29]

Controversy

edit

In London, Gambotto-Burke was employed as a music critic at the NME by editor Neil Spencer[30] and, on the advice of her live editor Mat Snow, wrote under pseudonyms Antonella Black and Ginger Meggs.[31] Her review of Cliff Richard's concert, in which she referred to him as "Satan" and which made national newspaper gossip columns, provoked him to sue the music journal.[32]

Gambotto-Burke then wrote "A Man Called Horse", the first cover story about alternative rock star Nick Cave to document his since-widely reported heroin addiction. "Shifting from bad to worse the interview collapses, along with Cave, into a series of broken thoughts and unfinished sentences," British author Adam Steiner has noted.[33]

Cave, retaliating, stated in an interview with Sounds that Gambotto-Burke had "brought her pyjamas along to the interview in place of a tape recorder". The male journalist added, "Hi, Antonella, and if you ever need to borrow my Sony ...".[34] Gambotto-Burke's editor Mick Mercer, who had published the cover story about Cave, wrote to Sounds: "I heard the tape of the interview and have yet to recover ... the piece eventually stated what other writers hadn't been brave enough to write. So what's the problem? Little Nick whittles his woodenly creative brain and makes sly insinuations about Antonella hauling in the bunk beds, anxious for the earth to move ... Cave dribbling in one corner."[35]

Mercer's letter was printed with the paper's apology: "Sounds entirely accepts that Ms [Gambotto-Burke] conducts herself properly and professionally at all times and apologises to her and to [the magazine] for any suggestion to the contrary in Bill Black's interview with Nick Cave."[36]

Cave, who had told Melody Maker journalists that he wanted to "kill" Gambotto-Burke,[37] then wrote a song about her and Mat Snow entitled "Scum"[38]

The Cave interview was included in Gambotto-Burke's anthology of interviews Lunch of Blood, while Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds included a version of "Scum" on their 2005 box set, B-Sides And Rarities. In turn, Gambotto-Burke wrote about her experience of interviewing Cave for an Australian magazine in 2006,[39] and her interview with him was again reprinted in the anthology Nick Cave: Sinner, Saint.[40]

Gambotto-Burke, in 2022, wrote at length about her experience of Cave in Apple: Sex, Drugs, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine, describing him as a "narcissist" and a "liar", and elaborating on the impact of his actions on her life and daughter.

Interview anthologies

edit

Lunch of Blood (Random House, 1994), Gambotto-Burke's first book and first anthology, peaked at number six on the best-seller lists. The Newcastle Herald observed that Gambotto-Burke's "command of language is delicious to the point where one wonders which came first, her wish to display her ability or the desire to share her impressions." In 1997, An Instinct for the Kill, her second anthology, was published to mixed reviews by HarperCollins. (The Age critic Katherine Wilson singled out the Capper interview as "laugh-out-loud" funny.)[41]

In The Best Australian Profiles, Professor Matthew Ricketson wrote the introduction to Gambotto-Burke's work: "[She] is probably the closest Australia has come to having a profile writer who is a celebrity in their own right ... and from the early 1990s readers became as interested in Gambotto-Burke as they were in the people she profiled."[42]

Bestselling The_Wolf_of_Wall_Street_(book) author Jordan Belfort, whom Gambotto-Burke interviewed for "maybe six hours", wrote "Chaos Theory", the foreword to her anthology MOUTH. In it, he said that "She also has an edge to her - let's just say I wouldn't want to be on her bad side. She has her own moral compass."[43]

Recent journalism

edit

In 2017, Gambotto-Burke returned with her daughter to England,[44] where she began working for The Sunday Times, The Telegraph, and other newspapers.[45]

Gambotto-Burke's writing about human trafficking has been syndicated around the world. She is also a widely published essayist, and has written lead and front-page news stories about legal issues, and, in the wake of the Israel-Hamas conflict, antisemitism.[46][47][48][49]

The issues of pornography and gender inequality also heavily feature in Gambotto-Burke's journalism.[50][51]

As of January 2023, Gambotto-Burke has been writing the back page of The Weekend Australian literary section,[52][53] and is now a senior feature and cover story writer for The Daily Mail and other major newspapers, including The Sunday Times, in London.

