Tuesday, January 28, 2025

VALE NORMA ROBERTSON - Musical Director and accompanist extraordinaire.

 

Norma Robertson at the School of Arts Cafe in 1989 

NORMA ROBERTSON – 21st March 1941 – 8th January 2025 - Musical Director and Accompanist Extraordinaire.

Friends gathered at the Canberra Repertory Theatre recently to celebrate and reminisce about the life of one of their most admired and respected members, Norma Robertson, who died earlier in the month.

A life member of Canberra Repertory, Norma was best known to the wider community as the brilliant pianist and Musical Director for Canberra Repertory’s Old Time Music Halls.

For 26 years she and fellow pianist, Andrew Kay delighted audiences with their unique skills as duo-pianists.    

What set Norma apart from most other musical directors was her ability to play by ear, transpose any song instantly, often mid-song if necessary, and her inexhaustible good humour during rehearsals.

I learned this during my very first production, “Stairway to the Stars”, a revue I directed for the Griffith Amateur Musical Revue Company in 1958 and for which Norma - then a 16-year-old schoolgirl who had passed all her AMEB examinations - was my Musical Director.

She would be my musical director for five of my shows, until she won a scholarship to the Wagga Teacher’s College in 1961.

After graduating she married director Ross McGregor and they settled in Gundagai where in addition to Ross directing a series of theatrical productions, they produced four children.

In 1973 Ross McGregor was appointed artistic director of Canberra Repertory and in 1974 Norma McGregor, as she had become, was teamed with local dentist, Andrew Kay, to provide the musical direction for the inaugural Old Time Music Hall.

By 1976, having established my family in Queanbeyan, I directed a revue, Up Tempo, for Tempo Theatre, my first production in Canberra and the Kay/McGregor duo became my musical directors.

In 1986, my wife Pat, son Tim, and I purchased the School of Arts Café in Queanbeyan, which soon became the longest-established full-time cabaret venue in Australia.

Norma was now Norma Robertson, having married Graham Robertson in 1980, and agreed to be accompanist for a season at the café with American lounge singer, Connie Strait, whose talent for being able to sing just about any song from the Great American Songbook, was a perfect match for Norma’s ability to play just as many of them.

   

A poster on the School of Arts Cafe wall featuring a review of Connie and Norma's show.


After Connie returned to America in 1987, Norma, by now raising eight children (as the result of blending her four with Graham’s four) continued as accompanist whenever she could.

She resolutely refused to perform a solo in any of the shows, preferring to provide a safe and supportive ambiance for the artist she was accompanying.

But she did appear in group shows, including numerous editions of the annual Bull N Bush Christmas Parties, where she could hold her own as an entertainer with the best of them.


The cast of the 1992 Bull & Bush Christmas Party
Alan Cope - Graham Robertson - Kirsty McGregor - Norma Robertson - Rosemary Hyde


In their 1989 show, I Love a Piano, she and Kay showcased their duo-piano skills, with polished narration, as she did when accompanying Jon Finlayson and Jon Stephens for their 1998 Flanagan and Allen show, Underneath the Arches.

Nothing if not a perfectionist, Norma Page-McGregor-Robertson, didn’t abide fools gladly, but neither was she dictatorial. Rather, she was a wise and knowledgeable mentor, whose counsel was sought and respected by every artist with whom she worked.

BILL STEPHENS


                                                         Photos by Robert Roach.


An edited edition of this article first published in the digital edition of  CITY NEWS on 27.01.25