Friday Essay: How Blanche D'alpuget's 'Warts And All' Biography Of Her Lover Bob Hawke Helped Make Him Prime Minister


Author: Chris Wallace

(MENAFN- The Conversation)

Blanche D'Alpuget was born in 1944, the daughter of Lou d'Alpuget and Josie Stephenson, and grew up in Sydney's eastern suburbs. She attended Sydney Church of England Girls' Grammar School and, briefly, the University of Sydney before becoming a journalist with the Daily Mirror, rival newspaper of the Sun where her father worked.

A hyper-masculine yachtsman, champion boxer, wrestler, water polo player and, in youth, Bondi lifesaver, Lou d'Alpuget in the newsroom once shouted at cadet journalist John Pilger so ferociously for getting his facts wrong that Pilger fainted. He taught Blanche to box, surf, sail, fish, fire a rifle and execute basic unarmed combat moves, the last because he thought girls should be able to defend themselves against assault.

The journalistic gene was not fully transmitted though.“I was always aware of the fact that I was not a good journalist,” d'Alpuget says.“I had no news sense. It is a sense, and I haven't got it. I still haven't got it.”

Unusually, Lou recommended the works of Cambridge English literature don arthur quiller-couch to Sun cadets, not an obvious choice as an influence on Australian journalistic prose. While Lou's news sense was not transmitted to Blanche, the literary bent this suggests in him was.

D'Alpuget was on the Mirror's full-time payroll in Sydney for just three years: life as a novelist lay ahead. First, though, there was a spell in London followed by nine years living in South-East Asia, including two periods living in Indonesia with her husband, journalist turned diplomat Tony Pratt.

'A good guy': meeting Hawke

In 1970, the year d'Alpuget first met Hawke, Pratt was second secretary at the Australian Embassy in Jakarta.“I showed visiting 'firemen' around Jakarta,” she recalls.“I was very good at that. It was one of the things expected of the wives.”

Hawke, recently anointed actu president, remembered seeing“this vision” for the first time, en route to the annual meeting of the International Labour Organisation in Switzerland.

“I met her first in Jakarta on my way through to Geneva when Rawdon Dalrymple was the counsellor in the embassy there,” he recalled.“I was sitting on the verandah of his house having a beer and this vision in white appeared from around the corner and I thought, my god!” For her part, d'Alpuget formed an immediately positive impression of Hawke.

She would see Hawke once more in Indonesia – the following year, in 1971, when he was again en route for the International Labour Organisation. As well as squiring visitors around Jakarta, d'Alpuget worked variously at the Australian Embassy, including the press office, during her time in Indonesia.

She wrote human interest pieces“with the blessing of the Australian embassy” and tacit approval of the Indonesian intelligence service, to be placed in the Australian media, smoothing the way for the first visit to Australia by an Indonesian head of state: President Suharto in 1972, in the still sensitive post-konfrontasi period.

It was a life of“pleasure and ease ... friends and parties, horse riding in the early mornings, swimming in the afternoons”, married to Tony:“We [...] were boon companions.”


Bob and Blanche were both married when they first met, in 1970. He thought, 'my god!' when he saw her; she thought he was 'a good guy'. 25 years later, they would marry, and stay together until his death. Good Weekend A 'vivacious, unconventional' writer

D'Alpuget returned to Australia in 1973 and lived in Canberra where Pratt worked for the Department of Defence“with consequences he had not foreseen, and he was miserable”. She felt socially restricted and stood out in a national capital then only 200,000 strong, the vast majority of whom were in the paid workforce as public servants.“I don't much like bureaucrats and they don't much like me,” she adds .

Her friend, feminist activist susan ryan , who became a Labor senator for the ACT in 1975, recalled d'Alpuget then as a“vivacious, unconventional woman in her thirties”.

Pratt, in turn, was an“Adonis” in Ryan's recollection.“I loved my husband, whom I'd met when I was seventeen, and felt fiercely loyal to him,” d'Alpuget has written .“In the decade we had journeyed together we had both taken side trips, but we were mindful of each other's feelings, and discreet.” They divorced in 1986.

It was during this period that d'Alpuget established herself as a writer.

“I was not keen on taking a job, because of our young son”; instead she wrote a novel set in Jakarta. Twenty rejection slips later, including one from publisher Richard Walsh who described it as“just a straggle of events” – he“was right, but I felt like pulling out his tongue and feeding it to the cat” – she set the novel aside.“But I had discovered the pleasures of writing and wanted to do it again.”

Read more: i studied 31 australian political biographies published in the past decade - only 4 were about women

d'Alpuget's first biography: Sir Richard Kirby

D'Alpuget did, winning Fellowship of Australian Writers' prizes for two short stories in 1975. Then came an unexpected, perhaps fated, opportunity to write a biography of Sir Richard Kirby, a long-serving judge and former Conciliation and Arbitration Commission president.

