Panda Lisner


Panda Lisner was an Australian model and television presenter, most notable for her work during the early days of Australian television.
Lisner is arguably best known for her time as a "barrel girl" on the prize wheel audience-participation segment of the live variety show, In Melbourne Tonight. On 31 August 1966 she joined only a handful of women who filled in as replacement comperes for Graham Kennedy in the first 10 years of that program.

Personal life

She was born in Claremont, Western Australia. Her first marriage to actor Francois Lisner, which produced a son, ended in divorce in 1959. In 1961, Panda Lisner married American entertainer and band leader Jimmy Allan, and they eventually relocated to the United States of America in the late 1960s to work in Las Vegas after obtaining residency permits.
She published her memoirs Surviving Fame: Memoirs of a TV Princess in 2001 through Spectrum books.

Career

After arriving in Melbourne, Lisner worked as a fashion model. She was noticed during in-store parades and chosen in 1957 to represent the Darrods department store in live promotional spots on GTV-9. A year later she signed a contract with Channel 9 that reputedly made her the highest-paid woman on Australian TV.
Apart from In Melbourne Tonight, Lisner also appeared on Astor Showcase, The Bob Dyer Show, The Panda Show, Merry Go Round and The Happy Show and other specials. When working in children’s television she was sometimes styled as “Princess Panda“ and wore a Tiara.

Logie awards

During her television career, she won a number of Logie Awards including the TV Star of the Year Award at the first Australian television awards ceremony in 1959. Lisner was also awarded Logies for being Best Female Personality in 1960, Most Popular Female in 1961 and Most Popular Female in 1963.

Popular culture

Australian actress Kate Doherty portrayed Lisner in the 2007 biographical film about Graham Kennedy, The King.
Lisner moved back to Australia with her husband in 1989 to live in quiet retirement before she died in 2011.
Explaining her decision to drop out and disillusion with contemporary television in 2001, she told journalist Bob Hart, who had rediscovered her:
TV used to look for the best in everything, and everybody. Now it just looks for the cheapest programming. It’s sad. The magic disappeared.

Other references

Category:Australian television presenters
Category:Australian women television presenters
Category:1930 births
Category:2011 deaths