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Oz (Magazine)Oz was a satirical humour magazine published 1963–69 in Sydney, Australia and, in a second and more famous incarnation, from 1967 to 1973 in London, England. Strongly identified as part of the underground press, it was the subject of two celebrated obscenity trials, one in Australia in 1964 and the other in the UK in 1971. On both occasions the magazine's editors were acquitted on appeal after initially being found guilty and sentenced to harsh jail terms. The UK trial is widely regarded as the start of the backlash in the UK against the cultural values of the permissive sixties. Oz has been parodied in the short-lived television series Hippies. The central editor throughout the magazine's life was Richard Neville. Co-editors of the Sydney version were Richard Walsh and Martin Sharp. Co-editors of the London version were Jim Anderson and, later, Felix Dennis. Oz in Australia The original Australian editorial team included university students Neville, Walsh, Sharp and Peter Grose, with early contributions by future Time magazine critic and art historian Robert Hughes. Neville, Walsh and Sharp had each been involved in student papers at their respective Sydney tertiary campuses. Influenced by the New Statesman, Private Eye and the radical comedy of Lenny Bruce, the group decided to found a "magazine of dissent". The first edition, published on April Fool's Day 1963, parodied the Sydney Morning Herald, and led with a front-page hoax about the collapse of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. In succeeding issues (and its its later London version) Oz gave pioneering coverage to contentious issues such as censorship, homosexuality, abortion, police brutality, the government's racist White Australia Policy and the Vietnam War, and regularly satirised public figures up to and including Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies. The magazine caused an immediate sensation with it first edition on April Fool's Day 1963, which parodied the Sydney Morning Herald and led with a famous hoax story about the Sydney Harbour Bridge collapsing. Two of the most contentious items in these early issues were Martin Sharp's satirical poem about Sydney's youth sub-culture, "The Word Flashed Around The Arms", and the famous Issue #6 cover photograph, which depicted Neville and others pretending to urinate into a wall fountain mounted in the street facade of the Sydney offices of the P&O shipping line, which had been created by sculptor Tom Bass and which had recently been unveiled by Prime Minster Menzies. Within six issues, the magazine had landed its editors Neville, Walsh and Sharp in court on obscenity charges. The cases stemmed from a number of published items, including the pissoir cover and Sharp's poem. In their initial trial, all three men were found guilty, but the convictions were turned over on appeal. Sharp and Neville left for London soon after and Walsh returned to his studies, although he subsequently revived and published a reduced edition of Sydney Oz until 1969. In the 1970s he edited POL magazine and the Nation Review and later became managing director of leading Australian media company Australian Consolidated Press, owned by Kerry Packer. Oz in the UK In late 1966 Neville and Sharp moved to the UK and in early 1967, with fellow Australian Jim Anderson, they founded the London Oz. Contributors included Germaine Greer, artist and filmmaker Philippe Mora, photographer Robert Whitaker, journalist Lillian Roxon, Angelo Quattrocchi and David Widgery. With access to new print stocks, including metallic foils, new flourescent inks and the greater flexibility of layout offered by the offset printing system, Sharp's artistic skills came to the fore and Oz quickly won renown as one of the most visually exciting publications of its time. Many editions of Oz included dazzling psychedelic wrap-around or pull-out posters by Sharp, London design duo Hapshash & The Coloured Coat and others; these instantly became sought-after collectors' items and now command high prices. The all-graphic "Magic Theatre" edition (Oz #16), overseen by Sharp and Mora, has been described by British author Jonathon Green as "arguably the greatest achievement of the entire British underground press." Sharp drifted away from the magazine during 1968 and a young Londoner, Felix Dennis, was brought in as Neville and Anderson's new partner. The magazine regularly enraged the British Establishment with a range of left-field stories including heavy converage of the Vietnam War and the anti-war movement, discussions of drugs, sex and alternative lifestyles, and political stories such as revelations about torture of citizens under the