D'Alpuget knew Kirby's daughter Sue from school. At the time Sue lived in Canberra and her parents occasionally visited. When Kirby and d'Alpuget met in Canberra through Sue, they found a common interest in Indonesia, especially the late Indonesian president sukarno .“Kirby had known him personally when he was at the height of his power,” d'Alpuget later wrote ,“I as an observer in the last days of his shattered dream.”

During a conversation about Sukarno's Indonesia of the 1940s, d'Alpuget asked to see Kirby's photographs of the period; Kirby instead sent the transcript of his National Library of Australia oral history interview. Shortly afterwards, at her father's request, Sue sounded out d'Alpuget about whether she would be willing to help him with his memoirs.


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D'Alpuget was interested but the logistics were unworkable: she had a young son and the Kirbys divided their time between Melbourne and the NSW South Coast. D'Alpuget suggested she write his biography instead. Kirby agreed. It would be published in 1977 as mediator: a biography of sir richard kirby . During the process they became friends; Kirby nicknamed d'Alpuget“Blanco”.

D'Alpuget began work on the book without a publishing contract in hand. Getting a publisher for a serious biography was easier than for a first-time novel, however, and at Max Suich's suggestion, d'Alpuget proposed it to Melbourne University Press publisher, Peter Ryan.

Before d'Alpuget sent a chapter to Ryan she would send it first to her stepmother, journalist and editor Tess van Sommers. It was a production line that forged her as an author.

D'Alpuget credited both Ryan and van Sommers for turning her“into a writer”. Applying the lessons learned from writing the Kirby book, d'Alpuget did a six-week rewrite of the rejected novel and immediately found a publisher; it became the prize-winning monkeys in the dark .

Research on the Kirby biography included long walks along Berrara Beach, near Jervis Bay, during which Kirby gave d'Alpuget a crash course in Australian industrial law – unique in the world at that time in consisting of court-based arbitrated rulings on cases triggered by disputes between unions and employers, and the creation of court-sanctioned“awards” that embodied agreements on wages and conditions between them.

To that point, d'Alpuget's only experience with the law had been as a teenage runaway when at her parents' instigation police nabbed her and her much older boyfriend interstate. D'Alpuget had also done some court reporting at the Mirror. D'Alpuget was no student of biography either.“At that stage, I'm ashamed to admit, I had never read a biography,” she recalls.“I was much too busy ... going to parties!”

'Galvanised' by 28-year-old Hawke

As the long-standing Arbitration Commission president, Kirby knew Hawke and had come to like him very much. When he first observed him, Hawke was an impatient ANU research student assisting ACTU advocate Richard Eggleston QC in the 1958 national wage case hearings.

“He couldn't sit still,” Kirby told d'Alpuget.“You could see he was practically going mad with frustration at not being able to have a say [...] From the bench we used to watch him with some curiosity and amusement.” Hawke, 28 years old at the time but looking to the bench“only twenty-two or three”, asked for an interview with Kirby in his chambers.

In the next few pages of the Kirby biography, d'Alpuget recounts the unexpectedly riveting story of Hawke's arrival on the public stage and his role in transforming the conceptual basis of Australian wage-fixing at that time from“capacity” to“productivity”. Hawke dropped out of his ANU doctoral studies, became the ACTU's first university-educated employee and, not yet 30 years old, was appointed ACTU advocate for the 1959 basic wage case.


Bob Hawke was the ACTU's first university-educated employee.

The presiding judge, Alf Foster, sent word via back channels to ACTU president Albert Monk“that he thought senior counsel and not some unknown student” should present the union case. Monk stuck with Hawke whose“assault on the concepts of wage fixation was immediate, savage and effective,” d'Alpuget records .

Kirby was galvanised by Hawke's arguments.“In the off-season I later sought discussions with economists like Nugget Coombs, Joe Isaac and Dick Downing to help me understand in some depth what Hawke was talking about,” he told d'Alpuget.

D'Alpuget herself was galvanised by Hawke the man. In March 1976 she went to Melbourne to interview him for the Kirby book.

Read more: what i learned from bob hawke: economics isn't an end itself. there has to be a social benefit

Lovers 'as soon as possible'

The city was Canberra. Hawke was late and wearing pancake make-up. They would meet every few weeks; in between there were“no phone conversations, no notes, messages, nothing”. Hawke was rarely out of d'Alpuget's mind. She tried never to mention his name but everything seemed to evoke his image, and all of it“shimmered with life”.

D'Alpuget's interior world was alight :“Researching was a joy; writing was a joy; everything was a joy.” She carefully diarised their meetings. but


Bob Hawke was 'rarely out of d'Apluget's mind'. Fiona Morris/AAP

The relationship continued nevertheless and in November 1978 Hawke told d'Alpuget about a dream in which she and“Paradiso”, his long-standing lover in Geneva, were standing on a roulette wheel.“The wheel spun, and came to rest at me,” d'Alpuget writes in on longing .“It meant, [he] said, he must choose me: to marry.” She was, she writes,“slain with delight” but told him she would think about it and respond in the New Year.

