logo
June Opitz obituary

June Opitz obituary

The Guardian23-04-2025
My aunt June Opitz, who has died aged 100, spent 50 years in the Northern Territory outback of Australia, first setting up a store and motel that became part of the Kakadu national park, and then at Charles Darwin University, where she finished a PhD aged 84 before returning to her native UK.
It was in 1958 that June became a 'ten pound Pom', sailing from Tilbury Docks. She worked her way across the country before taking a job at the remote Nourlangie safari camp, 300 miles east of Darwin. There, June met Tom Opitz, a crocodile hunter who called her Judy, a name she adopted throughout her time in Australia. They married in 1963, then set up the Cooinda Trading Post and Motel. In 1980 they returned the site to the traditional owners, and it was eventually absorbed into the newly proclaimed Kakadu national park, now a world heritage site.
June was born in London, the fourth of six children of Irene (nee Molesworth) and Charles Rowley, an army captain, and initially lived in Tonbridge Wells, Kent. A brother, Charles, died when he was two.
In 1935, her father died, and the family moved to London, where June attended Glendower school in South Kensington. When she was 16 years old, her mother married Frank Ash, an ex-army captain and friend of June's father. With the onset of the second world war, Glendower was closed and June was sent to stay with friends in Winchester. There, her studies suffered, and she left school without qualifications.
After studying shorthand and typing at a commercial college, June joined the Women's Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) aged 18. She was posted to RAF Bourn in Cambridgeshire with 105 Squadron, where she transported the Mosquito aircrew to and from the dispersal points for flights as well as driving ambulances to crash sites.
Demobbed in 1946, June auditioned for a production of the musical Annie Get Your Gun, and was taken on as a chorus girl. However she got to play Annie on its opening night at the Empire, Liverpool, when the show's star, Barbara Shotter, and her understudy both fell ill.
More acting and other jobs followed, but June yearned to see more of the world. In 1957 she set off overland by bus for India, with a view to getting a boat to Australia. She made it through Europe, Turkey and Persia but became ill with hepatitis so returned to England, sailing to Australia the following year.
Tom died in 1982, and she did a series of access courses that led to a degree in archaeology and anthropology at the Northern Territory University (now Charles Darwin University), followed by her doctorate. She published her autobiography, An English Rose in Kakadu, in 2009.
In 2012 June returned to the UK to live in Cambridge with her sister, before moving into a retirement home in Cambourne, near RAF Bourn.
She remained an honorary fellow at Charles Darwin University. A letter from the university to mark her 100th birthday noted her contribution to widening understanding of the Kakadu national park.
She is survived by seven nephews and nieces.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Yellow Wiggle Greg Page slams Justin Timberlake in 'brutal' TikTok: 'Getting roasted by the OG!'
Yellow Wiggle Greg Page slams Justin Timberlake in 'brutal' TikTok: 'Getting roasted by the OG!'

Daily Mail​

time3 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Yellow Wiggle Greg Page slams Justin Timberlake in 'brutal' TikTok: 'Getting roasted by the OG!'