Maternal feminism

edit

Mama: Love, Motherhood and Revolution

edit

Gambotto-Burke dedicated her first book about motherhood, Mama: Love, Motherhood and Revolution to her daughter Bethesda. The foreword was written by the French obstetrician and academic Michel Odent.[54]

Gambotto-Burke, a high-profile advocate of increased parent/child intimacy,[55] was a working, breast-feeding SAHM who practised co-sleeping. "The association of maternal-infant separation with developmental havoc is not new, and yet despite the evidence, little change has been made to the way mothers and babies are treated, both by hospitals and by society at large", Gambotto-Burke wrote.[56]

In a Life Matters interview with Natasha Mitchell, Dr. John Irvine[57] described Mama: Love, Motherhood and Revolution as being to motherhood what The Female Eunuch was to feminism,[58] and Professor K. S. Anand,[59] 2009 Nils Rosén von Rosenstein Award laureate and professor of paediatrics, anaesthesiology, perioperative and pain medicine at Stanford University, described it as “undeniably the most important book of the 21st century”.[60]

Controversially, Gambotto-Burke also home-schooled her daughter.[61][62][63]

The Mama: Love, Motherhood and Revolution excerpt published in The Guardian (UK) went viral.[64]

Apple: Drugs, Sex, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine

edit

On publication of Apple: Sex, Drugs, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine, a 3000-word excerpt ran in The Australian. Gambotto-Burke's strong opinions on the routine administration of obstetric anaesthesia attracted significant attention.[65]

In a review of the book, British author and The Daily Telegraph writer Gwyneth Rees wrote, "Argued with intelligence, force and the fury of righteous indignation by lauded feminist thinker, author and critic Antonella Gambotto-Burke, the book explores how the manner in which we enter the world has a profound and lasting impact on our lives, and by extension upon society as a whole. As we come to learn, modern obstetric practices are deeply connected with an increased likelihood in later life of drug use, sexual fetishes, anxiety and mental illness, chronic and potentially life-threatening illnesses. They are also linked with the breakdown of relationships between men and women, and the erosion of the bond between mothers and children. This all comes to light through Apple's central question: why is our culture governed by the principle of separation?" [66]

Personal life

edit

At the age of 22, Gambotto-Burke became engaged to the notorious American-born UK GQ editor Michael VerMeulen. She left VerMeulen in 1990, citing, in The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide, his drug abuse as a primary reason. He later died of a cocaine overdose.[67][68]

After her brother Gianluca, a Macquarie Bank executive,[69] gassed himself in his car at the age of 32, Gambotto-Burke began reading "obsessively" about death and suicide, trying, as she said in a national Australian cover interview, to make sense of the experience, trying to become big enough to let go of my brother. That's what bereavement is about – surrendering the memory, the relationship."[70]

The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide (2004) is about her brother's 2001 death and her engagement to, and the death of, VerMeulen. In another interview, she said: "I wanted to explain depression as a valid emotional response rather than as a disease".[71][72]

In his 2023 review of the Finnish edition of The Eclipse, poet Kimmo Leijala wrote, "Sometimes [Gambotto-Burke] goes through a strict, even self-critical monologue, which also includes a lot of universal reflection and existential questions ... [and] the versatile use of language can read like poetry".[73] The Eclipse is a Good Grief Trust recommended book, and the American Psychological Association website describes The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide as "brilliant".[74]

On 24 November 2023 Gambotto-Burke and multi-platinum record producer Gavin Monaghan announced their engagement.[75][76] The two had been working together since late 2022 as Mama ft. Antonella.[77] [78] [79] She has since said that the city of Wolverhampton, where she records at Monaghan's studio Magic Garden, has been a "portal to joy".[44][80]

Monaghan has described Gambotto-Burke as "a hurricane" and as his "crowning glory".[76]

MAMA ft. Antonella

edit

From June 2019 to February 2020, Gambotto-Burke hosted The Antonella Show, her own programme on London's independent Boogaloo Radio, which featured guests such as the acclaimed producer and composer Magnus Fiennes,[81] the award-winning sculptor Beth Carter,[82] former PiL bassist Jah Wobble[83] and other internationally recognised artists and writers. She only stopped, she said on air in January 2020, to commence work on Apple: Sex, Drugs, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine.

