Hot Potato: The Story of The Wiggles (2023)

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Hot Potato: The Story of The Wiggles (2023)

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[man] It is amazing.

You guys are the top

entertainment earners in Australia.

More than Russell Crowe.

More than Nicole Kidman.

I mean, this thing is a monster.

And as I'd watch it,

I'd kind of be laughing

and I'd sing, you know,

"Hot Potato" and all the songs,

and it's cute.

And I was trying to analyze,

so, okay, these guys

are really smart guys.

There's a reason for the colors.

There's a reason for the lyrics.

There needs to be a psychology

of why you guys...

Why this hits.

[crowd cheering]

[announcer] Everybody,

are you ready to Wiggle?

[crowd cheering]

Come on! Here we go! Give it up!

[bass drum sounding]

[The Wiggles: "Fruit Salad"]

[announcer] Anthony!

[crowd cheering]

[Anthony] Jeff!

[crowd cheering]

[Anthony] Murray!

[crowd cheering]

[Anthony] Greg!

[crowd cheering]

[Greg] Hello, Sydney!

Oh, it's great to see you tonight!

Let me ask you a question.

Are you ready to Wiggle?

- [cheering]

- Yeah!

[The Wiggles: "Hot Potato"]

[man] They are the world's

number-one preschool band.

[woman] They're like

The Beatles for toddlers.

[man] The Wiggles rule!

[singing]

Hot potato, hot potato!

You can always say it's a hobby,

in the end, for sure.

Hot potato, hot potato!

[man] These tickets were hotter

than The Stones and Springsteen.

[man] They again topped the BRW List

with 50 million dollars.

[woman] Children know a good song

when they hear one.

[man] But do not be fooled

by their simplicity...

It's The Wiggles!

...but their music is up there

with the greats.

- [man 1] And the winner is The Wiggles.

- [man 2] The Wiggles.

- [woman 1] The Wiggles.

- [woman 2] The Wiggles!

[man] There is a saying,

"Childhood is never history.

Childhood is always with us."

- Hi.

- [all] We're The Wiggles.

- [all laughing]

- We are, really.

Potato, potato, potato

["Hot Potato" ends]

[Jeff Fatt] You want my story

of how the colored skivvies came about.

I just chose purple straight up.

I had a red, a red shirt.

I heard that there was a race

to the bargain bin table

between Greg and Anthony.

They both could see a blue shirt,

and so they both ran for it

and Anthony won.

[chuckles]

But I'm not sure if that's true.

It's a good story, though.

My memory is Greg got yellow,

and all of us were glad.

No offense to anyone who loves yellow,

but I just, it wasn't my color.

[chuckles]

[Greg Page] That's me in a yellow skivvy

even before I wore the yellow skivvy.

[chuckles]

[Murray Cook] This wasn't something

that was invented in a boardroom.

It was, you know,

just four mates who did a record

and they thought that was all

it was going to be. [chuckles]

My '49 Martin.

[Anthony] Murray's nickname

just simply is Muzza.

He loves to get out there and rock.

[Murray] Stratocaster.

Murray is very considered in his thinking

and his way of doing things.

[Murray] Sure.

[Greg] He's not spontaneous.

[knock on door]

Is that the secret knock?

Sorry, guys. Sorry, Muzz.

Uh, I've just got to find

this bloody speaker that...

- You know what...

- [Greg] Anthony is so spontaneous

and like, "Yep, this is a great idea.

Let's do this."

Whereas Muzz will be kind of like,

"Mmm, okay, let's have a look at that.

Let's analyze things a bit there."

Anthony is a ratbag.

[laughing]

That's it. That's the one, mate.

I've been bad-mouthing you the whole time.

I thought you would.

Well, you can pay me back. [chuckles]

[Murray] Anthony's great.

He has so much energy.

[playing banjo]

[Murray] So many ideas.

He's really the heart of The Wiggles.

[playing piano]

[Greg] Jeff would take a photo every day,

every day, and I think he still does it.

[Anthony] He reminds me

of The Rolling Stones' Charlie Watts.

In the background, but he is cool.

Greg was a young, young man

when he joined The Wiggles.

[strumming guitar]

No matter what he's singing,

it's gonna soothe the soul.

[singing]

Taba naba naba norem

[Greg] It was a great relationship,

the way that the four of us

would work together.

Had its moments, as any relationship does.

[singing] Sere re naba we

But the intent and the motivation

has always been about the kids.

Are you ready to wiggle?

I'm ready to wiggle.

Is everyone ready to wiggle?

- Yeah!

- [children cheering]

We met at university,

doing a course in Early Childhood.

This connection with music

and Early Childhood teaching

is really the flow on thing

of what became The Wiggles.

Can you do that with us?

- The ducks went...

- [all] Quack.

[Murray] When I was at university,

this course was really great

because one of the things you looked at

was the way children think.

How they think

quite differently from adults.

Not just they don't know as much,

their brain works differently,

and I found that really fascinating.

Huh. Who are those young,

fresh-faced fellows?

Well, that one is, um...

Anthony and me at our graduation.

We both started second year

at the same time,

and I would have been 30

and Anthony would have been 27.

I'd just got married and... [chuckles]

He said, "What're you getting married for?

There's all these girls here."

[laughing]

There were five guys in our year,

180 women.

Murray was married, and that was great,

but as a young, testosterone-...

I couldn't understand it. [laughs]

But that is so superficial,

and I'm a changed man.

[laughing]

[rock music playing]

[Murray] Greg was a lot younger.

He's about 12 years younger than me.

Anthony and I were in third year

when Greg started in first year.

At university,

Anthony was pretty well known.

He was in a band called The Cockroaches.

[indistinct cheering]

[The Cockroaches: "She's the One"]

I would listen to that song

over and over, like multiple times.

I'd drive my family crazy with this album.

[mouthing along]

Ready on the starting line

This is The Cockroaches.

They were my idols.

I just... I just loved their music

and I loved them.

Come on, come on,

come on, come on, yeah, yeah

Hey, let's go, let's go, let's go

Hey, let's go...

How can you not love it?

Hey, let's go, let's go

She's the one, she's the one

She's the one, she's the one

She's the one, she's the one

She's the one

[Anthony] The Cockroaches

was a band I was in

with my brothers, Paul

and Johnny, and Jeff.

It was quite an amazing vibe every night.

And it was just so much fun.

Come on, come on...

We played all the time.

There were nights when we played

three gigs in a night.

Hey, let's go...

[Greg] The energy was infectious.

So I joined The Cockroaches fan club.

[Paul] Greg was helping us out

as a roadie.

He did some work experience

with The Cockroaches.

[Anthony] We had a couple of hits,

but it was mainly Paul and Johnny's band.

Johnny was writing all the songs.

I didn't have much creative input.

I left and went

"I've got to go to university."

["She's The One" stops playing]

[Greg] Anthony pulled me aside and said,

"You can't be a roadie all your life."

I said, "Well, look,

if there's something else I could do,

I'd probably be a teacher."

He said, "Do Early Childhood teaching.

It's about freedom of creativity.

It's about expressing yourself

through music and the arts."

And I just loved it.

[Murray] They were really passionate

about music, and I was, too.

And I guess that was partly

why we gravitated.

[Greg] Up in the music rooms,

we'd been getting together

and going through children's music,

but, in our time off,

we'd go busking for a bit of fun,

[indistinct chatter]

One day, we were busking,

Anthony, Jeff, Murray, myself,

and Anthony's brother John,

and John, being a great songwriter,

he would often come up with songs

literally on the spur of the moment.

And he just started playing this thing

on the guitar and, uh...

Can I grab that?

And just starts going...

[playing guitar]

[singing]

Hot tamale, hot tamale

And he turned to us

and he'd go, "Sing along."

[singing]

Hot tamale, hot tamale

Hot tamale, hot tamale

Hot tamale, hot tamale

Hot tamale, hot tamale

-Hot tamale, hot tamale

-Tamale

-Tamale

-Tamale

Tamale, tamale, tamale

And Anthony thought, "This is great.

You know, there's a real opportunity here

to take this

and turn it into a kids' song,

but we can't sing about tamales.

We're going to sing about potatoes."

We kind of went,

Australian kids won't know

what hot tamales are.

[singing]

Hot potato, hot potato

Hot potato, hot potato

Hot potato, hot potato

Potato

Potato, potato, potato

What else?

-Cold spaghetti, cold spaghetti

-Cold spaghetti, cold spaghetti

-Cold spaghetti, cold spaghetti

-Cold spaghetti, cold spaghetti

-Cold spaghetti, cold spaghetti

-Spaghetti

-Spaghetti

-Spaghetti

Spaghetti, spaghetti...

Just turned it into a food song,

which kids love.

-Mashed banana, mashed banana

-Mashed banana, mashed banana

-Mashed banana, mashed banana

-Mashed banana, mashed banana

-Mashed banana, mashed banana

-Banana

-Banana

-Banana

Banana, banana, banana

Big jump, everyone.

Whoo, wiggy, wiggy, wiggy

Whoo, wiggy, wiggy, wiggy

Gimme that, gimme that, gimme that

Big jump.

Whoo, wiggy, wiggy, wiggy

Whoo, wiggy, wiggy, wiggy

Gimme that, gimme that

-Hot potato, hot potato

-Hot potato, hot potato

-Hot potato, hot potato

-Hot potato, hot potato

-Hot potato, hot potato

-Potato

-Potato

-Potato

Potato, potato, potato

Whoo!

- Thank you.

- [crowd cheering]

[Anthony] That's when I thought,

"Well, you know what?

I reckon if I get some people together

and we use our Early Childhood training,

our musicianship,

uh, we could make an album."

[Greg] I mean, I remember the call

I got from Anthony

because I was still living at home.

He rang up and he said,

"Oh, you know, I want to get together

and write and record some songs for kids."

You know, I was still in awe of this guy.

To be asked to record with him

was just like, "Wow, this is really cool."

[Jeff] I was renovating my house

and I get a call from Anthony,

"Would you like to come down to the studio

and play on some songs?"

I thought it'd be only a few hours.

Just wanted to get out of

the studio as fast as possible

to get back to my renovations. [laughs]

[Murray] Anthony's initial idea

was that it might be a collective,

that people come and go.

Then we had a guy,

Phillip Wilcher, originally,

who we knew from the university,

he worked in the music department,

and he did a few piano pieces.

[piano music playing]

[Anthony] Phillip was a classical player.

We wanted to be all styles of music

because that's part of the philosophy.

Give children a broad range

of music styles.

But we all brought songs in.

My brother Johnny, he came and, uh,

I said, "Have you got any songs?"

He had an adult song called,

"Here Comes Mr. Wiggle," right?

Which was...

[singing]

Ba-dum-pum-pum-ba-dum-ba-dum

Ba-dum-pum-pum-ba-dum-ba-dum

Ba-dum-pum-pum-ba-dum-ba-dum-bum

It's wiggle time!

Now we're ready to wiggle

Wiggle your fingers high in the sky

We're ready...

So The Wiggles got its name

from the song "Get Ready to Wiggle."

It's kind of ideal, in a way,

because it is kind of

the way kids dance, too,

they kind of wiggle around,

but it's also no one is going to

mistake it for a heavy metal band.

[chuckles]

[singing]

Come on, wiggle all ten toes

That's right

Ba-dum-bum-bum-ba-dum

Big jump!

