History Lab

History Lab

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History Lab || exploring the gaps between us and the past || This series is made in collaboration by the Australian Centre for Public History and Impact Studios at the University of Technology, Sydney.

Episode List

46. Red Light, Green Light

Apr 1st, 2026 6:10 AM

In this episode from History Lab's archive, we stay in Darlinghurst with the award winning Red Light Green Light story from our Listen to Darlinghurst series.Going back to the street corners and safe houses where sex workers competed for customers in Darlinghurst in the 1980s, you will hear the stories of members of the community who fought for law reform and sex worker's rights.The last time we heard this story, a petition had been started to bring back the statue of Joy, one of relatively few statues in Sydney that represents a woman - in this case, a sex worker. We are proud and excited to say that Joy has been returned to her rightful place in Darlinghurst, now in bronze and fully permanent!This episode of History Lab won a Signal Award in the social impact category.VoicesJulie Bates, veteran sex worker activist; Principal of Urban Realists Planning and Health Consultants.Chantell Martin, veteran sex worker; Co-CEO of Sex Workers Outreach Project.CreditsThis audio story is a production of the Australian Centre for Public History and Impact Studios at UTS, in partnership with the Paul Ramsay Foundation. It is part of the award-winning Darlinghurst Public History Initiative.Producer: Catherine FreyneSound engineer: Judy RapleyMusic: Blue Dot SessionsArchival: ABC Library Sales

45. Darlinghurst's AIDS Crisis: Bonus episode with Leigh Boucher and Tamson Pietsch

Mar 18th, 2026 10:18 PM

In this bonus episode, History Lab's Tamson Pietsch speaks with historian Leigh Boucher about the making of Darlinghurst's AIDS Crisis — our three-part History Lab series exploring one of the most intense and concentrated episodes of loss, activism, and community life in Australian history (if you haven't listened yet, go to episodes 42-44 of History Lab).Leigh is an historian based at Macquarie University who has lived in Darlinghurst for years. Walking the streets of the neighbourhood every day, he found himself asking a question the existing histories hadn't quite answered: what did it actually feel like to live in this neighbourhood as the epicentre of an epidemic? The series was his attempt to find out.Here, Leigh describes the tension between oral history practice — open-ended, associative, unhurried — and what podcasting demands.Leigh also reflects on the way his research, his interviewees and the collaborative work of making the podcast were able to complicate the story of how AIDS played out in Australia - zooming in to the local experience, and listening to voices that can help us hold that complexity rather than resolve it.VoicesLeigh Boucher and Tamson Pietsch, presented by Regina Botros.CreditsRecorded by Siobhan Moylan, edited and mixed by Regina Botros.History Lab is a UTS Impact Studios production, in collaboration with the Australian Centre for Public History at UTS.SupportThis series of History Lab was made with the support of the support of the Paul Ramsay Foundation and is part of the Foundation's Darlinghurst Public History Initiative, a collaboration with UTS' Australian Centre for Public History and Impact Studios.Thanks to Macquarie University for its support of this series.A special thanks goes to the staff and management of City Gym, Darlinghurst, for their generous hospitality. Heartfelt thanks also to Anni Turnbull at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney for her time and expertise, and to the Australian Queer Archives.Thanks also to the National Library of Australia, the State Library of New South Wales, ACON and the Pride History Group Sydney.

44. Darlinghurst's AIDS Crisis Ep 3: Faultlines and farewells

Mar 5th, 2026 4:00 AM

By the early 1990s, AIDS had reached its devastating peak in Darlinghurst. Obituaries filled the pages of the Star Observer, funerals became routine. Sickness and loss touched almost every friendship and street in the neighbourhood.In this episode, we move inside the hospitals, hospices and homes where nurses, carers and volunteers supported a generation of young men facing terminal illness. Beyond the wards, grief and anger spilled into public life — through candlelight vigils, the AIDS Memorial Quilt, and growing activism demanding faster access to life-saving drugs.Then, in 1996, combination therapies changed the course of the epidemic. Soon, for the first time in a decade, the Star Observer ran without a single obituary. But survival came with a new question: how do you rebuild a life — and a community — after so much loss?This episode explores the final grueling years of the crisis and its aftermath — and the complex and unruly legacies it left for generations to come.VoicesNarrator: Regina BotrosHistorian: Leigh BoucherInterviewees: Pierre Touma, Lizzie Griggs, Bill Patterson, Frank McCabe, Billy Kokkinos, Tim Vincent, Sara Lubowitz, Bruce Carter, Tess Ziems, Scott Petrie and Ian Innes.Archive voice actors: Sam David Harris and Michael J Ryan.Radio news and current affairs archive from Gaywaves, 2SER.CreditsThis special History Lab Original series was created on the lands of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation.Produced, written and narrated by Regina Botros, in collaboration with Macquarie University historian Leigh Boucher.Story development by Leigh Boucher and Michelle Ransom-Hughes.Interviews by Leigh Boucher.Research assistance from Eli Branagh.Story and script editing by Sarah Gilbert.History Lab is a UTS Impact Studios production, in collaboration with the Australian Centre for Public History at UTS.SupportThis podcast was made with the support of the support of the Paul Ramsay Foundation and is part of the Foundation's Darlinghurst Public History Initiative, a collaboration with UTS' Australian Centre for Public History and Impact Studios.Thanks to Macquarie University for its support of this series.A special thanks goes to the staff and management of City Gym, Darlinghurst, for their generous hospitality. Heartfelt thanks also to Anni Turnbull at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney for her time and expertise, and to the Australian Queer Archives.Thanks also to the National Library of Australia, the State Library of New South Wales, ACON and the Pride History Group Sydney. Further readingTo learn more about the history and complex legacies of AIDS in Darlinghurst, read these articles by Leigh Boucher:Reciting the names of the dead: how Australia's response to HIV/Aids was emotionally - and politically - powerful, Guardian Australia, 1 Dec 2025.What have we lost with 2026's Mardi Gras Parade after party cancellation?, Star Observer, 13 Feb 2026.

