Patricia Anne Crocker professionally known as Patti Crocker, was an Australian actress associated with the "golden days of radio in Australia", who also appeared in theatre and on television, primarily in soap opera and commercial advertisement's. She was the author of a memoir detailing her life and career on both radio and subsequently on television.
Early life
Crocker was born in Bankstown, Sydney, the daughter of Edna May Crocker and upholsterer Roy Samuel Crocker. She was educated at Bankstown North Public School and Meriden Church of England Girls Grammar School, Strathfield. At her parents' insistence, she entered the stream for the academically inclined and passed her Leaving Certificate exams in 1948, though without distinction. Her mother was anxious that she not inherit her own shyness, and accordingly received elocution training from Grace Buist and Harry Thomas and studied piano under Eileen Hanley. She entered, or was entered for, eisteddfods from the age of eight, usually for "humorous recitation", or piano solo,, culminating in that of 1941, when she won "Best Entertainer" at an eisteddfod in Sydney against adult performers, and received high praise from the judge.
Radio
In 1941 she was a guest on the Youth Show, sponsored by Colgate-Palmolive, which first went to air on radio 2GB on 27 July 1940, and became a regular shortly after, with Peggy Hamilton as a comedy duo "Null and Void". Her first radio acting job was as "Dolly" in the serial Budge for the Australian Broadcasting Commission's Children's Session from around June 1942, followed by juvenile roles in The Poltergeist and Christa Winsloe's Children in Uniform, which won the Macquarie Award for Catherine Duncan. She also played stage parts: as "Agnes" in William Saroyan's The Beautiful People at Bryant's Playhouse in 1946 and "Adela", the headstrong youngest daughter in Lorca's The House of Bernarda Alba, at the Metropolitan Theatre in 1951. Her most enduring role was as "Mandy Gordon", the cheeky youngest daughter of "Dr Neil Gordon" in Gwen Meredith's Blue Hills, the long-running serial on ABC radio. Her part ran from to 1949 to 1952, when her character married "Dr Frobisher", played by Max Osbiston, and never reappeared. In real life she was about to sail with Ruth Cracknell to London, but from her return to Australia in 1953 she made frequent guest appearances in a variety of minor roles, and was one of the few who played in both the first and last episodes. Another radio play of note in which she appeared was White Coolies, by Betty Jeffrey, adapted in 52 episodes by Gwen Friend, sister of Donald Friend, and starring Ruth Cracknell and June Salter.
Television
With the advent of television in Australia in the mid-1950s, sponsorship for quality radio drama dried up, and radio stations moved to quiz shows, talkback, and popular music programming. Local TV production at first centred on advertising, of which lucrative market Crocker had her share, but success in drama largely eluded her, perhaps on account of her diminutive stature, until she was cast as "Eileen Chester", a woman with two errant daughters, Debbie and Jane Chester in serial Number 96. Her character's life ended with a shark attack in Queensland. Other TV credits included the serials The Outsiders, Luke's Kingdom, Matlock Police, Homicide and Riptide, as well as the TV movieWhite Man's Legend
Film production
In the early 1980s Crocker was involved as a producer on Jess, a movie that was to star Australians Diane Cilento and Ed Devereaux. It was to be set in the Depression and drought years of 1930s Australia. Financed by the Film Finance Corporation Australia and with European funding, the movie was never made.
Family life
Crocker married David Davies in 1958 and the couple had a son Michael in 1960. Patricia Davies died in Leura, New South Wales, in 1992.