rule of the military junta in Greece. In 1970, responding to criticism that Oz had lost touch with youth, the editors invited a group of secondary school students (including Charles Shaar Murray and Deyan Sudjic) to create a special 'youth' edition: Oz #28 (May 1970), known as "Schoolkids OZ". One of the resulting articles, a highly sexualised Rupert the Bear parody created by 15-year-old schoolboy Vivian Berger by pasting the head of Rupert onto the lead character of an X-rated satirical cartoon by Robert Crumb. The majority of the contributors were from public schools (in the UK sense of the term: elite private schools); as a result the humour was mostly an extension of the type of material familiar from undergraduate Rag Mags. Oz was one of several 'underground' publications targeted by the Obscene Publications Squad, and their offices had already been raided on several occasions, but the conjunction of schoolchildren and arguably obscene material set the scene for the infamous Oz obscenity trial of 1971. In some respects it was a copy of the Australian trial, with evidence and judicial instruction clearly aimed at securing a conviction, but the British trial was given an far more dangerous twist by the revival of an archaic charge brought against Neville, Dennis and Anderson, "conspiracy to corrupt public morals", which theoretically carried a virtually unlimited penalty. The trial, which began in June 1971, brought the magazine to the attention of a far wider public than would have been the case had it simply been ignored. John Lennon and Yoko Ono joined the protest march against the prosecution and organised the recording of "God Save Oz" by the Elastic Oz Band, released on Apple Records, to raise funds and gain publicity. Dennis and Anderson were defended by lawyer and playwright John Mortimer (creator of the Rumpole Of The Bailey series) with assistance from Australian lawyer Geoffrey Robertson; Neville represented himself. After the longest obscenity trial in British legal history, with defence witnesses including comedian Marty Feldman, artist and drugs activist Caroline Coon, DJ John Peel, musician and writer George Melly and academic Edward De Bono, the "Oz Three" were found guilty and sentenced to hard labour — although Dennis was given a lesser sentence because the judge, Justice Michael Argyle, claimed that Dennis was "very much less intelligent" than Neville and Anderson. Shortly after the verdicts were handed down they were taken to prison and their heads shaved, an act which caused an even greater stir on top of the already considerable outcry surrounding the trial and verdict. The most famous images of the trial come from the committal hearing, at which Neville, Dennis and Anderson all appeared wearing rented schoolgirl costumes. At the appeal trial, where the defendants appeared wearing long wigs, it was found that Justice Argyle had grossly misdirected the jury on numerous occasions. During the appeal, it was also alleged that Berger, who was called as a prosecution witness, had been harassed and assaulted by police. The convictions were overturned. After the UK trial The magazine continued in publication with diminishing success until 1973; arguably, it lost much of its impact after the trial. Dennis was stung by personal comments made by the trial judge that he was of limited ability and a dupe of the other defendants; since that time, he has become one of Britain's wealthiest and most prominent publishers, publisher of Maxim, and other magazines, and in 2004 released a book of original poetry. Neville, living again in Australia, has become a successful author whose books include a critically praised account in the 1980s of the life of Indian serial killer Charles Sobraj, who preyed on Western tourists travelling on Asia's so-called "hippie trail" in the 1970s; the book was later adapted for a successful TV mini-series starring Art Malik. He also wrote a memoir of Oz magazine, Hippie Hippie Shake. Walsh became a magazine editor with Kerry Packer's Consolidated Press organisation and eventually rose to become its senior publisher. Sharp has long been regarded as Australia's leading pop artist. External links References - Green, Jonathon, All Dressed Up: The Sixties and the Counterculture. Pimlico, London, 1999, ISBN 0712665234.
- Neville, Richard, Hippie Hippie Shake. William Heinemann Australia, Melbourne, 1995, ISBN 085615230
Further reading - Nigel Fountain Underground: The London Alternative Press 1966-74, Commedia/Routledge 1988 ISBN 0415007275 / ISBN 0415007283 (pb)
- Tony Palmer The Trials of Oz, Blond & Briggs, 1971.
- Geoffrey Robertson The Justice Game, Vintage, London, 1999, ISBN 0099581914.
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