43. Darlinghurst's AIDS Crisis Ep 2: Dancing as fast as we can

Feb 25th, 2026 9:20 PM

By the mid-1980s, the epidemic had taken hold in Darlinghurst. Fear was rising, homophobia was intensifying, and uncertainty shaped everyday life. Who had the virus? What did a positive test mean? And could the state be trusted with that information?In this episode, historian Leigh Boucher moves into the heart of the crisis as the neighbourhood marshals every last drop of queer energy, love, creativity and strength to hold back the tide. Safe sex campaigns and innovative health responses proliferate – in bars, on dance floors and among squat racks.For Peter Vincent and his friends, the party is far from over, even as they face the stark reality of a disease without a cure and the homophobic judgment beyond the gaybourhood. This is Darlinghurst – dancing as fast as it can.VoicesNarrator: Regina BotrosHistorian: Leigh BoucherInterviewees: Bill Patterson, Lizzie Griggs, Frank McCabe, Tim Vincent, Pierre Touma, Bruce Carter, Scott Petrie and Sara Lubowitz.Archive voice actors: Sam David Harris and Michael J Ryan.Radio news and current affairs archive from Gaywaves, 2SER.CreditsThis special History Lab Original series was created on the lands of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation.Produced, written and narrated by Regina Botros, in collaboration with Macquarie University historian Leigh Boucher.Story development by Leigh Boucher and Michelle Ransom-Hughes.Interviews by Leigh Boucher.Research assistance from Eli Branagh.Story and script editing by Sarah Gilbert.History Lab is a UTS Impact Studios production, in collaboration with the Australian Centre for Public History at UTS.SupportThis podcast was made with the support of the support of the Paul Ramsay Foundation and is part of the Foundation's Darlinghurst Public History Initiative, a collaboration with UTS' Australian Centre for Public History and Impact Studios.Thanks to Macquarie University for its support of this series.A special thanks goes to the staff and management of City Gym, the Albion Centre and ACON's Needle and Syringe Program for their generous hospitality.

42. Darlinghurst's AIDS Crisis Ep 1: Under the mirror ball

Feb 19th, 2026 2:35 AM

In the late 1970s and early 80s, Sydney’s Darlinghurst was the place to be for queer fun, sex and joy – all bubbling alongside a measure of danger.Packed bars, late-night gyms, house music, new friendships and the thrill of seeing and being seen. For many, this was the place to connect, to belong, to “grow up under the mirror ball.”In the first episode of this three-part series, historian Leigh Boucher steps into that world of parties, cruising, chosen families and hard-won freedom — a queer neighbourhood alive with possibility.But as the music plays and the nights stretch on, whispers of a mysterious illness begin to circulate.To understand how that powerful, fragile world of Darlinghurst felt and moved, Leigh talks to ordinary people who lived there and built the “gaybourhood” from the ground up.How might their stories help us to a fresh understanding of a history we think we know?VoicesNarrator: Regina BotrosHistorian: Leigh BoucherInterviewees: Pierre Touma, Sara Lubowitz, Bruce Carter, Gary Dunne, Lizzie Griggs, Tess Ziems and Frank McCabe.Archive: Dr Jim Curran and Dr Ron Penny (courtesy of Gaywaves, 2SER)Archive voice actors: Sam David Harris and Michael J Ryan.Radio news and current affairs archive from Gaywaves, 2SER.CreditsThis special History Lab Original series was created on the lands of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation.Produced, written and narrated by Regina Botros, in collaboration with Macquarie University historian Leigh Boucher.Story development by Leigh Boucher and Michelle Ransom-Hughes.Interviews by Leigh Boucher.Research assistance from Eli Branagh.Story and script editing by Sarah Gilbert.History Lab is a UTS Impact Studios production, in collaboration with the Australian Centre for Public History at UTS.SupportThis podcast was made with the support of the support of the Paul Ramsay Foundation and is part of the Foundation's Darlinghurst Public History Initiative, a collaboration with UTS' Australian Centre for Public History and Impact Studios.Thanks to Macquarie University for its support of this series.A special thanks goes to the staff and management of City Gym, Darlinghurst, for their generous hospitality.

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