Boston Herald

John Clarke, at 68, actor, comedian, satirist in Australia

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand — After Australia’s then-Prime Minister John Howard refused to formally apologize to indigenous Aboriginal people for past atrocities, an actor who happened to have the same name as the nation’s leader read out a moving apology on a television show.

The 2000 skit on “The Games” was one of many culturally iconic moments dreamed up by John Clarke, a comedian and political satirist famous in Australia and New Zealand.

Mr. Clarke’s family said the 68-year-old died Sunday of natural causes while taking photograph­s of birds in the Grampians National Park, a three-hour drive from his home in Melbourne, Australia. Friend and former colleague Ross Stevenson said Mr. Clarke died from a heart attack.

His death had people from both countries reminiscin­g about the skits and songs he performed that often touched on the essence of life Down Under.

The apology in “The Games,” a mock documentar­y about the 2000 Sydney Olympics, resonated and was later read out in Parliament, becoming part of the official record.

“I speak for all Australian­s in expressing a profound sorrow to the Aboriginal people. I am sorry. We are sorry,” the actor John Howard says on the show. “Let the world know and understand, that it is with this sorrow, that we as a nation will grow and seek a better, a fairer and a wiser future.”

Stevenson, who co-wrote the show, said the apology was Mr. Clarke’s idea.

“Every word of it was his,” Stevenson said. “It’s remarkably brilliant and poetic.” Stevenson said Mr. Clarke had a great appreciati­on for the absurdity found in daily life and was driven by a passion for social causes and anger about injustice.

“He maintained that rage,” Stevenson said. “It never diminished for him.”

He said his friend’s death came as a shock because Mr. Clarke lived a healthy lifestyle and kept himself fit.

Born in Palmerston North, New Zealand, Mr. Clarke achieved fame in his home country before moving to Australia in the 1970s. He created the persona Fred Dagg, a gumboot-wearing farmer and archetypal good bloke.

New Zealand Prime Minister Bill English took time during a media conference yesterday to reminisce about some of Clarke’s skits, saying he was “a man who showed us how to laugh at ourselves and created a rural vernacular for New Zealand.”

Clarke is survived by his wife Helen; daughters Lorin and Lucia; grandchild­ren Claudia and Charles; and son-in-law Stewart Thorn.

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MR. CLARKE

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