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The death of Australian entertainer Barry Humphries has sparked an outpouring of tributes for the treasured national icon at home and around the globe.
Humphries died on Saturday, aged 89, at St Vincents Hospital in Sydney where he was being treated for complications stemming from hip surgery earlier this year.
He was surrounded by his immediate family, including his wife of 30 years Lizzie Spender, his children Tessa, Emily, Oscar and Rupert, and 10 grandchildren.
Humphries, who has lived in London for decades, came back to Sydney in December for Christmas. He subsequently suffered a fall that led to his hip replacement surgery.
"He was completely himself until the very end, never losing his brilliant mind, his unique wit and generosity of spirit," his family said in a statement.
Humphries spent more than 70 years on the stage and was "an entertainer to his core" who loved his audiences and never took them for granted.
But he was also a painter, author, poet and collector of art.
"He was also a loving and devoted husband, father, grandfather, and a friend and confidant to many. His passing leaves a void in so many lives," his family said.
"The characters he created, which brought laughter to millions, will live on."
Humphries, who continued touring up until the last year of his life, was a man of many faces led by his comedic alter egos, self-described housewife "gigastar" Dame Edna Everage and Sir Les Patterson.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese led the tributes for the entertainer, saying while Humphries was the creator of stars like Dame Edna, he was the brightest of them all.
"A great wit, satirist, writer and an absolute one-of-kind, he was both gifted and a gift," he said.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said Australia had lost its finest raconteur, most brilliant satirist and greatest cultural comedian.
"He will forever be a treasured Australian icon," he posted on social media.
Former British prime minister Boris Johnson said Humphries was "one of the greatest ever Australians".
"What a loss," he said on Twitter.
Unsurprisingly, multiple tributes came from Humphries' fellow travellers in the world of entertainment, including British comedians Ricky Gervais and Matt Lucas and Australians Adam Hills, Rove McManus, Marty Fields and Jason Donovon.
All praised his genius, intelligence and generosity.
London-based Hills said he was "one of the greatest comedians of our time", while Field dubbed him a "god of comedy".
Welsh comedian Rob Brydon, who is in Australia and was with Humphries just three days ago, posted: "A true great who inspired me immeasurably. It was a delight to call him my friend ... His talent shone until the very end."
Also in Australia, British comedian Jimmy Carr said it would be bittersweet doing gigs in the country as "no one will ever be as good at crowd work again".
Monty Python member Eric Idle said Humphries had made him laugh out loud since meeting him in 1968 and called him "one of the greatest civilised comedians to have ever lived".
Sir Michael Parkinson, who featured Humphries on his show in his guises as Dame Edna and Sir Les, said he was one of his favourite guests of all time and a dear friend.
"In a time when the word is bandied around far too easily, we have truly lost a genius," he told PA in a statement.
Humphries played Rupert Murdoch in the 1991 TV mini-series Selling Hitler and was invited to celebrate the news mogul's marriage to Jerry Hall in 2016.
The News Corp chairman and chief executive remembered the shape-shifting comedian as a genuine genius.
"His works, his creations, his spirit will echo across the generations and his friendship is eternal," Mr Murdoch told his outlets.
John Barry Humphries was born on February 17, 1934.
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Celebrated Australian entertainer Barry Humphries is being celebrated globally after dying aged 89 from complications after hip surgery.
The comedy legend was best known for his alter egos Dame Edna Everage and Sir Les Patterson.
He died on Saturday at St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney surrounded by his immediate family, including his wife of 30 years Lizzie Spender, his children and 10 grandchildren.
"He was completely himself until the very end, never losing his brilliant mind, his unique wit and generosity of spirit," his family said in a statement on Saturday night.
" With over 70 years on the stage, he was an entertainer to his core, touring up until the last year of his life and planning more shows that will sadly never be.
"His passing leaves a void in so many lives."
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Humphries was a great wit, satirist, writer and one of a kind.
"He was both gifted and a gift," Mr Albanese said.
Tributes flowed from all corners of the world and, unsurprisingly, many came from Humphries' fellow travellers in the world of entertainment, including British comedians Ricky Gervais and Matt Lucas and Australians Adam Hills, Rove McManus, Marty Fields and Jason Donavon.
Gervais took to Twitter to say: "Farewell, Barry Humphries, you comedy genius."
Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he was one of the "greatest ever Australians."
"A comic genius who used his exuberant alter egos, Dame Edna Everage and Sir Les Patterson, to say the otherwise unsayable."
Humphries, lived in London for decades and returned to Sydney in December for Christmas.