Yellow Wiggle Greg Page has taken a playful dig at pop star Justin Timberlake. Page posted an exercise video to TikTok on Wednesday in which the 53-year-old can be seen doing push-ups with minimal effort while listening to the superstar's tune Can't Stop the Feeling. In the short clip, Greg can be seen taking little breaks as he listens to a live version of the 2016 hit in which Timberlake stops his vocals to let excited concertgoers take over the song completely. 'When you're working out to your favourite JT song and you are giving as much as he does', he said in his cheeky share. Fans appeared to love the Timberlake diss, with 372 followers commenting on the amusing sledge. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Page posted an exercise video to TikTok on Wednesday in which the 53-year-old can be seen doing push-ups with minimal effort while listening to the superstar's tune Can't Stop the Feeling 'JT catching strays from Greg Page wasn't on my 2025 Bingo Card, but if someone has it, mark it down,' said one user on the thread which has attracted 24.3K 'love' emojis. 'I think I can handle this new JT workout,' joked another follower, while a third added, 'This is how I normally work out… can't believe I haven't seen any results yet 18h ago.' 'Getting roasted by the OG Yellow Wiggle is absolutely brutal,' commented another user. 'Greg you're a legend,' another fan gushed. It comes after Greg revealed revealed that he was returning to show business earlier this year. The former star children's entertainer, who hung up his Yellow Wiggle skivvy back in 2013, was back on stage in March as part of the new musical production of Annie at the Capitol Theatre, Sydney. He plays President Roosevelt for the show which is now playing in Melbourne. Greg says that while he was performed all over the world, tackling a theatre role is very different to being part of a group for children. 'This is very scripted... with the Wiggles we had flexibility and we could improvise,' he told the Canberra Times back in March. 'It's one thing to take a man out of the Wiggles but you can't take the Wiggles out of the man,' Page said. He added: 'I've performed in many theatres, many times in different countries. This is a very different experience.' Greg had been experiencing health difficulties since December 2005, when he underwent a double hernia operation. He was forced to withdraw from the group's 2006 US tour after suffering repeated fainting spells, slurred speech, fatigue, and trembling. After bring diagnosed with a non-life-threatening form of dysautonomia - a hard-to-diagnose chronic illness - Greg decided to step away from the beloved musical act. In doing so he made way for newcomer Sam Moran. After making a return to the Wiggles in 2012, replacing Sam, Greg suffered a near-fatal heart attack while on stage with the group, for a one-off reunion concert at Castle Hill RSL in 2020. A young off-duty nurse in the audience found a defibrillator in the RSL and desperately worked to resuscitate Page while waiting for an ambulance. In his first interview since the attack on radio station 2GB, Greg said he had no warning signs. 'I went happily on my way, Wiggle-d my butt off that night, and nearly didn't make it,' he recounted of the concert. Despite his heart attack, Greg said he still considers himself to be 'fitter' than he's ever been, and said he was carrying more weight when he left The Wiggles in 2013. 'I felt really good. No warning signs, no symptoms, so when the show was coming up, I thought, "Yeah, okay, I'll just walk a little bit harder this morning, go a little bit faster"' he said.

Gregg Wallace speaks out as he's lined up as patron of autism charity after MasterChef axe
Gregg Wallace speaks out as he's lined up as patron of autism charity after MasterChef axe

Daily Mirror

time4 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

Gregg Wallace speaks out as he's lined up as patron of autism charity after MasterChef axe

The TV star says charity boss has been 'a pillar of strength at a very dark time' and has helped him to understand his inappropriate behaviour in the workplace Gregg Wallace is being lined up as a patron of an autism and workplace disability charity - one year after being dropped as ambassador by another one. The fired MasterChef presenter, 60, caught the attention of charity boss Annie Sands, after she read about the investigation into his inappropriate behaviour ordered by the BBC, in which 45 complaints against him were upheld. ‌ Annie approached Wallace to see if Disability Advice and Welfare Network (DAWN) could help him to better understand the condition, after also seeing some of the abusive messages he'd received on social media. ‌ She reasoned: 'People were attacking him and saying he was using his autism as an excuse. I heard someone say 'autistic people don't make inappropriate remarks'. Well, that's a ridiculous thing to say. Come and work with us for a week, you'll hear a lot worse than that. Each autistic person presents differently. ‌ 'This is about what's appropriate in the workplace. It comes down to education, and the ability to make reasonable adjustments." Rob Brydon to reinvent himself as a 'fashion icon' in new £20million BBC show The charity is there to offer help to all those who need it. 'I've seen Gregg's autism report and it screams neurodiversity,' said Annie, 63, who was also diagnosed with the condition later in life. 'We help all those who come to us, everybody deserves support. For me it's about putting Gregg Wallace the celebrity to one side and working with Gregg Wallace the autistic person. ‌ 'As an organisation we are not afraid to stick our head above the parapet - he deserves our help just as much as the next person. We hate injustice, whoever comes to us, we will never turn them away. We have people who are in trouble with the police, or who are in massive debt. Where else are these people going to go? Where else is Gregg Wallace going to go?' Gregg said Annie, who also advocates for those going through workplace disciplinary procedures, had been 'a pillar of strength at a very dark time'. Last night he told the Mirror: 'I've learned so much about autism and my issues in the two weeks that I've been talking to Annie. So much of what she's told me has helped me make sense of my condition - she's made me understand that the persona I learned in Covent Garden fruit and veg market is the same one that I took into the television studios. Everybody loved that version of me. What I've learned is that I still have a lot to learn.' ‌ The former TV star now intends to give support back to the charity. 'I very much want to work with DAWN and hope that I can bring awareness of neurodiversity in the workplace, with all the positives it brings, as well as understanding the issues that may be problematic," he said. "I will do all I can for DAWN in the future to help Annie help others.' His options include becoming an associate for the organisation, which is behind the successful Autism Passport initiative. Last year, the charity Ambitious About Autism dropped Wallace as an ambassador in the wake of the original claims made against him. And Dan Harris, who runs the different charity Neurodiversity in Business, and is himself autistic, said it was true that people like him "may miss social cues" at times. "But autism is not a free pass for bad behaviour," he added. "Comments like this stigmatise us and add an unfortunate negative focus on our community." ‌ Following the investigation into Wallace's behaviour on the cookery series, published earlier this month, BBC bosses said his position as presenter had become 'untenable.' The upheld claims against him included one of unwelcome physical contact and three of being in a state of undress, with the majority for inappropriate language. Annie said that the mistake made by show's producers and the BBC was in not referring Gregg for an occupational health assessment as soon as the first complaints about his inappropriate behaviour were made. 'This would have been picked up and then reasonable adjustments could have been put in place,' she explained. "When I read the BBC report it said 'he believes he's always behaved in this way and it's never been raised as an issue in the past'. And also 'GW seems to lack self awareness in certain matters'. Every employer has a duty of care - somebody must have been aware that this isn't normal behaviour. ‌ 'I think for Gregg he's really tried to fit in but often felt left out. He wants to connect with others and feel accepted.' Wallace said after the findings: 'I recognise that some of my humour and language, at times, was inappropriate. For that, I apologise without reservation.' ‌ Oxford University research psychologist Dr Lucy Foulkes has argued that sexually inappropriate comments are not a symptom of autism. She explained: 'Difficulties and differences in social interactions and communication are a key feature of autism. 'But it's things like having difficulties with the typical 'turn-taking' of conversation, or not feeling comfortable making neurotypical amounts of eye contact, or having difficulties deciphering hidden and implied meaning from people's explicit words. Nothing about autism or any neurodivergence explains why a man would make sexually inappropriate comments.' But Annie feels she fully understands why the presenter has behaved in the ways that he has. 'I've got myself into trouble lots of times for saying things I shouldn't have said. It's not about malice, it's about social communication.' Having read Wallace's autism report, she described it as 'gold standard' and says there is no way that the diagnosis is incorrect. 'It's probably one of the best I've ever read. He would have been born like this, every single person with autism will have some kind of social communication issue - and he's going through all of this in the public eye. In comparison with some of the referrals we get, this is quite mild. 'Gregg's been working without a formal diagnosis for a long time and probably playing the fool to cover his social anxiety.'

