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Ned Kelly has progressed from outlaw to national hero in a century, and to international icon in a further 20 years. The still-enigmatic, slightly saturnine and ever-ambivalent bushranger is the undisputed, if not universally admired, national symbol of Australia.
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Ned Kelly is a 1959 Australian television play adapted from the radio play of the same name. It focused on two main events – the robbery at Jerilderie and the siege at the Glenrowan Hotel. [1] It was different from a later TV play about Ned Kelly, Ballad for One Gun. [2]
Australian artist Sidney Nolan painted numerous Ned Kelly works, beginning with his now-iconic 1946–47 series, which Nolan later said was inspired by "Kelly's own words, and Rousseau, and sunlight". The Jerilderie Letter in particular "fascinated [Nolan] with their blend of poetry and political engagement".
The Last Outlaw is a 1963 British radio serial by Rex Rienits about Ned Kelly. [1] It is not to be confused with the 1980 Australian mini series about Kelly, which has the same name . The serial was one of a number of dramatisations of Australian historical figures by Rienits.
Apeirophobia is an episodic horror escape room game based on the Backrooms creepypasta. [155] Players solve puzzles [156] [157] to escape the game's "levels", [158] while also evading entities. [28] The game has been compared to Outlast, [159] and is still in its alpha phase. [25]
J. J. Kenneally (born James Jerome Kenneally; 1870 – 20 February 1949) was an Australian journalist and trade unionist. [2] An early populariser of Australian bushranger Ned Kelly and his gang via his book The Inner History of the Kelly Gang and Their Pursuers (1929), he was also one of the original members of the country's Labor Party and later formed his own party.