CAROLINE JONES, PRESENTER: Hello. I’m Caroline Jones. Later this year, when Gina Rinehart opens the Roy Hill iron ore mine, she’ll be fulfilling a long-held dream. For her, it will be a crowning moment, clouded by the continuing fall-out from court battles over the family trust. The events now unfolding are the culmination of a turbulent family history. A short while back, Australian Story filmed with Gina Rinehart at Port Hedland. And, over the next two weeks, we bring you the story of the Hancock dynasty.

(Footage of explosions at Roy Hill site; aerial footage of Roy Hill mine and rail line)

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: Well, the Roy Hill mine shows that the Hancock family could not just discover iron ore but it can actually build a mine.

(Footage of Gina in car with driver)

DRIVER: What we’re looking at here is the drive station of the overland conveyor. So the overland conveyor starts over near that crane.

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: And Gina’s great strength, where she will go down in history: she took her Dad’s big dreams and made them big realities. She built the big mine. She financed the big mine. She made the dream come true.

GINA RINEHART: So, Matt, you can see our port marine is clearly ahead of schedule: getting really, really, ready.

JENNIFER HEWETT, JOURNALIST AND SCHOOL FRIEND, JOURNALIST AND SCHOOL FRIEND: What people don't understand is how dependent Western Australia is on the mining industry and always has been. But this development of the iron ore industry, which was one of Lang's visions, took a very, very long time.

(Archive footage of Lang Hancock in single-engine aeroplane)

LANG HANCOCK: Iron ore to the left of you, iron ore to the right of you, iron straight ahead of you. It is iron, iron, iron wherever you look.

GINA RINEHART: I know very well my father would have great feelings about what I’ve done.

(Footage of Gina addressing team over dinner)

GINA RINEHART: To finance this project has been the largest mainland mining resource financing project in the world.

GINA RINEHART: Dad knows how hard it is to build a company; to try and entice financiers to trust us to do the debt financing, um, and yet still be "whatevered" by a whole lot of litigation: um, this is not the sort of thing Dad would be thrilled with.

LEIGH SALES, PRESENTER (7.30, May 28): But first: a very public and bitter dispute between Australia’s richest person, mining magnate Gina Rinehart, and her children has been resolved today in favour of the children.

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: Well, it is a dynastic story of Shakespearean proportions. It’s an epic and I guess it’s an epic because of the quantum of money involved. Gina’s turned it into the wealthiest family company in Australia. On the other hand, it’s also become the most disputed family company in Australia. And that’s the pity of it.

JENNIFER HEWETT, JOURNALIST AND SCHOOL FRIEND: Gina is the sixth-generation Hancock in Australia. The Hancock dynasty story is a story, I think, of great passion and commitment - and also a lot of pain along the way. I think it's one of those great pioneering Australian stories.

IMELDA ROCHE, BUSINESSWOMAN AND FRIEND: Gina’s a workaholic. It's not unusual for her to be working through the night. And very often, you know, friends will receive emails from her at three o’clock in the morning.

GINA RINEHART: I don’t think I’ve had a typical working day. Nowadays I’m basically: my hand is attached to the iPad. Do I have days off on the weekend? Pretty well no. Um, you know, that, ah, hand and the iPad are just together. Yeah.

JENNIFER HEWETT, JOURNALIST AND SCHOOL FRIEND: What drives Gina is one of those mysteries to most of us. But she is one of those people who is desperately interested in doing the deals. So she is not the type who would just sit back and let the money roll in. The image that she has in the media is obviously as a very driven and overbearing person.

(Footage from Q&A, May 2012)

TONY JONES, PRESENTER (Q&A): In fact, we've got a Facebook question. It's from Amelia Starbright: "Why is Gina Rinehart so greedy?" Um, let’s throw that to David Marr.

DAVID MARR, JOURNALIST (Q&A): Behind it all lies this towering ambition to fund in her own right, to get up this immense iron ore mine. And for that, she seems to be willing to appear greedy as all get out. She’s willing to appear brutally cruel to her own family. And so she goes.

BARRY HUMPHRIES, HUMOURIST (Q&A): But then, I don’t like her family very much either. I mean, they all deserve each other, in my view.