Mural of Wrexham icon" Big June painted onto city centre pub
Mural of Wrexham icon" Big June painted onto city centre pub

Leader Live

time4 days ago

  • Leader Live

Mural of Wrexham icon" Big June painted onto city centre pub

Wrexham Pride took place across the city over the weekend and on the eve of the event, artist Sophia Leadill painted a mural of well-known Wrexham figure 'Big June' at the Long Pull pub. Sophia told the Leader that the idea came about through discussions with Long Pull landlady Lisa Lock about how to remember one of their much loved regulars June. After completing the mural on Friday evening, Sophia said the reaction to the piece has been "overwhelming", adding she kept being stopped by residents sharing their memories of June. Sophia said: "The last 24 hours have been crazy and somewhat overwhelming. "I painted Wrexham icon, Big June onto the side of the Long Pull and the response is beyond anything I anticipated. I'd like to say thank you to everyone for the love that's been shared for June, who I wish was here to see this. The mural of Big June during the Wrexham pride after party. (Image: Sophia Leadill) "I'd also like to say a massive thank you to the team at the Long Pull, who are amazing. It was a total pleasure to gift my time and skills. The team were supportive from the start and have been amazing ever since. Originally the plan was for it to be up for two weeks, but I think that plan may have changed now. MOST READ: RECAP: A55 stretch in Flintshire re-opens after crash involving SIX vehicles Iconic mountain pass café now up for sale after sudden closure Councillor issues update on when Newbridge Road is likely to reopen "Hearing about the number of people turning up to see this over the weekend to pay their respects to June has blown my mind. June was a Wrexham icon. She was loved at the Long Pull, one of her regular haunts. The current managers and staff knew her well and adored her. "I wanted to do this on the eve of Wrexham pride. For those that knew June, the reasoning should be obvious. While June was oved by many, she was also shunned and ridiculed by others just for being her authentic self. "I didn't do it for the glory, I did it for the community, June and Wrexham Pride. Having it there on the evening of Wrexham pride just felt really important." For more of Sophia's work, visit @Sophia_Leadill_artist.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store