Today marks eight years since man first walked upon the Moon. It is a gloriously sunny winter’s day. Just as it was eight years ago.
Tiki drove me to Caringbah to buy two barbecued chickens, and thence to her parents’ where I showered downstairs. I packed boxes of belongings into the ‘Galant’ while Tiki prepared a savoury chicken dish for dinner. We consumed it in front of “A Current Affair”, which can be viewed from seven o’clock on Channel Nine.
The film, “The Sound Of Music”, with Christopher Plummer and Julie Andrews, is on television, in Sydney, from half past seven. I remember viewing it at a cinema in 1966, a year after the film was produced. And speaking of Sydney! Its Eastern Suburbs club was leading Brisbane’s Valleys club by seventeen points to two at half-time in tonight’s fixture of rugby league’s Amco Cup.
We awoke at half past six to another gloriously sunny morning. I was compelled to shave with the use of lukewarm water from the unwashed saucepan that had been used to cook our porridge.
Australia, in possibly its best performance ever, defeated the English club, Arsenal, by three goals to one, at the Sports Ground in Sydney last night.
“Dad” left work at half past two to temporarily fix our old electric water heaters in the bathroom and kitchen. However, he greeted us with the news that the stove — an old Parnall — was irreparable. It omitted sparks and smoke when he poked around at it with an insulated screwdriver. Tiki, therefore, used my late mother’s Hotpoint vertical grill to cook the veal chops, which we had bought for dinner. The appliance must be seven or eight years old and still works perfectly well.
Roger Climpson read the news on Channel Seven from half past six and, after “Willesee”, we watched the risque “Naked Vicar Show”. It features Noeline Brown, Kevin Golsby and Ross Higgins. Tonight’s episode included skits on movie buff, Bill Collins, as well as the Leyland Brothers. The series can be somewhat crude in parts with the seemingly unnecessary use of words such as “bullshit”.
Another episode of the perennial Australian serial, “Number 96”, screens from half past eight on Channel Ten. It can feature women baring their breasts from time to time and also contain some fairly kinky themes. No doubt, such antics have contributed to its longevity.
We watched the film, “Dead Man On The Run”, from 1974. It stars Peter “Whiplash”/”Court Martial”/”Mission Impossible” Graves, who, in real life, is the brother of James “Gunsmoke” Arness.
It is most unpleasant sitting upon our outdoor toilet in the dead of winter. I particularly feel for Tiki who, of course, has to withstand this more often than I.
It was an uncomfortable seven degrees Celsius when I showered and the water tended to be either too warm or too cold. Tiki rang me at work to say that her parents had decided to buy both her elder sister and her a new washing machine. She said that her father did not want to spend more than two hundred and fifty dollars and had his eyes set on a twin-tub washer by Hoover. I stated that I thought the fully automatic Simpson ‘Minimatic’ would be a better proposition, but was told not to get the “sulks”.
The day achieved an above average maximum temperature of twenty-one degrees Celsius and I continued to overheat in my skivvy and jumper as I drove to the store, Reids, on Taren Point Road to look at a stove that had been selected by “Mum” and “Dad”. Its price had been reduced by ten dollars, from two hundred and nineteen. Tiki, nevertheless, opted for a Chef ‘Executive’ with a price tag of two hundred and forty-nine, which somewhat displeased her parents.
Then it was our turn to look at washing machines. Once again we went against their wishes by showing our preference for the Simpson ‘Minimatic’, in spite of the fact its cost exceeded “Dad’s” stipulated limit by forty-nine dollars. By this time it was too late for us to actually purchase our selections and we, therefore, have to return tomorrow morning at half past eight.
Tiki and I purchased a Chef ‘Executive’ stove for two hundred and forty dollars. “Mum” and “Dad” on the other hand bought two Simpson ‘Minimatic’ washing machines before generously donating one to us.
He and I carried our heavy washing machine into the house, with my hands, which were gloved against the cold, almost losing their grip at one stage. The new stove followed, securely encased inside its crate of aluminium. Tiki soon discovered that we had been supplied with one that bears a door of black ‘glass’. Such a stove, she claimed, would have cost us more than fifty dollars extra!
We moved the old Parnall out to the backyard. Its element only worked on ‘high’ and the door to its oven had refused to stay closed. Its weight felt considerably greater than its new counterpart and the abruptness of its bottom edge made it feel as if it was going to sever my now gloveless fingers.
“Dad” and Tiki were down on their hands and knees scrubbing the tiles and lino with Ajax after I had scraped away the thick, oozy sludge that had lain beneath the old stove. He connected the new stove in half an hour, but not before “Mum” had burst into laughter when Tiki ungratefully remarked, “Is that all there is to it?”
