 The Singing Detective
1 9 8 6 (UK)
6 x 60 minute episodes
One
of the few saving graces of the 2003 movie version of The
Singing Detective (aside from Robert Downey Jr's credible
performance in the title role) was that it retained much of Dennis
Potter's dialogue, giving it some much-needed substance.
For all the film's good intentions, however, it still didn't
hold a candle to Potter's compelling original version which first
graced British television screens in 1986.
The six-part BBC serial revolved around the personal
entanglements (real, remembered, and imagined) of the thriller
author, Philip Marlow, who is hospitalised, suffering from acute
psoriasis and from the side-effects associated with its
treatment.
The result was a complex, multi-layered series which overlaid
the varied interests and themes of the detective thriller, the
hospital drama, the musical and the autobiography.
Michael Gambon - who won a BAFTA for his troubles - was simply
superb as Marlow, who chooses to escape the agony of his illness
and the mind-numbing bleakness of his hospital ward by imagining
himself as The Singing Detective, the crooning, crime-fighting
hero of one of his novels. Interspersed with his fantasies are
less than pleasant memories of his wartime childhood, to say
nothing of some bizarre but toe-tapping 1940s musical numbers.
The Singing Detective was not only the serial that the
TV viewer was watching, but the book that Marlow was rewriting in
his head. This added to the intricacy (and confusion!) as the same
characters would appear in different narratives, played by the
same actor, and at times characters from one narrative would
appear in another, or a character would lip-synch the lines of
another character from a different narrative, and characters would
even comment on their role, and speak directly to the camera.
Questions of time past and present were also rendered complex.
In narrative 1, in the present, Marlow was reconstructing two
pasts: the book he wrote a long time ago, which was itself set in
the past, and a part of his childhood, also set in 1945.
The main enigmas in his text are set in that year. In the
second narrative, who killed the busker, Sonia, Amanda, Lilli and
Mark Binney? And why? In narrative 3, who shat on the table? Why
did Mrs. Marlow commit suicide? Although narratives 1 and 2
usually (but not always) followed story chronology, in narrative
3, it was not really clear what the actual chronology of the young
Philip's life actually was.

There were obvious parallels between the story and Potter's own
personal history. Like Marlow, Potter was born and brought up in
the Forest of Dean at about the same time as Philip was a wartime
evacuee, and like Philip he stayed in Hammersmith with relations
who had difficulty with his strong Gloucestershire accent.
Two key incidents in The Singing Detective were based on
real-life incidents in Potter's childhood - His mother, a pub
pianist, being kissed by a man; and Potter's writing a four-letter
word on the blackboard when his precocious facility as a young
writer made him unpopular with other schoolchildren.
Director Jon Amiel did a terrific job of creating three very
different worlds, while the acting was consistently brilliant
across the cast (right down to Lyndon Davies as the young Marlow
and Imelda Staunton as one of the scariest nurses ever put on
camera).
The serial was explicitly concerned with psychoanalysis - the
text rich in Freudian imagery and symbolism, and Marlow's neurosis
and paranoia are explicitly linked to his repression of painful
childhood memories, notably his mother's adultery, her eventual
suicide and the mental breakdown of a fellow pupil after a beating
by a teacher.
The ''explicit'' content of the show seems pretty tame with the
benefit of 20+ years hindsight - it's hard to believe that the
brief sex scenes or the sight of Joanne Whalley's Nurse Mills
greasing up Gambon had Angry of Tunbridge Wells fuming so much in
1986.
|