1. Days of TV and Fish Fingers 2. Barbie at the Barricades 3

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1. Days of TV and Fish Fingers 2. Barbie at the Barricades 3 32 AUSTRALIAN LEFT REVIEW organised a big party up at the farm for his fishing mates. Then "George’’ turned out to be Sue and he was humiliated. I think he was humiliated about the farm too. He'd bought it so that the family would be self-sufficient when the depression came. He had this theory that depressions follow wars. He'd thought it up in 1941 while he was in the navy, watching for underwater enemy activity. He’d signed up the day war was declared and spent the next six years sitting on the Harbour Bridge waiting for the Japs to come. He waited and waited, but was on day leave the day they did. He was pretty bitter about it all, especially when it was all over. He’d tried to join the Days of TV and Fish Returned Soldiers’ League in 1945 but they wouldn’t accept him because he hadn’t returned from anywhere. Fingers Well, anywhere except the northern pylon. So then he waited for a Growing up in the rough and tumble of Sydney's Glebe depression to come and, of course, it in the Fifties, Moya Sayer-Jones’ childhood was a didn’t. There was a boom instead. topsy-turvy world of old communities and the new This meant the mountain place was consumer icons of the Long Boom. empty most of the time with Dad working on his business. He never was able to use it to save his family from hunger and poverty. Mum said j r oya” was a pretty Theday Mum and Dad brought the post-war boom was one of his I unusual name for a me home from the hospital our street greatest disappointments. 1 Y A child born in 1953. had a big party. There were streamers Not that we were rich. We lived Most little girls were Susan or hanging from the electricity poles, in Glebe in a House rented from the Elizabeth or Rhonda or Jennifer and fireworks, trestle tables covered in Church of England. The Church I might have been called that too if sandwiches and laundry boilers filled owned most of the houses in my two older sisters hadn't beaten me with bottled beer. Everyone was Richmond Street then. They were to the punch. really excited. No cars were allowed tiny semis or tenements filled with in after six o’clock but this wasn't too massive pieces of furniture, it was By the time i came along. Mum much of a hardship for the residents like that — the poorer you were, the and Dad were drained ofinspiration. because no one in the street owned bigger your wardrobe and dressing Two daughters with two names each one. Dad carried me in the bassinet table had to be. Rich people from big meant four good ideas already. The from the bus stop. It was a long walk, houses used to give the things away post-war baby boom was partly to winding through the trestles and and, if you were poor enough,, you blame. It left our family crowded shaking hands with all the people, had to take them. If you were really with namesakes of every available but Dad didn’t care. He said a new poor you had to take lots of odd relative. One aunt was still to be queen didn’t arrive every day. He chairs too. and radiograms that honoured but she had big, flashy wasn't talking about me. It was didn't work any more. Sometimes breasts and a de facto and so was Queen Elizabeth. She was crowned the houses got so full of odd chairs never a real consideration. I was ten that day. and lowboys that there was hardly days old before M urn saw a picture of Anyway, it was a good enough room for the children at all. an Irish tap dancer in the afternoon coincidence really and cheered Dad That’s why so many people paper. The girl was very beautiful up. He was a bit disheartened about came out into the street after tea and with long hair, slim legs and small having yet another daughter. He’d stayed there until it was dark. It was breasts and there was no mention of been really depressed four years pretty interesting. We lived right near extra-marital sex. Her name was before when my sister Sue was born. the trotting park and the greyhound Moya. He was convinced she’d be a boy and track, so we got to watch the old men AUSTRALIAN LEFT REVIEW 33 exercise the animals up and down every afternoon. The little men wore grey fell hats and held two or three dogs in one hand and a well-sucked Rothmans in the other. They gathered on the corner and talked about Blue Streak or Lord Charger white the dogs stood with their thin tails tucked hard along their sunken bellies and whined through muzzles. The local kids would play cricket on the road and the husbands would smoke fags on the verandah and the mothers would stay inside and try to rearrange the chairs. Everybody knew everybody and watched who came and went and when they did. Sue and I kept track from the window in the front room. We weren't allowed to run wild after tea. Maybe because we were girls or maybe because Dad was frightened that we'd disappear. That happened a lot in our street. People disappearing. One Graphic; Reg Lynch day someone was there and the next fat. The thin ones had TB and had to put a shilling in the meter day they weren’t. Nobody talked sometimes would never come back. every time you wanted to watch about them after they’d gone. The fat ones had babies and usually something. Ours worked for nothing I was only three or four when I came back, but not always with the because we were a bit better off. We first noticed it with Susan Parkes’ babies. Children got polio and came didn’t have much more money than father. The Parkes lived at the end of back with braces on their legs, and everybody else, but at least Mum the street and probably had more old people just lay down and died. never had to wear the black pillbox odd chairs than anybody else. Susan There was a lot of coming and going herself. was the youngest with about five and funerals and visiting the courts. Sue, tour years older than me, brothers and sisters. You’d never That’s where Mum’s black net was the entrepreneur of the iamily, know they were from the same family pillbox hat came in handy. All the and a really good swimmer. Mr Hill, though because they all looked ladies in the street borrowed it when the swimming teacher at the pool, different. Her oldest sister was even they needed to dress up. said she might be the next Dawn part Aboriginal. One day Mr Parkes Mum was like a princess in Fraser. Mum and Dad got worried went to work and never came back. Richmond Street. Everyone called about that because Dawn Fraser’s That’s when Mrs Parks put her head her Mrs Sayer because she had the shoulders were so big she looked like in the oven and disappeared as well. hat and Dad had a trade. He was a a man. They stopped the lessons Then Susan stopped coming outside third-generation master painter. straight away. Sue was short and and we never saw her again either. He’d take his ladder and brushes with blond and took after Dad. The street sucked up lots of families him on the trams in the mornings and Rhonda was ten years older like that, but particularly fathers and bring them home every afternoon. If than me. She was the eldest, dark and sons. Like Johnnie Herrington. He there was no work he’s paint our slim, and looked a lot like Mum. was always vanishing. He was about place to keep in practice. From the “Why have you got all that fifteen and had lots of tattoos. He'd outside it looked as bad as everyone bloody muck on your face, come home with a new car or a else’s, but inside it was all done up. Rhonda?” wireless or lots of money in his The house got smaller and smaller “Because I’m going out, Dad.” pocket and within a few days some with all those layers of Royal “No, you’re not." policeman would arrive and Johnnie Magenta and Arctic Blue, but it was “Why not?” would be gone again. Just when he pretty exciting. You never knew “Not with all that bloody muck was starting to do well, too. what colour the kitchen was going to on your face you’re not.” And there were the people who be next. Dad and Rhonda had the same disappeared because they were sick, We had the phone on and were fight all the time. especially the women. You could the first people to buy a television. Rhonda was very particular always tell who'd be the next one to The Herringtons got one not long about her appearance. She loved her go. TTiey’d either get very thin or very after but it was the land where you nails especially and really looked 34 AUSTRALIAN LEFT REVIEW after them. She wouldn't even play couldn’t stand all the fighting. She gave up sugar in her tea the same Scrabble because she reckoned you When Bob started coming it way.
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