Hunting the Famous by William John Stapleton will be available through Amazon and other major digital publishers shortly. This is is an extract.
Faces along the
bar
Cling to their average day:
The lights must never go out,
The music must always play,
All the conventions conspire
To make this fort assume
The furniture of home;
Lest we should see where we are,
Lost in a haunted wood,
Children afraid of the night
Who have never been happy or good.
Cling to their average day:
The lights must never go out,
The music must always play,
All the conventions conspire
To make this fort assume
The furniture of home;
Lest we should see where we are,
Lost in a haunted wood,
Children afraid of the night
Who have never been happy or good.
W.H. Auden
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Former Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke Courtesy NNDB Tracking the Entire World |
Everyone loved Bob.
Bob Hawke, Australian Prime Minister from 1983 to 1991,
enjoyed for a sustained period of time enviable approval ratings – during the
1980s the highest ever for an Australian Prime Minister. He led the Australian
Labor Party to four successive election victories and to this day remains the
left’s longest serving leader.
“Hawkie”, as he was often known, was the Sydney taxi driver’s
politician of choice.
He wasn’t just another working class hero, many of the
Australian population genuinely felt that Hawke was one of their own, an
ordinary person with their interests at heart. And such a person, after a
string of upper class residents, was finally living in the official residence,
The Lodge.
There were celebrations across Sydney when Hawkie trumped the
opposition with a lightning dash, becoming Prime Minister less than four weeks
after overthrowing former Opposition leader Bill Hayden.
The Liberal leader’s attempt to exploit disarray in the Labor
Party by calling a snap election backfired and the charismatic former union
leader led his party to a landslide victory.
Like many a journalist I somehow thought of the taxi drivers
of the city as the voice of the common man.
I wasn’t the first and certainly wouldn’t be the last
reporter, lazy or pressed for time, to grab a quote from the taxi driver on the
way back from a job. And then include the quote in the story so it sounded like
I had just surveyed half the country and discovered the common sense voice of
the working man.
Bob was clever in a nation which regarded cleverness with
suspicion.
Hawkie had won a prestigious Rhodes’ Scholarship to Oxford
University in England as a young man and risen rapidly through the union and
political ranks, leapfrogging off his decade long tenure as President of the
Australian Council of Trade Unions to become PM within three years of entering
Parliament.
But often enough you would never have known Bob had any more neurons
than the Average Joe.
Australia is a country where cleverness is confused with
pretentiousness and Hawkie wasn’t about to let the voters know he had ever read
a book or could see straight through them in a micro-flash.
Instead he adopted the camouflage of the good bloke, an Australian
male of working class origins.
It was part act, part truth.
Bob Hawke smoked, drank to excess, loved a party, a brawl, a
fine curvy woman, he swore like a trooper and bulldozed his way through any
given situation. Like many Australian men.
And he almost always got what he wanted.
Australians loved him. That he was clever was forgiven or
forgotten.
The most urbanized country in the world, Australia is
essentially a land of suburbs. Hawke was famous for going to the shopping malls
of the country’s outer areas and shaking hands with anyone and everyone he met.
And if someone wanted to verbally attack him over some real or perceived
injustice, as invariably happens when politicians expose themselves to the
public in unscripted scenarios, Bob would stand his ground, promise to look
into it or swear to their face he would take on board what they were saying.
Hawk’s successor Paul Keating always dismissed Bob Hawke’s
“shopping mall” antics as cheap, tawdry populism. Unlike Bob, Keating also made
the mistake of ridiculing the media as a bunch of low life grubs. Partly as a
consequence, Keating experienced some of the lowest popularity ratings of any
Australian Prime Minister on record.
Hawke’s shopping mall circuses were a vital part of how he
won elections; a fact Keating never grasped.
Successive Prime Ministers would emulate Hawke. None were
ever as successful.
When Bob Hawke committed troops to the first Iraq War, a
controversial move in a country which had seen too many of its young men die in
distant wars for the benefit of other nations, he slickly purloined what was an
electoral risk into an issue of national pride.
To question the country’s commitment to Iraq was to denigrate,
as the spin went, some of the world’s finest soldiers.
Having neatly survived the country’s natural anti-war
sentiment post-Vietnam - and as common Australian decency would dictate -Bob
Hawke went down to the docks on the day the first troops were being sent off to
war, ignoring the band of protestors outside the naval yards.
Hawke lingered on the ship for hours, shaking the hands of
every soldier he laid eyes on and wishing them all good luck.
After the official proceedings were over, Hawke wandered the battle
ship decks, cheerfully posing with the proud families of the soldiers.
I followed the Prime Minister, his circling minders and his
ever despairing security around the battle ship.