Ba-dum-bum-bum-ba-dum

Ba-dum-bum-bum-ba-dum

Ba-dum-bum-bum-ba-dum

We can wiggle, whoo, wiggle, whoo

Wiggle at home without a care

Wiggle, whoo, wiggle, whoo

Wiggle on your own or with teddy bear

Wiggle, whoo, wiggle, whoo

Wiggle at breakfast, lunch or tea

Wiggle, whoo, wiggle, whoo

Come on, wiggle along with me

That's right

Wiggle along with me

Uh-huh

Ba-dum-pum-pum-ba-dum-ba-dum

Ba-dum-pum-pum-ba-dum-ba-dum

Ba-dum-pum-pum-ba-dum-ba-dum-bum

- Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle, wiggle!

- Whoo!

[crowd cheering]

Whoo!

[Anthony] Yeah, I wanted to go to the ABC

and have it released

because the ABC

were children's music in Australia.

They were the benchmark.

[Jeff] We went through each song

and wrote the rationale

for why it was good for children.

I remember that moment of being told

we've got a record deal.

It was just like,

"Wow, this is happening."

[Murray] It was on cassette and CD.

CDs were just pretty new.

It was just really exciting.

[The Wiggles: "Get Ready to Wiggle"]

Everybody loosen up

[Murray] They did the

"Get Ready to Wiggle" video,

and we were like,

pretty excited about that.

I'd never been in a music video

of any sort.

Get ready to wiggle

We've been ready for so long

Get ready to wiggle

When you wiggle, you can't...

[Murray] We all thought

it was just a one-off.

We never thought

we'd make a career from it.

Wiggle will make you big and strong

[Anthony] I got a job in a preschool.

I was really loving teaching.

And Murray was teaching, too.

In the holidays, we'd do shows.

We had a meeting,

and we said we need a character

for the children to relate to.

So Murray came up

with Dorothy the Dinosaur.

I just saw how fascinated

children are with dinosaurs.

But I wanted

this kind of friendly dinosaur.

[Anthony] He wrote a song, or wrote

the words for "Dorothy the Dinosaur,"

which I said scanned exactly to

a Cockroaches song called

"It's Another Saturday Night."

Yeah, it's on again

Just like it was before

Revvin' and raisin' and lovin' up a storm

Eating all Mum's roses

There in the moonlight

It was Dorothy the Dinosaur

[Murray] Anthony would take

some of the songs

and play them to the kids

at his preschool.

He would give out tapes.

The parents would come back and say,

"Our kid's playing that song,

you know, 20 times in a row."

You know, rock and roll

just really resonated with kids.

That was also the key

to our popularity increasing.

[singing]

Romp-bomp-a-chomp!

Romp-bomp-a-chomp!

Rose is cool

[Anthony] Dorothy was

our first feminine character.

Murray's wife, Meg, made the first suit.

You could see jeans, you could see shirt,

but we knew from research

that children are centered thinkers,

so they would center on the face

and that's all you needed.

And that was true.

Children didn't say,

"There's a man in there."

They'd just go, "There's a dinosaur."

[singing]

...he fell to the ground

Now I take it that's Dorothy the Dinosaur!

[chuckling] Ah!

Good times. [chuckles]

We're so young. And you can hear my voice.

[singing along in high voice]

"In the backyard now?" [chuckles]

Romp-bomp-a-chomp!

Dorothy the Dinosaur

Chomp!

[Anthony] Jeremy Fabinyi was

our Cockroaches manager,

and I came to him

with the idea for The Wiggles.

[Greg] I remember being

at Jeremy's office.

He said, "You've got to get out there

and promote the album.

You've got to do some shows."

That's what any band does, right?

They get out and they tour.

[Jeff] We'd do kids' birthday parties,

so we'd play to, you know, ten people.

[Anthony] So Greg found a booking agent

for children's entertainment.

He gave her photographs of us,

the thesis behind

what The Wiggles are, the tape,

and she said, "I'm sorry, Greg,

can't do anything with this.

What am I going to do

with four men and a dinosaur?"

And Greg was very downhearted

and came to us.

I do remember saying,

"Oh, mate, let's just try it anyway."

[children chattering]

[Greg] Well, we started playing

at preschools.

Phillip had left by that point in time.

By '92, we were doing town halls.

Then I think we did

two shows of 500 people,

and we did the numbers, and we thought,

"Hang on, maybe we could be

making more out of this."

That's when the business side

of things kicked in for us.

We saw that there was a market

for what we were doing.

[children chattering]

[Anthony] I remember

Greg on the phone saying,

"We could actually do a lot more gigs

if you give up teaching."

It was a big decision,

but I went, "Oh, okay. Mmm, okay."

I gave up my scholarship to teach,

so I didn't actually start teaching.

[Anthony] Murray said,

"I'm gonna give it up.

Just do The Wiggles."

Hello, everyone. We're The Wiggles.

How are you all?

-[children] Good,

-That's good.

[Greg] We changed our look,

and that look was a much better look.

Yeah, you can see why

these didn't stay. [laughs]

Things like that being chosen.

The whole idea of the colors was,

well, if children don't know our names,

it was a really easy way to identify us.

Now this is my favorite

part of the song because...

[Greg] Anthony was great.

He said, "Guys, whenever

somebody's talking on stage,

we all need to be looking at them."

We never thought about that.

We treated it like a band.

Did I hear someone say they were going

to play a trick on somebody?

- Nope. Not at all, no.

- No, no.

[Greg] This was the shift

that needed to happen.

It was no longer a band.

The Wiggles became a show.

As adults, we can understand

the hype of the Rolling Stones,

but it's hard to comprehend toddlers

going berserk over a rock band.

You have to see it to believe it.

I've got my ticket.

[cranking]

[Greg] Muzz and I,

we put together the sound system.

It was very DIY.

Security barrier.

[indistinct chatter]

[Greg] It was like the embryonic nucleus

had exploded and just went,

"Yep, this is The Wiggles."

[singing]

See, 'cause that's the way we do it

Riding in our Big Red Car

-Big Red Car

-Our Big Red Car

-Big Red Car

-Our Big Red Car

And then, we made our own VHS video.

Sophia, would you start the tape, please?

[The Wiggles: "Hot Potato"]

[Murray] We made

the cheapest video of all time.

We took that Play School approach,

which they kind of did pioneer

of talking directly down

the barrel of the camera.

We'd like you to meet

a very special friend of ours.

She's not a person like you or I.

She's a dinosaur.

It's as if you're talking

just to that one person,

especially with egocentric kids,

'cause they do think

they're the only ones there.

[Anthony] And wherever

The Wiggles go and sing and play,

our friend Dorothy the Dinosaur

comes with us.

The merchandise, in the real early days,

was just in a suitcase.

And then, we made our own Dorothy hats,

which Jeff designed.

[Jeff] This is a prototype

of the original Dorothy hat.

I did all the sewing myself.

I've got an industrial machine at home.

I hand-painted the whole cap.

Would have been

very satisfying for children

to be able to be Dorothy

in a very simple manner.

No, Dorothy's not behind me.

She is, Jeff. She really is.

I better have another look then.

[Anthony] Murray took care

of the dinosaur.

But I was thinking,

"Well, that's feminine."

Of course, it's for everybody,

but predominantly boys love a pirate.

And if you went to a party at that time,

there'd be a dinosaur

and there'd be a pirate.

Now we're anti-g*ns or anti-v*olence,

but the scheme of a pirate

must have a sword.

[all growling]

[all laughing]

Who is that? Who's tickling us?

It's Captain Feathersword,

the friendly pirate.

So I thought, give him a feather sword,

then he's still a pirate,

but he's harmless.

And I was the original

Captain Feathersword.

I'm Captain Feathersword,

the friendly pirate. Arrgh!

Captain Feathersword?

A bing-bang-bong!

A ring-rang-rong!

That's a pirate song.

[all] A pirate song.

[Anthony] When Paddy came along,

he was doing West Side Story at the time.

He is a classical actor.

He has got all the chops.

I was playing trumpet one night,

and I got a hernia.

And he just said,

"Do you want to fill in?"

And, at that point, I hadn't even met

the other three Wiggles.

Had no clue what the show was.

- Just stand very still.

- Okay.

- And I won't be very long.

- Okay.

Now, as I was about to say to you...

[children laughing]

[Greg] He's what?

He's dancing?

[Anthony] Anyone who's watched The Wiggles

knows how good that fella is.

Even my mother said,

"He's a lot better than you are,

Anthony, at that." [laughs]

The characters provide

that fantasy element,

which is great for kids and imaginations.

[woman] It's very, very interactive.

The kids really get into it.

[Anthony]

Everything's got to involve them.

Every song we do,

they've got something to do in it

and they feel like

they're helping The Wiggles.

I remember when I was teaching

a preschool class,

I brought a vacuum cleaner into the class.

But then I noticed that all the children

gathering around, watching me do this,

I thought, "Okay, if they were

a bunch of adults,

they would not give me a second look."

And I wrote a song which became

"Here Comes a Bear."

[singing]

Here comes a bear

Stomping, stomping

But it was...

Picking up the rubbish

Zooming, zooming

So, people say sometimes

they give a present to a child

and they are more interested in the box.

And that, again, shows you

it's a different, uh...

Different thinking to the adult.

We've got a song called "Walk."

[singing]

Walk on your way to school

Walk to the swimming pool

Walk...

[Anthony] 'Cause walking's

pretty exciting for children.

Catching a train the first time.

We're about being childlike

with the children.

Here we go.

[singing] Can you point your fingers

and do the twist?

[Anthony] Children love challenges.

"Can You (Point Your Fingers

And Do The Twist?)" is a challenge song.

...your fingers and do the...

[Anthony] They want to show a grown-up,

"I can do that."

[singing]

Well, we're gonna go up, then go down

Get back up and turn around

But can you point your fingers

and do the twist?

Cha-cha-cha

Yeah, I love that one.

It's fun. It's good fun.

All through our work, you can go,

"Oh, that's a challenge song.

Oh, that's a listening song.

That's a singing song, a dancing song."

So, dancing songs are, you know,

"Do the Monkey."

[singing]

Do the monkey

Ooh-ooh-ah-ah, ooh-ooh-ah-ah!

Do the monkey

Yeah, my favorite

Wiggles song of all time

is "Rock-A-Bye Your Bear"

because it's so simple.

The actions... A lot of parents teach it

to their children as their first song.

I know a song about teddy bears.

Can you sing and do the actions with us?

[Anthony] Greg came up with...

[singing] Everybody clap

[rhythmic hand claps]

Everybody sing

La la la la la

That's all I had.

Anthony said, "Oh, yeah, this is great.

No, I can do something with that."

And he said,

"Okay, now bow to your partner."

[Greg singing]

Bow to your partner

Then you turn around

Hands in the air, rock-a-bye your bear

Bear's now asleep

I know I came up with,

"Bear's now asleep,"

but what I added to that,

which was brilliant melody from Greg,

um...

[playing melody]

[singing]

Everybody clap

[clapping]

Everybody sing

[kids] La la la la la

Bow to your partner

Then you turn around

Hands in the air, rock-a-bye your bear

Bear's now asleep

Sh, sh, sh

[woman] Good boy.

What's brilliant about it is

you can do all the actions,

a child standing next to a child.

What they call that is parallel play.

Because a lot of children

don't want to hold hands,

but they do like to play

next to each other.

