Background
Halesworth was born in Brisbane to Iris Kemp and her insurance husband salesman, Regional Kemp. Regional left the family not long after Tanya"s birth. Her mother remarried and had three sons.
Halesworth was born in Brisbane to Iris Kemp and her insurance husband salesman, Regional Kemp. Regional left the family not long after Tanya"s birth. Her mother remarried and had three sons.
Tony Stephens wrote in his obituary that "during her time on television, hers was one of the most recognisable faces in Australia". The family moved to Sydney and Tanya went to Darlinghurst Primary School and then the selective Sydney Girls High School. In 1951, she was vice-captain of the school.
She taught in primary schools for three years, as well as acting with small theatre companies and working on television commercials.
Christine Hogan, speaking on women in the media, described her as "a school teacher with a dramatic bent". By 1961 her work for the American Broadcasting Company included the show Six O"Clock Rock.
At the same time she was studying for an arts degree at Sydney University and performing in Clare Boothe Luce"s The Women at the Independent Theatre. Halesworth left the American Broadcasting Company in 1962 to join Channel Seven to host a tenpin bowling program
Foreign the next two years she worked on shows such as Talking Point as well as continuing to perform on stage.
One of her roles during this time was Juliet in Peter Ustinov"s comedy Romanoff and Juliet. In 1964, having graduated with a first class honours bachelor of arts degree from Sydney University, she went to England where she hosted Granada Television"s program The Headliners. Bailey and Halesworth worked for Channel Ten in Sydney and then Melbourne.
From 1965 to 1968, she co-produced with Bill Peach a current affairs show on Channel Ten called Telescope.
Peach also anchored the show with Halesworth being one of the reporters, alongside Ken Cook and Tony Ward. From 1979 to 1980 she hosted American Broadcasting Company"s Sunday Spectrum program which was compendium style show comprising a varying mix of documentaries, music, and visiting guests.
She also worked on Channel Ten"s Good Morning Australia (breakfast television). During the 1980s, Halesworth tutored at Macquarie University and completed a master"s degree in philosophy, doing her thesis on Karl Marx.
She moved into public relations and management, and managed the career of Australian swimmer Tracey Wickham.
Her last career was as a psychologist. John Bailey died in 1998, and Halesworth moved back to Queensland, living first in the Gold Coast and then the Sunshine Coast where she kept practising as a psychologist until becoming ill in late 2007.