Practical considerations arose in her mind but did not seem decisive. Some were especially telling, including the fact that he mispronounced her surname, did not know whether she had siblings and, essentially,“knew little about who I was”. She asked a psychiatrist friend to interpret Hawke's dream:“He laughed aloud at my obtuseness. 'It means throwing in his lot with you is a gamble'.”

More than the roulette wheel was turning, however, by the time 1979 arrived. Hawke rang daily:“I felt safe,” she says. But d'Alpuget had an emerging realisation that she knew him as little as he knew her:“We were enigmas, peeping at each other through keyholes.”


D'Alpuget began to research her second novel, turtle beach . It became an exercise in“unconscious autobiography”, d'Alpuget wrote later , as had the rewrite of her first novel after the Kirby biography was finished; the writing of both stories reduced the pressure of her clandestine relationship with Hawke to bearable levels, partly by channelling her and Hawke's personae into those novels' fictional characters.

Hawke's attention, meanwhile, had turned to the increasingly tense question of whether he should enter parliament – this against the backdrop of disasters at the 1979 ALP conference and ACTU Congress, the death of his mother Ellie, and trouble at home in Royal Avenue, Sandringham.

His life was now awash with“out-of-control drinking”. At the back of his mind, too, was a calculation that divorce could cost Labor a few percentage points at the ballot box should he become leader. Hawke stopped calling d'Alpuget. After some weeks, in a phone conversation lasting half a minute, Hawke told her he was not getting divorced.“Each of us asked the other to leave,” Hazel Hawke wrote later in her memoirs.“We both stayed.”

From being“slain with delight” at the marriage proposal nearly a year before, d'Alpuget now first thought of killing herself, and then of killing Hawke. Each proposition was considered in practical detail over a number of days before a“shard of vanity” and the realisation that“giving my son a murderess for a mother was hardly better than a suicide, and that if I were in jail I would not see him often” terminated that line of thought.


After Hawke said he would divorce Hazel, then changed his mind, d'Alpuget 'first thought of killing herself, and then of killing Hawke'. Tracey Nearmy/AAP

Is it possible that d'Alpuget really did know Hawke as little as she claims in on longing ?

D'Alpuget disavows even an appreciation of Hawke's powerful public projection at the time“because I never saw him in public”, and in any case,“I'd been writing novels ... I wasn't all that interested.” Rather, rivals were on d'Alpuget's mind.

In on longing she recounts looking at a“luscious minx” on page three of the Mirror, for example, and wondering if she was another of Hawke's“petites amies” – this while rewriting monkeys in the dark , whose heroine's fascination with her lover“was mixed and corrupted with anger and tension”. She continued:“We write out our sicknesses in books, Hemingway said. Well, yes and no: Hemingway shot himself.”

A symbiotic project

At this point, in 1979, d'Alpuget was author of the critically well-received Kirby biography, had two novels in the pipeline that would be published in the next two years to acclaim, several literary prizes and foreign translations of her works but little in the way of financial reward.

She wanted to write another biography and initially chose Hawke's mentor and predecessor albert monk , the ACTU's first full-time president whose tenure overlapped substantially with Kirby's at the Arbitration Commission. This idea fell victim to the resistance of Monk's widow, who was disinclined to give d'Alpuget access to his papers.

D'Alpuget has said that“the Hawke book came about because of the Kirby book”, and there is a symbiotic feel to the projects, even down to their respective book launches. Nearly five years to the day after Hawke launched d'Alpuget's Kirby biography at Canberra's Lakeside Hotel, Kirby launched d'Alpuget's Hawke biography at the same venue.

Melbourne Psychosocial Group members Graham Little and Angus McIntyre, and psychiatrist Michael Epstein, all attended the latter. The Kirby book required mastering the intricacies of Australia's unique industrial relations system and d'Alpuget did so convincingly.

The language and concepts she acquired enabled her to understand Hawke's long engagement with labour market theory and practice which dated from his research at Oxford in the mid-1950s on wage fixing under the Australian arbitration system. Interviewing Hawke for the Kirby biography brought about the fateful re-meeting of biographer and subject.

Conscious motives

What were d'Alpuget's conscious motives for the Hawke biography? In 2014 she presented it as a simple instrumental decision after she unsuccessfully“tried and tried” to get Monk's widow to give her access to his papers:“She turned me down ... So I thought, okay, I'll try the second president.”

Earlier, in on longing in 2008, d'Alpuget“noted that the news media presentation of [Hawke] was mostly so simplified as to be not much more than a cartoon”. D'Alpuget

Earlier again, in 1986, d'Alpuget told jennifer ellison that

The interrelated fiction and financial factors behind the book were related earlier still, in 1985, to candida baker ,“because I knew it would help make me so well-known in Australia that all future fiction writing would be easy to sell”.


D'Alpuget told ellison another factor was that Hawke“wasn't entirely happy” about another biography being written at the time, though she does not specify whether that concern related to the john hurst or robert pullan book.

D'Alpuget also evinced genuine interest in Australia's arbitration system; Hawke had wanted to do a doctoral thesis on it, and had spent half a lifetime working in it, while she had written a“part-history of that system” in the Kirby biography.