(Footage ends)

IMELDA ROCHE, BUSINESSWOMAN AND FRIEND: Every time, you know, a new news story breaks, you know, there’s usually something derogatory to say about her; about the family relationships. And it puzzles me why Australia doesn’t take more pride in her achievement. The tenacity and determination that um Gina demonstrates is no doubt part of her heritage. It’s in her genes. Gina has an enormously strong connection with the north-west. She sees the north-west as being the lifeblood of her family dynasty.

GINA RINEHART: You know, it really helps me if I think back to what our first families up here went through. Because my goodness, they really had very tough times. It was a gentleman called John Hancock with his two sisters, Emma Withnell who was a Hancock and Fanny Hancock and other members of the Withnell family. They came up in a very little boat, a wooden boat called the Sea Ripple and they had a few mishaps along the way: in particular, um, a shipwreck. And they lost approximately half of all the supplies they’d saved up for: half of the livestock, half of a lot of their possessions that they were bringing with them. They didn’t know where water was. But they did the trek, approximately 17 miles inland, to find where the water was fresh at a place they called Roebourne. So they camped there, established the first, um, town. Emma became rather famous. She was called "mother of the north-west", which is a title she earned. She became an untrained midwife to others - the Aboriginals and others - that came up. The family continued and they became the three Hancock brothers, running a station that they’d founded called Ashburton Downs. And just last night I was given from our station manager’s daughter on Mulga Downs a wonderful branding iron that she’d picked up: "H3B." And it was Hancock, Three Brothers. One of those brothers was my grandfather, George Hancock. George Hancock ventured over to a property called Mulga Downs: a wonderful property alongside the Hamersley Ranges. And then ultimately bought over the station with my father, Lang Hancock.

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: Well, it’s 25 years now since I’ve interviewed Lang Hancock and it still looms large. He still looms large in my memory. He came across to me as someone who probably hadn’t changed very much in his life at all. He spoke about his time at school. He went to Hale School, which was one of the best schools in Perth at the time. He was academically quite capable and Lang’s father wanted him to go to university.

(Archive footage of Lang Hancock)

LANG HANCOCK: I am afraid I disappointed him because the moment I got, um, got away from school I went straight to the land where I used to live.

(Footage from Tish Lee's home movies of Lang at Wittenoom)

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: Lang was impatient to get on with life and so he went back to the station and then subsequently got involved in various mining operations. The first was a blue asbestos mine at Wittenoom. It was at this point that an old school friend came back into his life, Peter Wright, and they developed a very long-standing 50/50 partnership.

(Excerpt from This Day Tonight, ABC TV, archive)

PETER WRIGHT, BUSINESS PARTNER: Mr Hancock has got the most driving imagination that I’ve ever met. He comes up with more imaginative ideas than any other person I’ve ever met. On the other hand, they’re not all workable - in my view, anyhow - workable ideas. In fact, some of them have been proved not to be workable.

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: Well, Lang was a dreamer and Peter Wright was a realist. And I think Lang was outlandish and brazen in his statements. There wasn’t an ounce of politics in his body - and I say that with great respect, by the way. And rather than the odd couple, they were a perfect couple because Lang had all the "let’s rip and tear and let’s get into it" attitude, whereas Peter Wright was prepared to sit back, let matters take its course. So they were a great partnership.

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: Lang moved into the white asbestos mining at Nunyerrie. And it was while he was there, actually, that he met and married his wife, Hope Hancock.

TISH LEES, HANCOCK FAMILY FRIEND: I personally came to know Lang because his property was on what we call "the Tableland", which was inland from ours. Mum and Dad were great recorders of history with Dad’s still camera and Mum’s movie camera.

(Footage from Tish Lee's home movies of Lang Hancock's mine)

TISH LEES, HANCOCK FAMILY FRIEND: Lang was very smart engineering-wise and he made all the equipment himself from bits of old 44-gallon drum and bits of old pipe and fencing wire and star posts here and there. And he did an amazing job with developing that mine. The house in which Lang and Hope lived when they were first married was very small. It resembled dongas put together. In other words, it wasn’t a lavish establishment. Mum admired Hopey greatly and considered her one of her very close friends. I can remember when Hopey was pregnant: we were down from the station. And I remember Hope saying to Mum, "I know that if it is a boy, that he will be called George Langley. If it’s a girl, I’ve got no idea what we’d like to call the baby." I thought for a minute and I said, "Well, if you’re going to call a boy George Langley, why wouldn’t you call a girl Georgina Hope?" And she laughed and said, "Tish, that’s a good idea. I’ll have to run that past little Lang."

