Last night I watched A Current Affair and frankly, I need to debrief. One thousand different thoughts and emotions are swirling around my head and I don’t even quite know where to start in unpacking it all.
Let’s start with the fact that last night’s show was four years in the making. Or 27 years in the making if we’re going to be honest.
Last night I finally watched the cast of ’80s sitcom Hey Dad! (a show I watched as a teen) reunite and openly discuss the dirty little secret they’d all kept for decades: the lead actor in the show – Robert Hughes who played the affable ‘dad’ Martin Kelly– was in reality a manipulative, cunning paedophile who sexually assaulted children on – and off – the set.
This week Hughes was found guilty of 10 charges of sexual and indecent assault of young girls – his on-screen daughter and others, including friends of his real-life daughter – dating back to the 1980s. And I’m sitting here thinking about how a young girl – a 10-year-old actress– was sexually abused by a man she trusted. How, somehow, this little girl summoned the inconceivable courage to tell the adults in her life about the abuse, only to have the majority of them fail her. To turn a blind eye. Sarah Monahan’s abuser, you see, was the adult ‘star’ of the series and she was rocking the boat.
Watching Tracy Grimshaw’s interview, I was deeply affected by two of Sarah’s former co-stars, Ben Oxenbould and Simone Buchanan, and the extraordinary courage and friendship they showed in speaking up and reporting Sarah’s abuse. When every other adult turned their backs on the little girl by pretending not to know or sweeping it under the carpet or saying to her “just don’t sit on his lap anymore”, it was Simone and Ben (who were 18 and 20 at the time) who stepped up, who went to the show’s Executive Producer Gary Reilly and demanded action. Simone and Ben who – when nothing appeared to change – then took turns ‘guarding’ Sarah from her molester so that she was never left alone with a serial paedophile.
Top Comments
i was tld about this article frm my psychogist.i was sexually abused by my uncle, when i was 3,6,10 & 12. i told the school who told my mum and she never did anything about it, and it was her brother that did it to me.
and it does hurt when you dont get the support from the adults who are meant to protect you.
Sorry but as soon as a kid mentions something has happened people should take action. I had a friends young daughter mention that her dad said she could play with boys toys, later on she said to her mum she was sore in a certain spot. I was stupid enough to say, A father wouldn't do that to his own daughter. So that poor girl had another 2 times she was touched. When in doubt shout it out. Talk it out. A child's innocents should come first.