The National Museum of Australia has acquired more than 800 objects from Norman Hetherington’s extensive archive of artworks, scripts, sets and puppets, including beloved children’s television puppet Mr Squiggle and his friends.
Your donation to the Annual Appeal will enable us to care for the collection and share these remarkable objects with the world. An exhibition featuring Mr Squiggle and his friends is in development for 2025.
Mr Squiggle and Friends
The puppet with a pencil for a nose and his friends, including Blackboard, Rocket, Bill Steamshovel and Gus the Snail, entertained and delighted countless Australian children over the show’s 40-year history.
Norman Hetherington
Norman Hetherington (29 May 1921 – 6 December 2010) was an artist, performer and puppeteer and one of the most significant figures in 20th century Australian cultural life.
Hetherington’s creative career spanned the heyday of commercial art, the contribution of theatrical performance to morale during the Second World War, and the development of a distinctively Australian puppetry movement.
Present at the birth of Australian television, Hetherington was a major participant in its growth over more than 50 years.
Generations of Australian children were delighted and inspired to draw by Mr Squiggle, one of the nation’s longest-running and most beloved television series, and thousands more were entertained by Hetherington’s theatrical performances, television productions and live puppet shows.
Mr Squiggle at the Museum
Mr Hetherington’s daughter, known to many Australians as ‘Miss Rebecca’, was the last presenter of the show and cared for her father’s archive before offering it to the National Museum of Australia to establish the Norman Hetherington collection.
Katherine McMahon, National Museum director, 2024:
‘We are grateful and humbled by Rebecca Hetherington’s decision to entrust this treasured collection to the care of the National Museum. The acquisition will become a highlight of the National Historical Collection and will be cherished by us and the rest of the country,’ Ms McMahon said.
Read the media release.
Digitised records for the collection are being added to the Museum’s website.
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Mr Squiggle (detail), 1959. All image credits: National Museum of Australia