D'Alpuget told Baker that Hawke had rung her in 1978 to say that Hurst was thinking of doing a biography of him, wanting to know how much demand on his time a biographer was likely to make:

This has been d'Alpuget's most frequent response to questions about the book's genesis. A more expansive account was given at a Canberra Times Literary Luncheon in 1982, shortly after its launch.


Blanche joked in 1978, 'Well if you're going to have a biography done, why don't you let me do it?' Here, in 2010, she and Hawke sign copies of her second Hawke biography, Hawke: The Prime Minister. Steve Gray/AAP

In the same speech, d'Alpuget says that as early as February 1976 she had a sense of how interesting Hawke could be as a subject when a woman sitting next to her at a Canberra dinner party one Saturday night, who knew Hazel Hawke, raised Bob's intriguing mother. The woman told d'Alpuget:

D'Alpuget refers to this 1976 dinner party conversation as the“seed” of the Hawke book, and the 1978 conversation with Hawke, triggered by their discussion of Hurst's planned biography, as its“germination”. In between, in 1977, growth was driven by“that marvellous human need – that is, the need to eat”.

A 'warts and all' biography

Little income had accrued from the Kirby book despite its critical success; monkeys in the dark had been rewritten and found a publisher but had not yet come out; and d'Alpuget wanted to apply for a Literature Board grant to enable her to continue writing. When her original plan to write a biography of Monk fell over,“I started thinking again about Hawke”.

In the interim d'Alpuget completed her second novel, turtle beach , which would be another critical success upon publication in 1981.

From the vantage point of late 1979, however, when after four years' full-time writing d'Alpuget still did not have“even enough to pay the telephone bill”, she decided she would either have to make some money or return to journalism,“a fate worse than death”. She hoped and expected that a Hawke biography would be financially rewarding. It was one of the things that kept her going.

D'Alpuget got the Literature Board grant. On 3 January 1980 – her 36th birthday and just a few months after Hawke's reneged marriage proposal drove her to suicidal, then homicidal, thoughts – the first interview for robert j. hawke: a biography was conducted.

“We set up a meeting [...] in Sandringham just around the corner from his house, in the house of a friend of mine,” d'Alpuget recalls. Says Hawke:“It developed rather intimately ... but it didn't affect what I had to say.”

Hawke's agreement was conditional on it being a“warts and all” portrait, a judgment based on his belief that voters understood he was human like them.“I just reckon I know the Australian people,” he said, conflating them with Australian men.“A hell of a lot of them could recognise themselves in both my drinking and my womanising. I think they make a judgment on the full person.”


Bob Hawke wanted a 'warts and all' biography, believing Australians would recognise themselves in his drinking and womanising.

Unlike the Kirby biography, the book did not immediately find a publisher. Peter Ryan at Melbourne University Press“knocked it back straight off – said, 'Oh no, he's alive!'” In a letter to d'Alpuget later, Ryan reiterated his“old-hat preference for 'Life” which is dead, career complete, personality finished and the surrounding events reduced to proportion by the perspective of the years'. Penguin Books also rejected the proposal.

A 'cowboy' publisher: Morry Schwartz

D'Alpuget's literary agent, Rose Creswell, suggested Morry Schwartz, whose innovative Melbourne publishing house Outback Press had recently folded: but not before releasing contemporary Australian classics like Kate Jennings' come to me, my melancholy baby and a book about australian women by Carol Jerrems and Virginia Fraser.

Outback Press also had some unlikely commercial successes, including the Kate Jennings-edited mother, i'm rooted: an anthology of australian women poets , which sold 10,000 copies in an Australia, whose then population was less than 14 million people.

Schwartz had a colourful reputation –“the kindest thing said about him was that he was 'a cowboy',” says d'Alpuget – and was a long shot as a publishing bet. But the book was a long shot for Schwartz, too. There were two biographies in the marketplace already.


'Cowboy publisher' Morry Schwartz (centre), pictured at an Outback Press launch, with launcher Gough Whitlam (left) and author Deane Wells (right).

More serious still was Hawke's extreme behaviour when drunk, and political embarrassments which made some conclude his ascent was over.“It was thought that he'd absolutely shot himself in the foot,” d'Alpuget recalls. Max Suich told her, for example, upon hearing about the planned biography,“Well you'd better be quick, dear, because he'll be 'Bob Who?' in six months.”

She and Creswell flew to Melbourne to talk to Schwartz. The meeting took place in the street.“Morry, who was around thirty and drop-dead good-looking, conducted the interview leaning against a low, fast, navy blue–coloured car that he owned, or hired, or had borrowed,” says d'Alpuget.

Schwartz backed the book with zest, offering an advance big enough to research the book properly.

In d'Alpuget's view he did this for two reasons:

In d'Alpuget's estimation, Schwartz was also capable of publishing the book with unusual speed.“I have attacks of being politically canny,” she said later of her conviction that Malcolm Fraser would call the federal election early and that the book therefore must, to avoid irrelevancy, be out before the end of 1982.

