Film Review
A genius like us
Joe Orton's brutal murder in August 1967, perpetrated by
his long-term lover Kenneth Halliwell, made a shocking news story - enough
to make everyone in the country prick up their ears in morbid surprise.
What made the event so newsworthy was the fact that Orton had enjoyed a meteoic
rise to fame in the three years preceding his death. His two West End
successes -
Entertaining Mr Sloane and
Loot - had been vilified
and lauded in equal measure on account of their brazenly farcical treatment
of the two great social taboos - sex and death - but Orton was the new darling
of the more liberal-minded critics. He was on the brink of national,
if not international, stardom when, suddenly, his life was violently snuffed
out - ironically by the one man who was closest to him and to whom he owed
a large measure of his success. Orton's short and eventful life
saw a barely educated drop-out blossom into a gifted man of letters with
a burning desire to thrust into the public gaze the sordid truths about human
beings that lay hidden beneath a thick veneer of sham respectability.
It is a rich and fascinating story, one that would seem to offer abundant
material for a '60s-era biopic, although the writer's continuing (ill-deserved)
reputation as a mischievous purveyor of lewd filth ensured that this could
be a highly risky enterprise for any filmmaker.
Two decades on from Orton's tragic demise, up-and-coming director Stephen
Frears and established playwright Alan Bennett joined forces to take on this
formidable feat, albeit somewhat less successfully than you might have hoped.
Frears and Bennett would seem to be ideally suited for this venture, both
(now) having a proven track record at getting under the skin of their (often
unconventional) subjects and exposing the unpalatable truths of the human
condition in their well-regarded body of work. In their hands, the
bizarre and grimly ill-fated story of Joe Orton and Kenneth Halliwell is -
regrettably - cleaned up, simplified and recast as a whimsical mix of fairytale
romance and skewed black comedy, a pretty conventional tale of love and ambition
that ends discordantly in pure horror.
Prick Up Your Ears
may not have been an out-and-out success when it was first seen in 1987 (the
release timed to coincide with the 20th anniversary of Orton's death) but
it is now considered an essential classic of British queer cinema, although,
sadly, it is a film that now appears dated and pretty unsympathetic to the
gay cause, too unwilling to break with convention and take the kind of chances
that made Orton such a standout figure in his time.
Joe Orton's oeuvre may be modest, but,
si j'ose dire, it is perfectly
formed, consisting of three widely performed full-length plays (the finest
being his uproariously funny last work,
What the Butler Saw) and six
minor plays (four of which originated as dramas for radio or television).
There's also an unused madcap screenplay (originally commissioned by The
Beatles) and a handful of highly innovative novels (none published in his
lifetime), including the brilliantly weird
Head to Toe. Despite
dying at the age of 34, Orton had a life that is as extraordinary and fascinating
as his literary output, and the American writer John Lahr did a superb job
of getting to the truth of the man in his meticulously researched 1978 biography
of Orton. The publication of Joe Orton's diaries in 1986 - which are
both hilarious and shocking in their frankness, particularly in regard to
the author's unbridled sexual escapades - gave us a further blistering insight
into a man who might very well, if he had lived longer, surpassed Harold
Pinter (a great admirer of his work) and become the pre-eminent British dramatist
of his generation.
Unlike his university-educated contemporaries, success did not fall easily
into Orton's lap. In fact, he would seem be a prime candidate for the
poster boy of self-improvement. His personal transformation from impoverished,
working class nobody to highly regarded literary celebrity, achieved through
long years of hard slog and almost super-human self-denial, was possibly
the most incredible of his achievements. When he left school at the
age of 16, John Orton (as he was then named) was a puny, asthmatic, inarticulate
semi-literate but he had a fantastic dream: to be an actor. For the
next few years he put everything he had into fulfilling this ambition, taking
elocution lessons to rid himself of his working class Leicestershire accent
and taking whatever work he could find in local drama societies. Through
a combination of good luck and judicious cunning, he evaded National Service
and found a place at RADA, the country's top acting school. When he
finally realised that an actor's life was not for him, Orton immediately
switched to writing, battling on against a barrage of rejection slips from
stuffy publishers unimpressed by his early literary offerings.
