Clip description
Rhonda (Justine Saunders) confesses her love for Arnold (Jeff Kevin) and Dorrie (Pat McDonald) forbids Junior (Curt Jansen) from seeing a ‘brazen hussy’.
Curator’s notes
This episode begins as each one always did – with an establishing shot of the building’s exterior before the camera zooms into whatever flat had the cliff-hanging drama from the previous episode. The new instalment then seeks to immediately resolve the drama; in this case, it’s Flat 6 where Indigenous hairdresser Rhonda is in tears, admitting to Arnold that she moved into the apartment under false pretences.
Actress Justine Saunders appeared in a TV Week spread at this time with the headline ‘Justine Breaks the Colour Barrier’. The magazine talked up how she was the ‘first Aboriginal actress to be cast in a regular role in a television series’ and Saunders was proud to prove that her people could ‘do more than run through the bush without clothes. I feel strongly about the fact that so many producers seem to frown upon giving us roles on an equal footing with white actors.’ She was also excited about the reaction of viewers after her first bedroom scene. ‘I wonder what some people will say when they first see a black girl and a white man in bed together. Apart perhaps from period dramas, I’m sure it has never been done on Australian television before.’
Prior to Number 96, all of Saunders’s TV roles (with the exception of a 1975 ABC play Pig in a Poke where she had played a receptionist) had been in period dramas where she was either nude, raped or brutally killed. Rhonda was not killed in Number 96, but she was seen nude and became a victim of the Hooded Rapist. Saunders, however, felt the scenes were ‘completely in context’ this time around and not ‘exploitation’ like her previous roles.
After the scene with Rhonda and Arnold, the action quickly moves to Flat 3 and some comedy relief. Note Junior’s reference to the Sydney Opera House, where the show has recently filmed sequences around its forecourt and harbourside restaurant. And listen for Dorrie’s malapropisms (‘I was merely speaking metaphysically’, instead of ‘metaphorically’), and her use of the catchphrase ‘Allow me to be the best judge of that’, which she has appropriated from Claire Houghton (see Number 96 – Episode 35, 1972, clip one).