I angrily retorted, “What do you mean… He’s bursting his gut down here!” And so he was! Faced with a somewhat lengthy struggle to successfully connect the wire that would earth the machine.
“Dad” left for work and the pair of us took “Mum” up to Miranda Fair, in the Chrysler ‘Galant’, at 11.00 a.m. At Nock and Kirby we bought eight handles for the doors of the kitchen cupboards, at a cost of eighty-five cents each. A Sabco toilet brush cost two dollars and ninety-five cents. “Mum” bought a hair dryer by Braun, which came with a styling wand in the shape of a stick. Its price of purchase was twenty-nine dollars.
Parramatta defeated Randwick by eighteen points to three on Channel Two’s live coverage of rugby union on this gloriously sunny afternoon. “Jeopardy” and “It’s Academic” appeared on Channel Seven in the hour from five o’clock. Channel Two’s edited replay of this afternoon’s game of rugby league followed from six. The Western Suburbs ‘Magpies’ defeated Canterbury-Bankstown by seventeen points to ten, thereby denting that side’s hopes of being one of the five teams that will then contest the duel for the premiership. Canterbury’s loss keeps Manly’s ambitions alive.
Fees at St. Andrew’s Cathedral School, in town, will be approximately six hundred dollars for a pupil in First Form. This, I have been reliably informed, is in spite of many of its classes having thirty-five students in them.
“Dad” and I removed most of the leaves from his above-ground swimming pool. Unfortunately, he fell heavily when stepping from the pool’s edge on to the nearby sandstone wall, severely grazing his thigh. He placed the blame for the accident on his bifocal glasses.
The pair of us travelled to our house where “Dad”, with my assistance, finalised the installation of the Simpson ‘Minimatic’ washing machine; affixed eight handles, in total, to the doors of the cupboards in the kitchen, and, after lunch, sawed the bottoms off the three doors that had previously been removed in order that we could have the carpet laid.
“Ask The Leyland Brothers”, from half past five, included a visit to Wave Rock, which is near Hyden in Western Australia, prior to transporting the viewer to the Flinders Ranges, in South Australia.
Tiki is two up on me as she has been to both Wave Rock and the Flinders Ranges. She spent five months travelling around Australia with her family in a caravan, in 1973. The nine weeks’ bus tour, in the year prior to that, took me to neither.
“Seven’s Big League”, from half past six, covers the match between the St. George ‘Dragons’ and the Balmain ‘Tigers’. The former triumphs, albeit narrowly, by twenty-one points to seventeen. At Brookvale Oval, this afternoon, in another game from this weekend’s round, Manly-Warringah accounted for Cronulla-Sutherland by twelve points to eight, having led by ten to five at half-time. Manly remains in fifth position on the ladder in spite of its victory.
Tonight’s programme in the series, “The Bionic Woman”, has Jaime Sommers, played by Lindsay Wagner, situated in the capital of country and western music, Nashville, Tennessee. We left Channel Ten at half past eight to view the film, “Machine Gun McCain”, on Channel Seven. Produced in Italy, in 1969, it stars John Cassavetes, Peter “Columbo” Falk and the Swedish actress, Britt Ekland. We found it to be a major disappointment.
Atlanta, Georgia, was the birthplace of Thomas David Roe, in May of 1942. It was his father, Thomas, who really introduced him to music when he bought him a guitar and taught him how to play three chords.
“Tommy”, Mike Clark and Bobby West formed a group, The Satins, when the trio was still in high school. The Satins would perform songs by blues artists, such as John Lee Hooker.
When Tommy composed his first hit, “Sheila”, it originally bore the title, “Freida”. The song was recorded in Nashville, in September of 1961, but was not released, on ABC-Paramount Records, until May of the following year. “Sheila” spent two weeks atop both the American and Australian charts and reached No.3 in Britain.
http://youtu.be/mR1EWIM81Vs
“The Folk Singer” followed. However, while it barely entered the chart in the United States, towards the middle of 1963, it climbed to No.4 in Britain. In Australia, it ascended to No.20.
http://youtu.be/dkE8PFbO_Jo
“Everybody” became Tommy’s second self-penned hit. Recorded in the studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, in July of 1963, it rose to No.3 in the United States and No.9 in Britain. Six years were to pass before Tommy Roe would re-enter the British charts.
The Australian public, on the other hand, had taken a distinct liking to Tommy’s recordings and while “Everybody” did not chart there, “Susie Darlin’ ” (No.4, in 1962) and “Carol” (No.9, in 1964) had performed well. “Susie Darlin’ ” had been a hit for its composer, Robin Luke, in 1958; as had “Carol” for its composer, Chuck Berry, in that same year. “Party Girl”, while it barely entered the Hot 100 in the United States, in 1964-’65, reached its apex at No.7 in Australia.
http://youtu.be/NNyVmGzldj4
Eighteen months passed before Tommy Roe took firstly “Sweet Pea” and then “Hooray For Hazel” into the American Top 10, in the latter half of 1966. “It’s Almost Winter’s Day” performed moderately, in America, at the start of the new year. All three songs were Tommy’s compositions. Nevertheless, a further two years would pass before the ditty he was destined to co-write would become his biggest hit of all.