(Footage from Tish Lee's home movies of Hope holding Gina as a baby)

TISH LEES, HANCOCK FAMILY FRIEND: And when the baby was born, Georgina Hope arrived - and, er, much to the delight of everybody.

(Excerpt from documentary, 'Man of Iron', BBC, 1966)

LANG HANCOCK: We didn’t think that we would ever have a family. And when Georgina came along, we were very, very thankful to have Georgina. And I wouldn’t like to see her replaced with a son and I don’t regret the fact that we haven't any sons by any manner of means.

(Excerpt ends)

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: They would be at Nunyerrie half of the year. The weather ruled out mining for the rest of the year, so he was flying away to leave the mine mothballed for the wet season and he flew into this enormous storm.

LANG HANCOCK (voiceover, archive): In November of 1952 I was flying down south with my wife. And by the time we got over the Hamersley Ranges, clouds had formed and the ceiling got lower and lower. And going through a gorge in the Turner River, I noticed that the walls looked to me to be solid iron.

GINA RINEHART: But of course just looking at it gets you absolutely nowhere. So he came back after the cyclone season. And there were no airports in the area; no roads, nothing. So he had to land his little Auster aircraft, a very frail machine indeed, in the spinifex. He brought an axe to be able to chop down the trees to be able to take off again; and sample bags, um, prospector’s hammer. And over a series of weeks collected samples from over about 50 miles of this area.

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: It was very hard for Lang to convince anyone that he knew of enormous iron ore resources. And so he went to 20 different companies. And it wasn’t until he got the head of Rio Tinto - a fellow called Duncan - out from the UK that he was able to convince people that it actually existed. But what he was able to do was say, "Look, all I want is 2.5 per cent royalty on anything that you export." This deal was unprecedented. It was a massive amount of money that was involved: enormous amounts of wealth. And 2.5 per cent of all of that wealth going in royalties to Hancock and Wright.

GINA RINEHART: Kaiser, the minority partner, said in print: "Without Lang Hancock there would be no Hamersley Iron."

(Archive footage of Lang Hancock dictating a letter to secretary)

LANG HANCOCK: Yours sincerely, LG Hancock.

GINA RINEHART: Does that mean he was honoured in government, the media, others? Of course not.

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: There was a kind of an event to celebrate this and there were the speeches and all the rest of it.

(Excerpt from Robert Pride's documentary, 'The Hancock Legacy', Hancock Mining Ltd, 1986)

ANNOUNCER: Of course, all this corporate backslapping and political euphoria further overshadowed the part played by Hancock, who was invited to the official opening and all but ignored. It must have hurt.

(Excerpt ends)

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: Lang finished up being royalty rich, but he didn’t own a mine. And Lang was never able to get the big financiers to the table.

GINA RINEHART: He actually got his money, dumped it in holes in the ground. Um, and that’s what he did.

(Excerpt from Weekend Magazine, ABC TV, archive)

ANNOUNCER: Here they are again investigating another new site, which field engineer Ken McCamey first spotted from the air with Hancock.

(Excerpt ends)

GINA RINEHART: He’d get so excited with his exploring and finding more and discoveries that he’d sometimes let the time get away from him. And so we’d hear (imitates aeroplane) 'Mmmmmmmm' (laughs) going around the, ah, the station homestead. It meant Dad was coming back: it was dark. So we already had tins along both sides of the airstrip for these events and we’d - Mother and I - would have to go around and light up the kerosene that was in the tins so Dad would be able to see to land. He was always trying to do that little bit more to go from just being a royalty person to a part-owner. He just kept working through his adult life to try to build up towards, you know, being able to be an owner-operator. That’s the way he wished to spend his life. A lot of people would not choose it, but it's a life that he chose.

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: Lang had been grooming Gina from a very young age. Lang’s view on that was just that it was the natural course of events.

