The cast of Home & Away at the Logies…
The answer seems to be yes as TV producers of shows like Home & Away and Neighbours are accused of applying a ‘white Australia policy’ to casting. According to a report at the weekend:
University of Queensland Aboriginal studies lecturer Sam Watson said
the dramas were operating an “exclusive white family club” that didn’t
reflect Australia’s true demographic.
“The producers and
directors of these shows are very sadly harking back to the White
Australia policy of the ’40s and ’50s,” he said. “Instead of embracing
the rich diversities of our country, they are shunning it.”
The Neighbours cast
The report continues…..
It’s a huge concern for actors’ union the Media Entertainment and Arts
Alliance, which will discuss the problems at a conference in Sydney
next month. The union’s national director of actors’ equity,
Simon Whipp, said he had been campaigning on the issue for 20 years and
still little improvement had been made. “Our members are missing out on roles for no other reason than the fact that they are not white,” he said.
The White Australia policy began in 1901 to restrict non-white immigration to the country.
While it was scrapped in 1973, viewers of Neighbours and Home and Away might be forgiven for thinking otherwise.
In
Neighbours, white Ramsay Street residents Susan and Karl Kennedy
regularly laugh over the fence with their equally white neighbours
Steve and Miranda Parker- even though the soap is set in the culturally
diverse city of Melbourne.
In Home and Away, the residents of
Summer Bay, just north of multi-cultural Sydney, are also white
Australians, with the exception of Jai Fernandez- a token Asian
character who stereotypically lost his parents in the Boxing Day
tsunami.
Top Comments
hi
home and away is a good show
I thought that the job should go to the best person, not the most politically correct skin colour!