Matches, Hatches, Dispatches

An ABC spokesman has confirmed John Clarke died on Sunday while hiking in the Grampians National Park in Victoria. He died from natural causes.

Awful news. John Clarke has been a staple of Australian comedy for decades.

:confused:

Will always remember him not only for Clarke and Dawe, but from this sketch on the Micallef P®ogram(me) (17:37 onwards)

No :frowning: would always watch his sketches, last week’s was a pretty good one too. I guess the final one ever. RIP.

He was brilliant in The Games.

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So sad. I will always remember him for the weekly segment with Bryan Dawe, first on A Current Affair then on ABC.

Statement from ABC

John Clarke

The ABC is saddened at the loss of John Clarke, whose work as a satirist and performer made him a greatly admired and loved figure on the national stage.

The writer and performer for three decades alongside his on-air partner Bryan Dawe offered insightful and cutting satirical commentary on issues of national importance. From the 1970s when he introduced Australian audiences to his character Fred Dagg from his native New Zealand, to his work on The Gillies Report and The Games, John Clarke was a central figure in Australian comedy and satire.

ABC Managing Director Michelle Guthrie said the unexpected loss of John Clarke would be felt by everyone at the ABC and by audiences across the country who had come to love his biting sense of humour.

“Australian audiences have relied on John Clarke for always getting to the heart of how many Australians felt about the politics of the day and tearing down the hypocrisy and at times absurdity of elements of our national debate.

“We have lost a giant presence on our screens. Our hearts go to John’s family, his wife Helen and two daughters, Lorin and Lucia.”

Statement from the family of John Clarke

The much loved and respected satirist and writer, John Morrison Clarke (b 1948) has died suddenly of natural causes on Sunday 9 April. Beloved husband of Helen, father of Lorin and Lucia, grandfather of Claudia and Charles and father-in-law of Stewart Thorn.

John died doing one of the things he loved the most in the world, taking photos of birds in beautiful bushland with his wife and friends. He is forever in our hearts.

We are aware of what he has meant to so many for so many years, throughout the world but especially in Australia and New Zealand. We are very grateful for all expressions of sympathy and love which John would have greatly appreciated.

John’s family has asked that their privacy be respected at this sad time.

Statement from ABC Head of Comedy Rick Kalowski

“The passing of John Clarke - our greatest ever political satirist - is a tragic loss to his millions of fans and the entire Australian comedy community, many of whom (myself included) were inspired by his brilliance to want to work in comedy. John was shooting for ABC TV on The Ex-PM Season 2 until only this past Friday, and it’s almost impossible to believe he is suddenly gone. The chance to get to know and spend time with John was an honour, and ABC TV Comedy joins so many others in offering John’s family our sincerest sympathies.”

Statement from Charlie Pickering

“One Christmas I was given four copies of John Clarke’s book ‘The Tournament’ by four different people. It’s safe to say they knew me pretty well. John was a familiar part of my life and sense of humour since I was old enough to know what I liked.

It goes without saying that he had a huge influence on me and our show. How can he not? If you are going to have the nerve to make jokes about the news in Australia, you do so knowing that you will never clear the bar set by John Clarke. And his work with Bryan Dawe over decades has been as good as anything put to air anywhere in the world.

Last year Tom Gleeson and I recorded a tribute to Clarke & Dawe simply as a thank you for being our favourite thing on TV. I rang him to ask permission. The conversation got away from itself and we ended up talking about how writing a good comedy script was somewhere between poetry and physics. Whatever that middle ground is, John Clarke deserved the Nobel Prize.

My thoughts are with his family, Bryan and the Australian viewing public for their loss.”

Bradley Cooper and his model girlfriend Irina Shayk have welcomed their first child.

Guitarist and J. Geils Band leader John Warren Geils Jr. has died at 71

Jana Pittman is getting married to IT consultant Rajiv Chaudhri. Third marriage, second husband.

Megan Gale has revealed (via a funny Instagram post of bread roll baking in the oven) she is pregnant with her second child to Richmond AFL player Shaun Hampson.

And you didn’t mention Serena Williams pregnant and that it has been revealed that she would have been two months along when she won the Australian Open in January.

Erin Moran, who played Joanie in Happy Days and spin-off Joanie Loves Chachi, has died aged 56.

Jonathan Demme, who directed films ranging from Silence of the Lambs and Philadelphia to documentaries on leading musicians, has died at 73 of complications from oesophageal cancer.

Richard Roxburgh and wife Silvia Colloca welcomed a baby girl into their family on April 21 (two days before the Logie Awards). They already have two sons Raffi and Miro.

The National Enquirer reporting the imminent (in about three weeks) death of Hugh Hefner.

Veteran Australian actress Val Jellay has died at 89 from pneumonia. She and late husband Maurie Fields often performed together and appeared in shows like The Flying Doctors.

Collingwood legend and former Seven VFL commentator Lou Richards has died at 94. He was a member of World of Sport and League Teams until Seven lost the VFL broadcast rights in 1987, before joining Nine’s Wide World of Sports and the Sunday Footy Show. He retired in 2008.

What a shame, RIP.

Tony Jones did a nice tribute to Lou on Nine News today and acknowledged the contribution that Lou had made via World Of Sport and League Teams which were Channel 7 programs and, as Tony said, were the predecessors to current shows like The Footy Show. Seems petty that Nine’s online article barely mentions World Of Sport because, you know, it only ran for about 30 years.

I imagine the Herald Sun will have a big tribute tomorrow, given he wrote for The Sun and Herald-Sun for so many years.