2020-02-29 New Zealand Listener

(WallPaper) #1

FEBRUARY 29 2020 LISTENER 7


OBITUARY


Tony Reid


Ground-breaking journalist and


former Listener editor. by GEOFF CHAPPLE


1943-


T


he journalism of the years 1960
to 2000 is littered with masthead
casualties now, but it was within
those publications that Tony Reid
became what’s now called a destination
journalist. Reid, who died on February 14,
was the one you’d buy the magazine, or the
newspaper, for – just
to read. Within those
years he’s acknow-
ledged as a master of
long-form print jour-
nalism – the in-depth
interview, or the reveal-
ing personal profile.
Reid learnt his trade
on provincial news-
papers, but progressed
quickly to the Domin-
ion Sunday Times and a
weekly interview series,
“The Frank Portrait”,
that established a
lifelong pattern. Sir
Edmund Hillary, Denis
Glover, Sir Ernest
Marsden, Sir Eruera Tirikatene and many
others were all ushered through “Frank” and
emerged afresh. If Reid’s Catholicism gave
him anything, it was his priest-like ability to
draw from his subjects far more than they
might want to give.
In 1967, he joined the NZ Weekly News,
and trialled stories that centred on himself
as observer. For a story on the New Zealand
Post Office, he mailed himself as a stamped
item from Cape Reinga to Stewart Island,
loaded en route into trucks, railway guards’
vans and ships.
But he had a darker Irish side, too. When
Paremoremo’s high-security D Block opened,
in 1968, he spent a night inside. His fellow

inmates staged a noisy demonstration for
him alone, and his interest in prisons led
to an interview series called “The Criminal
Mind”.
After a stint at the Sun in Melbourne, Reid
returned in 1972 as a feature writer on the
Listener. The intuition within his big round
head was formidable;
his subjects often
sleepwalked towards
revelations that are the
profiler’s holy grail. In
1974, his profile on
Hugh Watt, the then
Labour Government’s
deputy prime minister,
began – “In a word?
Dull? I suppose that
would be the adjec-
tive.” It’s widely quoted
as the beginning in
New Zealand of the
so-called new journal-
ism, but Reid had been
doing it for years.
Encouraged forward
by editor Ian Cross, Reid became, in 1977,
the magazine’s fifth and youngest editor. But
in 1980, he stepped down to return to his
first love, reportage and writing. The Listener’s
coverage of the 1981 Springbok tour by Reid
and Phil Gifford would win the top feature-
writing prize for that year. His long 1983
interview with the intensely shy redhead,
Janet Frame, published in the NZ Herald,
remains a classic of literary journalism.
He was diagnosed with multiple sclero-
sis in 1995, but, although the long illness
quelled his journalism, his reputation
endured. In 2010, the Qantas Media Awards
honoured him with a lifetime-achievement
award. l

competition was held. The


winner featured a turquoise


koru curling over horizontal


bands of blue and black (see


previous page). Perhaps its


creator could step forward?


Russell Campbell


(Aro Valley, Wellington)


ELECTRIC NIGHTMARE


Richard Bould’s description of


New Zealand’s poor electric-


vehicle-charging infrastructure


(Letters, February 15) conjures


up a picture of a road-rage


incident in which EV drivers


are attacking each other with


their power cords and hurling


such insults as “my car takes


100kW, yours is only 50kW –


get out of my way”.


There may be only a few


moving parts in an EV, but if


you can’t charge it, you can


add the driver and passengers


to what isn’t moving.


G Spencer
(Pukekohe)


QUAKE DATE MISTAKE


“All shook up” (That’s Enter-


tainment, February 22), about


the screening of a documen-


tary on Christchurch’s 2011


earthquake, mentions that “it


is important to tell stories and


remember the dead, acknowl-


edge the living and salute the


heroes” of the seismic shocks.


Although commendable,


in order to do so, it would


be appreciated if journalists


who were obviously not in


Christchurch at the time, or


have not had to live through


the chaos and rebuild of a city


and lives, would check their


facts before going to print. The


February earthquake did not


happen on the 23rd, as the


article says, but the 22nd.


A small point in print,


maybe, but for people – the


living, the dead, the heroes


and the survivors – it is very


important.


Sarah Helleur


(Christchurch)


We apologise for the error.

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