Read The Electrical Experience Online
Authors: Frank Moorhouse
âhold it, Frederick. We want dates and places. Tell us when.
âwill I start again?
âyes, If you want.
ââI was born at the foot of a mountain, taught my first letters in sand.'
I was born at Milton in 1918. I worked there for
a while. I remember when they cut up Lenin's brain into 31,000 pieces and found he had pyramids, his brain was all pyramid shapes and that was how he got his ideas, his brain was not normal. I was the first watchman allowed to carry a gun outside Sydney. For a while I played in the town band, cornet; after we got electricity the band hall was one of the first to have heaters. I was a volunteer fireman and went to classes about what to do with electricity when there was a fire and it was escaping. Damned scared we were. Some of them wouldn't fight the fire at the garage because of escaping electricity. We got an old Abo drunk once, and he told us where to find Billy Blue's reef up at Yalwalâyou could cut solid hunks of gold off itâbut we got so drunk ourselves that we'd forgot in the morning â¦
Back at Jane's Place Later
âit's all so much garbage, it's too static, Jane says.
âno, no, no, says Stewart, no, this is just the warm-up. This guy is good.
âhe's an interesting type, I say, he's the sort of person who fills the gaps in the economy. Adaptable, learns new techniques.
âthat's what the film is about, says Stewart.
He doesn't mean that. He just says that.
âbut you're depriving him of his dignity, Jane bursts out, because he thinks you are making a film about what you've told him. But really you're making it about things you've never told him.
âthat's not a film-maker's response, says Stewart sternly. If you feel bad about it you're in the wrong business. He, the subject, has to look after himself. We have to fight with reality to get what we want. It's a battle of wills. We have to attain our objective, regardless. Anyhow, you're the one robbing him of his
dignitas
by not conceding him the ability of looking after himself.
âI'm certainly not conceding him
that.
She laughs.
âthat's what show business is all about. Right, Gary? says Stewart.
âyou find 'em, I shoot 'em, says Gary.
âwhat a trouper! says Stewart.
Day Three
âwell, how goes it Frederick Victor? Ready to make movie history? asks jovial Stewart.
âI've been thinking. I'm not sure I know what you boys are on about.
âjust a few questions tonight, Frederick, perhaps a few more tomorrow night.
âbut I don't know what you fellows want. I don't think I know what it's all about.
âjust sit down and relax.
Stewart goes into more personal history asking for âsignificant memories'.
âonce saw an Avro Anson land in a paddock ⦠once went to Braidwood to see a demonstration of a new fly-trap, which they said caught 30,000 flies in a week using a piece of bullock's liver and honey â¦
never seen so many flies, thick black like tar they were ⦠this fellow who made this fly-trap was going to put one for every five hundred acres ⦠he reckoned that there'd be no more flies in the country ⦠don't know why he didn't go ahead with it â¦
âentertainment?
âremember going to see Clay's Variety and seeing Nellie Kolle dressed up as a man.
âyou liked that, Frederick?
âaround the thirties I was great mates with Harry Miller who could get more timber out of a tree than any man I ever knew ⦠bloody marvellous he was ⦠I worked with him ⦠he and me made all the post and rail fences you see up and down the coast. You could go there tomorrow and see them there â¦
âyou made all the fences, eh?
âone day we'd be working away, could be any time of the day, and I'd see Harry just drop his tools and all and walk off without a word ⦠I knew what would be up ⦠about every two months or so ⦠he'd be off on a drunk ⦠leaving his tools, everything, just where it was ⦠if I wasn't there to pick them up they would've just stayed there till he came back ⦠I used to go with him for the first few hours ⦠but he'd just drink until he fell down and go on for days, stopping just like he started, and go back to where he'd left off. No one could make a fence like him; he got more timber out of a tree than any man I knew. We must have built hundreds of miles of fences â¦
Day Four
âright, Frederick Victor, Stewart says.