In that Arcadian world prior to the Twin Towers turning
security worldwide on its head, Hawke wasn’t the type of Prime Minister to hide
behind a screen of Federal Police and National Security personnel.
Follow in Hawke’s wake as a reporter and virtually all one
ever found were fans. And so it proved on the day the country sent the first
contingent of soldiers off to Iraq. Nobody had the common touch like Bob.
“Hawkie shook my hand, he touched me here, he kissed me on
the cheek, I’m not going to shower for a week,” one of the mothers clutching
children gushed.
“He asked after my grandmother, he remembered her from the
teachers union, and said he was sorry to hear she had passed away,” another
would throw in.
“He wanted to know the names of my children. He posed for a
picture with them. When I told him one of the kids was sick, he said he knew an
asthma expert, and would get one of his staff to send me the details.”
All of this and more from the devoted constituents left in
his wake. Hawke didn’t win four elections in a row without a natural gift for
electioneering.
Outside the heavily fortified Australian Navy docks at
Woolloomooloo protestors waved placards and chanted anti-war slogans- to little
affect.
Journalism dignifies the extremities of any debate, often
quoting the opposition view to achieve a semblance of balance, even if that
view is only held by a handful of lunatics.
Often enough the holders of extreme or minority views are quoted
simply because they add color and tension to a story.
During the days when Sydney’s Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras was
still controversial rather than the city institution it is today, we would
always quote the Reverend Fred Nile for example for his consistent attacks the
parade.
In fact Fred Nile’s views, far from being widespread in the
community, were representative of the few thousand members of the
fundamentalist Christian tradition to which he belonged.
Critics like to dismiss Australia as a country of rednecks
and homophobes. But most Australians couldn’t care less who was doing what to
whom, as long as it’s not to them. The anti-war protestors weren’t getting a
say, however, on the day the soldiers were sent off to Iraq. Despite their spirited
efforts they got almost zero media coverage. Hawke had starved them of media
oxygen and once again stolen the limelight.
The fact that he was sending soldiers to a dangerous and far
off place where Australia had little business being was lost in a wave of engineered
nationalism.
That Hawke may have been risking the lives of his country’s own
citizens purely to support the American Alliance – at a time when much of the
population actively disliked the braggarts across the pond - was lost.
Opposition to the war subsided in the polls.
The manipulation of public opinion was just one of Bob
Hawke’s many talents.
He had long been renowned as a heavy drinker. His academic successes
at Oxford University were complemented by the setting of a world speed record
for beer drinking, a feat for which he gained entry into The Guinness Book of
Records.
Australians loved their Hawkie even more when he told the
nation in the lead-up to the 1983 election that if he became Prime Minister he
would stop drinking.
The Australia of the day lived by the motto: “Never Trust a
Man Who Doesn’t Drink.”
Heavy drinking was part of the culture and part of the
Australian way of life.
In what other country would a promise of abstaining from excessive
consumption made by someone running for the highest office in the land be
regarded with such admiration?
It was a promise Hawke would keep, much to some people’s amazement.
Australia being essentially a nation of beer drinkers, the
dust stained workers perched on the bar stools after work took to commenting on
how clever Hawkie was; how he had a Rhode Scholarship or something; but even so
he was a decent bloke, the highest compliment one Australian male can pay
another.
There was speculation that Hawke attended closed Alcoholics
Anonymous meetings for high ranking government officials during his time in the
nation’s capital.
True or not; his anonymity was respected. His confessions, if
he ever made any, did not become the subject of common gossip.
Years after he ceased being Prime Minister, a photographer
and I were sent to cover a function in Eastern Sydney for the launch of
something or other, a book, a restaurant chain, a new line of doilies, an
inoffensive new charity for the ladies who lunch. In the end the launches merge
into one another.
It was one of those leisurely, well catered for events where
someone had thrown $50,000 on the table for expenses and considered it easy money
well spent.
Everyone was well dressed. Except of course for the
journalists and the photographers; the city’s riff-raff.
Hawke, like many politicians, knew half of Sydney’s media
pack by name, he made a point of it, and even now, years after he lost the
leadership, he knew exactly how to play them.
After the launch of whatever it was, lunch was served. The
media were placed at a table well away from the main guests so they wouldn’t
spill anything on the neatly starched table cloths or overhear a confidence no
one wanted to be read in the next day’s papers.
Bob as always was prominently situated near the podium.
As far as pulling a living legend was concerned, having Bob
at your function was about as “good a get” as a society hostess could pull off.
And as always, Hawkie knew everybody and was perfectly at
home in the upper echelons of Australian society.
This was the refined, clever, upper crust Hawke the general
public never saw.
