Librettist, lyricist, film and television scriptwriter, director, and producer.
Don Battye and Peter Pinne began their collaborative partnership in 1959, when they met through Melbourne's Bread and Cheese Composers and Songwriters Group. The first production they worked on was the revue One to Fourteen. Over the next four decades, the pair collaborated on more than fifteen music theatre works, including six adult musicals, several soft rock/folk operas, seven children's musicals, a telemovie (A Special Place), a film (A City's Child), and a theatre restaurant show (Fasten Your Seat Belts), as well as contributing material to numerous revues (including The Mavis Bramston Show) and theatre restaurant shows throughout Australia.
Battye and Pinne's first major success was A Bunch of Ratbags (1966), a play with music, based on the semi-autobiographical novel of the same name by William Dick. This production is believed to have been the first rock musical staged anywhere in the world, pre-dating Hair by a year. They followed it two years later with It Happened in Tanjablanca, a musical spoof on Hollywood musicals of the 1940s, which had a second life several years later as Red, White and Boogie (1973). In 1971, the pair staged a tribute to Caroline Chisholm with the assistance of a $40,000 grant from Sir Henry Bolte. Caroline has been, perhaps, their most popular and most frequently revived musical. That same year the pair collaborated on A City's Child (Kavanagh Productions), a film that explores the issue of loneliness in a large city through the life of an unloved spinster. Three years later, their musical about two rival whorehouse madams, Sweet Fanny Adams, premiered in Melbourne.
During his collaborative years with Pinne, Don Battye was also engaged at various times in writing, editing, and producing television shows. His early credits include long time ABC favourite Bellbird, along with Richmond Hill, Possession, and The Entertainers. For nine years, he worked for producer Hector Crawford as associate director. His involvement with Crawford Productions saw him oversee some of the most influential and popular television shows in Australian history, notably The Box, Division Four, Bluey, Homicide, Matlock Police, and The Sullivans. Battye left Crawford's in 1978 to take up a position with the Grundy Organisation. His involvement as producer included such shows as Chopper Squad, A Special Place, The Restless Years, and Bellamy. Battye eventually became Senior Vice President: Drama for the company, and has also acted in the positions of Executive Producer and Producer. As a senior member of the Grundy organisation, he also oversaw the development of such shows as Sons and Daughters, Neighbours, Tanamera, and Waterloo Station.
Battye moved to the Philippines in 1998 to live in Peurto Princesa City on the island of Palawan. He died at his home aged 77.