D'Alpuget had the Literature Board grant, the agreement of her subject, a publishing contract, a healthy advance on royalties, had begun conducting interviews and was on her way to producing the book. Hawke's memory of the process was“a hell of a lot of interviews”.

In a letter written late in the manuscript's preparation, d'Alpuget told Peter Ryan that,“To say ... working with him is a nightmare is the blandest understatement: once, in a 2-hour taping session, there were 27 telephone calls.”

On the road to the Labor leadership

Four things were happening simultaneously, in fact, in the nearly three years between the first interview in January 1980 and the book's publication in October 1982.

Firstly, Hawke was on the road to seizing the Labor leadership, the necessary prelude to becoming prime minister. Secondly, d'Alpuget was making a political intervention to help Hawke achieve his goal. Thirdly, d'Alpuget was symbolically reclaiming Hawke as a man before, after publication, putting him aside. And fourthly, through the biographical process conducted by d'Alpuget, Hawke was settling and projecting an identity which formed the personal plank of the platform from which he pursued and conducted his prime ministership.

The first of these elements, that Hawke was bent on seizing the Labor leadership, was widely known and understood at the time, though the story behind-the-scenes – that Hawke“had more blood on him than the entire stage at the end of Hamlet” – still remains largely submerged. Hawke had been vaunted as a potential prime minister for years.

His leadership credentials were the focus even at the press conference when he announced his candidature for the seat of Wills, as Hurst and Pullan both pointed out in their biographies.“Newspaper files had grown fat on reports of his deeds and on speculation about where he was headed,” mills notes ,“[and] he was in demand by TV interviewers.”

D'Alpuget argued in her biography of Hawke that his success in using the media, at least that outside Canberra,“was so great largely because publicity – being the centre of attention – corresponded perfectly with a major element in his personality, laid in infancy and childhood”.

Beginning with his parents, Hawke“relished and had the knack of mesmerizing” his audience. D'Alpuget quotes Hawke's personal assistant, Jean Sinclair, on the extrapolation of this to his later career.“It was cruel to watch Bob with journalists,” Sinclair told her.“They were lambs to be slaughtered.”

Canberra Press Gallery journalists proved a tougher audience than those outside the national capital, however, and parliament itself was the prism through which gallery journalists rated politicians.

As a parliamentarian and as shadow minister for industrial relations, Hawke failed to enchant gallery journalists, impress Labor colleagues, or cow conservative prime minister Malcolm Fraser. In the hawke ascendancy , Paul Kelly quotes from a 1981 report by Laurie Oakes, then Canberra bureau chief for the Ten Network, after Hawke guest-compered a popular daytime television program, The Mike Walsh Show.

In private, including among members of the Labor caucus, comments were frequently much the same. Labor frontbencher Senator Susan Ryan shared Oakes' assessment of Hawke, rather than that of her friend d'Alpuget.

Some other Labor frontbenchers like Tom Uren thought Hawke“brought a charisma, a folksy, friendly, 'good bloke' relationship with the Australian people he had built up over the years” as ACTU president – the same point Labor frontbencher Mick Young made at greater length to biographer John Hurst, quoted by him on the opening page of hawke, the definitive biography .


Susan Ryan said Blanche believed 'her subject should become prime minister of Australia as soon as possible'; she was 'very far from that view'. National Museum of Australia

But at the time d'Alpuget was writing her book, that sentiment was still a minority one and did not deliver Hawke the numbers to displace Bill Hayden. Was d'Alpuget's biography part of some Hawke master plan to seize The Lodge? Not according to d'Alpuget in march 1985 , two and a half years after the book's publication.

Hawke himself said he had not considered writing an autobiography or organising for someone else to write his biography.“No, I hadn't thought about it at all,” he said.“I was extraordinarily busy, couldn't do it myself. I was just doing my job. This came along. I knew she could write.” Hawke didn't want a hagiography.

Read more: vale susan ryan, pioneer labor feminist who showed big, difficult policy changes can, and should, be made

A biography to 'help Hawke achieve his goal'

The second thing happening in this period was a political intervention by d'Alpuget to help Hawke achieve his goal. D'Alpuget did not declare this as her intention. Nevertheless, the Hawke biography was authorised and d'Alpuget had her subject's cooperation.

D'Alpuget was not going to write a book that would hurt Hawke's chance of winning the Labor leadership and thereafter the prime ministership, though upon first reading some did not grasp the sophistication of her approach.

It was a sign of Hawke's self-confidence as well as, he would say, his confidence in the Australian people, that it had to be a“warts and all” portrayal, and d'Alpuget largely provided it.“I'd become convinced that despite all evidence to the contrary, he would somehow make it to prime minister,” d'Alpuget says.

Another aspect of her role in this was not publicly known. Hawke asked d'Alpuget to try and turn a Hayden vote for him.“Bob had told me how he was going to unseat Hayden,” d'Alpuget says.“And he'd asked my help with a particular Hayden supporter in the caucus. He'd asked my help in trying to turn this person, to vote for him.”

