
In the panic and confusion of the Labor government’s sacking and the packing up and the frenzied shredding of documents, Gough Whitlam stands alone, a tragic figure, before all his friends and colleagues. He is called to the steps of Parliament house by the milling and fast growing crowd and this is the moment that was captured by the news cameras on that Remembrance Day in 1975. Summary by Janet Bell.
This is the moment at the end of a magnificent series when drama segues into archival history, a moment captured forever by the news cameras. As Gough Whitlam (Max Phipps) moves from the corridors of the parliament and into the sunlight to face his supporters, the image changes into the archival pictures we remember and there is Gough Whitlam standing up before his admirers pronouncing the words we all remember and there’s the Governor-General, standing between the caretaker Prime Minister and his deputy.
The voice of Peter Carroll has been the narrator throughout, reminding us of how the pieces of the jigsaw fitted together. Now his voice gives the epilogue – telling of the next two elections lost by Gough as Labor leader, of Malcolm Fraser becoming Prime Minister for the next five years and of Sir John Kerr, who chose to live in exile in the United Kingdom rather than face the wrath of so many of his fellow Australians.
On 11 November 1975, the Labor Prime Minister was dismissed by the Queen’s representative in Australia, the Governor-General, Sir John Kerr. The Dismissal brings to life the events leading up to this extraordinary event that shook the nation. The drama is played out in the Federal Parliament, the back rooms and the ministers’ offices, while the world of those now far off times is drawn through archival images and a fine narration to establish the point in history when the Arab oil embargo sent the world’s economies into a tail spin of inflation and unemployment for the first time since the Second World War.
Federal politics takes on a grimmer tone when Malcolm Fraser replaces the amiable but essentially light weight Billy Sneddon and the cut and thrust of the parliamentary system is ramped up for the larger than life, Prime Minister, Gough Whitlam. Whitlam becomes embattled by scandals caused by his ministers – Dr Jim Cairns and his affair with Juni Morosi, and Rex Connor’s dealings with a supposedly shady character from the Middle East, Khemlani of the petrol dollars. Both these ministers are consequently sacked, causing Labor to lose the balance of power in the parliament. This is the moment the leader of the opposition has been waiting for, and when Liberal controlled Senate refuses to pass the supply bill with the budget attached, the Commonwealth is threatened by the imminent prospect of running out of funds to run the country.
The climax of the film, the sacking of the Prime Minister, becomes inevitable when the character of the Governor-General is brought into the mix. Fraser plays him like a puppet and Whitlam seriously misunderstands the man to whom he gave the job.
Kennedy Miller produced one of the great Australian dramas based on actual events less than a decade after they took place. For five years the Broadcasting and Television Act had prohibited the dramatisation of the dismissal as then a current event. Eventually the series – which, at $2.6 million was the most expensive mini series made in the country at that time – was dramatised, with a cast of some of the very best Australian actors including Max Phipps as Gough Whitlam, John Stanton as the Liberal leader of the opposition, Malcolm Fraser and John Meillon as Sir John Kerr. Ruth Cracknell, John Hargreaves, Ed Devereaux, Bill Hunter, Robyn Nevin and Nancye Hayes were among the cream of Australia’s acting fraternity who lent their extraordinary talents to this important series. There were 115 speaking parts and one thousand extras and this was the first time that Kennedy Miller had worked in television.
The opportunity to move into television was presented to Kennedy Miller hard on the heels of it’s Mad Max success. The company was commissioned to develop programming for Network Ten, then owned by News Ltd, with News CEO Rupert Murdoch reportedly saying they could make anything, 'as long as it was bold’. The Dismissal was a ratings winner for the network. George Miller shared directing with Phil Noyce, George Ogilvie, John Power and Carl Schultz. Each director took two weeks to shoot a 50-minute episode.
Kennedy-Miller followed up this TV hit with several more successful mini-series for Ten – The Last Bastion (1984, directed by Miller), Cowra Breakout (1984). Bodyline (1984), Vietnam (1986), The Dirtwater Dynasty (1988) and Bangkok Hilton (1989).
Notes by Janet Bell
This clip shows prime minister Gough Whitlam (Max Phipps) striding down a corridor in Old Parliament House, surrounded by colleagues, on his way to hear the governor-general’s official secretary proclaim the double dissolution of Parliament on 11 November 1975, as angry crowds outside wildly chant ‘We want Gough’. The clip cuts to a montage of archival footage shot on 11 November 1975 that includes voice-over and the sounds of crowds cheering, protesting and chanting. On the steps of Parliament House, Whitlam makes his famous speech in reaction to the decision to dismiss him. Opposition leader Malcolm Fraser is then shown smiling at the television cameras from the back of a car. This is followed by scenes of people violently protesting on the streets and both leaders conducting electoral campaigning as the narrator describes the political campaigns of the Liberal and Labor parties. The final scenes show a victorious Fraser after his decisive election win on 13 December 1975.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
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