- [Greg] One, two, three, four.

- [crowd cheering]

Arms up, everyone.

Let's all sway from side to side

and we'll sing "Rock-A-Bye Your Bear."

[singing]

Everybody clap

[rhythmic hand claps]

Everybody sing

La la la la la

Bow to your partner

Then you turn around

Yippee!

[crowd singing]

Hands in the air, rock-a-bye your bear

Bear's now asleep

Sh, sh, sh

Bear's now asleep

-Sh, sh, sh

-What's that?

Bear's now asleep

Sh, sh, sh

Bear's now asleep

Greg, you were saying something?

Jeff!

[crowd cheering]

[Murray] Oh, what?

- It's past his bedtime.

- [Murray laughs]

[Anthony] When Jeff first joined,

he was really worried.

And if I hadn't been

Early Childhood trained,

I would be scared

of a children's audience.

[quirky music playing]

[Jeff] When I was at school,

all my other siblings were forced

to learn the piano. [laughs]

As was I.

I mean, I...

I'm very uncomfortable, actually,

with being in front of an audience.

Unless I have a role to play and...

Like, for example,

public speaking, that sort of thing,

forget about it.

We couldn't really trust him

to say much. [laughs]

Because he quite often say things

that weren't appropriate for kids.

Not in a bad way, but just like,

"No, you wouldn't say it like that."

So we had to give him an education

as the Wiggles evolved.

Hi, we're getting ready for a show.

Somebody's missing.

[both] Where's Jeff?

Oh, no! He's asleep!

[Greg chuckling] Oh, no.

When I was teaching,

a play came to preschool,

and the children had to wake up a tree.

The tree would fall asleep

and they'd have to go, "Wake up, tree."

And I... "This is fantastic."

So we gave him the role

of just falling asleep.

Wake up, Jeff!

- [Jeff blubbering]

- [all laughing]

I like the song, "Wake Up Jeff!"

[singing]

Wake up, Jeff

Everybody's wiggling

Wake up, Jeff

We really need you

Wake up, Jeff

Something, um, something, something

Wake up, Jeff, before the day's through

I should know that, but I don't.

I do, but I can't remember.

[singing]

What's that sound?

I can hear somebody snoring...

[Murray] But the other part to this,

which was so powerful,

kids love having power over an adult,

so we need your help to wake Jeff up.

Yeah, they'd yell out...

- [children] Wake up, Jeff!

- [Jeff exclaiming]

It's like a remote control, right?

If you've got a remote control

over a person,

they absolutely love it.

[boy] Wake up, Jeff!

Wake up, Jeff!

[indistinct shouting]

[indistinct shouting, screaming]

[Jeff] And I remember that Anthony said,

"Look, your life is never going

to be the same after this."

And it never has. [laughs]

Oh, my goodness, it must be Jeff

Wake up, Jeff

Everybody's wiggling

Well, a few thank-yous.

Of course, thank you to ARIA.

[man] Wake up, Jeff!

- Yeah.

- [crowd clapping]

Our albums were selling

and our VHS videos were wildly successful,

so we thought,

"Why can't we do a TV show?"

We went to ABC Television.

They brought in an expert to critique us

who said he was embarrassed by us.

[bird trilling]

[cow mooing]

[singing]

Biggest rain we ever had

[Murray] We had several meetings

with different producers,

and one particular guy said,

"Your videos make us cringe" [laughs]

[singing]

The ducks went quack

The cows went moo

And basically said

we had to lose the dinosaur.

That was a moment where we just went,

"No, we know what we're doing."

- Yeah.

- [Dorothy] Thanks, Anthony.

Well, it's been a great party.

And thanks very much for coming along.

From then on, we just went,

"Okay, we'll just make it ourselves."

[The Wiggles: "Get Ready to Wiggle"]

We always knew that man was wrong

about Dorothy the Dinosaur.

And Dorothy became

the most loved character of all.

[woman] Oh, look, Dorothy.

[crowd cheering]

[Anthony] When we look in the audience

and see 20-year-olds

wearing Dorothy hat or Dorothy tail,

it's just beautiful.

[Jeff] Do you wanna give

those roses to Dorothy?

[crowd cheering]

[laughing]

[Anthony] Their relationship with Dorothy

was something that they've still got.

[singing]

D-O-R-O-T-H-Y

- [woman] Dorothy the...

- Dinosaur

Oh!

D-O-R-O-T-H-Y

Dorothy the Dinosaur

-D-O-R-O-T-H-Y

-D-O-R-O-T-H-Y

She's my favorite dinosaur

- [cheers]

- [Murray] Dorothy!

[crowd cheering]

[Dorothy] Bye-bye!

Well, everyone,

it's almost the end of the year.

Christmas is coming.

Hanukkah is coming.

We've got our Santa hats on.

Let's sing some Christmas songs together.

[The Wiggles: "Go Santa Go!"]

[Anthony] By '97, we had an office,

we had staff.

It was commercial.

We had to support that.

[singing] Go, Santa, go

Go, go...

[Paddy] We went from playing venues

that held 500 people

to playing to 1,500 people a show.

And then I was like,

"Wow, this is really growing."

[man] The Wiggles have sold

more than 850,000 videos.

- [woman] Are you guys millionaires?

- No. [laughs]

Definitely not.

[singing]

Wiggly Christmas!

[crowd cheering]

[Greg] I think having a parent

who is in the public eye

can be challenging for a child

because it gave the other kids at school

something to tease them about.

And I would just say,

"Well, look, if I was an accountant,

people would find something

to tease you about regardless."

Started out pretty much as a band

and I guess, in our naivety,

we didn't know

there was such a thing as a brand

and that we would ever become a brand.

[Paul Field] I became the manager

for The Wiggles.

It was growing to the stage where,

"Okay, this is a kind of

fork-in-the-road time.

We know what we've done, but

jeez, there's some real opportunities."

[woman] They're The Wiggles

and, parents be warned,

the whole Wiggles crew have just made

their first feature movie.

172, take 3.

We're always trying

to take it to the step forward,

which is why the movie's great to do

after doing the videos,

and it's just such a big jump up.

[Jeff] That's a photo of me

getting made up

to have gone into this street

called Brrrrrr Street,

[laughs] where you could get very cold.

It was a segment in the movie.

Academy Award-worthy. [laughing]

[The Wiggles: "Toot Toot,

Chugga Chugga, Big Red Car"]

[woman] The Wiggles

are set to take the world on

with expectations of global exports.

There has been some interest

from overseas, so, yeah, fingers crossed.

[man] Done New Zealand

and Hong Kong already.

Um, where do you wanna go next?

Where are you going?

Well, we're looking towards

the United States

later in the year, hopefully, so...

Don't go to the States.

They can't have The Wiggles.

I honestly believed in them.

I knew that they could be, in theory,

as big as they wanted to be.

[singing] Big Red Car

Riding all night long!

Ooh, yeah!

[Anthony] We decided to concentrate

on America, the biggest market.

It was exciting.

Trying to get a footprint

into the USA, it was hard.

You know, back home,

we could sell out shows,

but here in the U.S.,

we're playing to like,

one, two, three, four, five,

you can count 'em on one hand.

Five people.

And those two adults were publicists.

And the three children

were their children.

But this is how you start out, right?

It's hard work, but what isn't hard work

that's worth doing, right?

[Anthony] We got a job to play

at SeaWorld, Orlando, Florida.

And we had a six-week residency

in this little theater.

Then, somehow or other, Lyrick had

put out Barney the Dinosaur saw us.

I don't look a day over

6,000, though, do I?

No, you don't.

You look really good.

You brought some special friends with you.

Can you can introduce them to us?

Oh, sure.

- Uh, they're my very wiggly wonders...

- I'll stand here.

...from Down Under.

- Hey!

- It's The Wiggles!

- The Wiggles.

- [Barney laughs]

Welcome, guys.

Great to be here.

What's it like for you guys

to travel with this dude?

Oh, Barney's fantastic.

He's friendly, he teaches all the songs,

shows us around America.

[Murray] They'd had

the foresight to actually test

some of our videos on kids

and watch them watching,

and these are kids

who're just watching it cold,

and they got into it straight away,

so they knew we had something.

- Yeah.

- We're going to do "The Monkey Dance."

- "The Monkey Dance."

- Yeah.

These guys, it's like Jagger saying,

"I'm going to do 'Satisfaction.'"

- [all laughing]

- [Russ Mitchell] The Wiggles.

We discovered The Wiggles

when they opened up for Barney,

and, you know, we just...

They were so catchy and they were so fun.

We're both kind of exhausted,

these new parents.

We would put on the tapes

and we found ourselves

rewinding to The Wiggles.

We were like, you know, "This is really

more our speed," you know?

[singing]

Do the elephant

[Jackie] Their songs were just phenomenal.

They just had become part of everyday life

in our household at that time.

- [singing] Here we go!

- Here we go!

Let's jump to the front and back

We're gonna jump to the front and back

[Greg] Back in Australia,

we were in the studio recording

and saw the news.

[Murray] The TV was on,

and it had just happened.

[Greg] And it was just like, "What

on earth is going on? This is crazy."

The devastation. I mean...

It was just...

Yeah, totally incomprehensible.

[Paul] New York was att*cked.

We had a tour lined up

of North America

and the East Coast, you know.

And we were going

to two of the places that were hit,

Washington and New York City.

There was real concern.

[Greg] At a time when there's been

such a scale of devastation,

not knowing if they were actually wanting

The Wiggles to be there,

singing and dancing?

You know, it was a little bit like,

"Is this the right time?"

But we got so much feedback

from fans saying,

"If ever there was a time

when we need you, it's now."

This is Brian Cannizzaro,

and he was a firefighter

in Red Hook, Brooklyn.

Brian Cannizzaro was a firefighter

who responded.

[Paul] Brian was getting people out.

[sirens wailing in distance]

[Jackie] I remember

saying goodbye to him and...

[emotionally] saying "Be careful"

and "I love you."

Which is what I always said.

And that was the last thing

that I said to him.

You can only imagine the public death

of your husband, you know?

And they replayed it, and replayed it,

and replayed it,

as they did here in Australia.

[somber music playing]

[Jackie] That was truly the darkest time.

My priority was Christopher and...

That he was okay. He was only

ten-and-a-half months at the time.

[The Wiggles: "The Monkey Dance"]

I was like, "It's The Wiggles.

The Wiggles will play all day, every day."

[sniffles]

The Wiggles brought us this...

[inhales] This light.

This light.

[exhales]

[faintly] Sorry.

As it turned out, it was the right time,

and people appreciated the fact

that we would go there,

that we would bring that joy

and positivity back to New York.

["Get Ready to Wiggle"

instrumental playing]

[Greg] Hello, everybody! Hello!

[Jackie] I mustered up the energy to go.

I remember seeing Chris's face

look at them,

wondering how these guys

got from our TV every day,

and now we were seeing them live.

We got to meet The Wiggles after the show,

and what sticks out to me most

is their compassion, their empathy.

I was crying with them.

I was hugging them.

And I remember talking about Brian,

and I think we sat there

for hours after the show.

[soft music playing]

That's one family.

And to meet one family

who had been affected by this tragedy,

it just impacted everybody

in such a profound way.

[marching band playing]

And that was the first year

we did the Thanksgiving Day parade,

which was also, like, pretty overwhelming.

