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The Age from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia • Page 14

Publication:
The Agei
Location:
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

J- 14- TH1 AQ1 WEDNESDAY 10 JUNE 1992 jjit''Sji', trtl blea y.dt A3' tan i i. Arts Entertainment friend of art 1 ists', Mike Brown, Ross Crowthall and Colin Lanceley. For this reason the Balzac was considered a compulsory stop for those interested in the arts, from the fledgling Sydney critic Robert Hughes (who dedicated the first edition of his book 'The Art of Australia', 1966, to Mora) to the International champion of Modern art, Herbert Read. A cheerful host. Mora was renowned at the time for his generosity with meals and work when It came to assisting penniless artists.

In 1967 he left the Balzac and set up the Tolarno restaurant and art gallery In Fltzroy Street, St Kilda. Tolarno scon earned a reputation for being one of Melbourne's better bistros, as well as an Important commercial exhibition space. Mora immediately set about supporting a new generation of vanguard-Ists, introducing in his first year of operation artists such as Dale Hickey and Robert Hunter. The gallery flourished, and be also organised annual shows of graphic works by major 'School of Par- Melbourne OBITUARY GEORGES MORA 1913-92 day Reed, and found themselves drawn into the close-knit circle of artists and writers who frequented the Reeds' home, 'Heide'. Georges Mora quickly became a prominent figure on the Melbourne art scene during the 1950s.

He and his wife offered their flat as the headquarters for the Contemporary Art Society when it re-formed in late 1952, Mora himself becoming a member of the CAS council (1953-61). His support for the modern movement was unswerving and he was involved in many innovative projects. In particular. Mora was a committee member of the Gallery of Contemporary Art (1956-59), and of the Museum of Modern Art Design of Australia (195946). With the poet John Gooday he also edited the short-lived local art -magazine 'Modern Art News' (1959).

Picture: WILLIAM WEST idea of getting back to old-fashioned and visual storytelling." it Murder film from a family scrapbook i.uuo v( oj io. T. During this period the space emerged as one of the leading contemporary gal-; leries In the country, continuing to ex-. nlblt challenging and Innovative' local art Mora was also a foundation member of the Australian Commercial Galleries and through that helped set up the -biennial Australian Contemporary Art Fair. In addition to these he acted as an art consultant, advising on the formation of mafly major private col-lections such as tHd National Australia Bank Collection.

Tn recent years Georges Mora has continued to present major shows by leading artists, including Howard Arkley, John Brack, Julie Brown-Rrap, Juan Davila, T'm Johnson, Albert Tucker, Eric Westbrook and Caroline Williams (Mora's widow). I fondly remember Georges's chirpy greetings when I entered his gallery. His warm humor, seasoned eye and fondness for conversing about good pictures over an aromatic coffee represented much that was positive about the art scene. Melbourne's gallery beat will be considerably lessened by' his absence. v- Chftowpttar Haathcot ol be- i gether wQa'doiftiiealiyn6WBsuirirnate their relationship 'will become predatory or kill is crucial to this case.

"I don't even see Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb as gay homosexual. I think Leopold was in' love with Loeb In a traditional sense, but If you defined Loeb by todays terms he would be bisexual very mlcn a Charming figure both men and worrien responded to. He wasn't particularly interested in sexuality, but in power. And the way he exercised that power was- through crime." The low budget, black and white movie was shot in days. "It Is constructed like a classic melodrama," he says.

"One of the big. objections has. been that It absolutely refuses to take a moral position. And there are no redeeming qualities about the two young men. "The Hollywood style of ending that leaves the audience on an 'up' note does not represent life as I've known It There Is something to be said about a film that unsettles you all the way, because It leaves you asking questions." Mr Kalln, who has a background in painting, experimental videos and short films, says he Is Interested.

In "films that are driven by the performances, not in car chases and exploding buildings. I like the idea of getting back to old-fashioned values of bril-' llant acting and visual storytelling. "But right now I'm trying to avoid the daunting question of the 'second tea-. hire'. Instead I hope to make a couple of half-hour works for TV and hone my abilities as a director." 'Swoon' screens at the Valhalla on Saturday afternoon.