Gambotto-Burke told the BBC that she started singing in 2021, after lockdown, on the advice of Alan McGee and a Grammy-Award-winning producer.[9] Their debut single, the electronic dance track "I Want What I Want", had over 36,000 Spotify streams in the first few weeks.[84] It was followed by the single Real Girl[85] and A River Running Wild, the first single from their first album.[86]

Neither Gambotto-Burke nor Monaghan have revealed the title or genre of the album.

In an interview with her, Creation Records founder and Oasis manager Alan McGee revealed that in her twenties, Gambotto-Burke had refused his offer of singing with the Jesus and Mary Chain on the basis of "shyness". He said that she is "forever surprising".[87]

In October 2024, BBC Introducing, the British institution that launched the careers of Florence Welch, Ed Sheeran, IDLES, Lewis Capaldi, and Wolf Alice, featured "Promised Land", Gambotto-Burke's first collaboration with electronic artist Chris Budd.[88] [89] [90] The track was also later selected for the BBC app Orbit.[91] [92]

Bibliography

edit

Anthologies

edit

Novel

edit

Memoirs

edit

Motherhood

edit

As a contributor

edit
  • Write A Letter to Your Twenty Year Old Self, edited by Kim Chandler McDonald (2020)
  • Nick Cave: Sinner, Saint: The True Confessions, 30 Years of Essential Interviews, edited by Mat Snow (Plexus Publishing, 2011)
  • My Favourite Teacher, edited by Robert Macklin (University of New South Wales Press, 2011)
  • Your Mother Would Be Proud: True Tales of Mayhem and Misadventure, edited by Tamara Sheward and Jenny Valentish (Allen & Unwin, 2009)
  • What Is Mother Love?, edited by Selwa Anthony (Penguin, 2008)
  • Some Girls Do ... My Life as a Teenager, edited by Jacinta Tynan (Allen & Unwin, 2007)
  • The Best Australian Profiles, edited by Matthew Ricketson (Black Inc., 2004)
  • The Thoughts of Chairman Stan, by Stan Zemanek (HarperCollins Australia, 1998): afterword by Gambotto-Burke
  • Love Cries: Cruel Passions, Strange Desires, edited by Peter Blazey (HarperCollins Australia, 1995)
  • This I Believe: 100 Eminent Australians Explore Life's Big Question, edited by John Marsden (Random House Australia, 1996).
  • ShrinkLit, edited by Michele Field (Penguin, 1983)

Direction/ Scripts/ Storyboards

edit

Television appearances

edit

Gambotto-Burke has appeared on many television programs, including Beauty & The Beast (Channel Ten, Foxtel), The Midday Show (Channel 9), Meet the Press (SBS), Wake Up(Channel Ten), Mornings (Channel 9) and performed cameos on Paul Fenech's SBS sitcom Pizza.