When he finally managed to make a name for himself in his early thirties,
Orton (now named Joe) had completed his metamorphosis. Having refashioned
himself into one of the most promising writers of his age, he was confident,
charming, articulate and driven by a clear sense of purpose: to ram a dirty
great torpedo (or whichever phallic symbol you can imagine) through the accepted
norms of conventional society. He was more than a writer, though.
He was a social and sexual revolutionary, utterly fearless in his efforts
to expose the unsavoury truths that stinkingly festered behind the thickly
lined curtain of British propriety. Orton's obsession with bodybuilding
allowed him to transform his body as well, giving him a svelte, muscular
physique that would have allowed him to pursue a parallel career as a professional
male model if he had wished it. A will of iron was undoubtedly the
main driver in Orton's desire to recreate himself, but no less important
was the support he enjoyed over a sixteen-year period from the man who was
the most significant person in his life - his flatmate, mentor, co-author
and lover Kenneth Halliwell.
In the diary in which he meticulously (and humorously) charts the last eight
months of his life, Orton freely admits the debt he owed Halliwell but in
public, once he had secured fame for himself, he kept this fact to himself.
He couldn't allow his friend so much as the merest hint of recognition for
the part he had played in his intellectual and cultural development, let
alone the possibility that he had some input into his work. As they
shared everything else in life, so Orton and Halliwell shared ideas in their
separate projects and Halliwell provided an invaluable service in editing,
refining, galvanising and commenting on Orton's work. It was Orton's
seeming ingratitude towards the man who had played so large a role in his
personal transformation that was to be his undoing. Halliwell grew
to resent Orton's success and, fearing an imminent end to their long and
intensely hermetic relationship, succumbed to the mental instability that
would have such terrible consequences for both men. Reading Lahr's
biography, or watching the film which it engendered, it is hard not to have
sympathy for Halliwell as his world collapses in ruins and self-revulsion
whilst Orton's becomes ever more glorious with every passing day. Yet
Halliwell was never a sympathetic man - he was narcissistic, pretentious
and unable to connect with anyone other than his talented young disciple.
Such is the stark brutality with which this sad man dispatched his friend,
literally beating out his brains as he slept, that it is impossible to see
him as anything other than the villain in Orton's story, the story of a complete
outsider who was determined above all else to make his time on Earth count
for something.
Raging too correctly
Frears' film takes its title from Lahr's biography, which is fair enough
as this is the main source for the material shown on screen (albeit with
some obvious omissions and alterations to reduce the likelihood of causing
offence). Orton himself had originally conceived
Prick Up Your Ears
as a working title for his abandoned Beatles screenplay (re-titled
Up
Against It) and later chose it for the title of his fourth play, a historical
farce set during the coronation of Edward VII - a project he planned to start
after completing work on
What the Butler Saw. Oddly, the film's
title (a multi-layered pun that typifies Orton's clever mischief at word
play) is the most risqué thing this surprisingly tame biopic has to
offer. The more sordid aspects of Orton's life (some described in lubricious
detail in the writer's jaw-droppingly explicit diaries) are daintily glossed
over, and the factors that hardened the writer's resolve as he committed
himself to his Sisyphus-like treadmill (his family history, his obsessive
yearning for recognition, his utter contempt for social norms and phoney
values) are not given anything like the emphasis they deserve. The
Joe Orton that Frears and Bennett present us with is an appallingly watered
down, barely interesting imitation of the real man, essentially just a pretty
boy wannabe writer who hits the big time by happenstance, only to get himself
cut down in his prime by his estranged lover. For the most part, it's
depressingly glib and soapy, and does hardly any justice to the subject at
all.
Gary Oldman and Alfred Molina are both gifted actors and it is fair to say
they each turn in some exemplary work on this film. Yet their portrayal
of Orton and Halliwell is so wide of the mark that you can only weep at the
waste of talent. It could be the fault of the dialogue or merely the
actors' preconceived notions of what a gay man of this era looked and sounded
like, but something is definitely off, with Oldman and Molina both casually
embellishing their otherwise solid performances with a noticeable air of
femme campness. In real life, neither Orton nor Halliwell lived up
to the stereotypical picture of gayness - indeed Orton was by all accounts
pretty contemptuous of effeminate homosexuals and insisted that in the staging
of each of his plays all of the gay or bisexual characters be played as ordinary
blokes, with no outward sign of their sexual orientation. Not only
did no one in Orton's family have the slightest inkling of his true sexuality
(including his beloved younger sister Leonie), Orton had no difficulty passing
himself of as a heterosexual divorcee when he became a public figure. (Naturally,
Orton could not reveal he was gay as such an admission risked him being sent
to prison - homosexuality was not decriminalised in the UK until two weeks
before his death.) Oldman's physical appearance may be a fair approximation
to Orton's, but Molina can't help looking like a grotesque caricature of
Halliwell. Whereas the real Halliwell bore quite a striking physical
resemblance to Orton (once he had acquired an adequate wig to conceal his
premature baldness), Molina's portrayal is somewhere between the Addams Family's
Uncle Fester and a sinister interloper from a Harold Pinter play.
