Friday, May 29, 2015

CANBERRA WHIPCRACKER BECOMES MODESTY BLAISE

From Australia's most audacious political comic strip -Fabula-which featured thinly disguised leading  politicians  comes  this  illustration , regarded  as too  hot  to run . The   strip  first appeared  in the  March 6, l969 edition of  the national publication, Broadside, edited  by Pete Steedman, published in Melbourne . It  told how the always  scantily  clad  Fabula, private secretary to  Prime Minister  Sir Jim  Grey , protected  him  in a great southern continent, said to be  a  precarious outpost  of  civilisation surrounded by  enormous numbers of  hostile  coloureds.
 
The  capital of  the country  was the  headquarters of  Operation Panic !, the unique form of government  practised  by the cultured and sophisticated  people.  Fabula , plucked from  the obscurity of  the  typing pool, a  dynamic patriot, put  herself  physically and  mentally  at  the  disposal of  her country, fighting  its  foes  and  preserving the cultural  way of  life.
    

The  above  version  of  Fabula , in typical deshabille,  was  unearthed  during  Pete  Steedman's  recent consolidation of his  extensive  files .  The  doctored published  version  showed   Fabula   in  tights.
 
While the  Fabula  strip was being run , the controversy  broke  about  unrest in the Conservatives  over   the   influence   Ainsley Gotto , 22,   had over  Prime Minister John Gorton  as  his principal private secretary.  When Air Minister Dudley Erwin   was asked  why he had been  sacked  in  1969, he  famously said  :" It wiggles, its shapely, its cold blooded  and  its name is Ainslee Gotto ." Veteran reporter  Laurie  Oakes   said  most papers, fearful of defamation, dropped mention of  cold  blooded . The highly talented Gotto  went on to  become a  successful  international  businesswoman .
 
Fast  forward  to  our Charlie Chaplin MODERN TIMES  in Australia   and  a   Fabula-like  comic  strip  would  surely  be  a  real  goer . Is there  somebody  with  a  bit of  nous   and  daring out  there in the  publishing  world  to take up this  idea?
Fabula  in  action  in  the  corridors of  power.