1980s expressionism, although their colors are more calculated than may appear. Of the other exhibitors, Pasquale Glardino offers an agreeable and well- composed picture of Starbuck's crew hunting' Moby Dick. But the rest of the Roar team appear to have not lasted the distance. Indeed, they tend to retreat unfortunately into the programmatic landscapes and abstract decorations that they set out to rebel against. THEO Papathomas exhibits a set of gouaches of twisting and dancing creatures in harlequin-like costumes at Girgis Klym.

Probing beyond surface -patterns, many of his figures and animals appear, indebted to Peter Booth and MImmo Paladlno. Papathomas makes inventive use of his frames, which have been eut from masonlte and assembled into brightly colored geometric motifs. Individually, some works do seem weak, but as a whole the display is cheery and entertaining. 22 5 19111 0055 332211 rv 7T TT .1 'M- ma-ali it GEORGES MORA, who died on Monday after a sudden illness, was synonymous with Australian contemporary art for four decades. Before then, he had an exotic history.

He was born Gunter Morawski, of Jewish parents, in Leipzig in 1913, but lived most of his young life in Paris. He studied medicine. Joined the French Foreign Legion and, during the Second World War, fought in the Resistance, where he met his first wife, artist Mirka. "We were not heroes," he once said. "We just had a sad job to do and dally risks." Georges Mora and his young family emigrated to Australia In 1951.

While he had no prior knowledge of art (he managed a noodle factory). Mora met a number of local artists over the following months. One thing led to another, and fairly soon Georges and his then wife Mirka had allowed Charles Blackman, Ian and Dawn Sime, Laurence Hope and Julius Kane to hold small exhibitions in their large flat In the basement of 9 Collins Street At this time the couple also became friendly with the local patrons, John and Sun- IMP Film director Tom Kaliw "1 like the values of brilliant acting IN a once important, but nowadays neglected article on post-war attitudes toward artistic beauty, the British philosopher N.J. Findlay argued that two values the "perspicuous" and the "poignant" have been central to our aesthetic experience. His terms are flowery, but they are useful.

By perspicuous, Findlay wanted to define what he called "a peculiar sort" of "clearness and and by poignant, a no less distinct quality of "lm-presslveness and Euan Heng's latest paintings seem to me both perspicuous and poignant Standing in his Australian Galleries exhibition, the viewer ceases to be self-absorbed and becomes object-absorbed. These pictures testify to the continuing relevance of art in our attempts to make sense of life, for the human situation Is represented here with an unexpected lucidity, and in a manner that stirs us quite deeply. Little about the meaning of Heng's works Is resolved by inquiring into the sources of his iconography. His compo- TV New Leave It To G. R.

6.30 Cartoon Worth considering INTERVIEW MIKE DALY Ovist In the ACT UP movement His videotape charting media response to the AIDS crisis, enabled him to raise the money tor 'Swoon'. This included a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, although unlike his colleague Todd Haynes, whose NEA-funded film, 'Poison', drew conservative flak in the US for its allegedly pornographic content, Tom Kalln Is aiming at a more mainstream audience. The Leopold-Loeb trial involved details of homosexual favors exchanged for crimes of escalating violence; and defence attorney Clarence Darrow loses a true In 1955 Georges Mora took his first step into the restaurant business by opening Mlrka's Cafe In Exhibition Street The menu leant toward Continental cuisine which was relished by artists, writers and the theatre crowd. Notably, Mlrka's Cafe was decorated with the boldest contemporary art (John Olsen later described it as Australia's 'Tachlst paradise'), including surrealist counters by Julius Kane, bio-morphlc celling sculptures by Clifford Last, non-objective murals by Ian Sime, and expressionist crockery by John Perceval and Arthur Boyd. The cafe also hosted Impromptu exhibitions of works by Joy Hester, Sidney Nolan, Clifton Pugh and others.