He subsequently suffered a fall and ended up having to have a hip replacement.
Humphries delighted and outraged audiences for more than half a century with his cavalcade of grotesques, presented in a unique blend of old-style music hall and contemporary satire.
Among them were the gross Sir Les Patterson, Australia's cultural attache to the Court of St James; the melancholy and rambling Sandy Stone; and, in comic strip and film, the chundering Ocker in Pommyland, Barry McKenzie.
The multi-talented Humphries was also a respected character actor with many stage and screen credits, an author of novels and autobiography, and an accomplished landscape painter.
Humphries had four marriages, reformed from alcoholism and took his shows around Australia and the world.
Born in Melbourne on February 17, 1934 his parents were comfortable, loving and strait-laced.
Before he'd finished at Melbourne Grammar, Humphries was more interested in art and secondhand bookshops than football or cadets.
Humphries joined the Melbourne Theatre Company and while touring Victoria created Edna Everage as a dowdy, complacent Moonee Ponds housewife. That Edna was a long way from the internationally feted, egomaniacal superstar she was to become.
He moved to Sydney, joining the Philip Street Revue.
In 1959 he settled in London and was soon working in Peter Cook's comedy venue The Establishment.
Humphries, with New Zealand artist Nicholas Garland, created the Barry McKenzie comic strip for the satirical magazine Private Eye in 1964.
Bazza was a boozy parody of the ugly Australian abroad, full of phrases like the "technicolour yawn", "siphon the python" and "the one-eyed trouser snake", but also a foil for the pompous, devious and hypocritical Poms.
When the strips came out as a book, the Australian government banned it because it "relied on indecency for its humour".
By then Humphries' drinking was out of control. In Melbourne in late 1970, he was charged with being drunk and disorderly and was rolled in a city gutter.
He finally admitted himself to a hospital specialising in alcoholism for the treatment that would turn him into a lifelong abstainer.
In 1972 came the first Barry McKenzie film - financially supported by the Australian government, despite the earlier ban.
It was savaged by the critics, largely because they trembled at what the world's first film to feature full frontal vomiting would do to Australia's image overseas.
But it was a popular success sparked a renaissance in the moribund Australian film industry.
A sequel two years later included Gough Whitlam knighting Edna, who was McKenzie's aunt.
Outside Australia, she struggled for a while, with her early London appearances being panned.
Dame Edna was introduced by, on debut, Sir Les ("I'm as full as a bull's bum") Patterson.
The Dame picked out "possums" from the audience and make them squirm - the "Senior" drugged for his evening leave from the twilight home; or for an exchange of confidences, like "My husband has never seen me naked, nor has he expressed the least desire to do so." It ended in a blizzard of gladdies.
It was a huge critical and popular success.
The show bombed in New York. Humphries said: "When the New York Times tells you to close, you close."
Dame Edna was more than Humphries in drag. She was a fully formed character, with family and background, memories and tastes.
Humphries remained wedded to the stage until the very end, even as his health deteriorated.
Humphries married four times. The first, to Melbourne actress Brenda Wright when he was 21, was brief.
He is survived by his wife Lizzie, his children Tessa, Emily, Oscar and Rupert, and 10 beloved grandchildren.
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New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has hailed Australia's embrace of Kiwis as "historic" after about 400,000 of them were offered a pathway to citizenship.
Hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders living in Australia will be eligible to become Australian citizens in July following sweeping changes unveiled by Anthony Albanese.
"It's a "blimmin' good day for Kiwis living in Australia," Mr Hipkins beamed from Rongotai Airport on his way to Brisbane to meet with Mr Albanese.
"This is the biggest improvement in the rights of New Zealanders living in Australia in a generation."
With citizenship, they can access rights they held prior to a 2001 change by John Howard's government.
That includes access to key welfare benefits, student loans, disability support, to public housing, to work for the public service or to serve in the armed forces and to vote.
Australians living in NZ already enjoy all of those benefits, some after waiting times.
The reversion to reciprocal citizenship arrangements comes after years of campaigning by Kiwi governments and politicians of different stripes.
In 2015, then-Labour opposition leader Andrew Little even travelled to Canberra in 2015 to brief an Australian Senate committee on hardships faced by New Zealanders without access to a support net.
Jacinda Ardern returned the issue to the top of the trans-Tasman agenda in Sydney in June last year, when she became the first leader to visit Mr Albanese after his election win.
Shortly after, the pair announced the review of citizenship that has led to this weekend's announcement.