There was a“unique angle” according to d'Alpuget:“I was good friends with this person.” It was Susan Ryan. In the second edition of her Hawke biography, d'Alpuget would describe herself openly as a“Hawke camp insider” in the notes at the front; but not in the first edition. It was concealed even from her publisher, Morry Schwartz, at the time.

This underlines the dual nature of the author as both biographer and political player. While those roles were congruent, d'Alpuget's verve and high estimation of her subject underpinned artistic risks from which a lesser, more instrumentally focused, biographer in this situation would shrink.


The choice of cover photograph for robert j. hawke is an example.“Morry Schwartz and I sat on the floor in his office in Melbourne and we went through gazillions of photographs,” d'Alpuget recalls.“And we picked that one. If you know Bob, you know he's drunk.”

The picture, by American photographer Rick Smolan, shows Hawke, eyes heavy-lidded, head leaning sideways on a hand with a cigar clenched between two fingers, his expression poised between bored bemusement and impending explosion. Hawke's crisp, stylish business attire is juxtaposed against his intense, glowering gaze. The cover's drama is heightened by its stark black and white palette and the containment of Hawke's face in a tight square at its centre.

Read more: summits old and new: what was bob hawke's 1983 national economic summit about?

Reclaiming Hawke – and putting him aside

The third thing happening during this period was d'Alpuget symbolically reclaiming Hawke as a man and then putting him aside.

The background was Hawke's years of hard drinking, philandering and fighting with wife Hazel, from whom he had only a few months earlier tried to separate in order to marry d'Alpuget, but failing since neither would agree to be the one to walk out of the marriage.

“It was a very difficult situation for him because Hazel hated me,” d'Alpuget says, and Hazel knew about their previous relationship and assumed, correctly, that it had resumed. Moreover, Hazel Hawke was not the only hostile rival d'Alpuget had to contend with in the writing of the book. There was also Jean Sinclair and others.


Bob Hawke, a known philanderer, was in a long-term relationship with his private secretary, Jean Sinclair, as well as having an affair with Blanche.

D'Alpuget thanks Sinclair in the foreword to robert j hawke: a biography for“spending so much time in passing messages to him from me, and in finding research material”. She describes Sinclair in the body of the book as“Hawke's right arm” and spends a few pages sketching out her story as, like Hawke, an“exotic” ACTU employee.

Sinclair was schooled at Melbourne Girls' Grammar School, had an economics degree from the University of Melbourne, had worked for the management consulting firm McKinsey and was a director of her family company.

Sinclair's description to d'Alpuget of the state of the ACTU administration upon taking up her job in 1973 is vivid, and familiar to anyone familiar with the labour movement at that time: variations of this kind of administrative chaos were replicated at busy union head offices around the country.

D'Alpuget describes how Sinclair bore the workplace brunt of Hawke's belief that“every day contained forty-eight hours and that he should be awake and occupied for all of them”, and remarks that“a good week for her was one in which she dissuaded him from committing himself to a major scheme: agreeing to write a book, for example”.

Sinclair was Hawke's personal assistant and companion for more than twenty years, and she and d'alpuget“disliked each other”. The extra demands on Hawke's time would have been only one of the reasons Sinclair opposed the book given her own ongoing relationship with him.

Fighting Hazel

Hazel Hawke's cooperation did not come without a fight. Hazel wrote a letter to the editor of The Age in November 1979 registering her“utter revulsion” at press coverage of a court case involving a prominent politician's son.“My main argument is that any politician or public figure must be assessed on his job performance, and that whether his wife and family are glamorous and interesting or have two heads and are naughty should be irrelevant,” she wrote.

She continued that“no public figure who is good enough” needs the ego-boosting or public image softening that“nice little stories” involving their families entail, and further, that,“The electorate which makes this demand avoids its responsibility of properly assessing the worth and performance of that figure on the contribution he makes, or does not adequately make, in his particular area of public affairs.”

In the foreword to robert j. hawke , d'Alpuget says the only area she avoided, at Hazel's request, was the Hawke children“whose privacy has already been invaded over many years”. It was, she wrote,“a price worth paying for her help and unflinching frankness, both in giving information and in reading the manuscript for accuracy of detail”. D'Alpuget wrote that she had been“guided by her perceptions a great deal, while exercising the responsibility to reach my own conclusions”.


Hazel Hawke once wrote that 'any politician or public figure must be assessed on his job performance'. ABC TV Australian Story

Hazel in turn, in her own memoirs published after Hawke's prime ministership was over, characterised herself as an opponent of the biography, then a reluctant starter and, ultimately, a supporter. She felt Hawke's flaws being brought into the open ahead of his run for the prime ministership had a kind of inoculation effect, as well as relieving the pressure she personally felt over public perceptions of their marriage.

Sue Pieters-Hawke has written that her mother was“distressed and angry” about her father's relationship with d'Alpuget, and that wider knowledge of their relationship affected the interviews Blanche obtained from Hazel loyalists amongst the Hawke family's closest friends.