Mora subsequently launched the highly successful Cafe Balzac in East Melbourne. If he was not as active on the art scene, the restaurant's ambience was set by contemporary art It was decorated with many works, including a large mural commissioned from the 'Annandale Imitation Real CHICAGO history, in contrast with Hollywood's glamorous past, is a murky chronicle of gangsters and criminals, says visiting film director Tom Kalln, whose debut feature, 'Swoon', is screening at the Melbourne International Film Festival. But this only partly explains why, in a country replete with movie mayhem, the young Chicagoan decided to focus on the sordid "thrill-kill" case of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb: affluent, Jewish, homosexual and aged 18. Their random murder of an eight-year-old boy aroused public fury and disgust In the 1920s, and a bestselllng book and film in the 1950s. Tom Kalln, the youngest of 11 siblings, Inherited an obsession with the notorious case from his late grandmother, who complied a voluminous Leopold-Loeb scrapbook.

"I remember looking at all the press clippings, the photographs and the innuendo about the case," he says. "My mother, for Instance, still shudders at the thought because it was so disturbing the first of America's motiveless crimes." The case Is thought to have inspired two previous movies, Alfred Hitchcock's 'Rope' (1948) and Richard Fleischer's 'Compulsion' (1959). Although Tom Kalin believes Hitchcock's film Is tenuously connected to the Leopold-Loeb murder, he says one of his motives for making 'Swoon' was to respond to both films' euphemistic depiction of two dandified men. "Their physical relationship was never properly articulated," he says. "It was signified more by their manner and dress and the way they looked at each other, than by anything they did." He has been Involved as an AIDS ac- clutches tightly to his chest, or holds out as an offering.

Significantly, such actions always oct cur In relation not to another character 4 in the composition or the viewer, but to -an unseen third observer whose approval is being constantly sought Everything centres on this absent witness, or, at least, Heng's figures are unable to act without taking him or her Into account (perhaps it Is a God). Of course, there are suggestions of Beckett's black comedies In these perspicuous tableaux, as well as the traditional allegorical characters of medieval drama and art People fuss about and aspire to do many great things, although they seem to achieve very little In the long run. In this sense Heng's child-like gentlemen are symbols of the plight of the individual in the vain, material world. Sometimes an image cuts one to the quick. The poignancy of Heng's lmagi- missed 1 6.00 Newa.

6.30 Good Morning Australia, e.90 ine Morning Show With Bert Newton. G. 10.00 Mulligrubs. P. R.

10.30 Aerobics Oz Style. G. 11.00 Sally Jeaae Raphael. US chat show. My kids are ruining my life.

PGR. Afternoon 12.00 Santa Barbara. PGR. 1.00 The Bold And The Beautiful. PGR.

1.30 Donahue. US chat show. Tabloid scandal hits democratic front runner. PGR. 2.30 Oprah Winfrey Show.

US chat show. My husband is a home improvement klutz. PGR. 3.30 General Hospital. US drama series.

PGR. 4.00 Batman. G. R. 4.30 The Wonder Years.

C. R. 6.00 Newa. Sport Weather. In Evening Adelaide hall.

VICTORIA: extending the metres. PORT wind 20 to ALPINE a west waters IN THE Showers. periods Cold wind, max. max. max.

edited by MICHAEL SHMITH Is this Qhurchill's finest two hours? TELEVISION BARBARA HOOKS 1HE most moving film Image of the state funeral of Winston -av Churchill is not the gun carriage sombrely carrying the flag-draped casket, or the river barge that bore it away after the service, or the mourners. It Is the massed dockland cranes forming a guard of honor with their lowered booms as the barge passed below. The gesture, which comes at the end of the US-mlnute documentary, 'Churchill: Portrait of the Man', tonight at 8.J on the ABC, is eloquent Although the British electorate had enjoyed a fickle relationship with its former Prime Minister, and although he was a son of the noble house of Marlborough, the docklands' gesture seemed to sum up the social unity of feeling about the passing of this elder Statesman. Up to that point writer-presenter Martin Gilbert, Churchill's official biographer, does a good Job of exercising our feelings about his subject. Two years in the making by the BBC and completed this year, 'Churchill' Is ail admiring portrait, but not wide-eyed.

