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  1. Lee Robinson OAM (22 February 1923 – 22 September 2003) was an Australian producer, director and screenwriter who was Australia's most prolific filmmaker of the 1950s and part of the creative team that produced the late 1960s international hit television series Skippy the Bush Kangaroo.

  2. Sep 22, 2003 · Lee Robinson OAM (22 February 1923 – 22 September 2003) was an Australian producer, director and screenwriter who was Australia's most prolific filmmaker of the 1950s and part of the creative team that produced the late 1960s international hit television series Skippy the Bush Kangaroo.

  3. Lee Robinson (22 February 1923 – 22 September 2003) was an Australian producer, director and screenwriter who was Australia's most prolific filmmaker of the 1950s and part of the creative team that produced the late 1960s international hit television series Skippy the Bush Kangaroo.

    • Petersham, New South Wales, Australia
    • Sydney, Australia
  4. Discover Lee Robinson (director)'s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 80 years old?

  5. Lee Robinson was born on 22 February 1923 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. He was a producer and writer, known for Adventure Unlimited (1965), Walk Into Hell (1956) and Skippy (1968). He died on 22 September 2003 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

    • Producer, Writer, Director
    • February 22, 1923
    • Lee Robinson
    • September 22, 2003
  6. wiki-gateway.eudic.net · wikipedia_en · Lee_RobinsonLee Robinson (director)

    Lee Robinson (22 February 1923 – 22 February 2003) was an Australian producer, director and screenwriter who was Australia's most prolific filmmaker of the 1950s. Biography. Robinson was born in Petersham and left school aged 12. He worked at the Daily Telegraph has a copy boy, and wrote short stories prior to the war.

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  8. In fact, as Lee Robinson remarked some years later in an interview with Graham Shirley, if the public were aware that a feature film was Australian it meant death at the box-office: ‘To put an Australian tag on it [an Australian feature film] was the worse thing you could do’.

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