Discography

edit

Unnamed album to be released in 2025

Digital singles

edit

"A River Running Wild", September 20 2024

References

edit
  1. ^ "Astrology and natal chart of Antonella Gambotto-Burke, born on 1965/09/19". www.astrotheme.com.
  2. ^ "Facing the onslaught of maternal intimacy" by Andie Fox, Daily Life, June 5, 2014
  3. ^ 'Mensa's Australian connection', The Sydney Morning Herald, 19–20 June 2004
  4. ^ 'Award-winning Wolverhampton music producer hopes new dance track will get people on their feet', by Isabelle Parkin, Express & Star, 30 August 2023
  5. ^ The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide, by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, Broken Ankle Books, 2004
  6. ^ 'Failed NMRA float sinks lawyers' by Kathryn Bice, The Financial Review, 14 May 1999
  7. ^ 'Gambotto v WCP [1995] 182 CLR 432', by Oxbridge Law team, updated 4 January 2024
  8. ^ Gambotto v WCP Ltd: Its Implications for Corporate Regulation, edited by Ian M. Ramsay, Centre for Corporate Law and Securities Regulation, Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, 1996. ISBN 0-7325-0821-5
  9. ^ a b "BBC radio interview with Gambotto-Burke, 17 May 2024".
  10. ^ 'North Shore girls understand their value' North Shore Times, 2018
  11. ^ 'Revolutionary in high heels', by Doug Conway, North Shore Times, 26 April 2018
  12. ^ Introduction to An Instinct for the Kill by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, HarperCollins, 1997
  13. ^ 'An Absolutely Ordinary Rainbow', by Clavis Lumen aka Antonella Gambotto-Burke, Penguin Books, 1983
  14. ^ "Billy Blue Magazine | AustLit: Discover Australian Stories". www.austlit.edu.au.
  15. ^ The Peter Blazey Fellowship, School of Historical Studies, The Australia Center, 2009
  16. ^ "A Vile Book for Mean and Pitiful People" by Gail Cork, The Sydney Morning Herald, 7 January 1995
  17. ^ "Love Cries" review by Margaret Smith, Who, 27 February 1995
  18. ^ "The Astronomer" by Antonella Gambotto, Billy Blue Magazine, Summer 1989.
  19. ^ "Film Series 'I Could Be Me'". 20 October 2010 – via YouTube.
  20. ^ a b "Artist's film draws on a life of images", by Penelope Debelle, The Age, 4 September 2006
  21. ^ 'Words in Motion', by Antonella Gambotto, The Weekend Australian, 21–22 May 2005
  22. ^ "Affairs of the Heart" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Independent on Sunday Review, 17 March 1991.
  23. ^ 'In the blood', by Murray Waldren, The Australian Magazine, 26–27 March 1994.
  24. ^ "Another phrase of her life" by Matthew Condon, The Age, 22 August 1998.
  25. ^ 'Antonella Gambotto at The Sydney Institute' Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  26. ^ "The Blond Leading the Blond" by Antonella Gambotto, Mode, 1994
  27. ^ "Close Up: Review" by Matthew Ricketson, The Age, 18 June 2005.
  28. ^ 'Tasteful Sexuality', by Richard Cooke, The Monthly, October 2019
  29. ^ 'Dining Out with Mr. Lunch', by Murray Waldren, University of Queensland Press, 1999
  30. ^ 'Interview with legendary NME editors Neil Spencer and Mat Snow', Boogaloo Radio, 13 August 2019
  31. ^ Introduction, An Instinct for the Kill, by Antonella Gambotto, HarperCollins, 1997
  32. ^ 'Totally Wired: The Rise and Fall of the Music Press' by Paul Gorman, Thames & Hudson, 2022
  33. ^ 'Darker with the Dawn: Nick Cave's Songs of Love and Death', by Adam Steiner, Rowman & Littlefield, 2023.
  34. ^ ‘Bad Seed Rising,’ by Bill Black, Sounds, 25 May 25, 1985
  35. ^ 'Cave Man Boogie' by Mick Mercer, Letters, Sounds, 8 June 1985
  36. ^ Reply to ‘Cave Man Boogie,’ Letters, Sounds, 8 June 1985
  37. ^ 'Book Review : ‘Apple: Sex, Drugs, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine by Antonella Gambotto-Burke', by John Robb, Louder than War, 10 July 2022
  38. ^ "Bet you think this song is about you", by Dave Simpson, The Guardian, 13 December 2008
  39. ^ "Scum: The Inside Dope" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, Men's Style, Spring 2006.
  40. ^ Nick Cave: Sinner, Saint – The True Confessions, edited by Mat Snow, Plexus Publishing, 2011.
  41. ^ 'The Best Australian Profiles: Review', by Katherine Wilson, The Age, 23 October 2004
  42. ^ The Best Australian Profiles, edited by Matthew Ricketson, Black Inc., 2004.
  43. ^ "Chaos Theory: An Introduction to Antonella Gambotto-Burke", by Jordan Belfort, from MOUTH, by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, Broken Ankle Digital, 2013
  44. ^ a b BBC interview with Antonella Gambotto-Burke 17 May 2024. Retrieved 7 June 2024
  45. ^ "My post-divorce blow-out in New York" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Sunday Times, 8 September 2019
  46. ^ "Business demands fixed fees as revolt builds against billable hours" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Australian, 20 August 2010