It Is also critical of his many mistakes, although it does not catalogue them definitively (the substance of the Australian Prime Minister's complaints about Britain's cavalier attitude to us in wartime is qot mentioned despite the ABC's financial involvement). Rather, it is a celebration and ex-, amlnation of a life full of achievements and fallings made in spite of, as Well as because of, who he was and what he was a sad and neglected little rich boy who grew up to be a confident, eloquent world leader subject to black depressions and a preoccupation with death. As a documentary, 'Churchill' works so well because it Is animated and richly anecdotal, not in the least dry or dull, however worthy. Gilbert marshals an army of Churchill confidants and chroniclers. Among them are family members, former private secretaries, personal staff, diplomats, politicians, military historians, authors, and the sons and daughters of his contemporaries, such as Richard Panlchurst, son of sufragette Emily, to whom Churchill was not in the least sympathetic at first Between them they give us a rounded sense of the man, his humor, his habits, his blind-spots and talents.

They cover everything: his un-aristo-cratlc table manners, prodigious thirst for, and seeming Immunity to, alcohol, his darkest days of war, and his prescient grasp of a changing world order. Of course much of the material is familiar, but 'Churchill' has a freshness and completeness lacking in other documentaries about the extraordinary wartime leader. DOES 'Cluedo' represent an upward swing In game shows or a downward swing In drama? Based on the board game, Nine's new weekly murder-mystery game show (tonight at 7J) combines both elements but is compelling as neither. As a game show It has too little at stake to be truly exciting. Who are we barracking for and what's to lose? And as drama, It looks Ud feels flat The mathematical permutations of six characters (Col.

Mustard, Miss Scarlet etc etc) taking turns to bump each other oft in six rooms with six weapons are probably endless. But odds on 'Cluedo' will soon feel repetitious and tiresome. Whaps On 7.00 Latelin. 7.30 Open Learning: Marketing. S.

8.00 The Smoggles. 8.24 Bunyip. 8.30 Sesame Street 9.30 Play School. 10.00 For The Juniors. 6.00 The Beaver.

R. 10.20 Take A Look. S. 10.30 Look Up. 10.45 Zardip'a Search For Healthy Wellness.

R. 11.05 Behind The Newa. R. S. 11.30 Espana Viva.

R. Afternoon 12.00 World At Noon. 12.30 A Big Country. R. 1.00 National Press Club Luncheon.

Tom Sherman, chairperson of NCA. 2.00 Something Close To HeH. R. 3.00 Sesame Street 2.55 Come And Get It 3.55 Nellie The Elephant. 4.00 Play School.

R. 4.30 Postman Pat R. 4.45 The Brolly's. R. 5.00 The Afternoon Show.

Hosted by Michael Tunn. 5.02 Vidtot Teen trivia. G. 5.30 Degress) Junior High. Children's series.

Q.R. Evening 4.00 Danger Mouse. Q. R. 8.25 Roger Ramjet G.

R. 6.30 Here's Lucy. G. R. 7.00 Newa.

Sport Weather. 7.30 The 7.30 Report. Hosted V.by Mary Delahurrty. ..00 A Question Of Survival. Environment series.

Tonight: Ihe South Pacific struggles between economic survival and environmental concerns; Seattle's garbage surplus; 'and the Queensland timber Industry. 8.28 Newa Update, (also 10.25) Churchill: Portrait Of The Involving British Afternoon 12.00 Single Divorcees 2.00 Hunter. Evening hosted 7.30 Hey 10.50 Connection. R. P.

10.00 R. themselves their 6alnt 3.00 3.30 Get 4.00 Art. 4.30 Now 5.00 Family 5.30 Wheel Australian 6.00 Newa. 6.30 Real 7.00 Home wedding smoothly. Lawrence.

for 40 Monahan, 6.00 Home comedy superstitious. and PGR. 8.28 8.30 royal the aueen grandmother tne Vizard. Lucid, stirring pictures that linger in the mind 2 Georges Mora: a force in fostering contemporary art for four decades. Is' masters, Including Bonnard, Villi-lard, Matisse, Leger and Picasso.

During the 1970s Mora's son, William, joined him as a partner in the gallery. In 1979 Georges Mora left the St Kilda restaurant and relocated Tolarno Galleries to River Street, South Yarn. made legal history by including Freudian psychoanalysis in evidence. Tom Kalln says, "I definitely didn't want to make a film that through its excess completely alienated people. "I don't by any means see 'Swoon' as being addressed merely to a sympathetic gay or lesbian audience.