This was the man the nation’s taxi drivers, builders
laborers, electricians and hard-working masses didn’t vote for; because they
thought they were voting for one of their own kind.
With all the charm and discretion for which the media are
known, the Sydney Morning Herald photographer pulled off a string of shots of
Bob drinking what looked suspiciously like alcohol.
He was no longer Prime Minister, having been replaced by the
knife edged Italian suits draping Paul Keating’s elegant form, but to
everyone’s knowledge he had maintained his pledge of abstinence.
Hawkie holding a glass what looked like white wine was the
first public sign that The Big Dry had ended.
All of those lay-it-on-thick sympathy articles in the Women’s
Weekly or wherever for his long suffering wife Hazel, who was admired more than
any other Australian Prime Minister’s wife before or since, went down the tube.
The country’s women sympathised with Hazel for all those long
nights alone caring for the children, waiting for her husband to come home from
the office or whatever function Bob happened to be attending – including all those
boozy late night Australian Labor Party dinners where drinking to excess was
more or less compulsory.
And Hazel was much admired for her dignified look-the-other-way
response as Hawke’s womanizing became the subject of gossip.
The story of Hazel’s quiet heroism and Bob’s self-sacrifice disappeared
with the first photograph of Bob holding a glass of “piss”, as Australians so
elegantly call wine.
The Sydney Morning Herald where I then worked loved the story
of the end of The Big Dry.
A common place launch of nothing in particular I was hopeful
I wouldn’t have to file a single word on suddenly turned into a front page
story - thanks to an enterprising photographer.
Wrung out from so many other hundreds of stories, I wished
the photographer had kept their lens cap on.
In a dreary afternoon under fluorescent lights I was obliged
to ring everyone even remotely connected to the story and the luncheon, from
experts on alcoholism to the event’s caterers.
Hawke’s press person declared that he had no idea where Bob
was and that as he was no longer Prime Minister and now a private citizen his
location wasn’t a reporter’s concern.
The helpful little press person promptly turned off his phone
after I barraged him with calls.
Former Australian Prime Ministers receive ample benefits costing
the taxpayer hundreds of thousands of dollars annually, but don’t expect them
to answer any questions in return.
The pictures of Bob drinking white wine, spread across the
top of the front page proofs, looked fantastic.
The problem, the editors declared, was it could possibly be
non-alcoholic white wine. It seemed unlikely. It was certainly news to me that there
was any such a thing.
I rang the caterers. They weren’t prepared to discuss. No,
they couldn’t possibly put me on to the waiter who had been serving Hawke - they
were casuals and had dispersed.
No, the head waiter could not comment and no, they couldn’t
possibly pass on any of the staff’s numbers, a question of confidentiality.
The emphasis on individual privacy as a right and its progressive
enshrining in legislation has become the bane of working journalist’s lives, making
their jobs more difficult over time.
The restaurant delivered up the same story as the caterers:“Sorry,
everybody’s gone home now. No, I don’t have anyone’s number. No, I’m so sorry,
I would like to help but I just can’t. Best of luck with it.”
Non-alcoholic white wine!?
Would someone like Hawke even drink such a thing? Was it even
available in Australia? And if it was, what a nightmare assignment for some
marketer that must have been!
Prior to the advent of Google, there weren’t any lightning
fast computer searches which would reveal every major reference to such an
oddity as the sales of non-alcoholic white wine in Australia in 0.24 seconds. The
only references I could find were obscure.
The principal wine merchants were all bemused. Some suggested
they had heard of such a thing but had no idea where to buy it.
As day turned to night there was only one thought on my mind
– “I want to go home”. Lunch was an increasingly long time ago.
Journalism might seem like an interesting line of work, but
just being under the fluorescent lights of a news room and the marauding layers
of Chiefs of Staff, Editors in Chief, news editors and night editors, to name a
few, increases stress levels magnificently.
Journalism is a high burnout high turnover profession and
only the naturals, misfits or hardheads survive past the first three years. The
rest of the annual throngs of eager young cadets soon leave for bigger offices,
more respect and considerably better salaries in corporate public relations.
As night fell outside the Fairfax
building – which to the amusement of the journalists working there never made
it onto the SMH’s annual the list of Sydney’s Ten Ugliest buildings - and the
brewery on the other side of eight lanes of traffic lit up for the night shift,
the editors continued to wring their hands over the possibility of being sued
if the paper went with the Bob Drinks Again story.
Hawkie might have been all bonhomie to the nation’s working
journalists, a seasoned master at manipulating the media who played such a
crucial role in the stratospheric popularity he enjoyed for so many years.
But in fact Bob was no lover of the Fourth Estate.
