Alan Brissenden has been commenting on Australian and international dance since 1950. He currently reviews and writes for the Australian, Dance Australia, the Adelaide Review and Radio Adelaide and edits Brolga, the scholarly journal of the Australian Dance Council (Ausdance). His publications include Shakespeare and the Dance and the Oxford World's Classics edition of Shakespeare's As You Like It as well as numerous essays in books, journals and reference books, including The International Encyclopedia of Dance and The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare. An Honorary Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Adelaide, in 1996 Alan Brissenden was made a member of the Order of Australia for services to the arts.
Keith Glennon served in the Australian Imperial Force before training in classical and modern dance and then working as a theatre technician with J.C. Williamson. To research Australia Dances: Creating Australian dance 1945-1965 he traversed all states, interviewing hundreds of people while gathering material. In 1973 he became the founding administrator of Aborigines Woomera, now known as the Mornington Island Dancers, which tours nationally and internationally. Keith Glennon died before the manuscript reached its final form. Accepted into the Aboriginal community and given the name Warrkuthulin (whirlywind), he lies buried on Mornington Island.