[Paul] You know, I remember

being there and looking up,

there were sn*pers on the roof,

there were helicopters going over.

It was pretty serious vibe.

Ahoy there, me hearties!

From the Jolly Polly pirate ship. [laughs]

[Paddy] What was incredible was

the police that were walking alongside.

And they were like, "Yeah, Wiggles."

[on radio] Hot potato, hot potato

[officer] My son loves you guys.

My daughter loves you guys.

[singing] Lights, camera, action

Wiggles!

Welcome to our TV show

[Murray] And they got us

on Disney Channel in America.

And we were like this

and we just went, pshhh...

Lights, camera, action

[Greg] It was a wild ride.

It was incredible.

...our TV show

To see your name up in lights

in front of Madison Square Garden.

It's a legendary venue.

We sold it out,

it's either 12 or 13 times,

so that's just phenomenal.

This event has created

such a stir in Hollywood.

Executives all over town

are calling in, saying,

"You've got to get me into the party."

[man] ...for my friends, The Wiggles!

[audience cheering]

[Jeff] People on the floor says,

"John Travolta wants to meet you."

He comes into the green room

going, "Hot potato, hot pot..."

[audience laughing]

And we put out our hand out to shake.

He said, "That won't do,"

and gave us all a big hug.

[audience laughing]

[host] You are the coolest guys

in the world.

[audience laughing]

Mashed potaytoes, mashed potahtos

Potaytoes

Potaytoes, potaytoes, potahtos.

Then, you know,

you have coming to your gigs,

Robert De Niro.

He was just in the audience,

and he was eating the popcorn,

and it was straight out of Cape Fear.

- You know, when he goes to the movies?

- [all laughing]

Every time Jeff would walk by,

he's going, "Are you seeing this?"

[audience laughing]

[Greg] Many incredibly famous celebrities

come along

because of their child's connection

to The Wiggles.

They're precious memories.

It's a precious time of your life.

Wiggles rule!

[crowd cheering]

[man] Bye, Wiggles! Say goodbye!

BRW had you at $14 million

in 2001 on the Rich List.

Turnover.

Is that right?

- Oh, I don't know.

- Pretty good.

[Murray] I think the sort

of attention we got

about how successful

financially The Wiggles was,

I think it kind of rankled

a little bit just because,

for a while there,

that's what the story became.

There was an underlying suggestion

that there was something wrong

about making a lot of money

from performing for kids,

but I don't think they realized

how much work that we do.

It's not like we're selling dr*gs,

you know? [chuckles]

What we're selling people is

something positive that makes them happy.

The show was awesome.

He's crying because The Wiggles are gone.

There were fights for tickets,

[Meg Washington: "Do the Monkey"]

[man] The Wiggles have been named

Australian Entertainment's

Top Earners for 2005,

with gross earnings of $50 million.

They again topped the BRW list,

which includes the rock band AC/DC.

All of a sudden,

we were doing 10,000-seat arenas

and these massive ice hockey places.

[chuckles]

[singing] Do the monkey

Do the monkey

That's all right

[Anthony] Touring America,

you know, we slept on the buses.

We were away for nine months a year,

three months at a time.

Sometimes we'd have 300,000 people

see us in that time, three times a year.

It was a real rock-and-roll lifestyle

without actually being

in the rock-and-roll business.

[singing] Jump to the back

Jump to the front

[Anthony] We had a great time.

Don't get me wrong, all of us together,

playing sold-out shows.

And we'd party, too.

We're young guys.

[song ends]

Do you ever get single mums

trying to make a move?

[audience chuckling]

[audience applauds]

[Lucia Field] When I was younger,

I couldn't really connect that

Anthony and my dad

were the same person,

so I used to get a little confused.

I was like, "What are they doing

with my dad on TV?

Like, what is going on?"

The kids have been

well looked after, good schools,

lovely house, all that stuff.

But, on the other side,

you know, they've had a dad

who hasn't been home for a lot of it.

As soon as he'd come home,

he'd be home for that time,

and we get to hang out with him.

We'd, you know, have some time together,

and then he'd be off again.

[indistinct conversation]

[Anthony] Miki had the three kids.

Antonio was a baby.

Hello, Daddy.

- [Maria] I say...

- [Anthony] Maria was probably two.

I... Dad. [indistinct]

Hey, Luci.

[Anthony] Lucia just

absolutely loved Dorothy.

Hey.

What about Luci?

Have fun.

- Bye-bye, Daddy.

- Have you got a rose for Dorothy?

I do have a favorite Wiggles song,

and it's a Dorothy song.

I remember just wanting to play it

over and over and over again.

[gasps] "Sing With Me"!

"Sing With Me," Dorothy the Dinosaur.

[Dorothy singing]

Sing along with me everybody

Sing with me, sing with me

To this pretty little melody

Sing with me, sing with me

Sing along with Dorothy

[chuckles]

I loved Dorothy because she did ballet.

Um, I only recently found out

that Dorothy started doing ballet

because I was doing ballet.

He saw how much I loved dance

and incorporated that into Dorothy.

[lively piano music playing]

[Anthony] The first tour I went to,

when she was just over six-weeks old,

probably, today, I would have stayed

and sent someone else.

I was away so much.

There was no balance in life.

[crowd cheering]

We're gonna do a song that Murray wrote.

[The Wiggles: "I Love It When It Rains"]

[singing]

I love it when it rains

And I lie in bed at night

I listen to it patter

On the roof soft and light

But then a storm may...

[Murray] My wife and I were married

before The Wiggles.

I sometimes felt, you know,

she didn't really sign on for this.

[singing]

...and I see the lightning flash

Going to America, we'd go

for about six weeks at a time,

and it was just, like, heart-wrenching

when you had to leave.

[singing]

And I sink down in my bed

I close my eyes so tight

And pull the covers over my head

[Greg] My kids probably said

from time to time,

"Dad, I wish you could be there for this

or can you be there for that?"

And it's really hard when they ask you,

and the answer has to be,

"No, I'm sorry, I can't."

[Murray] Hamish used to dress

as Captain Feathersword

constantly for a while.

There was a point where

he did say one time,

"I don't like music,"

and Meg said to him, "Why not?"

And, um, he said,

"Because that's what takes Daddy away."

And that was kind of a bit...

[chuckles sadly]

You know, pretty heart-wrenching.

[Greg] In my mind, it was always

a matter of, "Well, this is my job.

If I don't commit to The Wiggles,

I can't continue to support

the family in this way."

That was hard, and undoubtedly

had an effect on relationships.

And, in some people's minds,

perhaps making other people's

children happy

in preference to being there

for your own family.

[singing]

I love it when it rains

As I lie in bed at night

[crowd cheering]

[indistinct chatter]

During the shows,

The Wiggles usually go out

to the audience to say hello

to as many people as they can.

Murray would always be the last Wiggle

to come back on stage

because you could see

he was trying to get every child

that he possibly could to say hello

and he'd go right to the top.

And we found that,

with a lot of the sick children, too,

that it was for the family

as much as for the child themselves.

You know, I can't imagine

what the parents were going through,

you know, knowing that

they're going to lose this child.

Little Jakey is terminally ill,

and, ever since he's been born

and able to follow The Wiggles, he has,

and we've supported him a lot,

and we've been converted, too,

by all The Wiggles stuff.

Bernadette was Paul's daughter,

and Pauline's.

Uh, Bernadette passed away

at ten months from SIDS.

The Cockroaches were on tour at the time.

I remember hearing this scream

from a room that I haven't heard before.

It was a guttural scream.

Uh, and I thought, "What's happened?"

Paul had run home,

found out that Bernadette had passed away.

[Paul] And my world kind of

came to an end, in some ways.

I'm now 61, you know?

It happened in 1988. It's that far.

[indistinct]

[shudders] And, um...

So, you know, we sought help.

[Anthony] Paul was never

the same, of course,

and the fun went out

of three-chord rock and roll.

That's when I went to Early Childhood,

and The Wiggles came from that.

[Paul] You know, it's one of the factors

as to why The Wiggles existed,

so I love that fact.

There's a real connection

with her and life, children, joy.

There are times

when I'd go to a hospital

as a sign of respect

to the parents that are there.

[Anthony] It's great to see you all.

We're The Wiggles.

Having lost a child,

it means the world to them.

How you going there? Hello.

-Hi

-Hi.

- [Anthony] We'd like to sing a song...

- [Greg] Yeah.

If you can bring any sort of happy memory

for that sort of dark time,

I think that's...

You know, we're really privileged

to be able to do that.

[Greg] We're on our way to the hotel.

Tomorrow morning, though,

we're on our way out

to the Great Wall of China,

which should be very, very interesting.

[indistinct conversation]

[Greg] The Wiggles have been touring

every single year.

And that tour, I'm talking week

after week after week after week

after week after week

after month after month,

relentlessly touring.

[cameraman] Okay, we're rolling.

In the early days,

when we did 21 days in a row,

obviously we would

get on each other's nerves.

Uh, we have a soundcheck at 1:00.

[Anthony, chuckling]

One time, before a show,

I was on the drums and I was playing

tin whistle behind a curtain.

Greg came up to me and said,

"You can hear your drums

and your whistle in the audience."

"Right, okay.

Greg, do you want to see a drum roll?"

And I picked up the drum kit

and I threw it.

[Greg] Anthony and I have an issue

going back with water.

We were literally about to go on stage.

I had to put on my yellow shirt.

Somebody had spilled water on it.

[Anthony] This is before going on

in front of 80,000 people in the audience

and worldwide audience.

And I thought, "Must be Anthony."

And Greg really had a go at me.

"Damn, my shirt. I can't go on stage

with a wet shirt now.

Anthony, you've done this."

"No, no, no, I didn't do it."

"Must have been you.

Who else would have done it?"

And then the curtains open

and now we go on stage singing...

[both singing] Christmas memories

Christmas memories

Special moments that we're thinking of

If you see Greg, will you tell him

I didn't do the water?

[indistinct chatter]

[Paul] No one's as close as a band member

when you're touring

hundreds of shows a year.

Everyone has their moments.

But, you know, Anthony

might get upset about something.

Thinking, "Jeez, that's more than normally

that would result in."

[man] Um, favorite children's performer

and why?

Do I have to do it now?

- [man] Oh, no.

- [Anthony laughs]

- Sorry...

- I've only got 20 minutes...

I remember the first time

when I was on the road in England,

and I just was bursting

into tears backstage.

[Murray] I just said to him,

"What's wrong?"

and he said "Nothing."

People didn't really talk

about mental health much in the '90s.

I knew people had depression

and stuff like that,

but I didn't really know

what it looked like

because people tended to hide it.

[music playing]

[music stops]

[man] Cut. Perfect.

All right.

[Anthony] I remember

talking to my brother,

one of my brothers, and I told him,

"I just feel sad all the time."

He said, "What do you got

to be sad about?

If you're successful and, you know,

you've got all the comforts,

what's wrong with you?"

You know? But I said to him,

"Mate, it's not like that. It's like...

I know I've got it... I understand,

I'm grateful for my life,

but it's just, I'm not feeling this."

[Jeff] I really didn't know what to do.

It made me feel very churned up inside.

It was very confronting.

[Anthony] I didn't want to talk about it,

but Paul, my brother,

said it might help people

if you come out and talk about it.

[Paul] I just thought

it was actually good for him

to be open about it

and say, "I've got a problem,"

because then you understand.

