Faces of Change was an Australian documentary series created by Anne Deveson and broadcast by the ABC in 1982 to 83. It was a six part series about ordinary women.[1][2] Subjects covered were an Aboriginal woman who was separated from her family as an infant,[3][4][5] a woman doctor running a woman's health centre, the affect on working women of insufficient child care, a lesbian couple, a young street-wise punk and a woman fighting for rights for women in heavy industry.[6][7]

References

edit
  1. ^ Wilmoth, Peter (16 December 1982). "Case of total involvement". The Age.
  2. ^ Coleman, Richard (11 January 1983). "Television choice". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  3. ^ Wilmoth, Peter (9 December 1982). "Sensitive, powerful". The Age.
  4. ^ Robinson, Harry (19 December 1982). "Murder, broken families, religion, war... have a happy TV Christmas". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. ^ Warden, Ian (16 December 1982). "Deveson style impresses in a harrowing tale". The Canberra Times.
  6. ^ Coleman, Richard (13 December 1982). "If you think it's bad for women now, remember the sixties". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  7. ^ Flynn, Greg (24 November 1982), "A new TV series ... women who choose to be different", The Australian Women's Weekly