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Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay
I remember a night, when I was a kid. Sitting in the very back of a white station wagon, in the dark, driving through the night on the way home from my Aunt’s house. And we were listening to a radio play, everyone quiet. All in the dark, only the radio play and the car lights playing over the road.
There was a man, and he was an astronaut. He was in a rocket, in space, and that rocket had lost it’s way. He was on his way to death, when the fuel finally burned out, and there was nothing anyone could do. Except talk to him, on the radio, while he waited for the end. I think it was a long time, that we listened. I think the conversation got further and further away, until, in the end, there was silence. I still remember driving through that silence on my way home.
I remember going home from school because we were going to watch the first man on the moon, on the television. Though I don’t remember going home, and I don’t remember watching it, I only know that I did do that, and I remember it because it was so important, even at the time, even for a five year old. I remember that, and I remember all the excitement about space. The Jetsons, Elton John’s Rocket Man, David Bowie’s Ground Control to Major Tom.
I remember it today because I was sitting in a restaurant, and old fashioned kind of a place, lots of dark wood and dark upholstery, with a dark booth and a dark table, and Rocket Man came on on the stereo. I’ve been looking at all that stuff about the Moon; the big money-making dreams, the hotel schemes, thinking it was all some macho techno-gamble. But then I heard Rocket Man again, and I remembered. There was a time, not so long ago, when it was the stuff of dreams. And we were the dreamers.
I enjoyed your story Lehan… it’s wonderful what one can find on the interenet… I’m currently rediscovering all kinds of old movies and tv series that I haven’t seen I was knee-high to a grasshopper…
I’ve also just discovered the ‘Miss Fisher’ murder mystery series on telly currently and I must say that although I’m not usually a fan of this genre, with the otherwise almost sole exception of Conan Doyle, I really do quite enjoy the quirks of the ‘Miss Fisher’ character as the story unfolds… It’s one of the few things worth watching on ‘free-to-air’ tv these days… Very 1920s and set in Melbourne, but you can’t have everything, can you?
🙂
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asty, Miss Fisher was light entertaiment, but it was well acted, it was beatifully realised, sharp eye for detail, all very 1920ies, the lovely outfits, the decor, Melbourne looked very nice…almost as good as any English TV drama.. .:)
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That’s pretty much what I thought Helvi… a qulity production. It’s sad, but Australia used to be capable of such quality productions… the Sullivans, Carsons Law, etc… but nowadays all we get is panel shows and ‘reality’ tv… no-one wants to invest in ‘quality’ productions any more… (Sighs heavily)…
🙂
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Wikipedia has led me from Rocket Man to a short story by Ray Bradbury called Kaleidoscope. Which was made into a radio play in 1955. There is a sound file online. I think I will listen to it now. Will it be the same story? Would I recognize it now if it was, after all these years?
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I think you may. I hope you return to tell us. You might be inspired to write another whole piece.
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Huh. Yes, I listened to it. It’s not the one I remember from my childhood. That terrible isolation, sending you spiralling alone into an unknown and insane world? Trying desperately to hold on to the words spoken by a near stranger? That came later.
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I thought the 4 Corners of last night was a good attempt at getting to the bottom of people smuggling. It was also somewhat bizarre. Surely at the end of it, with “oh, oh, he got away’ showing the evil Captain Emad escaping away,scooting along the road on his tractor and trailer loaded with shopping trolleys close to the AFP headquarters in Canberra was very theatrical and strange.
The AFP must have been aware of the program being made by the ABC with very lengthy interviews with many boat people and many phone calls from Germany and Irag between the different relatives.
It makes me wonder if the right-wing element in the ABC was taking the opportunity to prepare and nurture another barrage of attacks onto the present government.
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The advertisements for the programme-promos-are distressing. It couldn’t go lower.
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I liked Bonanza, Hawaii five -5 O, but not so much ‘I love Lucy’ such a shrill woman. Ah, the Flintstones. Those were the days.
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She was shrill, wasn’t she?
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Rin Tin Tin was my first introduction to a film with moving characters.I found it amazing and I don’t think anything has ever come close to that first experience. So was also my first sighting of the sea. I still remember the salty smell and when I had climbed over the last dune and saw that expanse of water, it was so unbelievable and yet it was true and not a lie.
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I saw that once. Two girls came to Hakodate from Zimbabwe. I took them to the sea, they had never seen it before. Nor could they get over that it tasted salty. They went in for a swim, they were very disturbed by it. It was kind of a little bit of pleasure and a little bit of horror at the same time.
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Well it’s a bun fight in here today.
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No buns for me..thanks 🙂
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Honestly guys, I was just having a bit of lunch, having a little humalong to Elton, who I profess to hate, and thinking about all that rocketman stuff when I was a kid. How the hell did you all find this place? And Gerard, turn that transistor down.
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And you VL. All this talk, you sound like someone from Sydney or Melbourne pretending to be a Queenslander. We’re talking about SPACEMANS here.
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Fried chicken and watermelon, anyone? It’s delicious.
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La la la.//… crackle..the circuit’s dead…there’s something wrong..
Are you with me Mr Swan, are you Mr Swan.
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Like – all those thin white collar-workers, back then in the sixties, ties loosened, unbuttoned to the singlet, hunched over their counter lunches, watching the black and white TV mounted on the wall. Dreaming of Space.
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And that sudden and violent metaphor we all had for terrible, desolate loneliness, that we’d never had, never understood before. Yes, I guess we can also pin that up under “Space”.
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The sadness of our political dreams, all engines down, running out of oxygen. And no free-fall out there in space. Just a long, slow spiral into the darkness.
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And how impossible it seems to us old people to say Yes! We’re going to the Moon! It’s all GOOD! How impossible not to feel cynical and disbelieving. Well I don’t know how the old people were in the sixties. I only got to five in the sixties.
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Okay. I’m off to the Drum, to see if my child-like optimism has any effect on my tongue.
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I loved that song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwaR9jgiWgQ
A bit Gustav Mahler like.
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Lehan we must never stop dreaming, we must do more dreaming in these ugly, aggressive, hate-filled times, for self preservation I watch less and TV….
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What ugly, hate filled times?
It’s not like that in Queensland. Everyone that I know is happy, busy, productive and interesting. Filling my days with abounded love, jokes and bonhomie. Remind me never to visit Aubery Wongoba, or wherever you live.
You should move straight away.
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You should have married an Englishmen, instead of a manky, pessimistic Dutchman 🙂
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You mean like Tony Abbott… ??? I think Viv lives in AW, VL
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…oops forgot to say that I could not watch the last nights Q&A, too many angry rednecks in the audience, it was filmed in Toowoomba.
When Q&A was at Viv’s area, i remember commenting that the audience looked most civil…
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I’ve never seen it…Ever…I have lived in Australia for 24 years and never felt the urge. I have seen perhaps 60 secs, when I channel surf. However, why would I watch lowbrow s**t like that when I can watch, Ovation, or Studio? Or, UKTV, come to that: Stephen Fry ect..
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I love Stephen Fry, Denton’s Rangling is childish, I do also like many of the English crime series….Luther, Shadow Lines, Whitehall, Silk (court drama)…
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