[man] Well, you may not know this,

but that guy right there,

Blue Wiggle Anthony Field,

has been fighting a few personal demons.

[woman] Anthony has

overcome clinical depression,

a life threatening illness

and chronic pain.

But I never wanted to be the spokesperson

for mental health

because it's real personal.

[Anthony] I thought

I was such a burden on everyone.

I got my own dressing room,

put in this bar, put music on it,

and I would go in there,

so I wasn't bothering anybody.

So, really, on the road,

I made myself even lonelier

because I'd just stick to myself.

I thought, "No one wants to talk

to me anyway."

When Anthony came out,

making it publicly known

that he has these issues

with mental health,

that gave me a much better understanding

of what he'd been going through.

Is this every day?

It's every day. The thoughts aren't,

"I'm just feeling down."

This is thoughts of, you know,

"I want to harm myself.

- I'm not worthy of living in this world."

- Okay.

"I don't fit anywhere.

[fading]

Uh, you know, nobody likes me.

I don't like myself."

[Anthony] My dad helped me.

He got me to see someone who

I've been seeing for 35 years now.

[Greg] Understanding Anthony a lot more,

I look back now and I think, "My God,

without Anto's creative genius

and his desire to try things

that were a little bit out there,

a little bit different,

The Wiggles would not have

tried many, many things."

[bagpipes playing]

Well, the bagpipes...

When I was in the army,

uh, I was a rifleman

and a piper because we played at

all the funerals and ceremonial parades.

[playing bagpipes]

I got tattoos. [chuckles]

This one here is

the Royal Australian Regiment.

I think my tattoos tell the story of me.

I've got a jester on my chest

because I do feel like that sometimes.

I feel for jesters.

I think, what a job,

jesters being paid to be funny

when you don't feel like it.

When I'm on stage, it's my happy place.

It's where I want to be.

Playing music, that's it.

[stops playing]

Just prior to your holiday break,

there was rumors that "Greg the Wiggle,

Yellow Wiggle collapses

during a performance."

What happened?

Oh, nothing really

that dramatic at all, Ryan,

I'm sorry to spoil the story

but no, no, no.

Um, I, it was, you know, having a bit

short of breath and dizziness, and...

[Jeff] He collapsed.

[all laughing]

When SARS had hit Hong Kong,

Greg collapsed.

The Chinese officials

thought that he had SARS,

and then they carted him off.

And we were left there,

about to go on stage,

and we went, "Will we ever see him again?"

[Greg] I remember doing a stress test

and being on the treadmill.

And they said, "Yep, no problems at all."

Unfortunately, everyone,

Greg's not with us.

He's had to stay at home with his family.

But we've got a great friend here

who's been filling in.

This is Sam, everyone.

And Sam's been doing a great job.

Let's give him a big clap.

Hi, everybody.

[singing]

Now play your guitar with Murray

Play your guitar with him

[Greg] It kind of happened again,

and it got to a point

where it was happening

and was a concern because

nobody could tell me why it was happening.

They're testing for epilepsy,

they're testing for diabetes,

they're testing for neurological problems,

you name it.

- Welcome back.

- Thank you.

- He might have an accident.

- Yeah.

[all laughing]

So I'd always try and do the shows

when I could, because I loved them.

[song playing] Yummy, yummy

[mouthing along]

Yummy, yummy fruit salad!

[Anthony] Jump up.

Made it, it's time to eat it.

Uh, huh, huh!

It tastes so good

That you just can't b*at it

Uh, huh, huh!

[Murray] Say hello to Peggy.

- [groaning] Hello.

- [Murray] Hello.

[Paddy] And then it got to the point

where it got more frequent

and it would last a bit longer.

But he was such a trooper, you know.

He'd just come out and do the next show.

Three more tomorrow.

We'll get there.

Whew.

[Anthony] At the time, we had Sam

or we had Brett Clarke, Ryan De Saulnier.

They were all Greg's understudies.

So one of them would go on stage

at, honestly, 30 seconds' notice.

[Sam Moran] I remember Greg being

at the front of the stage

and me being in the back of the stage,

and Greg looking over

and just catching my eye

and nodding to me,

and him leaving the stage.

And so I would just slot into wherever

he was and continue the song,

mid-song.

[Greg] I was going through

personal struggles as well.

That's when I separated

from my first wife,

and that was compounding

the health issues, unfortunately.

[Sam] We did meet-and-greets.

And there was one moment that I caught him

as he fainted,

I mean, in front of the children.

Yellow Wiggle Greg Page

is suffering a mystery illness

that's kept him from touring

with the children's supergroup.

[Kelly Ripa]

Here's The Wiggles performing...

- [Regis Philbin] The Wiggles are here!

- [audience cheering]

Greg's a little bit sick,

so he's at home recuperating.

- [Kelly] Oh, you're gonna fill in for him.

- I am indeed.

Oh, terrific.

Well, it's great to see you.

Thank you. It's great to be here.

Wiggles are appearing at the Garden,

- Madison Square Garden, this weekend.

- I know all about it.

Two weeks into that tour,

they had gotten word

that Greg had gotten an actual diagnosis.

The condition that I had, or still have,

a condition called

orthostatic intolerance,

which is a function of dysautonomia.

He couldn't perform.

He really couldn't, right?

And we knew what it was.

And as for what the prognosis was,

we didn't know.

And I didn't want to hold the guys back.

There were deals that needed to be signed

and I had to make a decision

one way or the other.

And, at that time,

that's what needed to happen.

[somber music playing]

[woman] Well, sad news today,

with Greg Page quitting The Wiggles

because of poor health.

Best known as the Yellow Wiggle,

Greg says he can no longer sing

and dance like he used to.

The announcement, a blow to his millions

of young fans around the world.

Get well soon, Greg.

Get well, Greg.

Get well, Greg.

- Do you think he's going to be okay?

- Yep.

When Greg resigned, we were discussing

whether or not we were going to go on.

So, um, yeah, the decision was

to continue on

with different personnel, so...

[Sam] Anthony came knocking on the door

and he said, "We'd love if you would

think about taking over."

And ultimately gave them the word

that I would love to take the opportunity.

[man] Okay, Sam,

so it's a hard phase ahead, but it's...

- I understand what you're saying.

- We're not...

- Okay.

- [all chuckling]

[man] It's a nice gentle there

Yeah, look, I think that was

one of those things that was hard to do.

And basically it means

that when I stand up,

my body doesn't pump enough blood or...

Oh... Not my body, my heart.

- Jesus.

- [man] Still rolling?

In the times that I have been unwell

and unable to perform

because of this condition,

Sam's been doing a great job

filling in for me

wearing the yellow skivvy.

So, Sam, right now, I'm going to

officially hand over the yellow skivvy

to the new Yellow Wiggle, Sam Moran.

Thanks, Greg.

[man] And cut. Well done.

It was a bit clumsy there with the hand.

- Is that all right?

- [man 2] No, it was good.

[Paul] That was surfing the zeitgeist.

It was as big in pop culture

as it could be.

It was on the front page

of The New York Times.

And, I'm not joking, and with all respect

to Australian Prime Ministers,

I don't know many that get on

the front page, right?

In America, you gotta be eaten

by a shark or disappear.

That shows how mammoth they were.

The change was big on every level.

[camera shutters clicking]

It's very emotional.

Been very surreal, too, that Greg's

not going to be with us after this.

Very sad.

He sort of left the business side as well,

and we bought him out

and, um, he went on the journey

to get well.

Yeah.

Hi, everybody. It's Sam Wiggle here.

We're in New York.

Good day, USA.

We just came from LA,

and now we're in New York,

and it's really cold. [laughs]

Please welcome Anthony Murray, Jeff

and the newest member of the group, Sam.

- Wow.

- You've been touring around America,

- I understand?

- Yep.

To sold-out crowds everywhere.

It's been wonderful.

I guess it felt like my three mates

that we started this thing together with

were going off now without me.

It was like another separation, I guess.

And it was... That was tough.

[squealing]

How bad she knows your name?

[Sam] You wanna take a picture?

[all chuckling]

- Mommy, I just saw The Wiggles!

- [girls laughing]

- Jeff and Murray!

- Anthony,

I saw The Wiggles and Jeff.

[singing]

Ooo ooo doo doo doo

[Sam] Greg's voice was always

a little bit lower than mine.

The first song that I really

felt like was my own,

that really hit with the audience,

was probably "The Shimmie Shake!"

[singing]

The shimmie shake

Shake it all way...

And it wasn't me copying the way

somebody else had sung another song.

...high!

Shimmie, shimmie, shimmie

Shimmie, shimmie, shimmie

To me, I feel like it's a very

intuitive process, being a Wiggle.

Certainly, the group always

shunned talks of market research.

We have our own focus group

of thousands of kids every day.

[singing]

Ooo ooo doo doo doo

And the other guys realized

that they needed the larger world

that incorporates all those

extra characters,

like The Dorothy the Dinosaur Show.

Oh, gosh.

[man speaking indistinctly]

[gasps]

- [man] Yes, hello.

- Hello.

- [man] Say your name.

- Hi, my name is Emma Watkins.

[chuckles softly]

[man] Good. Here we go.

Oh, John the Cook, don't worry.

I told Dorothy you were arriving

with her special case.

- [chuckling]

- She will be here any second now.

- [man] Beautiful.

- [crew clapping]

[Emma] I was auditioning

for a ballet dancing fairy

on The Dorothy the Dinosaur Show,

which was a sister show

to The Wiggle show at the time.

Four months later, I got called to join

The Wiggle show as a Wiggle dancer.

And, at that point, I thought,

"This is the highlight of my entire life."

Because I grew up

with the original Wiggles,

they were like mythical celebrities

from my childhood

that were remaining in my brain

as my childhood memory.

In '92, '93, and '94,

it wasn't that extravagant then,

and so I was really shocked

that a children's show

could be so spectacular.

[audience cheering]

[Simon Pryce] The Wiggle show

at the time was very circus-y

and they asked if I'd come on

and be the ringmaster of the circus.

I came from a theater world

or opera world,

and, for about the next year,

I ended up touring with them.

[singing] We will sing along with Dorothy

This dinosaur melody

Let's have a dance.

Dance with me, dance...

[Caterina Mete] Anthony's the brainchild

behind all the developments in the show.

We got into circus training.

Right here,

when she dives and then we'll...

We're going over here.

That is brilliant.

[Caterina] So we were learning

all these circus tricks.

Like I learned how to do trapeze

and others were doing

flips and trampolining.

And, at the time, The Wiggles were getting

involved in the circus training.

[all cheering]

[Sam] Because I was scared of heights,

standing on the trapeze

was well and truly enough

of a circus skill for me to have overcome.

[chuckles]

Anthony, to his credit, is entirely

focused on improving the live show.

[Anthony] I think the psychology

of The Wiggles

has been like a football team.

[all] Hey!

And what I mean by the team,

not just the four,

it really takes everybody.

[Anthony] So if you're up there,

don't look to each other.

[indistinct] So work it out

before you get up there.

[Anthony] We are adults,

and adults can have different ways

of looking at things.

The rainbows, they are fantastic.

Murray, when you go through the tunnel,

don't go backwards into it.

Sometimes you've got a team

that's not pulling in the same direction

and the creativity dries up a little bit.

Well, the original Yellow Wiggle is back.

