A Very Private Celebrity (18 page)

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Authors: Hugh Purcell

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There was a peacock, you see, and he and I loved each other very much. I was four years old. He would fly up to the leads outside my mother's bedroom, when I went to say good morning to her, and would give a harsh shriek. Then he would give another scream and fly down to the garden to wait for me. We would walk round the garden arm-in-arm, excepting he hadn't any arms; I would have my arm around his neck; and I was asked why I loved him so and I said, ‘Because he is proud and has a crown, and is beautiful.' And then my father got
him a wife, with his usual tactlessness, after which he never looked at me again, and my heart was broken.

Freeman's questions on this occasion were gentle, almost flirtatious. He tried to coax her into frank answers, though not always successfully:

FREEMAN:
Have you ever – I hope I may ask this – seriously contemplated marriage?

SITWELL:
That I think I can't answer.

FREEMAN:
No reason why you should at all. Do you consider, looking at young people today, that the standard of taste and behaviour is lower than it used to be?

SITWELL:
Well, you see, I think you said that I was a forbidding old lady – well, I'm very forbidding. No young person would dare misbehave in my presence, and I can think of one very great poet who died some time ago – I never saw him behave in a way that a great man shouldn't behave.

FREEMAN:
Would you tell us who he was? I can guess and it would be nice for you to…

SITWELL:
…Dylan Thomas. He always behaved impeccably in my presence.

The interview was another success. The
Daily Herald
declared: ‘Here was a living legend captured on the popular screen.'

Grace Wyndham Goldie was delighted:

8 May 1959, from assistant head of talks television

 

My dear John,

 

I have already told Hugh Burnett how superb I thought the Sitwell programme was, and how beautifully he had handled it visually. I thought I must write to say that it seemed to me also the best thing I have ever seen you do on television.

I don't know how you made her so obviously at ease and happy that she could reveal herself, in ways that were fascinating and resounded to her credit as a person, in front of the television cameras. Thank you very much. I enjoyed it enormously.

 

Yours ever, Grace

12 May, 8 Heath Mansions

 

Dear Grace,

 

Thank you so much for writing. I value your praise more than anybody else's – without exception.

 

Yours ever, John
7

He must have been relieved to get it, for she did not dispense praise lightly. Indeed, a few weeks before, at the morning-after meeting of the
Panorama
team, she had reprimanded him: ‘Mr Freeman, I can't tell you how bad you were last night.'

Considering the popularity of
Face to Face
, it is remarkable how many of those ‘approached' (not quite the same as ‘invited') for interview between April and December 1959 turned the offer down. Of seventy-two ‘approaches', only ten were successful. There was a ‘no' from Danny Kaye, Laurence Olivier (‘not interested'), Eamon De
Valera (‘constitutional reasons'), Igor Stravinsky (‘definitely no'), Pablo Casals, T. S. Eliot (‘not inclined to appear on TV'), Lord Beaverbrook (‘dislikes personal publicity'), Noël Coward (‘not coming to England') and Charlie Chaplin (‘working on memoirs'). There were no replies from Groucho Marx, the Shah of Persia, Alec Guinness, Maria Callas, Ernest Hemingway, Ed Murrow and Frank Sinatra. There was a ‘perhaps' from Evelyn Waugh (‘for a larger fee' – the standard fee was 100 guineas) and Stanley Spencer (‘scarcely worth the while'), but a ‘yes' from Cecil Beaton, Harry Belafonte, Augustus John, Gilbert Harding and Stirling Moss. Later Evelyn Waugh relented and gave Freeman a prickly interview.

There was also a category of ‘not approved', meaning that the choice of Burnett and Freeman was rejected by Grace Wyndham Goldie or Cecil McGivern (the controller of television programmes). This category included Oswald Mosley, the Dean of Canterbury, Jomo Kenyatta and Albert Schweitzer. The odd one out was Schweitzer, as his ‘English was no good'; the others, presumably, all had political black marks. Mosley was the former fascist leader; the ‘Red' Dean of Canterbury was an unyielding supporter of the Soviet Union; and Jomo Kenyatta was allegedly the leader of the Mau Mau revolutionaries in Kenya, who had just been released from prison. However, this does not mean, necessarily, that the interviews were censored for political reasons. Grace Wyndham Goldie may well have thought that these three subjects would be so unpopular with a British audience that she would lose her precious viewing figures, plus there were more straightforward talks programmes, like
Panorama
, which could take them on.

The
Face to Face
with Carl Jung, recorded at the professor's home in Zurich in June 1959, was an historic coup. It was the only TV interview ever given by the world's greatest living psychologist and founder of the concept of the collective unconscious. He was eighty-four and
would be dead within two years. For this reason, the tape, script and then DVD of the interview were, and still are, in demand all over the world.

Curiously, wrote Hugh Burnett, Jung was the only one of thirty-five guests to refuse to have his portrait sketched for the opening credits:

Instead, we filmed paper captions floating on the lake by his house. He stood nearby, leaning on his stick and smiling as he watched us trying to drift the paper past the camera lens. I said to him, with a straight face, ‘Professor Jung, perhaps we could start this film with a shot of you coming out of the water from your morning swim?'

‘Ah yes,' he replied, ‘emerging from the unconscious.'
8

At one stage during the interview, Freeman's usual presence of mind seemed to desert him:

FREEMAN:
Do you now believe in God?

JUNG:
Now? Difficult to answer. I know. I don't need to believe. I know.

FREEMAN:
Well, now what made you decide to become a doctor?