"Successive New Zealand prime ministers have advocated for this change for two decades," Mr Hipkins said.
"Today's announcement brings our nations closer together. It underscores the strength and breadth of the bonds between our countries.
"These changes will make a real and meaningful difference to the lives of many New Zealanders and their children by giving those who decide to take up Australian citizenship similar rights to Australians living in New Zealand."
Ms Ardern told AAP in December she considered it a duty both to care for New Zealanders based overseas and maintain reciprocal relationships.
"We look after our people no matter where they are contributing in the world," she said.
Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil on Saturday said Kiwis were "more like family to us as Australians than friends".
"Yet the law has said that when Kiwis migrate to Australia, they are essentially treated worse and differently than other migrants," she told the ABC.
The scenario was one that failed to "reflect that beautiful close friendship that we have with New Zealand", she said.
Under the changes, children of New Zealanders born in Australia will also become citizens at birth, rather than waiting until they are 10.
The shift has delighted advocates including Joanne Cox, who leads Oz Kiwi, a volunteer group founded a decade ago to campaign against the existing arrangements.
"It's very emotional. It's been a slog," she told AAP, saying she broke down crying when she learned the news.
"It's been demoralising. It's been frustrating. There have been tears and anger over the years and some absolute horror stories along the way.
"But this, it's like a fairytale. The changes they are bringing in is enormous and the impact they will have on so many people is enormous."
On Saturday night, Mr Hipkins and federal treasurer Jim Chalmers - a key supporter of the move - hosted a gala dinner in Brisbane.
The two prime ministers will meet in the Queensland capital on Sunday, visiting a citizenship ceremony and sharing a barbecue to toast the deal.
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New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has hailed Australia's embrace of Kiwis as "historic" after about 400,000 were offered a pathway to citizenship.
The contingent of New Zealand residents living in Australia will be eligible to become Australian citizens in July following sweeping changes unveiled by Anthony Albanese.
"This is the biggest improvement in the rights of New Zealanders living in Australia in a generation," Mr Hipkins said.
With citizenship, New Zealanders in Australia can access rights they held prior to a 2001 change by John Howard's government.
That includes access to key welfare benefits, student loans, disability support, to public housing, to work for the public service or to serve in the armed forces and to vote.
Australians living in New Zealand enjoy all of those benefits, some after waiting times.
The reversion to a reciprocal citizenship arrangements comes after decades of campaigning by Kiwi governments and politicians.
Then Labour opposition leader Andrew Little travelled to Canberra in 2015 to brief an Australian Senate committee on the hardship faced by New Zealanders without access to a support net.
The issue was returned to the top of the trans-Tasman agenda in Sydney last June by Jacinda Ardern when she became the first world leader to visit Mr Albanese after his election win.
Shortly after, the pair announced the review of citizenship that has led to this weekend's announcement.
"Successive New Zealand prime ministers have advocated for this change for two decades," Mr Hipkins said.
"Today's announcement brings our nations closer together. It underscores the strength and breadth of the bonds between our countries.
"These changes will make a real and meaningful difference to the lives of many New Zealanders and their children by giving those who decide to take up Australian citizenship similar rights to Australians living in New Zealand."
Ms Ardern told AAP in December she considered it a duty both to care for New Zealanders based overseas and maintain reciprocal relationships.
"We look after our people no matter where they are contributing in the world," she said.
Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil said on Saturday Kiwis were "more like family to us as Australians than friends".
"Yet the law has said that when Kiwis migrate to Australia, they are essentially treated worse and differently than other migrants," she told ABC TV.
The scenario was one that failed to "reflect that beautiful close friendship that we have with New Zealand", she said.
Under the changes, children of New Zealanders born in Australia will also become citizens at birth, rather than waiting until they are 10.
Mr Albanese said the changes were "consistent with our ambition to build a fairer, better managed and more inclusive migration system".
"Australia and New Zealand have a deep friendship, which has been forged through our history, shared values and common outlook," he said.
"I am proud to offer the benefits that citizenship provides."
The shift has delighted advocates including Joanne Cox, who leads Oz Kiwi, a volunteer group founded a decade ago to campaign against the existing arrangements.
"It's very emotional. It's been a slog," she told AAP, saying she broke down crying when she learned the news.
"It's been demoralising. It's been frustrating. There have been tears and anger over the years and some absolute horror stories along the way.
"But this, it's like a fairy tale. The changes they are bringing in is enormous and the impact they will have on so many people is enormous."
Mr Albanese and Mr Hipkins will meet in Brisbane this weekend.
© AAP 2023
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