home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0818>
- <title>
- Jun. 20, 1994: Obituary:A Way to Live The Way to Die
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 20, 1994 The War on Welfare Mothers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- OBITUARY, Page 71
- A Way to Live, The Way to Die
- DENNIS POTTER: 1935-1994
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> Dennis Potter lived on TV. He was a dramatist, not an
- actor, yet viewers in his native England and abroad knew
- Potter's life story through his teleplays. In 1964 he ran
- unsuccessfully for a seat in Parliament as a Labour Party
- candidate, then wrote his two Nigel Barton plays about a Labour
- M.P. that hit such a nerve the party demanded they be softened.
- He fictionalized his military service in last year's six-parter,
- Lipstick on Your Collar. His 1986 magical musical memory
- masterpiece, The Singing Detective, pictured a writer who, while
- suffering an egregious skin disease, psoriatic arthropathy (as
- Potter did), recalls his youth in Gloucestershire's Forest of
- Dean (where he grew up). For a quarter-century, Potter was
- England's raw conscience, its collective grudge keeper and, to
- many, its pre-eminent playwright.
- </p>
- <p> For the chronically disabled Potter, life was a death
- sentence; but he would have the last word. So this spring, two
- months before he succumbed at 59 to cancer of the pancreas and
- liver, he staged his own funeral oration on Britain's Channel
- 4 program Without Walls. In the 70-minute conversation with host
- Melvyn Bragg, the dying man displayed a new, calm bravery. At
- one point he paused, knee-high in the stream of his eloquence,
- to ask if he might take a sip of liquid morphine to ease his
- pain. Bragg wondered if they should stop; Potter replied, "It's
- better to go on." As another poet of profound distress, Samuel
- Beckett, wrote, "I can't go on, I'll go on."
- </p>
- <p> Potter went on, heroically, from the day he learned his
- cancer was incurable, Valentine's Day--"a little gift, a
- little kiss from somebody or something." He continued to care
- for his wife Margaret, whom he called "my rock, my center," as
- she battled breast cancer. And he worked ferociously, testing
- the limits of his anguish, to complete two teleplays: Karaoke,
- another musical drama; and Cold Lazarus, about a 20th century
- man whose head has been preserved for 400 years. Potter planned
- to write 10 pages a day. "I will--and do--meet that schedule
- every day," he told Bragg. "My only regret is to die four pages
- too soon." Sticking a cigarette between fingers crippled by
- arthritis, then puffing on "this lovely tube of delight," he
- said he was a physical coward in his youth. But now, dying, "you
- find out that in fact, at the last, thank God, you're not
- actually a coward."
- </p>
- <p> If nothing became Potter's life so much as his grace in
- leaving it, then nothing became his death so much as his having
- written so often about it. Mortality hung on his plays like
- crape. While awaiting his own demise, Philip Marlow, the hero
- of The Singing Detective, plots the death of all who may have
- hurt him. Lipstick on Your Collar climaxes at a grave site,
- where one of the three main characters is dead, a second falls
- into the open grave, and a third woos the widow--all to the
- '50s tune Sh-Boom! "We're the one animal that knows we're going
- to die," Potter said. "And yet we carry on, behaving as though
- there's eternity."
- </p>
- <p> In his 40 TV pieces--and in his stage plays (Sufficient
- Carbohydrate), screenplays (Track 29) and novels (Ticket to
- Ride)--Potter did see things under the aspect of eternity.
- Novelist Julian Barnes aptly described him as "a Christian
- socialist with a running edge of apocalyptic disgust."
- Christian, yes, in residue. Though Potter gave ecclesiastics the
- willies with his God play (Son of Man) and his Devil play
- (Brimstone and Treacle), he could still recite, as meaningfully
- as if it were a pop standard, the words to an old hymn: "Will
- there be any stars, any stars in my crown?" Socialist, yes,
- decrying British mercantilism that turns everyone "from a
- citizen into a consumer. And politics is a commodity."
- Apocalyptic disgust? Plenty, even at the end. He told Bragg he
- had named his cancer Rupert, for Murdoch, the media warlord.
- </p>
- <p> His rage against Murdoch was part of a general anger at
- the present for not living up to the image in the gilded
- rearview mirror Potter held to his youth. In Blue Remembered
- Hills he re-created his West Country childhood (but with adult
- actors as the kids). He larded his breakthrough series, Pennies
- from Heaven, with sentimental tunes from his '30s infancy.
- "Childhood," Potter said, "is full to the brim with fear,
- horror, excitement, joy, boredom, love, anxiety." He was welcome
- to cherish his youth; he never got to savor old age.
- </p>
- <p> "We should always look back on our own past," he said,
- "with a sort of tender contempt." The past echoed in Potter's
- inner ear like an accordion rendition of Peg o' My Heart: trite,
- tinny, extraordinarily potent. But as his days dwindled, he
- attended, rapturously, to the present. "I'm almost serene," he
- said to Bragg. "I can celebrate life. Below my window there's
- an apple tree in blossom. It's white. And looking at it--instead of saying, `Oh, that's a nice blossom'--now, looking
- at it through the window, I see the whitest, frothiest,
- blossomest blossom that there ever could be. The nowness of
- everything is absolutely wondrous. If you see the present tense--boy, do you see it. And boy, do you celebrate it."
- </p>
- <p> In every life there is so much to celebrate, so much to
- mourn. In his last days, Dennis Potter did both. Triumphantly,
- he finished his two plays--two final blossoms soaked in acid.
- And he nursed his wife until she died. A week later,
- disconsolate, Potter followed her, with blood in his eyes and
- stars in his crown.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-