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WHEN RAT RULED THE WORLD - PART 1

Well, Sydney Anyway

INTERVIEW BY HANNAH BROOKS
PHOTOS BY WILLIAM YANG

Reno Dal, Billy Yip and Jac Vidgen, the first team behind the RAT parties. They remain good friends to this day. Picture by John Webber.

In early 1983, having recently moved to Sydney, a young Jac Vidgen decided to throw a party in his Elizabeth Bay apartment. He’d done stuff like this before and like his previous efforts, the party was an unmitigated success. But this time, even though all the right people came, there were just way too many of them. They left a solid trail of glitter from the street to his apartment and his whiny downstairs neighbors complained about that and the ceiling caving in. Reno Dal, a friend who Jac had hired to hang mirror balls and take care of the lighting, sensibly suggested that Jac move the affair to a venue that he didn’t shit and eat and sleep in, and start charging people an entrance fee. Thus, the birth of RAT.

Click here for more images.

Five years and one friendship with an exotic Chinese maker-of-art-things named Billy Yip later, they still weren’t making a ton of money (that’s what happens when you spend your profits on amazing outfits and drugs you give away for free) but the parties continued into the early 90s, leaving the photo documentation of the wildest shit Australia has ever seen. Like that time when Grace Jones serenaded a crowd of 15,000 as the sun began its first yawn of 1983.

These days Jac lives in Asia and works as a senior Buteyko practitioner, or, in non-spiritual asthmatic terms, a type of breath teacher. But he still remembers the good ol’ days…


Vice: Tell me about the first RAT party.

Jac Vidgen:
We found this old house in Redfern and decided to rent it from the hippies who lived there. The 220 people who came in got free punch but we never did that again cause it was gone in half an hour.

And what was in this punch you made?

Well the punch was made up of all kinds of things but for the next party we provided everybody with a jelly baby impregnated with a quarter of an acid trip. If you were a good looking boy you might have been lucky enough to get a second one if you came to me. I’d cross your ticket when you’d had your acid, which meant you couldn’t get any more. Basically, it ran out when everybody got their share. But it was very strong so it was enough to get everybody into a good state without it getting stupid. Of course everybody said, “When’s the next party?”

Can you tell me about the photo known as the “Infamous Line?”

It’s a photograph of people lining up at the Balmain Bijou in January of ’85 to buy their drugs. The Bijou was a wreck in those days. We just took it over for a night and made it into this incredible environment. What they’re lining up in front of is a big cutout foam sign that says “From Your Dealer With Heart,” which would have been a sign for a car dealer on Parramatta Road or somewhere.

I remember that night that the police came because we didn’t have a license. I was dressed outrageously and in quite the party mood and I told them that they should have a look inside for some reason. I led these two policemen in and they stood there with their eyes practically popping out and said, “Right, well don’t do it again,” and then they just left.

What were you wearing?

I was wearing a Chinese or Japanese opera mask on the top of my head and I had these huge blousing red pants with white polka dots on them, a singlet that had been hand painted by somebody, and these long boots.

Amazing. How important were costumes and dressing up to the parties?

Very important. People went to a lot of effort. Martin Harsono had these three Chinese Opera costumes and they came out for two or three parties ’cause they were such a great look. Famous drag queens like Tobin Saunders, who does that character Vanessa Vagner, would come along and always get free tickets because of their great outfits.

If you were all dressed up and heading to a RAT party, how did people react if they saw you?

Very rarely antagonistic. Often fascinated. We did a party at the Enmore Theatre called RATarama where we played movies and the idea was to come as your favorite movie character. We had arranged a limousine service for people arriving and the ABC TV was there filming it for one of their shows. The locals were on the street watching it like it was a parade.

So were there ever any busts?

In those days, never. But the thing to understand is that drugs were far from the focus. This is what distinguished RAT from all the other parties. We’d put huge amounts of effort into creating an extraordinary environment where everyone got to be expressive. Whether they were make up artists, fashion designers, costume makers or punters who wanted to be those things. Or musicians who generally performed in front of 200 people who then got to perform in front of 2,000 people at our parties. We gave people who weren’t famous a chance. I used to just let people perform—not for long but it gave them a chance to be part of the event. I was privileged to work with some extraordinary people over the years.

