A NEW PLACE IN THE SUN –EXCLUSIVE MEMOIRS OF AN ADVENTUROUS REPORTER , # 1
Much travelled journalist , cameraman and
author , Ian Mackay, and his
wife , Luella , now reside on
Magnetic Island , North Queensland.
Ian has
led an action- packed life , covered many
hotspots on assignment , and has
kindly agreed to supply Little
Darwin with outstanding articles , photographs
, books
and ephemera from
his sea chest, so expect some salty contents . In this extraordinary opening
piece he provides
broad biographical details , including a revealing
event involving meat and two
vegies .
Ian on an airfield hit by Vietcong mortar fire
**********************************************************
I
WAS born in Adelaide on a dark and stormy night in 1939, so my
father joined the Army. I spent the
war in my mother’s home-town on the West
Coast of SA, and when it was all over we settled back in Adelaide where my
father returned to his job of schoolteacher. After high school I joined The Adelaide Advertiser as a copyboy, and during the best year of
my life to that time I learned the ins and outs of what was a rather
old-fashioned morning daily newspaper. I got a cadetship the following year and
began life as a reporter – which – with a lot of twists and turns along the way
-- I gave up only five
years ago .
.
TV came to Adelaide in 1960 and I was drafted into the newsroom at Channel 7 which was then owned by The Advertiser. I became good at making films – including documentaries in Thailand and Kenya – and in 1965 a cameraman by the name of Brian Taylor and I chanced our arms and went freelancing in SE Asia. We helped set up the Far East bureau of ITN in Singapore and although our beat extended from India to the Philippines we spent most of the time in Vietnam.
COVERING VIETNAM WAR
TV came to Adelaide in 1960 and I was drafted into the newsroom at Channel 7 which was then owned by The Advertiser. I became good at making films – including documentaries in Thailand and Kenya – and in 1965 a cameraman by the name of Brian Taylor and I chanced our arms and went freelancing in SE Asia. We helped set up the Far East bureau of ITN in Singapore and although our beat extended from India to the Philippines we spent most of the time in Vietnam.
After
two years of that I was sick of TV and went back to Adelaide and The
Advertiser, and wrote my first book,
Australians in Vietnam. Since then I have written nine more, including the
best-selling The History of Farting and the wine classic, Taking the Piss.
In 1970 I became The Advertiser’s Canberra
correspondent, and in 1972 I was posted to London as its European correspondent
– the best gig I guess a reporter could get. I worked in the Melbourne Herald
Cable Service office in Fleet Street, and covered another war – the Yom Kippur
war in 1973, based first in Beirut, then Cairo .
START OF A PLACE IN THE SUN
Three
years later I went back to Adelaide but the Herald mob wanted me in Melbourne
so I shifted to Victoria in 1977. I worked as a reporter on The Herald – one of
my early jobs was to whiz up to Sydney and cover the Granville train disaster.
The following year I was shifted over to The Sun to replace Keith Dunstan as
Place in the Sun columnist and I kept that up for a few years before
freelancing again.
I made a film in Tibet, wrote a few more
books, worked for a year or so in Bob Hawke’s media office in Melbourne and
wrote about wine for The Age, Business Review Weekly and the Sydney Morning
Herald . I joined The Age full time as
a senior feature writer in 1985, but after four good years I was conned back to
The Herald which had been taken over in the meantime by Rupert Murdoch. That
turned into a total fiasco which culminated in the merging of the two famous
Flinders Street papers into today’s Herald-Sun. Known in the business as The
Hun.
Luella and Ian rolling out Salty Dog clobber for yachties .
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MOUNT ISA OR THE BEACH ULTIMATUM
I twiddled my thumbs for a while before seeing an ad for a reporter on the North-East Star in Mount Isa , Queensland ,and thought – what the heck! I only stayed there for 10 months – my wife finally gave me an ultimatum to get back to Airlie Beach – but it was great fun. I was by far the oldest person on the staff, but it was a great little paper and I loved every minute of it.
Back in Airlie , I needed something to keep me off the street so I took up an offer to become editor of the local rag, the Whitsunday Times, a weekly giveaway. That got me through to retirement, and after a couple of years in the little town of Bowen, we were thinking of buying a boat up in Cairns. But then my darling daughter Emma, who lived in Melbourne, announced she was pregnant with twins. My dear wife Luella decided she needed to be closer to the action, so instead of Cairns we settled in Nungurner – which is about as close to Melbourne as I need to be. My son Lachlan, incidentally, lives in London, where he runs the famous Comedy Store in Piccadilly.
SIGHTS OF SINGAPORE
So
– 50 years a journo!! And as they say,
you get to meet some interesting people. Here’s a little list: The Queen of
Australia – twice ; the King and Queen
of Thailand – twice ; three presidents, two Popes – a small van-load of Prime Ministers and a truck-load of pollies. In London I had lunch one day with Joanna Lumley from Absolutely
Fabulous. Mind you, she was at the next table, but she spoke rather
loudly so it was like I was there. And
at Wimbledon I was
covering a match on No 2 court between Jimmy
Connors and the young Indian VJ Amritrarj and sitting right
behind me – really right behind me in the very steep seats of the press box --
was Ava Gardner. She was barracking
for Jimbo
and every time he won a shot she jumped up and kicked me in the back! And each time she bent down and patted me on the shoulder and said: “Sorry, honey!” Wow.
Unfortunately, Connors won in straight sets. .
One day in Singapore , I went to Tanglin
Barracks, headquarters of FARELF – Britain’s Far Eastern Land Forces. There in the
visitors’ book was the bold signature – Jack Profumo, Minister for War. Jack is better remembered these days for his dalliance with a call-girl by the name of Christine Keeler – whose other best friend happened to be a top Russian spy. But it was the title that impressed me – Jack wasn’t Minister for Defence but Minister for War. Very British! Minister
for Whores, as it turned out.
The UK was at war at the time – the so-called Confrontation with Indonesia. The Scots Guards and the Ghurkas were in Borneo and the Guards were about to be replaced by the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, then staging through Singapore. I went out to Changi Barracks to see them go, and arranged a TV interview with their CO. He was sitting down facing the camera and I looked around to see if we were ready to roll and the cameraman and the CO’s ADC, Captain Andrew Dewar-Duries, from the famous whisky family, were rolling around with laughter. “Meat and two veg, Sir,” called out Andrew, and the Colonel demurely re-arranged himself. Meat and two veg!!! At least we knew the Argylls wore nothing under their kilts.