“Intimates who knew of Blanche's relationship with Bob closed ranks in support of Hazel,” Pieters-Hawke says .

D'Alpuget had, in fact, pulled off a coup in terms of her power vis-à-vis the two other women closest to Hawke at that time. Within only a few months of Hawke ceasing contact and then breaking his offer to leave Hazel and marry d'Alpuget, she was spending hours interviewing him at a house a couple of minutes from his own in Royal Avenue, Sandringham, had his intimate amanuensis Sinclair passing messages and doing minor research for her, and had Hawke's wife corralled into an interview against her will.

This was an act of triumphant repossession, all in the name of a greater good the other two women were hard pressed to obstruct: Hawke's advancement.

Hawke would foreswear alcohol in the interests of his political career, while Hazel fell more deeply into its clutches.“The monster drink had gone from Bob's life but infidelity had not,” Hazel wrote later in her memoir.“I felt extremely unsure about our future and was lonely. Now I would often drink alone, at home, with my solitary dinner, a very unwise practice.”

Sue Pieters-Hawke says her mother was“distressed and angry” about Bob and Blanche's ongoing relationship, and“was by now capable of striking back when she, too, had been drinking”. Hazel made a number of phone calls to Morry Schwartz's office demanding information about the book, making it clear that Hawke and d'Alpuget were lovers.


Sue Pieters-Hawke says her mother, Hazel, was 'distressed and angry' about Bob and Blanche's ongoing relationship.

Once, after newspapers in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra published a photograph of subject and biographer on the steps of Parliament House, Hazel phoned the Schwartz office and told the person who answered the phone,“Get that fucking bitch off the front page or I'll blow the whistle. I'll blow the whistle and he'll never be prime minister.”

The intensity of Hazel Hawke's battle against the biography is revealed in letters at the time from d'Alpuget to Peter Ryan, her old publisher and mentor at Melbourne University Press, to whom she sent“the Bird Tome” for critique prior to finalising the manuscript.


Blanche wrote in private correspndence: 'Hazel hates him, & her greatest pleasure in life is to make him suffer.' Russel McPhedran/AP

In the acknowledgements of robert j. hawke , d'Alpuget thanks Ryan for reading the manuscript when she had reached“exhaustion and despondency” under pressure of meeting the tight publication deadline. This perhaps explains the closing paragraph of the letter from d'Alpuget to Ryan containing her unvarnished comment on Hazel that,“She would make great copy in the Lodge. But I don't think we can look forward to that.”

It was a brief down beat in d'Alpuget's usually unrelenting belief that Hawke would indeed make The Lodge. She subsequently revised her view of Hazel's capacity to perform as a prime ministerial spouse, based on actual performance.

“I was wrong,” d'Alpuget says now.“I had seen only her worst self. Once in The Lodge she rose to the challenge.” Hazel had hypnotherapy to stop smoking, moderated her drinking and conquered her shyness to become a good public speaker. Says d'Alpuget,“Hazel changed into the model prime ministerial wife.”

Read more: the larrikin as leader: how bob hawke came to be one of the best (and luckiest) prime ministers

Hawke was 'a fighter by nature'

In her speech at the book's launch at Canberra's Lakeside Hotel in October 1982, d'Alpuget describes Hawke as a“fighter” by nature who had fought with many, including her, and had fought for the book.

D'Alpuget told the audience she had tried to write a frank account and that the biography was intended as“an early step in a movement for more penetrating analyses of people in Australian public life”.

It was a significant break from the usual mould of contemporary political biography, and initial reactions and calculations about it were wider of the mark the closer one got to Parliament House, Canberra. Many Canberra Press Gallery journalists assumed it would seriously damage Hawke's standing.

So did some of Hawke's rivals on the opposition frontbench, like fellow leadership aspirant Paul Keating. Hawke recalled a member of Labor's NSW Right faction telling him at the time, in relation to the book,“Keating's very, very happy, reckons that's the end of you. With all that stuff in it, all your drinking and womanizing – that that'll be the end of you.” Hawke replied,“Well, I think that shows how little Paul understands the electorate.”


Paul Keating was apparently 'very, very happy' about Hawke's warts and all biography. 'He reckons that's the end of you.' melody ayres griffiths/flickr , cc by

It did prove the end of the d'Alpuget relationship, though.“I'd been burnt, when we'd broken up,” she says, recalling the breach over Hawke's failure to honour his promise to leave Hazel and marry d'Alpuget in 1979.

This repossession and then relinquishing of Hawke had a satisfying symmetry. They next met three years into Hawke's prime ministership for a newspaper profile d'Alpuget undertook for the Sydney Morning Herald.“The room was quiet and felt empty,” d'Alpuget reported, and Hawke was distant.“Hawke has defined his Prime Ministership as super-respectable,” she wrote .

two years after that Hawke rang d'Alpuget and their relationship resumed; covert meetings were organised during the latter years of his prime ministership. In December 1991 he was ousted as prime minister by Paul Keating and he resigned from parliament shortly afterwards.

