The New Zealand Herald

League caller gone with the wind

- Kathy Marks in Sydney

A clumsily recalled line from

has cost a veteran rugby league commentato­r his job, after Warren Ryan refused to apologise for using the word “darkie” on air.

The ABC suspended Ryan, a former player and coach, and his fellow commentato­r, David Morrow, after Ryan made the comment during an NRL match a fortnight ago between the Roosters and Bulldogs.

Morrow — who was suspended himself last year for joking that it was difficult to see people in Darwin without the lights on — could be heard laughing at his colleague’s remark. The ABC is investigat­ing the incident, but Ryan told Fairfax Media he had resigned “to save them the trouble of conducting it”.

During a stand-off between a referee and a player towards the end of the match, Ryan recalled “a line in a movie where the old darkie says, someone says, ‘Quittin’ time.’ He said, ‘It’s not quittin’ time, I say quittin’ time.’ Then he yells out, ‘ Quittin’ time!’”

The 73-year-old was referring to the 1939 movie set in the Civil Warera American South, and an exchange of dialogue on the Tara cotton plantation between a worker and a foreman (both black, neither elderly).

As the bell rings to signal the end of the day, the worker says: “Quittin’ time!” The foreman retorts: “Who says it’s quittin’ time? . . . I’m the foreman, I’m the one that says when it’s quittin’ time at Tara . . . Quittin’ time!”

Neither man uses the word “darkie”, but it does feature in the movie, and even back then was controvers­ial. Producer David Selznick chose to retain it in the script, but bowed to pressure to remove the ‘N’-word following a heated debate. Many black activists regarded Margaret Mitchell’s book, on which the film was based, as demeaning.

This week, Ryan — who was planning to retire at the end of this season — insisted that “the word used to describe the character was a direct quote from the film . . . There was no offence intended, so I won’t be apologisin­g. It would be insincere.”

Linda Burney, a former NSW state minister and chairwoman of the National Indigenous Rugby League Council, described his comment as “inappropri­ate” and “belittling” yesterday. She told the ABC: “He needs to understand that there is absolutely no place . . . whatsoever in today’s society for that sort of language.”

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