Since his retirement Hawkie had lined his pockets with more
money than he ever made as Prime Minister by suing the news’ organisations
which had dared to malign, slight or allegedly defame him during his time in
power.
This is my time in jail, I often thought, as I crossed the
lanes of ceaseless traffic on the strip of Parramatta Road known as Broadway.
Here soot covered camellias lined the edge of the highway, remnants of some
optimistic council project aiming to bring beauty into an unbeautiful spot. It
didn't work. The plants and their usually much admired flowers were covered
with black dust and the pollution of the thousands of cars passing every day.
This Broadway had none of the lights, glamour or
entertainment of its New York counterpart; and I would sometimes feel all was
lost, lost, as I gazed up at that concrete building and knew I was a stranger in
a strange land, that I would be lucky to make it through the day.
When I first started work at Fairfax the place resembled a self-contained
factory with management on the top level, editorial in the middle, and
production downstairs.
The place smelled of ink. When I arrived for work on a Sunday
morning the docks were full of drifting paper left over from the hundreds of
thousands of copies of The Sun Herald which had been loaded onto trucks and
dispatched around the state.
When the printing machines started up the entire building
shook.
Technology has changed everything, not just the nature of
journalism and newspapers, but the atmosphere of the buildings themselves. The
smell of ink no longer permeates newspapers offices. Printing takes place tens
or even hundreds of miles away from the editorial offices.
And many a proud production career has disappeared with the
evolutions in printing technology. The same was true of editorial. The
librarians who once meticulously ran the daily clipping services and saw it as
an honorable role to help journalists find information and fact check details
all disappeared with computer technology which allowed such information to be
accessed in seconds.
With instantaneous electronic communication, newspaper
offices are no longer creative ferments full of people shouting ideas at each
other, arguing with Chiefs of Staff and smoking furiously at their desks as
deadlines approach. Now the air is free of cigarette smoke and the desks
occupied by bright young things with bottles of mineral water in their gym
bags.
Once upon a time no journalist would ever be seen dead with a
gym bag. Wouldn’t have even known what one was.
I had already reached the allotted hour for being swamped bymy
daily feeling of burnout. Other pleasures lay outside the newspaper’s
precincts.
I might have been working since early morning, but my bosses
weren’t about to hand this story over to the night reporter, a backstop
position not always held by the most experienced of hands.
“Ring him and ask him,” I was ordered.
“I don’t know where he is,” I replied.
“Do your job,” came the frustrated response. “Ring everybody
you can think of who knows him and don’t stop till you’ve got him. Because
you’re not going home until you do.”
Finally I tracked the quarry down to the bar in the Duke of
Stamford hotel in Double Bay. It was the Sydney’s hotel of choice for the affluent
and influential wanting discretion, good taste and top of the range service.
“He’s not in his room, he’s in the bar,” I told the Chief of
Staff, hoping I could wriggle out of making the phone call and knowing perfectly
well Bob wasn’t going to take kindly to this sort of invasion.
“Ring the hotel and ask to be put through to Bob in the bar,
it’s that sort of hotel and they’ll know exactly who you mean,” the Chief of
Staff ordered.
“Ugh” I responded, grumbling as I went back to my desk.
I rang the Duke of Stamford hotel and explained to the man on
the switch what I needed.
We had bonded over the previous hour of multiple calls when I
dropped the hint I might “bat for the other side”.
The switch-bitch was all aflutter at the gossip that one of
the reporters on the city’s Bible of the Chattering Classes aka The Sydney
Morning Herald might be gay. Who knows what stream of stories might change the
way conservative Australia thought about sexuality; if only he was kind enough
to help out a reporter with a little show of brotherhood.
After a little prevarication the telephonist did exactly as I
asked.
I could hear the muffled flurry in the expensive padding of
that exclusive watering hole hidden behind the moderately less imposing public
bar as the barman said quietly: “Phone call for you Bob.”
And I could almost hear Hawkie’s self-important “harrumph harrumphs”
as he excused himself from the group he had been entertaining and went to take
the call.
Once I had that instantly recognizable and most famous of
Australian voices on the line and had apologised for interrupting him I
explained to Bob that the editors were a pack of idiots with no respect for
other people’s privacy, but they wanted to run a picture of him, probably in
the gossip section at the back of the paper, probably not at all.
And they just wanted to know if what he was drinking in the
photographs at that day’s function was actually white wine.
“Oh for Goodness sake,” Bob snapped, slamming the phone down.
The story, including his response, along with a string of prominent
photographs, was strapped across the top of the front page of The Sydney
Morning Herald the next morning.
Bob was never, to my knowledge, ever seen drinking in public again.
Or more precisely, he never let a news photographer
catch him in the act.
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