I wanted to reclaim this genre of mad love and show It doesn't have anything to do with sexuality, per se." The film is, however, a partial response to the attitudes behind 'Compulsion', which he regards as a product of McCarthylsm, "an era that whipped up hysteria about all the things Leopold and Loeb represented Thus they became the perfect villains to resurrect in the popular He also wanted to dispel the "American myth of a pathological homosexual behavior. The idea that two men to- selves. However, viewers who savot' the resonance of an image, and the per-' splcuousness and poignancy of good art, should find that Heng's pictures linger in the mind for the rest of this year, at least. NINE of the original Roar artists are featured at William Mora Gallery this month. The exhibition marks the tenth anniversary of the opening of Roar studios in June 1982.

The show is dominated by the works of Judi Singleton and Wayne Eager, who have continued to refine their early themes. Singleton's lyrical excursion into childhood adventures on suburban bitumen seems to have taken its cues from the "bicycle boys" theme of John Olsen. Eager makes an energetic cart-wheel emblem out of the aerial view of a city block. Both artists continue to work in the painterly idiom of Melbourne 0055 19800 Victoria 0055 19321 The world Amsttrdam Athens Auckland Bahrain Min Man Cond 1 iu ciouay 32 cloudy IS rain 41 cloudy 36 cloudy 30 cloudy 25 cloudy Bl)fno Berlin Cairo Chrlstchurch Geneva Harare Hong Kons Honolulu Islamabad Jakarta leruMitm Kuala Lumpur i ciear tonoon The tides TODAY Wllll.mitown high water: 9,46 9.43 pm. tow water: 3.51 port pi Phillip Heads 7.01 Am.

tVCe tu high water; low waien tooradln high water: 12.06 am, 12.10 b.ib pm. low wittn i 1.29 am. TOMORROW WIHUmstown htgn water: 11.07 am. 10.27 pm. low waMn 4.44 am.

4.33 pm. Port Ptiilllp Heads high water: S.1 1 am. 7.46 pm. low water: 1.01 am, 1.02 pm. Tooraoln high water 9.34 am.

9.09 pm. low water: 2.24 am. oeareei a) ft an Althouoh evening no front was The planets will TODAY sun; Mercury VENUS 7.2$ am MARS 3.12 am IUPITER 12.11 pm SATURN 6.33 pm 11.25 4UeM TOMORROW 1 JSJ1 Sets SUf 7.32 am 5.07 pm VlNUS 7.36 am .03 pm MARS 3.11am 2.1 8 pm Astrorwrnlcel Society of Vk tor (a Highs and lows Today's normal Man 14.0 Record Wgh io.JIn ll8 ii 1967 1.1 In 1666 A ami Highest ramfaH: 14.7mm 1(49 Mb of it mm per cent sab of 10 mm 3 per cent Solar energy Total solar energy vest rneMrOUKnvsg. m. On days In June wM recelvi Vic IB 32 audw Njw Ojlljl 7 rjln SKS Li I kw 1 MELBOURNE NOON Isolated southern and In the rainfall totals mm although also observed, was mostly to strong In be nation puts one In mind of previous artists and dreamers.

For example, 'The I Aviator reverberates with allusion to IWatteau's Images of Pierrot frittering away his life in Elysian pastures. Presumably the artist prefers asceticism to luxury, for this theme seems to recur in other major pieces. In 'The Metaphysician', my favorite piece, a visibly troubled youth In an expensive scarlet suit who clutches a model steamtraln has thrown himself down on the ground before a sweeping seascape. Oblivious to the glorious world surrounding him, he gazes introspectlvely to the left. I suspect that the allusions are to Wittgenstein, that engineer-turned-philosopher-turned-mystic.

Heng's show is not for everyone. Those who worry whether an artist Is a member of the right clique, or if the exhibits conform to conceptual fashion, will find little to amuse them-. ART Euan Hang (Australian Galleries, until 13 June); Nine Roar Artists Now (William Mora Galleries, until 20 June); Theo Papathomas (Girgis Klym Gallery, until 21 June). CHRISTOPHER HEATHCOTE sltlons may echo with esoteric references to what he most values; from the paintings of the forgotten British artist William Roberts, to trees in his garden, to even the structure of his daughters' faces. Yet such details have little bearing on the act of interpretation.

