This Day Tonight

Last updated

This Day Tonight (TDT) was an Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) evening current affairs program from 1967 to 1978.

Contents

Founding

When TDT premiered in 1967 it was the first regular nightly current affairs program on Australian TV, and it extended ABC's award-winning coverage of current affairs, which had begun in the early 1960s with its flagship weekly program Four Corners .

Background

TDT was hosted for the first eight years by journalist Bill Peach. The original on-air team consisted of executive producer Allan Martin, and producers Sam Lipski and Ken Chown in Sydney and Bill Pritchard in Melbourne. [1] The original reporters were 60 minutes, Gerald Stone Frank Bennett, Peter Luck, and Gordon Bick in Sydney; Gerald Lyons, Mike Crewdson and Brian King in Melbourne; and Eric Hunter in Canberra. Shortly after, Eric Hunter replaced Mike Crewdson in Melbourne and Mike Willesee became the program's first full-time political reporter. The fact that Melbourne reporters contributed to the programme with original material is often overlooked. [2] [ better source needed ] Clive Hale hosted a South Australian version. [3]

The impetus for this program sprang from Ken Watts, then ABC Director of Television, supported by Neil Hutchinson, ABC Controller of Programs. Watts had been in London and seen the BBC Tonight program, which ran from 1957 to 1965, and was one of the most popular programs in the UK at that time. He was determined to introduce a similar program into the ABC schedule. His first move was to second ABC Drama producer Storry Walton with a brief to identify reporters and on-air talent for a Sydney-based program with the working title of Tonight. Bill Peach was Walton's early nomination for compere, while Willesee, then Press Gallery reporter for the Perth Daily News was immediately hired after an impressive performance while being interviewed on the second night the program went to air.

Watts knew that to support such a daily program would require a minimum of two on-line producers alternating, and for these he nominated Sam Lipski and Ken Chown in Sydney, supported by Bill Pritchard in Melbourne. The appointment of additional staff, obtaining and scheduling film and studio resources and setting the style and shape of the program along the lines he envisaged were further requirements. There was also the complexity of setting up contributing units in each state, and the utilization of the developing microwave networks allowing those units to feed into the Sydney studios, which would originate the program.

Watts' next move was to find an executive producer with sufficient experience to take charge of the overall production. For this he looked to Allan Martin in New Zealand. Watts had met Martin and knew that he had worked as a producer/director for eight years in London for Associated-Rediffusion Television, and he was well aware of the BBC Tonight program. Martin had returned to New Zealand as TV Production Supervisor and later became Chief Producer of NZBC TV initiating programs of the Tonight format in the four main centres of the country entitled Town and Around. Watts offered Martin the position of executive producer.

Having been assured by Watts that on-air staff had been identified, Martin proposed a start of six weeks after his arrival in Australia in late February 1967, and although confronted by a lack of facilities was able to meet that deadline. In March he issued a five page memo to all staff regarding what had been known as the Tonight project. It detailed operations in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra, and the staff for the program, with dummy runs beginning on 27 March and transmission beginning on 10 April 1967. Martin, who was adamantly opposed to using the BBC title, made it clear in the memo that the program would be This Day Tonight. Having visited staff in all states it was clear to him that many of those involved in the production were unsure of the format. He attached an appendix to the operational memo which clearly outlined the nature, style and intention of the program. [4] [ better source needed ]

Noted Australian journalist, author and filmmaker Tim Bowden also worked on the show as a producer. Other producers included Stuart Littlemore and John Crew. [5]

Journalists

It was a training ground for a generation of leading Australian TV journalists, including Gerald Stone (later the producer of the Australian 60 Minutes ), Richard Carleton, Caroline Jones, Sonia Humphrey, [6] Mike Willesee, George Negus, Mike Carlton, Allan Hogan and Peter Couchman.

TDT was renowned for its hard-hitting interviews, a craft brought to a high degree of perfection by Carlton and Negus; the program subjected Australian politicians to a novel degree of questioning and raised the hackles of politicians on both sides who were unused to being placed under such scrutiny. It also broke new ground with its famous "empty chair" tactic, naming politicians who had declined to appear on the show and showing the empty chair where an absent invitee was supposed to be seated.

However, TDT sometimes took a more irreverent approach to stories. One notable example of its occasionally controversial editorial approach was a musical comedy sketch that satirised the actions of then-NSW Premier Robert Askin, who was reported to have ordered his driver to "run over the bastards" when anti-war demonstrators threw themselves in the front the car in which he and visiting U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson were travelling.

TDT also ran annual April Fool's Day stories, including the "Dial-O-Fish" (an electronic device attached to a fishing rod that could be set to catch any desired species), a story alleging that the Sydney Opera House was sinking into the harbour, and a bogus report about the supposed abolition of the 24-hour clock and the introduction of a metric (or decimal) time system. Each of these reports generated considerable feedback, with hundreds of viewers reportedly taken in by the hoaxes.

Awards

TDT won many awards during its run, including Logie Awards for "Best New Program" in 1967, "Personal Effort Award - Special Commendation, Production Current Affairs Allan Martin", "Most Outstanding Coverage of Political Affairs" in 1971 and "Outstanding Contribution to TV Journalism" in 1977. [7]

Axing

The show was axed in 1978, and replaced with Nationwide . Current affairs in the 7.30 time slot was reintroduced with The 7.30 Report in 1986. [7]

Related Research Articles

<i>Frontline</i> (Australian TV series) Australian comedy television series

Frontline is an Australian comedy television series which satirised Australian television current affairs programmes and reporting. It ran for three series of 13 half-hour episodes and was broadcast on ABC1 in 1994, 1995 and 1997.