Millions of viewers must have been beside themselves with frustration not knowing why the world's greatest psychologist
knew
that God existed. Several of them wrote to Jung, who replied:

Mr Freeman in his characteristic manner fired the question you allude to at me in a somewhat surprising way, so that I was perplexed and had to say the next thing that came into my mind. As soon as the answer had left ‘the edge of my teeth' I knew I had said something controversial, puzzling, even ambiguous. I was therefore waiting for letters like yours.
9

Freeman himself wrote to Jung for the answer to the question he should have asked, and received this in return:

I did not say in the programme, ‘There is a God.' I said, ‘I do not need to believe in God: I know.' Which does not mean, ‘I do know a certain God' (Zeus, Jahwe, Allah, the Trinitarian God etc.), but rather ‘I do know that I am obviously confronted with a factor unknown in itself, which I call God.' I remember him, I evoke him, whenever I use his name overcome by anger or fear, whenever I involuntarily say, ‘Oh God!' It is an apt name given to all overpowering emotions in my own psychical system, subduing my conscious will and usurping control over myself. In accordance with tradition, I call the power of fate in this positive as well as negative aspect and, in as much as its origin is outside my control, ‘god', a ‘personal god'; since my fate means very much itself, particularly when it approaches me in the form of conscience or
vox dei
, with which I can converse and argue.
10

In the cutting room back home, Burnett was finding Jung hard going:

Dear John,

 

I enclose a copy of the Jung script. Unless you press me very hard, I shall cut this programme on viewer appeal rather than psychiatrist's significance. I realise I might be hacking a very significant statement. However, from page fourteen onwards, some of Jung's statements are very difficult to follow. Up to thirteen, the material is excellent in terms of
Face to Face
technique, change of subject and vivid autobiography.
11

Freeman, on the other hand, was most intrigued and keen to know Jung further. The opportunity came in a scarcely believable way. The
Face
to
Face
interview had been watched by the publisher Wolfgang Foges. He thought Jung should write a book for educated readers who understood Freud's basic theories of psychoanalysis, but were unfamiliar with Jung's. Sensing Freeman's interest, Foges asked him to persuade Jung.

‘I jumped at the idea,' wrote Freeman, ‘and set off once more to Zurich. Jung listened to me in his garden for two hours almost without interruption – and then said no.' That might have been the end of what would become
Man and His Symbols
had fate, or Jung's subconscious, not intervened. Jung had a dream in which ‘a multitude of people were listening to him in rapt attention and
appearing to understand what he said
' (Freeman's italics). Crucial to Jungianism is the belief that man should be guided by his ‘unconscious', as revealed in dreams. So Jung changed his mind – on two conditions: Freeman had to be a co-editor and he had to include essays from disciples chosen by Jung.

Freeman accepted, but the second condition tried his patience beyond the limit. Urbane and charming he was, but Freeman was also used to getting his way, and neurotic European psychoanalysts were not his company of choice. He wrote in the margin of the essay by Jolande Jacobi, ‘I puke on this' and – scarcely restraining himself from throwing it in the bin – handed over the entire manuscript to his friend Norman MacKenzie.
12

Man and His Symbols
was completed in the month of Jung's death, June 1961, and published with an introduction by Freeman.

Freeman wrote that Jung had initially laid down the subject matter and outline of the book, but then ‘the last year of his life was devoted almost entirely to [finishing] it'. Jung had asked him to be co-editor (with his closest professional friend Dr Marie-Louise von Franz of Zurich) because he, Freeman, was the ‘average reader' and therefore what he could understand ‘would be intelligible to all'.

Freeman (and Norman MacKenzie) took their job seriously: ‘I have scrupulously insisted on having every paragraph written, and, if necessary, rewritten, to a degree of clarity and directness that enables me to say that in its entirety this book is designed for the general reader.' Freeman prided himself in his writing more than in his interviewing, and later said he wished he had spent more time as a teacher. Here he introduces the subject of the book:

Jung's thinking has coloured the world of modern psychology more than many of those with casual knowledge realise. Such familiar terms, for instance, as ‘extravert', ‘introvert', and ‘archetype' are all Jungian concepts – borrowed and sometimes misused by others. But his overwhelming contribution to psychological understanding is his concept of the unconscious – not (like the unconscious of Freud) merely a sort of glory-hole of repressed desires, but a world that is as much a vital and real part of the life of an individual as the conscious, ‘cogitating' world of the ego, and infinitely wider and richer. The language and the ‘people' of the unconscious are symbols, and the means of communication are dreams.

Thus an examination of
Man and His Symbols
is, in effect, an examination of man's relations with his unconscious. And since in Jung's view the unconscious is the great friend, guide and advisor to the conscious, the book is related in the most direct terms to the study of human beings and their spiritual problems.
13

The comedian Tony Hancock was Freeman's twelfth guest, the interview pre-recorded in January 1960. For Hancock, it was a huge honour to be invited. He was the first popular entertainer on a roll call of world-famous philosophers, lawyers and writers. He was an autodidact whose shelves at home in Sussex contained the works of
Russell and Jung – and now he was going to occupy the same chair as them! Hancock did not want to be regarded as a professional buffoon, but rather as an introspective thinker who spent much of his leisure time working on self-improvement, and he therefore took the interview very seriously. According to his brother, this was literally fatal, as it set him on a course of unhealthy introspection and self-destruction: ‘It was the biggest mistake he ever made. I think it all started from that really. He should never have done it. Tony was an intelligent man, but he was not an intellectual. He was carried away by John's intellect. Self-analysis – that was his killer.'
14

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