In his paintings Heng depicts a single male figure placed within a vividly colored Imaginary landscape. Each craggy character wears a suit and grasps an object (such as a ladder, a chainsaw, a bowl, or a fish) which he Weather Excellent Not to be BUREAU OF IVttTIlUlvDUlGY Situation at noon yesterday I HI I G. 9(00 Mr Ed. G. 6.00 Sanford And Son.

G. R. 6.30 ITN World Newa. 6.55 Business Today. 7.00 Today.

9.00 Here'a Humphrey. P. 9.30 In Melbourne Today. G. 10.30 Newa.

11.00 What'a Cooking. G. 11.30 Entertainment Tonight Hollywood gossip. 9.30 The Book Place. thirty some thing.

PGR. 11.0011am. Sex And The Parent 1979 drama. try to satisfy FILM. TODAY'S FORECASTS MELBOURNE: Cloudy periods with showers and local Cold, gusty west to south-west wind, max.

12. Rain in the east at first. Showers from the west with local hall and thunder in south and snowfalls developing down to 1000 Cold, gusty south-west wind extending throughout. PHILLIP and WESTERN PORT BAYS: A strong warning is current. West to south-west wind of 30 knots with waves of one to two metres.

AREAS: Snow showers becoming widespread. Strong, gusty north-west wind ahead of to south-west change during the day. WARNING8: Strong winds across all Victorian coastal including Port Phillip Bay and Western Port. COUNTRY: Mildura: Showers. Cold southwest wind, max.

13; Swan HIM: Showers, cold southwest wind, max. 13; Horsham: Max. 12; Aibury: Cold wind, max. 11; Bendkjo: Cloudy with showes, max. 1 1 Sheoperton: Showers.

wind, max. 12; Ballarab Showers. Cold, gusty max. 12; Geelong: Showery. Cold, gusty wind, 12; Warmamboof: Showers.

Cold, gusty wind, 1 1 La Trobe Valley: Showers. Cold, gusty wind, 12; Sale: Max. 13; Orbost Max. 13. fW" while being fair to.

children. Stars Susan James. PGR. R. PGR.

R. Winston Churchill is the subject of a richly anecdotal documentary tonight (2, 8.30pm).- G. Kingswood Country. I c- Im" 1 re- C7Z Smart G. R.

G. You See It C. Feud. G. R.

Of Fortune. game show. G. run. Afternoon 12.00 The Midday Show.

Hostea Dy Hay Martin. 1.30 Daya Of Our Uvea. PGR. 2.30 The Young And The Restless. PGR.

3.30 Supermarket Sweep. Game show. G. R. 4.00 1 Dream Of Jeannie.

G. R. 4.30 Guess What C. 5.00 Bewitched. G.

R. 5.30 Melbourne Extra. Local current affairs. Evening 6.00 News. Sport Weather.

6.30 A Current Affair. Current affairs with Jana Wendt. 7.00 Sale Of The Century. With showen were reported In Victoria on Tuesday, mainly In mountain areas, they became more widespread western and central areas towards evening. Recorded for the six hours to 3 pm were mostly less than 2 Ararat 4mm to 6 pm.

Morning togs were mainly In Oopsland and about the ranges. The sky cloudy. Wind was north-westerly and became iresn the south. Maximum temperatures were as much as Afternoon 4.00 NovostJ. Russian News.

other states 4.30 TV Ed. 5.00 English At Work. R. 6.30 Den Of Wolves. Sport Weather.

Ufa. Current affairs Brisbane Canberra G. 6.00 World Sports. by Stan Grant Today Yesterday Max Min 14 14 10 21 21 6 9 9-1 31 32 23 11 11 0 19 20 11 16 15 6 mw average ran june, ana rangea matray rrom I 'Falls Cree In Melbourne Aowmn were ntMArvaxrf tn the) rMtrooolltan a rata In tl AvarrWaht minimum z.zo Degrees ai 1 metropolitan an rain felt In the city gauge to pm. A strong col aa- off western Victoria last night moving rapidly north- estebllshed across Victoria on Wednesday.

