Betty Misheiker
Betty Misheiker (1919-2015) was a writer and producer of educational material for children.
Contents
Biography
She was born in Pretoria (South Africa) on 7th June 1919, the youngest of four children. Her primary years were spent in Brits and Johannesburg (South Africa).
Having moved back to Johannesburg from Brits, she worked at a variety of jobs, including working as a dental nurse, a doctor's receptionist, a secretary for an underwear manufacturing company and - during the war - working part-time as an ambulance driver for the mines.
She met and married her husband, the newspaper editor Ronnie Misheiker, in South Africa and they weremarried for 55 years. The couple raised a family which consisted not only of their own immediate children but, those of her sister who had passed away (in her 30’s). In this context it was inevitable that she discovered her writing talents.
Over the course of her new career as author and composer, she
Betty and Ronnie made a dedicated move to Jerusalem, Israel, in 1979 where Betty continued to produce material for major TV networks and publications. She passed away at the age of 96 in Jerusalem in 2015.
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
She contributed material for radio, TV, children's theatre, puppet shows and so on in South Africa over many years. Her stories and songs cover a wide range of topics, all dealing with educational subjects pertaining to children's daily lives.
Her English children's plays include The Old Kabobly Tree, Jack and the Turtle-doves (1975),
Her numerous songs over the years include many English and even some original Afrikaans songs such as the well-known “Ek’s ’n dapper muis”, “Almal dra ’n jas”, “Die lappop”, “Ek is ’n eensame krokodil” en “Sal jy dit glo”
Sources
http://www.bettymisheiker.com/pages/intro.html
https://www.sajr.co.za/many-still-remember-betty-misheiker/
George Ballot scrapbooks. (Provisionally held in the ESAT Archive, with the kind permission of Prof Muller Ballot[1] and consulted 2024-1925).
Notes in PACT Children's Theatre Programme for Jack and the Turtle-Doves (1968).
Go to the ESAT Bibliography
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