The Hawke marriage ended in 1994 and Bob married d'Alpuget in 1995. They spent 24 years together until his death in 2019.


Bob and Blanche spent 24 years married, until his death in 2019. Settling and projecting an identity

Three of the four things happening simultaneously between January 1980 when d'Alpuget conducted her first interview for robert j. hawke , and October 1982 when it was published, have so far been canvassed.

Hawke was on the road to seizing the Labor leadership, the necessary prelude to him becoming prime minister. D'Alpuget was making a political intervention to help Hawke achieve that goal. D'Alpuget was symbolically reclaiming Hawke as a man before relinquishing him post-publication.

The fourth thing happening was that, through the biographical process conducted by d'Alpuget, Hawke settled and projected an identity which formed the personal plank of the platform from which he pursued and conducted his prime ministership.

D'Alpuget describes Robert J. Hawke as“a well-built book” with a good structure.“It's internally strong,” she said later .“I was actually thinking of the architecture of a Congregationalist church I'd seen in South Australia when I was writing it: well-proportioned stone, four-square.”

In the process of construction, it could be argued that d'Alpuget did some rewiring of her subject, or at least enabled him to do some rewiring of himself through the biographical process, that helped stabilise his behaviour and settle his life generally, junking the self-destructive behaviour which jeopardised the achievement of his political goals.

It is not a claim that should be overstated; Hawke's personality is highly distinctive and of robust continuity. Nor is it a proposition that can be dismissed.

Some of d'Alpuget's impact on Hawke was straightforward and attitudinal – for example, concerning the position of women. In robert j. hawke , d'Alpuget describes his unreconstructedly sexist attitudes about, and behaviour towards, women, noting it did not change until Hawke in his fifties read Simone de Beauvoir's the second sex .

D'Alpuget omits to mention that she was the one who lent Beauvoir's book to him. The Hawke Government went on to pass landmark sex discrimination and affirmative action legislation for women through the auspices of the Minister for the Status of Women, Senator Susan Ryan.

Read more: anne summers' new memoir and the bitter struggle over memory narratives of feminism

Earliest memories and uncomfortable truths

In other respects, though, the change in Hawke's behaviour between 1979 when he was largely written off by political insiders because of his reckless, drunken and abusive behaviour, and the early 1980s when he gave up alcohol and (at least publicly) curtailed his obvious philandering, was dramatic.

Even if one ascribes the change entirely to his May 1980 decision to give up alcohol, the question remains, how was he able to give up drinking this time when he had failed on all previous attempts?

Upon the book's publication, d'Alpuget described it as“an attempt on my part to wrap a narrative around an analysis of personality”.

D'Alpuget went on to describe the unusual family dynamic before concluding that for Hawke,“In psychological terms, which I don't use at all in the book, I think it was a hypercathexis of his intellect”. This was a rare intrusion of psychological jargon, which d'Alpuget kept from the biography itself. While jargon free, however, there is no mistaking the bent with which she approached the project.

In the interpretation of dreams Freud wrote of“the royal road to the unconscious”. In the therapeutic setting, patients undergoing psychoanalysis lie on a couch and are questioned about their earliest memories and their dreams, and encouraged to reflect and expand upon them.

For Hawke it was a trip from his home on Royal Avenue, Sandringham, to the nearby home of d'Alpuget's psychiatrist friend Michael Epstein, where she would question him about his earliest memories and encourage him to reflect and expand upon them.


d'Alpuget's questioning and encouraged reflection on Hawke's memories is likened to Sigmund Freud's 'royal road to the unconscious'.

In these interviews d'Alpuget stirred up memories, unconscious and otherwise, and foreclosed resistance to them on his part when he could not or would not remember, by bringing to the biographical couch stories told to her by surviving family members. The most important was d'Alpuget's revelation that the all-powerful Ellie Hawke had committed Bob, when he was a small child, to the teetotal path ascribed to nazarites in the Hebrew bible, the word“nazir” having the spiritually highly charged meaning“consecrated”.

Hawke was“tremendously uncomfortable” when d'Alpuget raised it with him. Whether causal or coincidental, the fact that he successfully swore off alcohol within proximate range of d'Alpuget drawing key scenes like this from his childhood inescapably into his view is highly suggestive. Nor was it the only uncomfortable truth d'Alpuget brought to the surface.

Empathy over shared problems like this, the novelist's expert handling of rich source material, and a classic narrative arc emerging during research – the hero nailing himself to the cross of alcohol and then getting himself off in time to pursue the prize – all contributed to the satisfactions of the book from the readers' standpoint.

“I did believe his virtues far outweighed his vices, and that he had succeeded in this enormously difficult task which was overcoming his drinking”, d'Alpuget says.“So to that extent I thought it was a book about a personal triumph. But I didn't set out to do that. He did that. I just described what happened.”

This is an edited extract from Chris Wallace's book political lives: australian prime ministers and their biographers (UNSW Press/New South).


The Conversation

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