Ixpected situation for 9 oin today And Away. The Evening 6.00 MASH. G. R. 6.30 Neighbours.

Lou confesses to Maage. Andrew's life Is threatened. With Alan Dale. G. A few showers Fine Showers Fine dry A few showers Showers developing Snow report MT SAW SAW: StHI snowing.

reception runs With Debra G. S. 6.30 World Newa. Sport. 7.00 Dateline.

Current affairs Sydney Dad. The Kellies fast hosted bv Paul 7.30 The Movie Show. 8.00 Face The Press. Guest: hours. With Sarah Robert Hughes.

G. musician Billy Braga 7.00 Hlnch. Current affairs. 7.30 Street David is Injured in an accident rtomance tans for Penny and James. Amy kills Julia.

With Les Dayman. PGR. Victorian i yesterday: 8.30 FILM. B. Stryker Mt mf I fitted.

MT SUUM: malting UUI of Improvement US UUU MOUNTAIN: Stat snowing. MT tTmuNOi im snowing. BweMtR PLAIN: Stat snowing, road Is very Icy. Sim snowing, snow operation. CAIEK: Sim snowing.

20-30cm man-made snow on play-. 8.30 Derrick. German detective Glenn wage. u. Murchv.

7.28 Keno. 7.30 Cluedo. New Australian series with a 'whodunnit' format. With Ian McFayden, Jane Badler. 8.30 FILM.

Trading Places. 1983 comedy. Two businessmen use a street hustler and a spoilt nephew to find out whether Le Paris series. A film crew has mysterious accidents. With Horst Tapoert.

PGR. R. documentary about the life of the British statesman. 10.30 UrieNne. Hosted by Paul Bryant 11.50 12.58 NBC aeries.

Tim Becomes With Tim Allen Patricia Richardson. Tattslotto. Elizabeth R. A year in the life. Includes footage of as mother.

9.30 Out Of Africa: Black. The link between black culture and Parisian society. Intelligence Is more Important 10.30 FILM. The and monarch of Lttmmonweann. u.

h.w HAM: StHI mowing, chains Mormattat aaWM by the deucl svsfont over ToMitooio ond western VtV 'Ji Nr' Damascus. 1988 French comedy. An ex-hippy becomes a Driest. Tonight Live. With Steve Cards nn.

An old friend of Stryker's Is hunted by assassins after her arms dealing husband is murdered. Stars Burt Reynolds. PGR. 10.30 Newa. 11.00 The Street US drama series.

AO. 12.00 FILMS. Eleanor And Franklin The WhKehoue Years. 1977 drama. The lives of the presidential couple.

8 tars jane Alexander. PGR. R. 3.00 Natural World. G.

R. 4.00 Tlte Prisoner. AO. R. 8.00 Love Thy Neighbour.

PGR. 6.30 Too Cloee To Comfort G. R. leant over 12.00 Steve Martin. tnan nereany tor success.

Stars Eddie Murphy, Dan Akroyd. AO. R. 11.00 The World Tonight With Cllve Robertson. 12.00 Wieeguy.

AO. R. 1.00 FILMS. Children Of Rage. 1975 drama.

Stars Cyril Cusack.AO.R. 3.00 The Coraican Brothers. 1941 adventure. PGR. R.

AO. Midnight Caller. PGR. Today Snow. With Recordings Rainfall Sere- Dry Sew- Del If Meimirnt for 24 hours Road To The career 8.00 Carsona Comedy ciaeeiea.

pun. n. 6.30 The 8uWvwts.Q. R. Qumbel and Katharine of the comic actor from standup routines to screenplays.

G. R. 1.00 FILM. Sex Mission. 1985 Polish sci-fi.

AO. R. 3.00 Soccer: European Championship. 4.18 Soccer. Sweden v.

Franc. 9.16 Cloee. 1 HE uourtc. u. 2.85 The 100 Uvea Of Btack Jack Savage.

PGR. R. 3.45 Laura McKenzle'a Travel Tipe.Q. 4.46 Good Sports. G.

Barry, s. "11.08 Jau Ax Now. Final. Tonight Nat Adderiy Group Hind Hessen Youth jazz llMCtoee. rSdjhrmH: mmi image retnfea for month of Whet SO.

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