Fred is ready early. Sitting in his chair, hair done. He's now only too willing to sit in front of the camera to talk about himself. He has discovered film, the ultimate egomaniacal business, where everyone from subject to director feels unnaturally important.
âright, Frederick Victor, tonight is going to be a little different. We've heard all you have to say about the good old days, and how you built the South Coast. Today things are going to be a little different. Today I'm going to talk to you about what our generation thinks of your generationâdamn it noâto be specific, what I think about
you
.
Stewart hasn't warned us about this. This wasn't how I saw it all going.
âfirst your attitude to pleasure, Frederick. You could all get drunk, we know that, but did you ever sing? No. Did you ever dance? We know you could tell dirty jokes, but you were never really comfortable with women, women had no place with you and your generation. The bachelor is a sort of hero. You were hung up with sex but could never admit it. Your generation never admitted being wrong, hung up, and you went on to be so damn self-righteous about every bloody thing, you buggered up your kids.
âain't got no kids, says Fred aggressively.
âfor god's sake, Frederick, I'm talking about your generation, not you particularly. Your generation never could admit its failings, could never examine itself,
could never ⦠For instance, Frederick, where do you get your fucks from? Tell us how you work things out.
Fred looks across at Jane and Terri protectively.
Stewart, I think, is not that coherent, he is I think playing it off the top of his head.
âit's all right, Frederick, we don't have a double standard like you. We talk the same way to our friends irrespective of whether they're male or female. You treated women despicably.
âhey now, just you mind what you're saying, says Fred.
âyour fake toughness, too, you and your generation's gruffness, hiding your ignorance.
âyou know what you can do? says Fred. You can piss off, the lot of you. I'm not here to be insulted.
âoh yes, you are. Ho, ho, that's just what you are. Jane was saying only yesterday how you were being deprived of your
dignitas
. Because you haven't got a clue in all hell what's going on. And you didn't have the guts to ask or the nouse to guess.
âgo on, piss off, says Fred, getting to his feet, flustered and hurt. Piss off, the lot of you.
He motions with his hand and goes into the other room.
âwe'll wait, says Stewart.
We sit around nervously, smoking, drinking, or pacing.
âI might go to the pub, I say.
âyou stay. We might need some more probes, barbs. Start feeding me.
He snaps his fingers.
âfeed me, questions which sting, he says.
âat least it wasn't static, says Jane.
âbugger off, the lot of you, he yells from the other room. Bugger off.
Stewart gets Peter Sound to hold the mike against the door.
âall right, Fred, stop this prima donna bit and come out. Come on, tell us about how you fought on the Kokoda Trail, tell us about serving with the Eighth Divvy, how you worked on the Burma railway, put the telegraph across Central Australia, hewed the granite for the Sydney Harbour Bridge, dug the Parkes Swimming Pool during the Depression, was the first person to retread a tyre, built every fence on the South Coast, picked up Chifley's pipe when he dropped it at Bathurst once, shook General Montgomery's hand â¦
Stewart ran out of questions.
âChrist, take it easy, Stewart, I say.
We sit a bit longer, but Stewart is wrong. Fred doesn't come out.
Day Five
Jane and I go back to reapproach Fred and to pay him his twenty-five dollars for Day Four.
He answers the door.
âcan we come in and talk with you, Mr Turner. We're sorry about how things turned out last night.
âwhere are the others? He is brusque, formal.
âwe came around to say we're sorry, says Jane. I nod.
âlike to get me hands on that bloody Stewart.
Stewart is crouched with Gary in the hedge with sound gear and a sungun ready to pounce.
As soon as Fred says this, up Stewart and Gary jump, sungun beaming.
ânow's your chance, Fred, says Stewart.
Fred sort of laughs with fright. There is a bit of laughing, and we're back in the living-room with Fred the centre of attention and the camera rolling. Good spirits.
To soften him up, we let Terri Props, etc., ask a few questions about the coast where she comes from. She's more nervous on camera than Fred.