(Excerpt from documentary, 'Man of Iron', BBC, 1966)

LANG HANCOCK: As she gets older, she’ll have a lot of responsibilities to undertake. And with no brothers and being an only child, everything will devolve upon her. So it is most necessary to get her a balanced education, a balanced outlook, so that she can learn to live and handle other people as she will have to do.

(Excerpt ends)

JENNIFER HEWETT, JOURNALIST AND SCHOOL FRIEND: Gina was sent to St Hilda's School in Perth as a young girl. She was a weekly boarder a lot of the time, mainly because, I think, that her mother was quite ill. I was in the same class as Gina throughout our high school years. I remember that she was always fairly reserved. I think most of the, of her school friends would think that. She was quiet. She was polite. But she wasn't deeply involved in a lot of the school activities and always kept herself to herself, really.

(Excerpt from documentary, 'Man of Iron', BBC, 1966)

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: I think she will have problems as she grows. She won’t know whether people want her for herself or whether they want her for, perhaps money, or what she is.

GINA RINEHART: I’ve been at the school for four years. This is my fourth year and I’m going to go on to leaving. And I don’t like it much, especially the housemistress and the food. I’d like to be home at Hamersley. It’s gorgeous fun up there. You can ride, swim, muster and lots of other things.

(Excerpt ends)

GINA RINEHART: I just thought my life in the bush was, er, fantastic. It was a very, um, close family life. I meant, you know, there really wasn’t anyone else apart from your family.

(Excerpt from documentary, 'Man of Iron', BBC, 1966. Gina swims backstroke in gorge)

GINA RINEHART: Tell me when I hit the rock.

HOPE HANCOCK: Yes. That’s the girl.

(Excerpt ends)

(Excerpt from Australian Story, 1997)

GINA RINEHART: Life up here was wonderful for a child. But it was very, very tough on my mother. For instance, at the back of the house is the kitchen. A tiny little kitchen, a low roof: that it was so hot, that must have been one of the hottest kitchens in Western Australia. Mother was very, very family-orientated. She couldn’t have been kinder and nicer to me or more loyal to me. My father and I were very, very close. On the station we were together all the time. I was even sent out on exploration things. And we spent an inordinate amount of time together.

(Excerpt from documentary, 'Man of Iron', BBC, 1966)

LANG HANCOCK: I’m most concerned that she learns at a very early age how to express herself properly; to stand up on her own feet; and expresses her views.

GINA RINEHART: I certainly did travel with Dad overseas. Dad was particularly thrilled, as was I, to be able to meet Margaret Thatcher a number of times. But Dad and Margaret Thatcher thought very, very much alike on many, many issues. Er, basically you’d watch Margaret Thatcher start a sentence and you’d watch Dad finish it (laughs) and vice versa.

(Excerpt from 'The Hancock Legacy', 1986)

SONG: Why don’t you get off our backs / Chop the bureaucrats and cut our tax...

LANG HANCOCK: I believe that if welfare was cut out, they could balance the budget.

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: Lang was a deeply polarising figure and there were no half measures.

LANG HANCOCK (Channel 9 Brisbane, 1981): The ones that are no good to themselves, can’t accept things, the half-castes - and this is where most of the trouble comes - I would dope the water up so that they were sterile and would breed themselves out in future and that would solve the problem.

(Vision of newspaper headlines: 'Hancock accused of inciting race hate'; 'Grassby responds to interview: "Hancock's remarks suited to Nazis"'; 'Hancock faces backlash on race comments')

STUART REID, ORAL HISTORIAN: Lang was extreme in his views and quite free with expressing views that many people felt offended by.

ADELE FERGUSON, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: He was extremely right-wing. Environmentalists he called "eco-nuts". He believed in using nuclear bombs to develop mines. Lang was a huge fan of Dr Edward Teller, whose nickname was the "father of the hydrogen bomb". Dr Teller believed you could cut the cost of building a mine or, you know, other sorts of construction by using nuclear bombs.

INTERVIEWER (1969): What are the economic advantages of using a nuclear device to produce iron ore, for instance?

LANG HANCOCK (1969): Well, cost-wise, from the point of view of the explosive: $1 worth of a nuclear device is the equivalent of $400 worth of TNT.