Jana Bohumila Wendt is an Australian Gold Logie award-winning television journalist, reporter and writer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ATN</span> Television station in Sydney, New South Wales

ATN is the Sydney flagship television station of the Seven Network in Australia. The licence, issued to a company named Amalgamated Television Services, a subsidiary of John Fairfax & Sons, was one of the first four licences to be issued for commercial television stations in Australia. It began broadcasting on 2 December 1956.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George Negus</span> Australian journalist

George Edward Negus AM is an Australian journalist, author, television and radio presenter specialising in international affairs. He was a pioneer of Australian TV journalism, first appearing on the ABC’s groundbreaking This Day Tonight and later on Sixty Minutes. Negus was known for making complex international and political issues accessible to a broad audience through his down-to-earth, colloquial presentation style. His very direct interviewing technique occasionally caused confrontation, famously with Margaret Thatcher, but also led to some interviewees giving more information than they had given in other interviews. Recognition of his unique skills led to him hosting the ABC’s new show Foreign Correspondent and Dateline on SBS. He often reported from the frontline of dangerous conflicts and described himself as an “anti-war correspondent” who wanted people to understand the reasons behind why wars were senseless. He was awarded a Walkley Award for Outstanding Contribution to Journalism. He presented 6.30 with George Negus on Network Ten. He remains a director of his own media consulting company, Negus Media International.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ray Martin (television presenter)</span> Australian journalist and television presenter

Raymond George Martin AM is an Australian television journalist and entertainment personality. Having won the Gold Logie five times, he is the most awarded star of Australian television, along with Graham Kennedy.

A Current Affair is an Australian current affairs program airing weeknights and Saturday nights on the Nine Network. The program is currently hosted by Allison Langdon and Deborah Knight (Saturday).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mike Munro</span>

Michael Kenneth Munro,, is an Australian journalist and television presenter.

<i>Today Tonight</i> Australian television program

Today Tonight was an Australian current affairs television program produced by the Seven Network. It aired from January 1995 to November 2019 in Adelaide and Perth. Editions in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne were previously produced before being cancelled in February 2014.

<i>10 News First</i> News and current affairs service of Network 10 in Australia

10 News First is an Australian television newscast, produced by Network 10. The network's ninety-minute long news program airs at 5pm each evening covering local, national and world news, including sport and weather. Weekend editions are presented nationally from Network 10's studios in Pyrmont, Sydney.

<i>60 Minutes</i> (Australian TV program) Australian version of the U.S. television newsmagazine show 60 Minutes

60 Minutes is an Australian version of the United States television newsmagazine show 60 Minutes, airing since 1979 on Sunday nights on the Nine Network. A New Zealand version uses segments of the show. The program is one of five inducted into Australia's television Logie Hall of Fame.

Allan Hogan is a veteran Australian investigative journalist.

Samuel Lipski is an Australian journalist. He has been editor-in-chief of the Australian Jewish News and has worked as a reporter and columnist for The Age, The Australian, The Bulletin and The Sydney Morning Herald. He was also Washington correspondent for the Jerusalem Post, as well as The Australian. He also worked at a senior level in television, both for Channel 9 Melbourne and with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation where he was executive producer of Four Corners and founding producer of This Day Tonight. He is chief executive of the Melbourne-based philanthropic Pratt Foundation and a former president of the State Library of Victoria. He was a commentator on Melbourne radio station 3AW.

Michael Willesee Jr. is an Australian television journalist, who has worked in both print journalism and broadcasting.

Anthony John "Tony" Ward was an Australian television actor, director and producer and journalist. He is regarded as Australian television's original action star, on Hunter, and was an inaugural reporter on two national current affairs programs, Seven Days and A Current Affair.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Terry Willesee</span> Australian presenter from 1969 to 2013

Terence Joseph Willesee is an Australian retired journalist and television and radio presenter.

Michael Robert Willesee, was an Australian television journalist, interviewer and presenter.

<i>6.30 with George Negus</i> Australian TV series or program

6.30 with George Negus was an Australian television current affairs program broadcast on Network Ten. It aired at 6:30pm from Monday to Friday and was presented by George Negus and Hugh Riminton or Hamish Macdonald (Friday) from the TEN studios in Pyrmont, Sydney.

Paul Makin is a South Australia based television and radio journalist. He started as a cadet journalist at Radio 5KA Adelaide in 1973 joined Radio 2UE Sydney in 1976 before moving to television; he is currently a freelance presenter for Channel 7 Adelaide.

Peter Couchman is an Australian journalist, author and presenter. He had a long career with the Australian Broadcasting Commission, working on current affairs programs including This Day Tonight and Four Corners.

Dominique Schwartz is an Australian communications specialist and former television journalist and news presenter.

References

  1. "About the ABC - History of the ABC". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 25 March 2012. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  2. Martin, Allan (22 October 2009). "Interview with Allan Martin" (Interview). Interviewed by Jeffrey, Tom.
  3. Clive Hale, ABC Media Release, archived at Internet Archive, 6 June 2005
  4. Original documents Allan Martin sighted T. Jeffrey Vanguard Productions Pty Ltd. Sydney
  5. Davies, Brian (9 January 2008). "Newsman of a different age". Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media.
  6. Daniel Creech (8 February 2011). "Journalist championed anti-discrimination". Sydney Morning Herald.
  7. 1 2 Bell, Janet. "This Day Tonight (1967 - 1978)". Screen Australia. National Film & Sound Archives.