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Sam Neill says painful ‘joke’ about Azaria Chamberlain must stop ahead of new documentary

Sam Neill starred in the world-famous movie about Azaria Chamberlain. Now, 40 years on, he has revealed why he is still outraged by her death.

Lindy Chamberlain: The True Story preview clip

IT was a mother’s terrified cry in the night, made famous by Meryl Streep as Lindy Chamberlain in the 1988 film, Evil Angels: “a dingo’s got my baby.”

For the Chamberlain family the real disappearance of their nine-week-old daughter and baby sister, Azaria, from a campsite near Uluru in the Northern Territory, would mark the beginning of four traumatic decades in which Lindy would be wrongfully accused, charged and imprisoned for the child’s murder; while a shadow of guilt and suspicion fell over husband Michael and their surviving offspring, Aidan and Reagen.

For actor Sam Neill, who played Dr Chamberlain in the movie, the mocking of that desperate moment continues to fill him with a quiet fury.

Lost love … Lindy Chamberlain with infant daughter Azaria climbing Uluru a day before she disappeared. Picture: Supplied
Lost love … Lindy Chamberlain with infant daughter Azaria climbing Uluru a day before she disappeared. Picture: Supplied

“It’s a sort of joke in America in particular, when they hear an Australian accent, someone will say, ‘a dingo’s got my baby,’ in Meryl’s accent. And people chuckle,” he tells The BINGE Guide, “but this was the moment a mother lost her child and I go, ‘Look, you know what? That isn’t funny. That isn’t funny at all. And I like to make people think about that. That it’s a horrible thing,” adding firmly, “and I won’t stand for it.”

Neill has remained a staunch defender of Australia’s most maligned family, lending his voice and support to a new documentary, Lindy Chamberlain: The True Story.

Featuring interviews with Lindy and her children, as well as archive footage of her late former husband Michael (who died from leukaemia complications two years ago), the two-hour special reopens their wounds and turns the spotlight back on those responsible for this legal injustice and never-ending tragedy.

Marking 40 years since Azaria went missing, the family are disarmingly candid in sharing their enduring pain and loss; as well as the ongoing fight to right the wrongs against them.

Neill still finds it staggering that the NT Government and Police have yet to officially apologise to Lindy, after falsely accusing and imprisoning her for three years.

Meryl Streep as Lindy Chamberlain [R] and Sam Neill as her husband Michael in A Cry in the Dark (also released as Evil Angels). Picture: Supplied
Meryl Streep as Lindy Chamberlain [R] and Sam Neill as her husband Michael in A Cry in the Dark (also released as Evil Angels). Picture: Supplied

“I thought by the time we made our film [in 1987] that things would be done and dusted. But their suffering just goes on and on. The fact that they’ve never had an apology, no comment from the Northern Territory government or the police up there, it just absolutely staggers me. It’s outrageous,” he says.

“It’s one thing to endure the tragedy of having your child killed but then to have it compounded by having to put up with decades of this whole horrible stuff, it’s devastating.”

The Crown’s case against Lindy was at best circumstantial, at worst a wilful “fitting up” of evidence to convict the beautiful young mother, who was judge in the court of public opinion for being too calm and calculating in the face of such a grave loss.

Neill argues the media were also to blame for driving much of the sensationalist coverage, which to this day still sees Lindy as a polarising figure – did she, or didn’t she?

“A lot of it was sexism and misogyny, blind ignorance and malice, just plain malice,” the 73-year-old recalls, “and also misunderstandings, you know. But the good thing about Lindy and Michael was that they were very stoic people, amazingly so.”

Through her eyes … Lindy has shared her story across news interviews and documentaries, including the new 10 special, Lindy Chamberlain: The True Story. Picture: Supplied
Through her eyes … Lindy has shared her story across news interviews and documentaries, including the new 10 special, Lindy Chamberlain: The True Story. Picture: Supplied

Visiting the family in the months before filming Evil Angels (marketed in Australia as ‘A Cry In The Dark’), Neill shares a snapshot he says captures the family’s innate decency.

It was 1985, and the family had bought a plot of wooded land near Cooranbong, on the NSW Central Coast, with plans to build their dream bush home.

Access to their property, Neill recalls, was through a “derelict and neglected” orange orchard, “just sort of overgrown, with fruit just all over the place.”

Walking through the grove one afternoon with the Chamberlains, he thought to start collecting the abundant fruit, which lay plentiful on the ground.

“So I go pick up a dozen really good looking ones and say ‘these will be great, we should take them back’ but they said ‘no, no, we can’t do that … they don’t belong to us.’”

It left a deep impression on the Irish-born, New Zealander, who says: “that’s just who they were … rigorously honest.”

He remembers the weekend with them with fondness: “they were very hospitable and pleasant company. And the kids were very nice, very sensitive.”

The documentary showcases that sensitivity, with Reagan revealing how he blamed himself for his sister’s death, as the dingo had walked over him to get to her.

Sam Neill is grieving the death of his duck, Charlie Pickering. "Cuddle a duck. If you can. Best if you're old friends like Charlie and me …" Picture: Instagram
Sam Neill is grieving the death of his duck, Charlie Pickering. "Cuddle a duck. If you can. Best if you're old friends like Charlie and me …" Picture: Instagram

Kahlia, who was born in 1982 when Lindy was imprisoned, but removed immediately from her mother and fostered out to another family, presents as a buoyant, optimistic and caring sister, despite the terrible disruption to her childhood and sneering asides from strangers.

But it is Aidan, now 47, who seems to still carry the weight of the trauma on his shoulders; introverted and, not surprisingly, suspicious of any media attention.

Neill says the ‘fake news’ back then, makes it relevant to audiences today.

“In many ways, it does sort of presage what’s going on now with these ridiculous conspiracy theories about 5G towers. You know, this anti-vax nonsense,” he says, “people are prepared to believe anything.”

He continues, despairingly: “What an age we live in, when these falsehoods are being primed and pumped and promoted by leaders of countries.”

During the chaos of the coronavirus pandemic, Neill has tried to counter the fear and division with lots of levity – sharing a series of hilarious short films, with an all-star cast, he called Cinema Quarantino.

He’s continued the fun in London, where he is filming Jurassic World 3: Dominion, dabbling in jazzy little duets, with his co-star and talented pianist, Jeff Goldblum.

Their first effort, a rambling rendition of A Fine Romance, went viral, much to their own surprise and amusement, Neill says.

“The problem is Jeff doesn’t like anything much that’s more modern than about 1926,” he laughs, “but it’s been a good distraction.”

The blockbuster, due out in June next year, is one of the few major Hollywood films back in production, with Neill – who dates ABC 7.30 correspondent Laura Tingle – grateful to be back at work.

“I feel very fortunate that I’m actually at work when so many of my friends and colleagues are not, you know, not just in film and in acting, but my musician friends.”

His other great love, his Two Paddocks vineyard in Central Otago, NZ, has been a bucolic place to retreat in this age of uncertainty, but has been in mourning since the death of Neill’s beloved duck, Charlie Pickering (just one of his farm animals named after his famous friends).

Genuinely grieved by the loss, he says: “Poor Charlie, I do miss him. He was such a such a friendly, friendly little fella,” adding, “it was so surprising and gratifying when you realise that an animal actually loves you.”

* Lindy Chamberlain: The True Story, 7.30pm, Sunday, 10.

Originally published as Sam Neill says painful ‘joke’ about Azaria Chamberlain must stop ahead of new documentary

Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/sam-neill-says-painful-joke-about-azaria-chamberlain-must-stop-ahead-of-new-documentary/news-story/9e086c348c895af6ddd973f968f452f4