POST UPDATED [*warning: if you are a survivor of abuse, this post may be upsetting….]
Extraordinary. That’s really the only way I can describe watching A Current Affair tonight when this Hey Dad story unfolded a whole lot further after the interview given by Sarah Monahan to Woman’s Day last week. We’ll get to that in a moment.
First, the background. News Ltd reports:
ACTOR Robert Hughes has denied reports he molested a child co-star on the set of the hit Eighties sitcom Hey Dad. Earlier, Channel Nine’s A Current Affair named the actor, who played the father in the popular comedy series, named Hughes as the actor at the centre of the allegations.On A Current Affair tonight
“I am absolutely shocked and surprised at this allegation,” Hughes said. “I categorically deny the allegation. It never happened. The entire matter is now in the hands of my lawyers.”Child star Sarah Monahan told Woman’s Day last week that a man who worked on the show had fondled her and exposed himself. Monahan, who played schoolgirl Jenny Kelly, was six when she began work on Hey Dad!, which aired on the Seven Network from 1987 to 1994.
She told Woman’s Day that a man who worked on the show had fondled her and exposed himself, the Herald Sun reported.
Monahan later said there were other other victims among the Hey Dad! cast. “I guess I was the smallest and I know I wasn’t the only one. The others are just still not going to speak about it,” she said.
But the most compelling part of the whole program was the interview with actor Ben Oxenbould, who played Sarah’s brother on the show. Interviewed live in the studio by Tracy Grimshaw, Ben gave the most extraordinary and emotional interview. He was amazingly composed and articulate but the intensity of his anger, guilt and torment was palpable.
He spoke of having caught Hughes in a sexually compromising position with another child, a 10 year old girl who was a guest actor on the show. He said he knew of Robert Hughes’ behaviour towards Sarah and that ‘those in charge’ also knew. He said on numerous occasions – over years – he witnessed behaviour by Robert Hughes which he described as ‘extremely inappropriate’ even by the more relaxed standards of the 80s, let alone by today’s standards. He spoke about living with the guilt of not having said anything for 17 years since it happened and how extreme pressure was put on him and other cast and crew members not to rock the boat about concerns over Robert Hughes’ behaviour.
After all, the show was one of the most successful in Australian TV history – with 291 episodes filmed and the the show sold into more than 20 countries.
There are so many tragic and disturbing aspects to this story it’s difficult to know how to unpack it.
Top Comments
This issue has been explored thoroughly from every possible angle. Since there are many commenters leaving multiple posts under multiple different names, I've decided to close comments.
Thanks everyone for your contribution to the discussion.
An article on ninemsn, this surely won't help Sarah's cause, proves both Monahan and Buchanan did get paid.
Today Tonight sank to a new low on Friday by trying to discredit the story and its origins, simply because it had been prosecuted by its bitter rival, A Current Affair.
Today Tonight pursued show-business agent Steven Moriarty through an airport, trying to turn him into the villain of the piece because he represents Monahan and her fellow Hey Dad star Simone Buchanan who told their stories to Woman's Day and ACA for money.
TT's piece was a pathetic piece of television - a cheap shot from a program which had been beaten fair and square in the rough and tumble of tabloid TV.
Monahan is an alleged child-abuse victim and that is the central issue, not how she was handled by her manager. Her claims deserve to be treated with the same level of respect as any other complainant, irrespective of how they first came to the public's attention.
One key fact TT omitted was that they themselves had the cheque-book out trying to buy pieces of the story but lost out continually to ACA.