Toni Lamond


Patricia Lamond Lawman AM, professionally known as Toni Lamond, is an Australian cabaret singer, stage and television actress, dancer and comedian. She was given the nickname of "Lolly-Legs Lamond" by fellow performer Noel Ferrier after being voted as having the second-best pair of legs in television while appearing on In Melbourne Tonight.

Biography

Lamond was born in Sydney in 1932, as Patricia Lamond Lawman. She began her professional career at the age of ten when she sang on the radio while touring with her vaudevillian parents in variety shows, which included her actress mother Stella Lamond and father Joe Lawman. Her first stage performances were at the Tivoli Theatre in Sydney. Her first performances as a leading lady were with English comedian Tommy Trinder in The Tommy Trinder Show in 1952. She has starred in Australian productions of Oliver!, Annie Get Your Gun, The Pajama Game and ' and was a regular in a number of 1970s television shows such as Number 96 and Graham Kennedy's In Melbourne Tonight. She later compered her own IMT, becoming the first woman in the world to compere a variety television show.
She travelled to the United Kingdom where she appeared in the British night club circuit as well as on BBC-TV and BBC Radio. She also recorded two singles for Philips in London. In the mid 1970s Lamond moved to Los Angeles where she appeared in musicals and television shows. She debuted on the New York stage with Cabaret at the age of 67. In 1986 she made a small appearance on the American crime series Murder, She Wrote in the episode “Murder In The Electric Cathedral” credited as “Ad-Lib Woman”. On her return to Australia in the mid 1990s she performed in shows including 42nd Street, The Pirates of Penzance and My Fair Lady.
In 2007, Lamond featured in Australian film
'. In April–May 2008 she appeared in an autobiographical one-woman show, Times of My Life, at the Seymour Centre in Sydney.
Lamond has written several autobiographical books including, First Half, Along the Way and Still a Gypsy. The first book went to the top of the bestseller list in eight days.
In July 2010 Lamond was a headline act in the inaugural Melbourne Cabaret Festival.
She joined the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra as well as Trisha Crowe, Michael Falzon, Amanda Harrison, Lucy Maunder, Andy Conaghan and others to record I Dreamed A Dream: The Hit Songs Of Broadway for ABC Classics, released on 21 June 2013. Lamond sang "Send in the Clowns" from Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music.

Notable work

Stage

Sources: Austage, IBDB
YearShowRoleNotes
1957The Pajama GameBabe WilliamsAustralasian Tour
1959For Amusement OnlyHerselfTheatre Royal, Sydney
1963WildcatWildcat JacksonPrincess Theatre, Melbourne
1966Oliver!NancyAustralian Tour
1971Anything GoesReno SweeneyRichbrooke Theatre, Sydney
1975GypsyRoseAustralian Tour
1978AnnieVarious USA - Second National Tour
1985Madonna and ChildHerselfPerformed at Off-Broadway Theatre, NSW with Tony Sheldon
198942nd StreetMaggie JonesAustralian Tour
1994Pirates of PenzanceRuthAustralian Tour and 1994 TV Movie
1996My Fair LadyMrs PearceLyric Theatre, Brisbane
1998Dream KitchenBettyOne woman play directed by son, Tony Sheldon
1998FolliesSally Durant PlummerSydney Opera House
2004High SocietyMother LordThe Production Company
2010Love, Loss, and What I WoreVariousSydney Opera House

Awards

Toni Lamond is a recipient of two Logie Awards, including the 1962 Most Popular Victorian Personality. She has received a Variety Club of Australia Award and a Mo Award.
In 1993 she was presented with the Key to the City of Melbourne and in 2000 was included in the 'Honours List of Women Shaping the Nation'.
In 2001 she was awarded the Centenary Medal for
"services to the community through the arts". She was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2003, "for service to the entertainment industry, and to the community through fundraising for a range of organisations, including the Guide Dog Association of New South Wales and ACT."
In 2011 she received the Australian theatre's JC Williamson Award for her contribution to the live performance and theatre industry, alongside fellow actress's Jill Perryman and Nancye Hayes
In 2014 Lamond received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Equity section of the Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance. Actors Equity president Simon Burke says: “Toni is a truly legendary Australian performer whose phenomenal career has spanned vaudeville, musical theatre, television and cabaret. She is also a wonderful human being who has given back to her community, to her colleagues and to her industry in every way she can."

Personal life and family

Lamond has a significant pedigree within the Australian performing arts. She is the daughter of Stella Lamond and Joe Lawman, both vaudeville entertainers. Her parents divorced when she was seven and Stella remarried Max Reddy. She is a half sister to singer Helen Reddy, whom she raised as a surrogate mother while their parents were performing.
She married Frank Sheldon in 1954; however, in 1966 shortly after a separation, he committed suicide. An addiction to prescription drugs followed, and she was a patient at Chelmsford Private Hospital, where she underwent Deep Sleep Therapy. She overcame and publicly discussed the issue in an episode of The Mike Walsh Show, becoming one of the first Australian media personalities to do so.
Her son is actor and writer Tony Sheldon.