“Dizzy” topped Billboard’s Hot 100 for four weeks from the middle of March in 1969. Tommy’s re-emergence on the British chart could also be celebrated for the recording also reached No.1 there, in June of that year, after it had climbed to as high as No.3 in Australia.
http://youtu.be/qH3i7KaQ26w
“Heather Honey” met with more tempered success and, just as 1969 drew to a close, “Jam Up And Jelly Tight” was just about to mark Tommy Roe’s final visit to the Top 10.
Although Tommy continued to enter the American charts for a further three years, the recordings that had worked so well for him before were really no longer in vogue. In America there had been a leaning towards mellow country rock while, in Britain, glam rock had come to the fore.
Nevertheless, Tommy Roe continued to find audiences to attend his concerts and, in 1991, in that most retrospective of decades, he would have received royalties when the British outfit, Vic Reeves and The Wonder Stuff, again took “Dizzy” to the top of the charts.
Fortunately, I awoke at 6.00 a.m. Whilst I had rewound the clock last night, I had neglected to reset the alarm. It is a fine day, which is accompanied by a cold wind.
“Dad” crashed his Chrysler ‘Town And Country’ utility, of four years, when he went to change lanes. Although the impact dented the red ute’s mudguard, it apparently did little damage to the other motorist’s vehicle.
Tiki paid the bill of seven dollars being for a short consultation she had had with a general practitioner.
Kerry Packer was interviewed, on “Willesee” at 7.00 p.m., about his troupe of cricketers, which has broken away from the establishment.
We walked through the shopping centre, in suburban Gymea, for the first time tonight. Its main street really does look like that of a country town. Vehicles are parked rear first and at an angle to the kerb.
The gusty winds are continuing to blow. “Last Of The Wild”, this evening, focuses upon the pelican. “Willesee”, at seven o’clock on Channel Seven, contains an interview conducted between Paul Makin, a reporter on the show, and an apparently drunk Robert Shaw. The actor, who was born in England, is asked about his role in the film, “The Deep”, which also stars the English actress, Jacqueline Bisset and Nick “Rich Man, Poor Man” Nolte.
Half past seven heralds another delivery from the American comedy series, “Good Times”, and an hour later, and also on Channel Seven, Bill Collins introduces the picture, “Reflection Of Murder”. Produced in 1974, it features actresses Tuesday Weld and Joan Hackett. Bill informs us that it is based upon a French film of the 1950s, which I remember having seen.
“Darling”, another motion picture, from 1965, screens from half past ten, however, we are only to watch the commencement of it. Evidently, the English duo of Julie Christie and Dirk Bogarde has a prominent role to play, as does the late Laurence Harvey.
Despite the temperature reaching a maximum of sixteen degrees Celsius, a bitterly cold wind made the day an unpleasant one. We paid two dollars and eighty-nine cents for a plastic garbage bin at Target’s store in Rockdale.
This evening, at half past seven, we viewed the motion picture, “Locust”. Set in 1943, it stars Ron “The Andy Griffith Show”/”Happy Days” Howard. It is followed, also on Channel Seven, by the film, “Night Of The Lepus”. Stuart “Cimarron Strip” Whitman, Janet Leigh and Rory “The Texan” Calhoun all feature in this fictitious drama, from 1972, which depicts enormous, carnivorous rabbits running amok.
Although it was a bright, sunny morning it was only six degrees Celsius as we left for work. I did the driving and was in a jovial mood. Tiki, who dislikes them intensely, kept stirring me over my fondness for Volkswagen ‘Beetles’. Because I refused to look upon them as she does, she informed me that I would have to walk home this afternoon. I told her that if that, indeed, were the case then I had better get an immediate start and walked off without having kissed her goodbye. It wasn’t until she espied me hiding behind a fence, constructed of corrugated iron, that we laughed and kissed one another.
“Follow The Sun”, an outstanding documentary on the coast of the region known as The Kimberley, in the north of Western Australia, is shown this evening between half past seven and twenty past nine. Meanwhile, at Trent Bridge, Australia is making a promising start with Davis and McCosker having advanced the score to 1-94. A programme of the defunct series, “Banacek”, is viewed from ten minutes to ten. George Peppard is its star, cast in the title role of the private investigator, Thomas Banacek. Tonight’s guest star is Joanna Pettet, who was born in England. When I finally retired for the night, at half past twelve, Australia had disappointingly slumped to be 4-134.