GINA RINEHART: I think my father thought maybe it would look a little less frightening if a teenager explained the concepts of the nuclear explosives. So years ago, he had me up north to explain to the media what this nuclear explosive would do.

GINA RINEHART (archive): A hole will be drilled down here and into this will be lowered the hydrogen bomb, which is about six foot, feet high. And then after that will be lowered the atomic bomb. Now, this atomic bomb will be set off and that will set off the hydrogen bomb.

IMELDA ROCHE, BUSINESSWOMAN AND FRIEND: I think Lang and Gina were very much a father-and-daughter package. Almost everything that he wanted to achieve, he shared with Gina. And many people have heard the comment that he used to call her "fella". She was really in many ways his alter ego.

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: I met Lang in my twenties, mid- to late twenties, so Gina had to be in her teens. So she knew everything that Dad knew. I mean, she could take up Dad in mid-sentence as a teenager and tell you about the tonnage and tell you about the partnerships. There was never any doubt in my mind that she’d take over from her Dad - and never any doubt in his mind, either.

(Excerpt from Four Corners, 'Rich and Super Rich', 1975)

REPORTER: On a purely emotional basis, how does it feel to look at all that iron ore lying in the ground that one day is going to be yours?

GINA RINEHART: Bloody good.

(End of excerpt)

TISH LEES, HANCOCK FAMILY FRIEND: Gina’s 21st birthday party was a wonderful occasion. Huge marquee on the front lawn of their home in Dalkeith. It was a very, er, happy occasion and Gina looked absolutely gorgeous in a beautiful frock. John Gorton was the prime minister.

(Footage of John Gorton addressing guests at Gina's 21st birthday party)

JOHN GORTON, PRIME MINISTER 1968-71: It’s going to be tough in 10 years or 15 years. You know, Lang will be sort of doddering around in 10 or 15 years and she’ll have to take over more and more of the responsibility. And it’s going to be pretty hard for somebody to take over a big control like that and run a husband, or be run by a husband, I...

ADELE FERGUSON, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: She married an Englishman called Greg Milton who was travelling around and ended up, um, getting a job in a hardware store in Wittenoom. And he gave her a lift home and then the romance developed.

GREG HAYWARD (archive): Jump up and I’ll carry you!

GINA HAYWARD (archive): That's right! Right!

ADELE FERGUSON, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: Before they married, Greg changed his name from Greg Milton to Greg Hayward. Nobody really knows why Greg Milton changed his name.

GINA HAYWARD (archive): I’m getting hot on the feet, do you realise?

WOMAN'S VOICE (off-screen, archive): Look, I'll show you the idea.

ADELE FERGUSON, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: Not long after they married they had a couple of kids, John and Bianca. John was the first-born. And Gina kept it very private.

(Excerpt from 'This Day Tonight', ABC TV, 1976)

REPORTER: And the son, John Langley, is yet another in need of Gina’s time: time that’s increasingly more valuable as the deals are done and more iron ore is taken from the earth.

(To Gina) Is it possible, though, to give him a normal upbringing?

GINA HAYWARD: As long as we can give the most normal sort of balanced base that is possible, he will be able to handle things very well.

(End of excerpt)

ADELE FERGUSON, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: Gina, after she married Greg, really got much more involved in the business. Her father needed her more and more because he was getting sick. And Greg really didn’t find his place.

(Excerpt from 'This Day Tonight', ABC TV, 1976 continues)

REPORTER: Where does he fit in the family empire?

GINA HAYWARD: Well, I think it’s... We both think it’s best that he has outside interests, rather than just being engulfed in whatever I’m doing.

REPORTER: But purely outside interests or outside interests as well, do you think?

GINA HAYWARD: Um, I think it’s if he has his main interests apart from just the family.

(End of excerpt)

JANE MACLATCHY, FORMER JOURNALIST: I was a reporter with the Daily News in Perth and I got this call and the guy at the other end said, er, “Would you be interested in, er, taking a ride in a taxi, um, driven by Greg Hayward?" The driver was a young, good-looking man. And I said, "Are you Greg Hayward, Gina’s husband?" And he said, "No. No, I’m not. I’m, er, Greg Milton." So I made a search and I found in fact that Greg had changed by deed poll his name back from Hayward to Milton and that his divorce was made absolute the two or three months earlier in Sydney. The story came out and it made quite an impact. And I thought maybe there would be follow-ups but nothing, nothing came. And I suspect that, um, the heavy hand of Hancock came down at, er, at some height. And that was the beginning and the end of the, er, of the Greg story.

