Acquisition  of  this    book  about   American actor  Hayes Gordon,  who  had  a  major  influence  on Australian theatre, acting  and politics  , unleashed  memories  dating  back  to  the  l950s , when  I was a copyboy on The Sun  newspaper , Sydney .  For  a time , I  worked in the   PIX magazine  library  with  another  staffer , Jan , forgotten her surname , who  one  day  enthusiastically  spoke  to  me  about  an American  actor  called   Hayes  Gordon .
 
By Peter Simon 
 
 Although  I  had studied  for  a part   in  a French  play  at  the North Newtown  Intermediate Demonstration  High  School ,  the  opening  line  going  something  like ,    "Allo , allo ,  Madame  La   Marquise ", which ,   on reflection,  sounds like something out of the  much later  BBC  TV  farce   about  WWll ,  I  had not heard  of  this Yank, Hayes Gordon .  In   my  pimply  ignorance , I  possibly   thought  he   was   related  to  Speed  Gordon. 
 Eventually , I  became aware of  Hayes Gordon , this  fiddler on the roof   of  Australian  politics  who  even   coached  our   politicians  how  to perform before  television  cameras . My  mother  attended  one of  his  productions .
 
Gordon's  promising    career   in America   suffered when his name was mentioned in a newsletter called Red Networks which  specialised in naming alleged  communists  and sympathisers.  He was  ostracised  because he refused to sign the notorious  Senator Joe  McCarthy "Loyalty Oath. "
He left America and arrived in Australia in 1952 , appearing in the musical , Kiss Me Kate, in Melbourne . Author Lawrence Durant tells how Gordon used to see a large man standing at the stagedoor in a trenchcoat with a trilby. In conversations he had with the man, who only gave his name as Charlie , he seemed cultured and interested in theatre . Hayes had eventually invited him to have a cup of coffee and Charlie one day asked him an odd question - what he thought of President Richard Nixon .
He left America and arrived in Australia in 1952 , appearing in the musical , Kiss Me Kate, in Melbourne . Author Lawrence Durant tells how Gordon used to see a large man standing at the stagedoor in a trenchcoat with a trilby. In conversations he had with the man, who only gave his name as Charlie , he seemed cultured and interested in theatre . Hayes had eventually invited him to have a cup of coffee and Charlie one day asked him an odd question - what he thought of President Richard Nixon .
After making a lighthearted response that he, Gordon, wouldn't buy a used car from Nixon , they both laughed ; there were no further meetings . The man in the trench coat was later identified from a newspaper photograph as Charles Spry , head of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation .
Unfortunately , the  book  does   not  say if  Spry was  waiting for a female cast member . To  put  it another way , was  he  intent  on   kissing  Kate ?
For his services to the arts , Gordon received  the Order of the British Empire and  the Order of Australia .
What makes  the Hayes Gordon   book  doubly interesting is  that  it  is stamped DO NOT REMOVE  , Colin Roderick Award  1997, FALS ( Foundation for  Australian  Literary Studies .) Professor Roderick , of James Cook University , Townsville , launched the  award  , one of the nation's oldest, in 1967 to promote  publication  of  books on  Australia . He wrote  several   on  Henry Lawson , one on  Miles Franklin  and  Banjo Paterson . 
His book on the Prussian explorer and naturalist  Ludwig Leichhardt was closely read by the late  journalist  , publisher and historian  Glenville  Pike . Pike had  discussed  with Roderick his own  theory about  what had    happened to  Leichhardt's party , which  vanished ,   later  backed up  by  an overlooked  item  in  a South Australia museum .  
Roderick died in 2000  and  part of his  personal  collection  was donated to  Darwin, thought to have ended up in  the Charles Darwin  University .
 
At the time , the   late  American journalist, author  and political advisor , Barbara  James  , told me  she  felt   Roderick's  collection   should  remain in Townsville   as  there  was no one  looking after special  collections   in  Darwin , no  funds available .
On  a subsequent  visit  to Darwin , I found  items from Roderick's collection  on sale at the university  and  bought  books  relating to  his research on Henry  Lawson's works  , plus  other   items , one an early West Australian  literary magazine.
 