Greg Page has reunited with his mates

five years after he left the group

due to illness.

[man] That created

a rather wiggly situation for Sam,

who, it appears, was simply dumped.

That was a really rough time. Yep.

Uh, that changeover period.

Because I was coming back

because Sam wasn't gonna be continuing on,

and it wasn't portrayed that way

in the media.

But with Greg in, that means

his replacement, Sam Moran, is out.

I've had five years to come to terms

with the diagnosis,

and what it means for me, and manage it,

and I'm back on top of it.

Was this always part of the plan?

To return?

No, no, it wasn't always

part of the plan at all.

It ended up becoming that

Greg wanted back in and pushed Sam out,

and that just wasn't the case.

Then there was

the whole thing with Anthony

having said something

that, again, was taken the wrong way.

Okay, so you're back.

I guess the $64,000 question, Anthony,

what about Sam?

What about Sam?

Sam was, uh...

What do you mean? [chuckles]

- Well, Sam, until yesterday, was a Wiggle.

- Was... Yeah, yeah.

His contract is coming to an end.

I was under the impression

that everything had been sorted out.

I hadn't even seen the paper

when I get on the Today show.

The newspapers today

are full of speculation about things.

You sure know

how to pull a headline, by the way.

That opened the doors up for accusing,

I guess, Anthony

of being the person responsible

when essentially it was a group decision.

I certainly feel a sense of sadness

around how it all ended for me.

Um...

I've...

Yeah, that's kind of all

it needs to be, I guess.

That says it all, right?

[man] It's quite surprising how badly

- The Wiggles organization handled this.

- [woman] Yes.

I know, because they're so good.

- Yeah.

- Aren't they? Usually.

That was the first time

that we'd experienced

a sense of backlash

and a sense of public discontent

about The Wiggles,

and that was very hard to navigate that.

When Greg came back,

I distinctly remember hearing him sing,

I think it was "Fruit Salad,"

and his voice is just...

It... There's something special.

You go into a place which is like

a nostalgic childhood moment.

[crowd cheering]

[singing] Fruit salad

Yummy, yummy

Fruit salad

Yummy, yummy

Fruit salad

Yummy, yummy

Yummy, yummy

Yummy, yummy fruit salad!

Let's make some fruit salad today

Uh, huh, huh!

It's fun to do

It's the healthy way

Uh, huh, huh!

Take all the fruit that you want to eat

It's gonna be a fruit salad treat!

The first step

Peel your bananas

The second step

Toss in some grapes

The third step

Chop up some apples

Chop up some melons

and put them on your plate

Fruit salad

Yes!

Yummy, yummy

You got it.

Fruit salad

Right?

Yummy, yummy

Fruit salad

Yummy, yummy

Uh-huh.

Yummy, yummy

Yummy, yummy fruit salad!

[Greg] Yeah.

[crowd cheering]

[Jeff] Just so I don't doze off again,

can we do an action song

to get the blood pumping

and the old pacemaker a-tickin'?

[Greg laughs] Of course we can, Jeff.

And you can join in, too.

[Jeff] My heart incident all came about

when I had a blackout

whilst I was driving,

and ran into a tree.

But not with any great velocity.

And it turned out that

my heart had stopped momentarily.

And so it was recommended

that I have a pacemaker implant.

[Jeff] I will certainly hang in there

for as long as possible.

[man] The Wiggles will go on forever.

It may be the The Bionic Wiggles.

[laughing]

[singing] Up jumped the swagman

And sprang into the billabong

"You'll never catch me alive," said he

And back then, you're looking at that

and you think,

"This is never gonna end,"

but things do end.

[Murray] The kids were

pretty much grown up.

My son was doing his HSC,

or coming up to that.

I just kind of felt like

I needed to be there.

I hadn't been there enough.

[singing] Waltzing Matilda

Some of that precipitated

my decision to stop doing it.

[Jeff] When the time arrived for Murray

and myself to leave The Wiggles,

it sort of felt right for us.

[singing]

You'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me

[Greg] In that moment that I found out

that Murray and Jeff were going to retire,

I don't know,

I guess it was something

I hadn't contemplated

and kind of struck me as, not odd,

but just out of the blue.

But I wasn't involved in a conversation

with Murray or Jeff

about them leaving,

uh, so I turned up

to the board meeting and, uh...

they all handed their resignation in,

and I was sitting there and...

"What's going on, guys?"

[man 1] In the world of showbiz,

today's bombshell from The Wiggles

is as big as they get.

[woman] Parents around the country

are facing the difficult task

of telling their children

that the Wiggles are breaking up.

[man 2] That's right.

I firmly believe

Anthony's first thought was,

"Well, I'm going to keep going."

I don't think Anthony, for a second,

ever thought that that was time for him

to hang up the blue skivvy.

I feel so alive

and so part of The Wiggles.

It's part of me and I can't give it up.

I want to do it.

Because they're directors, I also said,

"Look, I think I can make us successful

as we were."

I think I kept The Wiggles going

at that meeting.

Because I think they were going to sell.

I never got it explained to me.

I could be wrong there.

But, uh... Yeah, it wasn't great.

[woman 1]

Three of the group's original members

have announced their retirement

after 21 years

of "Cold spaghetti" and "Hot potatoes."

[woman 2] With Jeff, Murray and Greg

jumping out of the Big Red Car.

[melancholy music playing]

Anthony pulled me aside and said,

"I have to tell you something.

It's really important.

We're actually going to be retiring

at the end of the year."

And this was April, so I thought,

"Wow, this is big."

But within five minutes, he's like,

"But we've got a new lineup,

and we were just wondering

if you'd like to join it."

Shivers, and I said,

"You know I don't sing."

And he's like, "No, it's not about that.

It's about, you know, the personality

and connecting with children,

and we can see that."

[Lachlan Gillespie] Emma came to get me

in my dressing room

and just said,

"Anthony wants to speak to you."

I'm like, "Okay."

Oh, no, I could see in Emma's face

there was something exciting.

And Anthony was like,

"Look, I'm going to keep going on.

We'd love to give you the purple and..."

I said, "Yeah." The rest was like...

Oh, just every emotion.

[Simon] I always joke

because Murray and I are the same size,

so I just fit the skivvy.

"Who have we got

who could fit Murray's pants?

Simon!"

Of course, I just jumped to the idea

and said yes. [laughs]

[man]

The superstar group has revealed

three of its members will be replaced,

and there's a twist.

[woman] Meet the new Wiggles,

with a woman to wear

one of the famous skivvies.

[Lachlan] We were so excited,

but also wondering,

"What are people going to think?"

The shock announcement has many wondering

if Wiggle shuffle will work,

or if the wheels are falling off

the Big Red Car.

[Anthony] We went out on the road

to half-filled audiences,

like quarter people, 50 people.

And all those children didn't know

who The Wiggles were.

"This is how it is, guys.

We've got to start again."

So let's ready, steady, Wiggle!

[Anthony] When we got on television,

we did everything, honestly,

on the smell of an oily rag.

[singing] Ready, steady, wiggle

Emma, Lachy, Simon and Anthony, too

[Anthony] Emma as cameraperson

for a while, editing the videos.

I had the guys pretty well improvise

as we went on.

He knew that this was going

to revolutionize The Wiggles,

and also take The Wiggles

into that next generation,

so that enthusiasm was infectious.

[in Spanish] Hi, everyone!

We're The Wiggles!

[Anthony] We had had female Wiggles before

with the Spanish and Mandarin Wiggles.

[in Mandarin] Hi, hello everyone,

we're The Wiggles.

[Anthony] But for people in

English-speaking countries,

we'd never done that.

Everyone was worried.

Oh, no! Dolly!

[Emma] And being the first female

at that time, it was taboo.

And for me to wear a skirt

and a bow and be dancy,

people felt that that was being

forced upon me in a way that wasn't,

you know, that was out of my control.

But when Anthony had asked me

what I wanted to wear, I was like,

"Oh, it's got to be a skirt.

It's got to be a bow." [laughing]

So it felt natural to me.

But people would say things like

"Wiggles can't be girls."

That was really interesting.

"Why are you wearing a bow in your hair?

Why are you acting like a child?"

That's me!

I think initially I thought that

they were attacking me personally,

but, you know,

as time grew on, I realized,

"Oh, no, they're just wanting

to protect that dream in their head."

[man] Let's starting dancing

with Wagsy.

[Simon] We didn't want to dwell

on the negative comments

and we didn't want to ignore them either.

And there were times that all of us

were a bit upset about certain comments,

and we would talk about it.

We wanted to support the Wiggles

so that they could continue.

We didn't want it to stop for children.

[all] One, two, three.

Wake up, Lachy!

[blubbering]

Thanks, everybody.

Give yourselves a big clap.

[Jeff] When Emma and Lachy joined,

it was always that thing about,

what do we do with

the "Wake Up Jeff!" song? [laughs]

[singing]

Wake up, Lachy!

Everybody's wiggling

Children responded to that.

I'd like to think that not as well

as the "Wake Up Jeff!"

[laughing] But you're doing

a good job, Lachy.

Wake up, Lachy, before the day is through!

Would you keep that noise down?

I'm trying to sleep!

As soon as we started creating new content

and people started getting to know us,

it was just a shift

that started happening.

[singing] Simon says

Put your hands on your cheeks

Simon says

Put your hands on your chin

[Murray] One of the things

that we really were conscious of,

we didn't want Simon

to come in and be Murray number two.

Like, we wanted him to be himself.

...say "Simon says"

- Simon says give yourselves a big clap.

- Yeah.

[Murray] But to leave something

like that behind is really hard.

When you're on tour,

you're living it 24/7. Um...

[singing]

Play your guitar with Murray

[Murray] And to go from that

to kinda nothing, bit of a shock.

[singing]

Play your guitar with Murray

It took a while

to settle into my new life.

Because so much of my identity

for the 20 years before was,

"Yeah, you're the guy from the Wiggles."

And I think the whole thing did affect

my mental health quite a bit at the time.

Just...

Uh, it was a bad time. Yeah.

Hi, I'm Dr. Shaw.

[all] Are you sure?

Sure, I'm Shaw.

[Anthony] After that first series

went on the air,

I'd seen it before, it was just, pshhh...

[singing] We're going up, up, up, up

up, up, up, up, up

And then we stop

But I knew we had to come up

with the best song we can.

[singing] Do the propeller

Do the propeller

I remember Anthony running in

from the studio

and he's like, "Guys, we've got it."

Do the propeller

Do the propeller

Don't remember

where the actions came from.

The actions are just this.

In Jesus Christ Superstar,

there's a dancer

who does this move like this

and reminded me of a propeller.

So that's where...

[The Wiggles: "Do the Propeller!"]

Do the propeller

Do the propeller

Do the propeller around and around

We're going up, and up, and up, and up

We're down down da-down down

da-down down down

We're going up, up, up, up

up, up, up, up, up

And then we stop

-Freeze

-Ah!

Everybody dance now

Do the propeller

Do the propeller

Do the propeller around and around

Do the propeller

Do the propeller

Do the propeller around and around

[song ends]

You know, I don't think the four of them

took a day off in probably two years

in that 2013 to 2014 period.

They put in the hard yards.

They were writing great music.

[woman] And the ARIA goes to...

- The Wiggles.

- [all cheering]

[Luke Field] So I knew

it was going to work.

Big jump there.