âGeorge McDowell! Old T.G.! You his daughter! Go on! Well what-do-you-know! Fancy that! Know him! I used to work for him, probably before you were born. Know him! I used to wash bottles in his bloody cordial factory. He was very particular about that. Well, strike me pink!
âwhat sort of person was he?
âwhat sort of person was he? Your father? Old T.G.? Fair, a fair man, but as hard as nails the old T.G. Know his biggest problem? He didn't understand people. Was always rubbing people up the wrong way. One day I remember Tony Larkins got a dreadful dressing down from T. G., a real bawling-out because Tony said something to me about crawling to the boss. Tony was having me on, like. T.G. went for him. Tony and me drank together. But old T.G. overhears Tony say something about me crawling to the boss, because I'd done something or other to make the line work better. Old T. G. heard him and really let fly. And
bugger me, but he doesn't give me a raise. For having improved things. But you know what? It was Tony's idea all along. He told me in the pub about the idea to make the line work better and I was just rigging it up! He gets bawled out by T.G. and I get the raise. We laughed ourselves sick in the pub. Your old man, eh! Fancy that!
Stewart lets this go on for a while, although he's not really interested. But Fred likes talking about it, and we obviously need to win him back on side.
We make it an early night.
Day Six
This time Jane prepares Fred.
âyou know, Fred, these days we all talk about sex. People these days want to know about how it is with other people and so on. There's more honesty about now. Well, we'd like to talk to you about it.
âsex? But everyone will see me.
âbut these days it doesn't matter.
âbut Stewart promised no more of that personal stuff.
We are shooting this little exchange, too.
Stewart comes in.
âright, Frederick, stop behaving like an old woman. Let's talk about prostitutes.
Fred is sullen.
âcome on, Fred, you've got your twenty-five bucks. Why you're almost in the same business yourself.
âabout what?
âcome on, Fred, you must have gone to a prostitute once in your life.
âhad a friend up in Nowra. We were sort of engaged, I suppose you'd say, but she off and marries this cocky. I was working down the coast; it would have been about the time I was working for young Terri's father. I'm not the marrying kind. I guess if I'd wanted to marry her, I wouldn't have gone down the coast.
âall very interesting, says Stewart, but what do you do for sex on the coast when you're not the marrying kind?
Fred gives a sheepish grin.
âwhen did you first visit a prostitute, Fred?
âthat's a bloody silly question. How would I remember that? Probably in Cairo during the war.
âJesus, he
was
in the Egyptian campaign, Stewart says, rolling his eyes at us. Turning back to Fred, he says, how old were you?
âtwenty something.
âbefore that it was your courtship. Did you âindulge' while engaged?
âsort of.
âsort of?
âI don't want to talk about her now. She's a respectable woman.
âall right, what about Aboriginal women?
ânever an Aboriginal.
âwhy not? Prejudiced?
âno, I'm not a prejudiced man.
âthen why not with an Aboriginal?
âthey're a different race and I don't believe in the races mixing.
âthat's prejudice.
âit's a bloody fact of life.
Old Cocky Calwell was right on this particular issue.
âpure prejudice.
ânot in my book, it isn't.
âwe must have a look at your âbook', Fred. What is it?
Mein Kampf
.
Silence.
âso you've never been with a black woman.
âI might have been with a half-caste.
âonly partially prejudiced then. Stewart enjoys his joke.
âtell us what you say when you go to a prostitute.
âsay?
âwhat do you talk to them about? I wouldn't know myself.
âtalk?
âwhat do you ask them, what do you say? Do you talk about the weather?
âdo you ask about the price? prompts Jane over-eagerly from the sidelines.
The embarrassment is burning me to death.
âyes, Frederick, or do you just take out your prick and put it in their hands and burst into tears.
âhow much, he says reluctantly.
âthen what? Do you say, âBeautiful weather'?
âsomething like that.
âdo you ever ask them to go out with you, try to
get to know them better?
He blushes, and is overcome with both the intrusion and some sense of personal misbehaviour.
âgo on, tell us, says Stewart, soft, coaxing, confidential.