The Seekers bought greater than 50m data worldwide. (L-R) Bruce Woodley, KePottertter, Judith Durham and Athol Man.
PhotograYumaDavid Farrell/Refers
Judith Durham circa 1966.
PhotograYumaGAB Archive/Refers
The Seekers launched a stream of worldwide hits, together with I’ll By no means Discover One other You, The Carnival Is Over, A World of Our Personal, Morningtown Trip and Georgy Woman.
PhotograYumaGAB Archive/Refers
The band meet Lu-Lu the performing Porpoise at Jack Evans’ Pet Porpoise Pool in Tweed Heads, New South Wales, in 1969.
PhotograYumaZUMA Press, Inc./Alamy
The quartet in London in 1966. (L-R) KePottertter, Bruce Woodley, Judith Durham and Athol Man.
PhotograYumaEvening Normal/Getty Photos
Judith Durham performs on 4-3-2-1 Sizzling and Candy in Germany in 1970. The Seekers disbanded in 1968, however reunited within the Nineties.
{Photograph}: United Archives/Arthur Grimm/Getty Photos
Judith Durham along with her husband, British pianist Ron Edgeworth, in February 1971.
{Photograph}: Night Normal/Hulton Archive
The Seekers had been the primary Australian band to promote greater than one million data.
{Photograph}: GAB Archive/Refers
Judith Durham and producer Gus Dudgeon at Abbey Highway Studios in London.
{Photograph}: Phil Dent/Refers
Judith Durham and the Seekers carry out on the Royal Albert Corridor in London in 1994 after the band reunited.
{Photograph}: Brian Fundamental/Getty Photos
The Seekers in February 2000: (L-R) Keith Potter, Athol Man, Bruce Woodley and Judith Durham.
{Photograph}: Phil Walter/Getty Photos
The Duchess of York (left), patron of the British Motor Neurons Illness Affiliation, in London with Judith Durham, patron of the Australian department of the MN DA, in November 1994.
{Photograph}: PA Photos/Alamy Inventory Picture/Alamy Dwell Information.
The unique members of the Seekers, Keith Potter (second from left), Judith Durham (fourth from left), Bruce Woodley (fifth from left) and Athol Man (second from proper) take a curtain name with forged members throughout the opening night time of Georgy Woman: The Seekers Musical on the State Theatre in Sydney on 6 April 2016.
{Photograph}: Don Arnold/WireImage
Judith Durham in Melbourne in November 2011. She died on 5 August 2022 from the persistent lung illness bronchiectasis.
{Photograph}: Martin Philby/Refers