Like all good things, I imagine the parties changed over time.

Very much so. It was totally exploited and commercialized by lots of people who thought, “Gee, we could make a lot of money out of this.” And some of them did; they would just do one or two events, promote all sorts of stuff, and deliver very little.

That’s where I really lost interest. By the early 90s I just became less inspired by it. It had a real edge in the mid- to late-80s and we’d inadvertently created that edge. We didn’t plan or set out to create that; it just evolved and went in that direction and there wasn’t any stopping it.

The other thing is, in those days, the tribes, if you could call them that, all mixed together. Today they have their individual things, which started to happen towards the end of the late 80s. So then, in the 90s, these very specialized events began. There were techno raves and hip-hop parties, and that’s where that group of people went. You go to an event now and everyone is dressed the same; you don’t see many people really dressed up.

No, you don’t.

It’s completely changed. There was AIDS; that put a damper on things and so by the 90s people were going back to black. Whereas the 80s had been an incredibly colorful period: colorful for fashion and colorful in a sense of people’s expression. I think the 90s became darker and more conservative. Sexually conservative as well, which was a rebound from the AIDS thing. In the RAT photos, I could point out a lot of amazing people who are now dead.

It’s sad.

It is sad. It was good training in a way though because that doesn’t usually happen to you until you get old.

I guess when you put it that way… no, it’s still sad.

See all articles by this contributor

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Comments

Anonymous, on Apr 27, 2009 wrote:
Super piece on the brilliant RAT team and their parties.

Such a happy reminder..

Anonymous, on Apr 25, 2009 wrote:
Sydney is no longer the place to be thats fo sure
Anonymous, on Apr 25, 2009 wrote:
Sydneys Hey Day is well and truly over. The scene particularly Oxford st is a very poor bland imitation of went before. A combination of OTT OHS laws, intimidation tactics deployed by police, low quality drugs and over commercialisation of clubs and parties has killed the vibe.
Anonymous, on Apr 25, 2009 wrote:
The drugs are shit today and the sniffer dogs have put an end to the freedom we had in the 80’s
Anonymous, on Apr 25, 2009 wrote:
I went to all the dance parties especially at the Hordern from 87 onwards and although RAT was good it definitely wasnt the best. Perhaps before it became very big and commercialised it might have been better but the ones at the Hordern were average. I also mixed with the arty crowd pictured and I have to say they were mostly very boring and pretentious people except for a few. Other Parties like SWEATBOX and FUN etc played better music and didnt attract the straight westie crowd in the same way that RAT did. I suppose RAT is the most memorable because it was the most mainstream and popular.
Anonymous, on Apr 17, 2009 wrote:
RAT so deserves to be remembered - gosh people are still fascinated and talking about it twenty years later!! so glad i was there - Robert Rosen - photographer
Anonymous, on Apr 17, 2009 wrote:
It is good to recall those days. RAT was a creative gene for that whole period: feeding into Mardi Gras and many other of the parties, but as Jac points out, in an inclusive way: Sydney was a tribe of tribes. Since the 90’s it became more a market of niche markets or rather brittle exclusive groups. In the eighties people would spend six months getting their costumes ready. It is sad today that people just want to go and buy a body from the gym and then wear the standardized costume, whether leather or grunge or sports gear that everyone else wears. In those days drugs were a means to fuller joy in the whole experience of life and creativity: more fun and less taking your appearance, yourself, and your in-group too seriously. Thanks to Vice (and Jac -- and William, and Reno and Billy) for reminding us of what Sydney can do, and will doubtless do again. There may or may not be pure unadulterated joy in the next life but it is good to put it as a priority in this one. RAT did that. Best to all. TIM
Anonymous, on Apr 17, 2009 wrote:
I’m actually surprised by all the nasty bitchiness in the comments section. You bunch of armchair critics, get up and do something. Thanks goodness for people like Jac Vidgen et al who make the world a far more interesting place. And if you think that isn’t hard work - think again.
Anonymous, on Apr 17, 2009 wrote:
Hi TTYM,
Don’t you think if you heart was palpitating, you’d do something about getting it fixed? Same goes for breathing, except we have a lot more control about that. You a are major. Major DUMBASS.