[singing]

Whoo, wiggy, wiggy, wiggy

Whoo, wiggy, wiggy, wiggy

Gimme that, gimme that

[Paddy] Our audience regenerates

every three years.

Three years after they left,

there was people going,

"Who's the old Wiggles? I don't get it."

[Murray] I went to one

of the Wiggles' shows,

and I walked through the audience,

and all the parents were going

to the kids, "Look, it's Murray!"

And the kids were like,

"What? Who?" [laughs]

[Emma] Children had always

dressed up at the shows,

but it became very different

where children wanted to

emulate their favorite Wiggle,

and that's what was really special

about these little ones.

So cute.

You would see a sea of yellow out there.

Bows everywhere, all that.

It was really fun

and it was very successful.

I would never have imagined

anything like that when Anthony asked me.

Well, everybody wave to Emma

as she walks past.

She's going out into the crowd right now,

[singing] Emma

Emma

She's the girl with the bow in her hair

Emma

Emma

[Emma] The only time

there was ever a unified cheer

was when I brought us a sign onto stage

from a child in the audience

that said, " Boys can be Emma, too."

[laughing]

[singing]

It's Emma's yellow bow

Bow, bow

Come on, let's try it!

Emma

Emma

Emma bow

Bow, bow

Bow, bow

[Emma] Have a bow-tiful day.

[The Wiggles: "Moonshine Pearl]

On the moon, lives a girl

Her name is Moonshine Pearl

[woman] For two years,

Yellow Wiggle and Purple Wiggle

kept their love affair a secret.

[Lachlan] You know,

we were traveling the world.

We were together.

But things do change

and life changes.

[Emma] Romantically, it just wasn't going

the way that our friendship was going.

[inaudible]

[man] And the entertainment world

delivered some more sad news today,

with the Purple and Yellow Wiggles

announcing their separation.

They say breaking up is a very positive

change in their relationship.

It was very much just

a personal Emma and I thing.

Life does move on.

[man] They plan to continue

to perform together.

[Emma] To be in that role

is a lot of responsibility,

but also it was really

all about the children.

[Lachlan] The Wiggles has

always been so professional.

Everything they do is for children.

I am absolutely proud of myself

on doing that at all times.

[Emma] It's connecting with a child

in a very important stage of their life,

and we might be responsible

for their first show,

their first experience of music.

I've got a beautiful poster

and I actually got it framed

from a beautiful little Down Syndrome boy

that says,

"Not all superheroes wear capes.

Mine wears purple."

[siren wailing]

[woman 1]

The country is burning.

It's been labeled

the worst fire season ever recorded.

[man] Thousands of people

take refuge wherever they could.

[woman 2] This is the view

of the fires from space. You can see...

[Luke] I think this says a lot

about the person that Anthony is.

He called me instantly and was like,

"What can we do?

We need to do something to help people."

Lachy and Simon were away at the time,

so we kind of went

"Well, let's put on the OGs."

[Stephen Colbert]

The original lineup of The Wiggles...

- [audience cheering]

- ...have announced that they will reunite

for bushfire benefit shows.

You heard me right. The original lineup.

About damn time.

[Anthony] We came together

at a smaller venue.

Said it was over-18s.

[Murray] Greg was feeling he could do it.

He didn't really know

what was going to happen.

There was no reason why he shouldn't.

[crowd cheering]

[announcer] ...and certainly more

deserving than the original Wiggles.

[crowd cheering]

Hello, friends.

Hello, everyone.

[Anthony] The night

was going unbelievably.

Greg was on fire.

[singing] Do the monkey

Ooh-ooh-ah-ah...

[Anthony] The crowd were loving it.

Greg was dancing around

like he was still 20.

And then we played "Get Ready to Wiggle,"

which is so energetic.

[singing]

Wiggle your hair and wiggle your nose

Ready to wiggle

[Emma] Being there on stage,

I could see Greg

and he was signaling to me

to come and stand in.

Ba-dum-ba-bum-ba-da-ba-dum

Ba-dum-ba-bum-ba-da-ba-dum

Ba-dum...

It's almost like he knows

that something's about to happen.

We had a fantastic time,

right up to the very end.

[crowd cheering]

Thank you, everybody.

Whoo!

Thank for coming to support

all those wonderful people.

Greg came over to the side of stage,

and was just behind me.

He kind of fell down.

He didn't look well,

and I thought,

"Oh, he's just overdone it."

So I jetted over to him

on the other side of the stage.

Now I was aware that Greg

used to pass out quite often.

And he's lying on the ground.

His eyes started rolling

back in his head.

My first thought was

he's having some sort of fit.

[crowd chanting] "Hot Potato"!

"Hot Potato"! "Hot Potato"!

[speaking indistinctly]

[crowd cheering]

[Murray] Guys, I think we're going

to end it there.

Greg's not feeling real well.

Uh, Greggy?

So...

So thanks everyone for coming tonight.

Then a couple of staff people came over

and they were kind of looking after him,

so I went, you know,

"Okay, it's all right.

You can go back on."

Do... Do...

- We could... We'll do "Hot Potato"...

- While he's taking...

I radioed a colleague of mine, Kim.

First-aid trained.

And by the time she'd gotten to Greg,

he'd stopped breathing.

I remember the color from his face going,

and I thought he was dead.

It's horrible to see one of your mates

get affected like that.

Yeah, it's...

You really don't know what to do

in those circumstances.

The only time I've been around

someone, you know,

I care so much about

where something like that happened,

and so it was, yeah, pretty distressing.

I could see Anthony

starting to have a panic att*ck.

So I was on the ground.

It was as bad as it could be. Really.

The Castle Hill venue manager,

she came up on stage.

She straight away went,

"I'm going to go get the defibrillator."

She knew where it was.

There was a nurse in the audience.

She came up on stage.

She took charge.

[faint applause]

And then I woke up in hospital,

and Vanessa was there

at the side of the bed,

and she said to me, "You're having

a massive heart att*ck." [chuckles]

And I remember at that time thinking,

"What do you mean 'having'?"

Because even though

they'd resuscitated me,

I still had a blockage

and my heart was under att*ck.

It is frightening, uh,

to see, uh, a friend, uh...

really in a bad way like that,

and, uh, uh, I was just glad

the guys could bring him back.

[Greg] After the procedure,

the nurse who was there said,

"You're a very lucky man

because only 10% of people

survive what you've just been through."

Greg kind of said, gave us his blessing.

He really wanted us to proceed

with the show on Saturday night, you know.

Your original Wiggles!

[crowd cheering]

You're all right, man. You're okay.

[cheering]

The audience was so loud

that you could hardly hear

whoever was singing. [laughing]

Which was pretty moving, so...

You can see I'm tearing up a bit

because, yeah, it was...

I mean, obviously incredibly

harrowing for him and his family,

but was harrowing for us,

his other family, too.

[Emma] And from that point,

you could see the love outpouring,

not just to Greg, but to the group.

And I think that's actually played

a really special part

in all of our hearts.

[woman] From his hospital bed,

a soft smile and a thumbs up.

Worldwide, fans sending well wishes

to the Yellow Wiggle.

I think the only word

I could use is "impact."

To see, you know, however many people here

have left messages about that one event

and the way it's impacted

people we don't know.

So, yeah, this is quite, um...

Yeah, quite emotional to think about

the whole cycle of

The Wiggles and the relationship

with our audience.

[woman]

The World Health Organization

has now officially declared

the outbreak a pandemic.

[man] The way in which it can be spread

more rapidly is in very large events.

You might only have one or two people

at a very large event

who might be carrying the virus

and the chances...

[Luke] We weren't touring.

Triple J, which is a great

Australian radio station,

reached out to The Wiggles and said,

"We'd love you to do a thing

called Like a Version,"

which is bands covering other bands

and genres of music.

[woman] The Second Coming is upon us.

[whispering] It's back.

[Luke] And it was in the middle of COVID.

We'd all had a pretty rotten time,

and I think, you know,

a bit of fun was on the cards. [chuckles]

Triple J, such a contemporary station

of really cool 20-year-olds, you know.

We had to come up

with a song that we liked.

And I had a list of about 15 songs,

none of which I knew. [laughing]

[Lucia] "Elephant" by Tame Impala

was one of them.

[singing]

Well, he feels like an elephant

Shaking his big grey trunk

for the hell of it

I was like, "I'm the biggest

Tame Impala fan.

You have to do 'Elephant.'

Like, this is such a good song."

Without hearing the song,

and I saw "Elephant,"

I thought, "Oh, great,

it's about an animal."

[singing]

Too bad your chances are slim

"'Elephant'? Children like elephants.

We can do 'Elephant.'"

[playing "Elephant"]

We spent probably four days

working that out, and Emma's

learned from a drummer how to play it,

which was incredible

because it's not an easy part.

[singing]

Well, he feels like an elephant

[Anthony] We sent Triple J

the most faithful rendition of it.

It was like we were a cover band.

They said,

"It's got to still say The Wiggles."

So then, I thought...

[singing]

Fruit salad

[Murray] We wanted

to keep it faithful to the original,

so the best way to keep it Wiggly

is just stick in "Fruit Salad."

[both laughing]

Which then Wiggle-fied it.

Fruit salad

Fruit salad

Yummy, yummy

[Anthony] We brought Murray in

to play the guitar.

Jeff.

Greg wasn't allowed because of COVID.

Fruit salad

Yummy, yummy

Now this is the synth lead.

That's the sound I played on "Elephant."

[plays synth]

But you get to play with Murray.

It's pretty cool.

- Rock god.

- [laughing]

So, for us, it's a real pleasure

to be able to play it with you.

We played it,

and the reaction was incredible.

After it went to air,

just so many people in this...

Like, I just got stopped way more.

"Oh, I loved 'Elephant.'"

We really needed, yeah, some fun.

One of the magazines said, "Oh,

this is the collaboration

we didn't realize we needed."

[song ends]

[Bryce Valley]

Thank you for all of your votes,

and all these texts are

absolutely flooding through.

A lot of people very excited

as we head towards number one

Every year, they have

the Triple J Hottest 100.

Listeners vote

for their favorite song of the year.

[Bryce] Plenty of big hits.

That could take out this number-one slot.

People have barbecues,

have parties around it.

It's unbelievably big.

So, of course, we thought,

"Well, if we make

the Hottest 100, that's great.

Ninety-nine, who cares?"

The voting opened.

My brother called me up and said,

"There's a lot of money

being put on The Wiggles

that they'll be in the Top 20."

We were listening to it all day.

Like, I had my phone by my ear.

As that day went on,

it just kept going up.

It was down to number five.

This one's three.

- Eh? So we're...

- We're three?

No. This song now is three.

Top two.

- [Ebony Boadu] Number two!

- [Bryce] In Triple J's Hottest 100.

And then they played "Stay,"

Kid Laroi and Justin Bieber.

[Murray] When we got to number two,

we all just started hugging

because we knew we were number one.

[all laughing]

Biggest song, as voted by you, of 2021.

[Bryce] 2.5 million votes.

And they played the first, like...

[humming "Elephant"]

I'm like, "Oh, my gosh, they won!

They got number one!"

[all cheering]

The confetti cannon's going off.

This was so special to so many people

because our listeners grew up

listening to you, also to Tame Impala.

I mean, what is it? What...

How does it feel to take this out?

This is massive.

