Robert Tudawali (1929 – 26 July 1967), also known as Bobby or Bob Wilson, was an Australian actor and Indigenous activist. He is known for his leading role in the 1955 Australian film Jedda, a role for which he was specifically chosen by the film's director, Charles Chauvel and his wife Elsa Chauvel, and which made him the first Indigenous Australian film star, Tudawali served as vice-president of the Northern Territory Council for Aboriginal Rights.
The Tudawali Indigenous Film and Television Awards ( Tudawali Awards) continue to recognise his legacy and award outstanding achievements of Indigenous people within the Australian film industry.
Although he had only a basic education in Kahlin Compound in Darwin, Tudawali gained a rich English vocabulary. He was a leading Australian rules footballer as a youth, and he alternated several times between Aboriginal and white society. He used the name Bobby Wilson in Darwin when he travelled there by canoe in the late 1930s, using the surname of his father's employer. He was an orderly with the Royal Australian Air Force, worked briefly in an army store and mechanical workshop, and also as a waiter before becoming an actor.
Under the name Bobby Wilson, he took part in various episodes of the 1960 TV series Whiplash, and featured in the ABC television play Burst of Summer in 1961. It has been argued Tudawali's role in the latter was closest to his real personality.
Tudawali served as vice-president of the Northern Territory Council for Aboriginal Rights in 1966 and, working with activist Dexter Daniels, trade unionist and activist Brian Manning and author Frank Hardy, fought to highlight the poor wages and conditions of Aboriginal stockmen in the Northern Territory, which culminated in the Gurindji strike in 1966.Warren Snowdon, "“Sometime we bin get extra salt on the beef.” Heroes of the Northern Territory", Crikey, http://blogs.crikey.com.au/northern/2012/08/16/sometime-we-bin-get-extra-salt-on-the-beef-heroes-of-the-northern-territory/ Accessed 18 August 2012. Tudawali had organised to give a series of talks to unionists throughout Australia in support of the stockmen when the Northern Territory administration banned any travel by Tudawali due to the tuberculosis he was suffering at the time.
He died of tuberculosis and severe burns at Darwin Hospital on 26 July 1967, following an incident at Bagot where an argument had broken out when he refused to offer his 11-year-old daughter Christine for marriage.
His funeral took place at Nightcliff, Northern Territory.
In about 1993, the Media Resource Centre announced a new award for Indigenous film-making, called the Tudawali Award.
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