Darian Zam
Anonymous, on Apr 17, 2009 wrote:
Fantastic photographers from William Yang & Robert Rosen. They capture a slice of history of Australian subculture. Jac is right about
the RAT (Recreational Arts Team) parties. It was 1 tribe, ’one nation under a groove’ so to speak. You could hear 80’s electronica, hip hop, funk, art rock, afro & more all on the one dance floor.

Thanks for sharing.

Scott.
Anonymous, on Apr 14, 2009 wrote:
is that really a photo? the two on the right look charcoaled.
Anonymous, on Apr 14, 2009 wrote:
RATT never ruled the world either, but they came pretty darn close.
A Taipan, on Apr 12, 2009 wrote:
Mmm... drugs... delightful... mmm...
Anonymous, on Apr 12, 2009 wrote:
It was a long time ago and frankly I am not surprised by these comments. Like any party, you just had to be there, at that time. RAT was a happy accident where we had an idea and it excited a lot of people to get involved. The result was a wild range of creative people coming together- artists, designers, performers- to create something for fun. It was weird and silly because we gave people the freedom to do whatever they wanted. And then we were surprised when people started coming from all over the world to have a look, to get involved and make it something quite unique.

Maybe in the future similar things will happen again where creative people can have the freedom to work together to celebrate the joy of silliness and just plain fun.

Thanks for your comments. Interesting to see how people react at such a distance.

Party on!

Reno
Anonymous, on Apr 10, 2009 wrote:
The guy does have a good point, its been ages since i went along to a party where loads of people had made the effort to dress up in costume and get silly. mostly just jeans, tshirt and pbr. not quite the same deal.
Anonymous, on Apr 10, 2009 wrote:
the guy on the left of the main photo reminds me of the fat guy from seinfeld. whats with that......
yikes snakes, on Apr 10, 2009 wrote:
This guy really went to a lot of trouble, can you imagine sitting there impregnating jelly beans with acid? one for the beans one for me. you would be tripping balls withing an hour .
Anonymous, on Apr 9, 2009 wrote:
i don’t remember rat, but i do remember when rat tails ruled the school bus
Anonymous, on Apr 8, 2009 wrote:
I dont think I have ever heard anyone attribute the 90’s style trend of darker colors to AIDS... interesting theory. probably bullshit, but interesting nonetheless
Anonymous, on Apr 8, 2009 wrote:
“From Your Dealer With Heart,” would have been a sign for a car dealership??... yeah right. I think basically anyone could see through that
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
I know what he means, but shit, those photos are 30 years old. Any collection of photos that old is going to have a few dead people in them.
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
i never realized AIDS affected fashion so much.....
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
It’s funny to me that with enough cocaine any party is deemed the coolest ever. It’s not surprising but it’s still funny.
duck duck goose, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
for a few years grace jones and mike tyson had the same haircut and during those years she was much scarier than he was, give or take a robin givens.
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
sounds okay but i’d rather get a an ounce of powder and a case of wine and do it up right with my personal best and brightest. home coke parties are where it’s at not key bumping your way to a shitty conversation in the corner with some dude you just met.
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
"grace jones freaks me out. i always think at any minute she’s liable to whip out a foot long cock and start shooting heat seeking missiles out of it. "

it’s not a party until grace unleashes the cocktillery. one night she blew the fedora right off my head with a grunt and a hip swivel. a blast of fem-cum shot through the air like a softball off a fresh tpx bat and almost took my head off.
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
he should have called it year of the rat and had one year of fun and called it a day. parties that go on for too long leave a bad taste and memory in your mouth and you forget how great they were in their infancies.
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
fuck grace jones, i wanna party with kangaroo. check ol boy out. you know he gets down and after a bump or twelve he’d break out the stories of fucking young thai boys and blowing fart bubbles and the democratic national convention in chicago.
Anonymous, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
impressive memories for partying so hard. after my bashes i wake up remember tapping the third keg and then i only have a sore pecker and a runny nose to clue me in to the rest of the night’s activities.
skidmarx, on Apr 7, 2009 wrote:
i love sidebraids. they are the backward baseball cap of the buddhist world.
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