Screenwriter and producer.
Ron McLean was born in Rose Bay, Sydney, but grew up largely in Campbelltown, in Sydney's western suburbs, until his mid-teens. He was edicated at Trinity Grammar School and Scots College, as well as the University of Sydney and the University of Canberra, including involvement in the Sydney University Dramatic Society.
According to the address given by his father-in-law at his funeral (reproduced by Stephen Vagg with permission of the family), he was raised in the Jewish faith.
McLean wrote scripts for more than 20 Australian television series, including such well-known shows as Skippy (1969), Woobinda: Animal Doctor, (1970), The Rovers (1970), Division 4 (1969), Spyforce (1971), Homicide (1971), Barrier Reef (1972), Ryan (1973), Silent Number (1974), Chopper Squad (1978), Prisoner (1979), Glenview High (1979), and Bellamy (1981).
McLean also operated his own production companies: South Pacific Films and Ron McLean Productions. He produced the telemovies The Little Feller, Air Hawk, and Outbreak of Hostilities, which appeared posthumously, as well as the television programs Spyforce, Human Target, Silent Number, Case for the Defence, and Glenview High.
McLean was also one of a team of four people who wrote children's books under the name of Mary Elliott.
He died of a heart attack in July 1983, but which point he had written some 450 hours of Australian television in a career that lasted a little over a decade.