  47. ^ "Corporates taken to the cleaners with billing abuses" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Australian, 27 August 2010
  48. ^ "'Challenge Clementine Ford's hatred and this is what you get', by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Australian, 22December 2023".
  49. ^ "'Target on their backs for being Jewish: how can this be in 2024?', by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Australian, 22 February 2024".
  50. ^ "Upskirting shows how porn culture has caused a breakdown in respect for women" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Sunday Times Magazine, 3 February 2019
  51. ^ "Yes, porn is a social blight. But the demonisation of men has to stop" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Weekend Australian, 13 August 2022
  52. ^ "Instagram". www.instagram.com.
  53. ^ "Instagram". www.instagram.com.
  54. ^ Dissident wisdom in Antonella Gambotto-Burke's motherhood statement', by Jack Marx, The Australian, 9 August 2014
  55. ^ "In defence of attachment parenting" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Australian, 26 May 2014]
  56. ^ 'How home-schooling helps me and my daughter bond, by author of Mama, a new book', by Mark Footer, South China Morning Post, 30 May 2015
  57. ^ "History of READ Clinic Psychology". READ Clinic Psychology.
  58. ^ "An attached approach to parenting", 24 April 2014, Life Matters, audio 20 minutes
  59. ^ "Kanwaljeet S. Anand biography – Stanford University". Retrieved 28 March 2023
  60. ^ "Antonella Gambotto-Burke: Pinter & Martin bio". Retrieved 28 March 2023
  61. ^ 'How home-schooling helps me and my daughter bond, by author of Mama, a new book' by Mark Footer, South China Morning Post, 30 May 2015
  62. ^ 'How it feels to ... home-school your daughter' by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Sunday Times, 29 September 2019
  63. ^ 'Don't give up—you can still homeschool like a boss (even when you feel like a total failure)' by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Telegraph, 5 May 2020
  64. ^ "Should women really be rushing back to work after giving birth?" by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Guardian, July 11, 2015
  65. ^ "Drugging women for childbirth should be a crime", by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Weekend Australian, 11 June 2022]
  66. ^ 'Apple: Sex, Drugs, Motherhood and the Recovery of the Feminine by Antonella Gambotto-Burke', by Gwyneth Rees, Female First, 9 June 2022
  67. ^ "Editor died from cocaine overdose", The Independent, 8 November 1995
  68. ^ 'Boyz II Men', by Michael Wolff, New York Magazine, 18 September 2000
  69. ^ The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide by Antonella Gambotto-Burke
  70. ^ "Death and the Maiden" by Murray Waldren, The Weekend Australian, 20–21 March 1994.
  71. ^ 'Soul Searcher', by Laura McCreddie, Yoga Magazine, November 2003
  72. ^ "I couldn't save my brother from suicide – the biggest killer of British men under 45", by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Telegraph, London, 31 March 2018.
  73. ^ "Antonella Gambotto: Pimennys – Itsemurhamuistelmat – Emotion Zine – Arvostelut". 13 February 2023.
  74. ^ 'A Memoir of Suicide', by Béla Buda, Crisis: The Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention, Vol 25(2), 2004, p95
  75. ^ "Instagram". www.instagram.com.
  76. ^ a b "Instagram". www.instagram.com.
  77. ^ 'Singer's new music inspired by the love of Wolverhampton and the man who brought her here' by Paul Jenkins, Express & Star, 30 March 2024
  78. ^ 'Mama featuring Antonella interview'|by John Robb, Louder than War,13 August 2023
  79. ^ "Mama feat. Antonella – official website". Retrieved 28 March 2023
  80. ^ 'Antonella Gambotto-Burke - Instagram' 28 May 2024. Retrieved 7 June 2024
  81. ^ 'Boogaloo Radio London' January 2020
  82. ^ 'Antonella Gambotto-Burke interviews Beth Carter' Boogaloo Radio London, December 2019
  83. ^ 'Antonella Gambotto-Burke interviews Jah Wobble' Boogaloo Radio London, November 2019
  84. ^ 'Award-winning Wolverhampton music producer hopes new dance track will get people on their feet', by Isabelle Parkin, Express & Star, 30 August 2023
  85. ^ Real Girl Mama ft Antonella : An Amazonian literate vocal swoops over disco dystopia’, by John Robb, Louder than War, 27 November 2023
  86. ^ "LISTEN! Mama ft Antonella new single is smoudering industrial blues" Louder Than War, October 3 2024
  87. ^ "Alan McGee interviews Antonella Gambotto-Burke on Riots & Raves", Boogaloo Radio, 27 May 2019
  88. ^ "MAMA ft. Antonella: BBC Introducing" Mama ft. Antonella on YouTube
  89. ^ BBC Introducing West Midlands & Warwickshire
  90. ^ "Official MAMA ft. Antonella website"
  91. ^ "BBC Orbit: Mama ft. Antonella"
  92. ^ "Gambotto-Burke personal Instagram" October 19, 2024
edit