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'First things first, the audience loved it. As Julia Gillard, in a performance that blended naturalism and impersonation, Justine Clarke held the crowd in the palm of her hand. They swooned and sighed to the wholesome depiction of Gillard’s working-class Welsh parents and cackled at the pleasurable jokes made at the expense of Kevin Rudd, Mark Latham, and John Howard. And when Julia wrestled with her conscience over the policy compromises of her government – the refusal of same-sex marriage, the resumption of offshore processing for asylum seekers, the reduction of the single-mother benefit – the audience was encouraged to see that such disappointments were the cost of doing business in a dirty game.' (Introduction)
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Last amended 3 May 2023 11:14:31
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https://www.australianbookreview.com.au/arts-update/101-arts-update/10227-julia-hagiography-in-secular-form-by-clare-monagle
Gillard as Everywoman : Hagiography in Secular Form
Australian Book Review