I think this is one of the biggest things

that's ever happened to us.

So, thank you, everyone.

Thanks, Bryce and Ebony...

Bigger than Madison Square Garden?

- It's up there, yeah.

- [all laugh]

- It is. It really is.

- Yeah.

If I knew The Wiggles was going to be

going for as long as it has,

I would have made us... gender balanced,

diverse.

And I got a chance to do that.

Come 2021, and we've,

you know, the pandemic,

we're locked in our world.

I got Emma, Lachy,

Simon together and I said,

"I honestly believe

that we need to diversify

because we're four people

with blue eyes and pale skin."

Hi, my name's Anthony.

[TV static]

[singing]

Fruit Salad TV

Fruit Salad TV

[woman] Earlier this week,

The Wiggles announced

that they're welcoming

four new gender balanced

and diverse cast members

to their YouTube series.

Fruit Salad TV!

What do you think about all that?

[man] You know, it's a bit box ticking.

[woman] Just think

it's absolutely an insult

and I find the whole thing

an absolute shame.

This is the only thing I've ever felt

that had to happen.

But what about this?

We got the non-binary unicorn.

"The Wiggles decide to visit their friend,

Shirley Shawn the Unicorn."

[Peterson] If somebody can enlighten me,

if somebody can tell me why,

we have to have a non-binary unicorn?

[panelist] I presume the unicorn would

prefer to be addressed as "they."

What do you think?

Yeah, Shirley Shawn the Unicorn. [laughs]

They are terrific.

[stammering] I just think

it's all woke madness.

[Stefanovic]

Not everyone's happy, Anthony.

That troublesome and boring senator said,

"If you go woke, you go broke."

How do you respond to that sort of thing?

I didn't even know what it meant. And...

[all laughing]

We've been celebrating

sleeping for years, you know?

So I don't mind.

I've been woken up.

[all laughing]

I know Anthony and Dad inspired me

that I could do something more.

Seeing a gender-balanced

and a diverse Wiggles

should be inspiring

for little boys and little girls

to, you know, you can be a Wiggle,

you can be a Prime Minister.

You can be anything you want to be.

Emma, a PhD?

Blimey, what are you doing a PhD in?

My PhD is about creative integration

of dance, sign language and film editing,

- so it's really visual harmony on screen.

- [Koch] Wow!

[woman] Emma Watkins

has made the tough decision

to move on after eight years

as the Yellow Wiggle.

[Emma] I feel like I really need to focus

to finish the research now.

[Simon] I didn't see it coming.

And it was sad because it was, you know,

the three of us came in at the same time,

so we'd gone through a lot together.

It's one of those days where you go,

"It's very sad to see Emma go.

We're going to miss her."

But Tsehay coming along

has made that easier to cope with.

[singing] Hey, Tsehay

[man] A five-time

World Latin Dance Champion

who has been a part of The Wiggles'

latest TV series, Fruit Salad.

[singing] You can jump as high as the sky

She's very, very smart, an amazing dancer,

and all-around performer.

Our friend, Tsehay

[Tsehay Hawkins] I was born in Ethiopia.

And my beautiful parents adopted me

when I was about six-months old.

[Wiggles singing] Everybody clap

[clapping]

Everybody sing

La la la la la

[woman giggling]

[Tsehay] My mom was actually

a childcare teacher,

so she played Wiggles on repeat,

stuck in my head.

Hands in the air, rock-a-bye your bear

Bear's now asleep

[Tsehay] It's really exciting just seeing,

like, a brown-skinned girl

as a kid's doll was beautiful.

[woman] Who is it?

Aw, you love Tsehay?

It's really cool that I'm part

of that next step.

[indistinct chatter]

[Murray] It's always better

if the audience

can see themselves in the performers,

and we've had the feedback

from African-Australian people

of how much it means to them.

And we all say, "Wake up, Lachy!"

[Greg] When we started it, in 1991,

there was definitely a conscious awareness

of making sure that we included

music from other cultures.

[singing]

Taba naba naba norem

Tugi penai siri

Dinghy e naba we

[Greg] As much as Anthony could see

what he wanted to do,

I don't even think he saw

what was going to happen.

You know, looking at what is there today

with the current Wiggles.

Style

Taba naba...

[Evie Ferries] I am a First Nations woman.

As a child, with other First Nations

and Torres Strait Islanders

and Aboriginal kids,

we would play that and do the actions.

It was just so special.

[singing]

Taba naba norem

Evie wears yellow with a red,

yellow and black colors

of the Aboriginal Flag of Australia.

She speaks to a lot of people out there.

[singing]

Taba naba naba norem

[Evie] I've had some beautiful messages.

Kids can't wait to copy that skirt

and be wearing those colors as well.

Taba naba norem

And that's the beauty

and magic of The Wiggles.

That there is different groups

and the people can engage with.

[Anthony] Caterina's been with us

for 20-something years.

- Our choreographer.

- [laughing]

[Caterina] I'm still the choreographer,

but it sort of evolved even more.

Anthony's a bit like that.

He wants to give everyone an opportunity,

give everyone a chance.

[Anthony] People ask me,

"How did you get Johnny?"

Well, I saw him at the local pizza shop.

Every time I saw him,

he was with a man with Down Syndrome.

He was so lovely to this man,

and I thought,

"The universe is talking to me."

He's not hard on the eye,

and he's, you know, Mr. Muscleman.

[John Pierce] Anthony asked everybody

what their favorite hobbies were.

"I love to exercise."

[chuckling]

"Okay, we'll turn it into a character."

Big Strong John was born.

["Fruit Salad" playing]

[woman] The Wiggles' purple member

has become an overnight sensation

in the US,

winning over the hearts

of users on TikTok,

many calling him

a heartthrob, a thirst trap.

[man] Causing quite the stir

with parents.

[woman] Yes, John Pierce

is making international headlines.

[John] I'm all about fitness, and health,

and exercise, and, you know, resilience.

And I think that's the main focus

for my character

and keeping it all Wiggly

at the same time.

I like it. [chuckles]

The more out there, the better.

We need bigger. We need bigger.

Bigger. Bigger!

My dad asked me to be a Wiggle. [chuckles]

I was touring so much, been away so much.

Making up for lost time,

getting to know Lucia on the road.

Been performing for a lot of my life

and also been on set with him

quite a bit as well.

Lucia did find a bit weird

having to call her dad, "Anthony."

- Yeah.

- [all laughing]

[Anthony] Lucia is her own person.

She always has been.

She went down to the

Australian Ballet School for three years.

And I think she's incredibly talented.

[Lucia] Now we have four female Wiggles.

I think that's just exciting, as a woman,

but also the reaction towards it

by everyone was just incredible.

[Anthony] The story just keeps

getting better, if you ask me,

and the music's still wonderful.

It's still great creating.

Hopefully, parents will keep trusting us

because they have trusted us

with entertainment of their children.

So, as long as we do the right thing,

I think we can keep going.

Sooner or later, I'm gonna take

a back seat, obviously,

in, you know,

a retirement village with Jeff.

[chuckles]

[Adalita singing]

Get ready

To wiggle

We've been ready for so long

[Luke] Greg was healthy again,

but when Anthony and I took a moment

to sit down and reflect on

seeing Greg live on stage, collapsing,

we both instantly went,

"That can't be the last OG show

that people remembered."

[Anthony] Well, to me,

the reunion shows were a celebration

of Greg being alive.

Murray's also had open-heart surgery.

Jeff, also.

Whoo!

[Anthony] So, to me,

this was a celebration of life.

[cheering]

The Wiggles rock!

We're Wiggles supporters

since we were, like, two.

What crossed my mind was,

"This is so cool.

We're going to be able to swear."

And then Anthony goes, "No, no, no.

It's just going to be the exact same show

that we've always done."

Yeah!

[all cheering]

[Jeff] Wiggles!

Wake up, Wiggles!

Wake up!

[Jeff] I'm not sure what OG means.

"Original Gangster"?

They're the least gangsters

you'll ever meet. [chuckles]

I mean, personally,

I'd call it Old Guy Wiggles [chuckles]

[Greg] It's kind of out there.

You've got these

four old blokes up on stage

trying to recreate

what they did 30 years ago.

[Murray] Yeah, we know

it's weird. [laughs]

And they know it's weird, too.

They love it.

It just means for like an hour and a half,

they can be kids again.

[singing]

We're gonna do the monkey

Ooh-ooh-ah-ah, ooh-ooh-ah-ah!

Do the monkey

Ooh-ooh-ah-ah, ooh-ooh-ah-ah!

Monkey, monkey

Ooh-ooh-ah-ah

That's all right

Here comes an elephant.

We're going to do the elephant

[trumpets]

Do the elephant

[trumpets]

Do the elephant

[trumpets]

That's all right

Get ready to jump, everyone.

We're going to jump to the front and back

Ooh ooh ha

We're going to jump to the front

and the back

Ooh ooh ha

Yeah, we're going to jump

to the front and the back

Ooh ooh ha ha

'Cause that's all right

We're going to do the monkey

Ooh-ooh-ah-ah, ooh-ooh-ah-ah!

Do the elephant

[trumpets]

The tiger, tiger

[growls]

Give yourselves a big clap, everybody!

[crowd cheering]

I gotta say, this is amazing

seeing a huge mosh pit.

[crowd cheering]

[Murray] Doing this OG tour,

we've actually met a few people

who had pretty rotten childhoods,

and for them it was kind of beacon.

[Anthony] They've brought along

a photo with us,

and we've recreated

some of those photos for people.

[Murray] I saw them.

She posted them on Instagram.

It's kind of their story, in a way.

- Love it. This is my childhood come true.

- [friend giggling]

[soft music playing]

[muffled] Murray!

[Murray] When people say,

"You were my childhood,"

I find that sometimes

a little bit hard to fathom,

but I think they just mean, "You were

such an important part of my childhood,"

and, um, I'm really proud of that.

[indistinct chatter]

[Anthony] Murray, will you be able

to get up again?

[all laughing]

I mean, I've been going to the gym, man.

Yeah, you do.

[crowd] Yeah! [clapping, cheering]

- [Anthony] Oh, no.

- [Greg] He's fallen asleep.

[all] Wake up, Jeff!

[Jeff] It's something that I've been

blessed with in my life.

That's something that,

yeah, I'll always cherish.

[Greg] You know, the fact that

we've been able to create this thing

that we have had this amazing

journey with, and many people

have had an amazing journey with us.

That's it.

Yeah!

[crowd cheering]

[Anthony] What I've learned

from the last couple of years

is it doesn't matter

who's wearing the skivvy,

as long as we reflect our audience,

as long as they're

communicating with children.

I think everyone does have

a child inside 'em,

but sometimes people get away from that.

[crowd cheering]

We've all got to be in touch

with the child in us.

We're very lucky to be doing

what we're doing.

[crowd cheering]

Let's see what I've got in here.

[singing]

Everybody clap

[camera shutter clicking]

Everybody sing

[camera shutter clicking]

Bow to your partner

[camera shutter clicks]

Then you turn around

Where'd you get all this? [laughing]

Hands in the air, rock-a-bye your bear

Bear's now asleep

[camera shutter clicking]

Hands in the air, rock-a-bye your bear

Bear's now asleep

[camera shutter clicking]

Bear's now asleep

[camera shutter clicking]

Bear's now asleep

[camera shutter clicking]

[closing instrumental music playing]
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