(Excerpt from Channel 10 news story, 1979. Gina meets guests with Joh Bjelke-Petersen next to her)

GINA HAYWARD: How do you do. I'm Gina Hayward. Welcome aboard.

BILL EDMONDS, FORMER TV JOURNALIST: In 1979 on the Wake Up Australia flight, Gina launched herself to the Australian public. This was a tour around the country of a group of like-minded people who all shared Lang Hancock's conservative, ultra-right-wing view of Australia.

(Excerpt from Channel 10 news story, 1979. Gina meets guests with Joh Bjelke-Petersen next to her)

GINA HAYWARD: How do you do. I'm Gina Hayward. Welcome aboard.

GINA HAYWARD (addressing passengers) (Ch. 10): Then premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen will talk to you about the proposed West Australia to Queensland rail link.

(Excerpt ends)

GINA RINEHART: It was meant to be a flight to honour my father, where I would have a very minor role. But both he and one of his very special friends, Dr Teller, both were in hospital and they were meant to be the two prime guests. So instead it became the, the Joh and Flo and Gina flight (laughs), which was never intended.

BILL EDMONDS, FORMER TV JOURNALIST: And then, flying at about 35,000 feet, she did an interview with Edward Teller.

(Excerpt from Channel 10 news story, 1979)

GINA HAYWARD (on flight communicator): Hello, Dr Teller. Can you hear me? How are you?

EDWARD TELLER, THEORETICAL PHYSICIST (over flight communicator): Gina, I can hear you very well.

GINA HAYWARD: It’s wonderful to hear you. It’s the first time I’ve made a phone chat with you like this over 35,000 feet.

(Excerpt ends)

BILL EDMONDS, FORMER TV JOURNALIST: Lang would have been extremely impressed with what she did and, um, I would suspect that Lang would have been glad that it happened that way, because it gave Gina a chance to shine and a chance to step out from under Lang's shadow. In sitting down and talking to other journos that were on the Wake Up Australia flight, we asked ourselves: would she be as strong and independent and self-focused, single-minded, as her father? And we looked at Gina on that plane and we said, "Is this the start of something new for Gina? Was this the start of the new House of Hancock?"

(Preview of next week's program)

LANG HANCOCK (to photographers as he kisses Rose Hancock) (1985): Say when.

REPORTER (1985): It was a marriage that couldn’t escape the front page.

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: Gina and I had a gap in our relationship during that period. You had to choose one or the other and I chose my friendship with Lang as he had no others and Gina had another life.

ADELE FERGUSON, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: This period was extremely tumultuous for Gina. In 1990, Frank died.

GINA RINEHART: It nearly killed me, you know, because I, um, loved my husband very much.

ADELE FERGUSON, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: After Lang’s death, Hancock Prospecting was losing money.

GINA RINEHART: It was a struggle. I went down with pneumonia and bronchitis twice.

(Footage of Gina at anti-mining tax rally, 2010)

GINA RINEHART (2010): Axe the tax!

JOHN SINGLETON, FAMILY FRIEND: Gina copped a lot of criticism and she doesn't necessarily cop it well all the time. And I often implore her not to put it into "they versus us": it’s not like that.

GINA RINEHART: I really felt when we’d got our first mine up and happening, the family should be happy.

JUANITA PHILLIPS, NEWSREADER (ABC TV News, 2015): Bianca Rinehart and two of her siblings launched legal action four years ago to have their mother removed as trustee.

BIANCA RINEHART: Thanks to the vision of my grandfather and through this case, we hope to bring effect to his true wishes.

GINA RINEHART (ABC TV News, 2015): They say if you give your children too much they don’t get the joy out of work they just want the unearned things to keep falling from the sky.

(End of preview)

(Footage of Gina's 21st birthday party. Guests sing 'Happy Birthday to You' as she blows out candles on cake)