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Catching up with the cultural wizards of Oz who came to UK

Howard Jacobson and Dan Goldberg discuss the BBC's two-part programme

July 3, 2014 13:24
Brolly good show: Howard Jacobson with Barry Humphries

BySimon Round, Simon Round

4 min read

Howard Jacobson has been telling a joke for a quite some time about his first trip to Australia back in 1964. "As the boat I was in was passing the equator, we passed a ship going the other way and Robert Hughes, Germaine Greer, Clive James and Barry Humphries were on it. They were all shouting from the deck, 'you're going the wrong way mate'. In reality they weren't all on the same boat and they all arrived in Britain at different times. But I have always thought that my life was in some way running parallel with these people."

Now 50 years on, Jacobson has cemented this link by making a two part documentary - Rebels of Oz: Germaine, Clive Barry, and Bob - which tells the story of these four fiercely ambitious and intelligent Australians who landed on ours shores just as Jacobson was arriving in Sydney to take up his first lecturing job at the age of 22. He had already met Greer in Cambridge. "Someone had said, 'you should meet this woman, she has just come from where you are going'. I met her and I thought bloody hell, if they are all like her this is going to be interesting. She was very impressive, very confident and very beautiful. She is the kind of person who can take up the oxygen in a room."

You could say the same thing about all four. Robert Hughes was a larger than life art critic who made his mark in London and New York both on television and in print with a directness that shocked the establishment. Humphries is an iconoclastic comedian who shot to fame with comic creations including Dame Edna Everage. James ruled the airwaves in the 80s and 90s with his prime-time shows but has also found time to write novels, poetry and to translate Dante. And, of course, Greer rocked the world in the early 70s following the publication of her feminist work The Female Eunuch.

"The one thing they all have in common is words," Jacobson notes. "They are all very good with language. They are good writers and good talkers. Every one of them is great on television. They can all hold an audience. The qualities they brought over here were very Australian qualities. They had no fear of authority."