Memorial

John Laws
John Laws — known across Australia as "The Golden Tonsils" — was the most listened-to, most influential and most enduring voice in the history of Australian radio. Born Richard John Sinclair Laws on 8 August 1935 in the gold-mining town of Wau in Papua New Guinea, he was evacuated to Australia during World War Two and grew up in Sydney, attending Mosman Preparatory School and Knox Grammar School before contracting polio twice in his youth. Against every odd, he launched a broadcasting career at 3BO Bendigo in 1953 and never looked back.
By 1957 Laws had arrived at 2UE in Sydney, where his distinctive baritone, warmth and unerring instinct for public mood turned him into a phenomenon. Over four separate stints at 2UE, plus years at 2GB, 2UW and 2SM, he became synonymous with the sound of Sydney mornings. His syndicated program reached nearly one hundred stations across Australia, attracting two million listeners at its peak — a figure that made him, at one stage, reportedly the highest-paid radio broadcaster in the world. Management at 2UE presented him with a golden microphone to mark the achievement. Former Prime Minister Paul Keating, at Laws' fortieth anniversary dinner, crowned him "the broadcaster of the century."
Laws pioneered talkback radio in Australia and helped shape it into the powerful political and cultural force it became. His interviews with prime ministers, premiers and public figures were considered genuinely consequential — leaders knew that reaching Laws' audience meant reaching the nation. He was inducted into the Australian Media Hall of Fame and received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2008 ARIA Music Awards. Alongside broadcasting, he released nine singles, eight solo albums and several books of poetry and prose.
His private life was marked by the same devotion he gave his listeners. In 1976 he married Caroline Hagon — the woman he called "the Princess" — in a ceremony at All Saints Woollahra. They had met as teenagers at a dance in 1951 and reunited decades later. He spoke of her endlessly on air, and her death from ovarian cancer in 2020 was one of his deepest losses. Laws made his final broadcast on 8 November 2024, closing with Roger Miller's Less of Me — a song he had used to sign off for decades — and thanking his listeners for 71 years of company. He died peacefully at home in Woolloomooloo on 9 November 2025, aged 90, surrounded by his family.
- Date of birth:
- August 8, 1935
- Date of death:
- November 9, 2025
- Place of birth:
- Wau, Papua New Guinea
- Place of death:
- Sydney
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In memory of John Laws
From the Memoriance team
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