Oldman and Molina not only fail to convince in their portrayal of their respective
characters, there is also something distinctly off in the way they interact.
There is nothing to account for the Svengali-like power of attraction that
Halliwell exerted over Orton in the early stage of their relationship, and
in the later scenes the two men end up looking like a jaded couple in a crappy
television sitcom, endlessly squawking and bitching. Apart from a truly
creepy seduction scene (in which we can just about make out Orton and Halliwell
kissing in near darkness), there's no sense of the mutually felt eroticism
that Orton describes in his diaries (which endured even in their last few
months of life) - indeed there's hardly any sign that the two men felt anything
at all for one another except resentment for being stuck in the same room.
Prick Up Your Ears's main failing as a biopic is that it offers scarcely
a clue as to just what it was that drew Orton and Halliwell together in the
first place and why they stayed together for so long, sharing a single room
that was barely large enough to accommodate two single beds and a desk, let
alone two overgrown egos.
As Lahr makes clear in his biography, it was Orton's relationship with Halliwell
that was the most crucial thing in his life. Halliwell not only gave
Orton the domestic and emotional security he desperately craved (and which
had been denied him by his god-awful parents), but also the exceptionally
broad literary education that was essential for an aspiring writer.
To gloss over such a vital part of the Joe Orton story, as Frears' film does
with such apparent indifference, is to lose sight of possibly the single
most important element of Orton's incredible development from uneducated
boy from the slums to fearless literary innovator. This is a shame
as Oldman does a reasonably good job at portraying Orton's physical transformation,
ultimately exuding the true-to-life mix of cocksuredness and careless insensitivity
that ultimately led the writer to his doom. Molina also makes the most
of the material he is given, bringing a genuinely felt poignancy to his depiction
of Halliwell, a man who was as much traumatised by his own personal tragedies
(the death of his mother from a wasp sting and his father's subsequent suicide)
as his inability to find his way as an artist whilst his friend blazed a
sure path to literary glory.
Alan Bennett's over-simplistic, over-tentative script is probably most to
blame for this unfortunate misrepresentation of Orton and Halliwell.
It is indeed odd, in view of the fact that Bennett is himself openly gay
and has no qualms about writing about homosexuality in his plays and stories
(often with immense tact and sensitivity), that he should fail so drastically
to capture the true Joe Orton in his screenplay. Orton's hedonistic
indulgences are admittedly referenced in a few scenes - his habit of gratifying
the lust instinct in men's public lavatories and taking trips to Morocco
to buy willing Arab teenage boys for sex - but it is always with a cold,
almost prudish sense of detachment, carefully avoiding showing anything that
might rile the censor or shock the average cinemagoer. The raunchiest
scene - referencing the most flagrantly erotic entry in Orton's diary, the
Saturnalian orgy in a London pissoir - is artfully choreographed but leaves just
about everything to the imagination. Bennett's downplaying of the prurient
details of Orton's life is hard to account for but may have been a consequence
of the public backlash in the wake of the AIDS pandemic of the early-to-mid
1980s. It was a time when homophobia in the general public was at its
height and the film's authors may have been justifiably concerned over how
their film might be received. To focus too much attention on Orton's
risky sex life could well have been seen as condoning the kind of dangerous
sexual behaviour that was turbo-charging the deadliest public health crisis in living memory.
Missing out on the best comedy of all
What
Prick Up Your Ears lacks in authenticity it makes up for in entertainment
value. Amusing cameo appearances by Frances Barber, Julie Walters,
Margaret Tyzack and Richard Wilson add to the film's charm and amusement,
in the way that a good sauce manages to pep up a slightly undercooked steak.
Sad to say, none of the characters played by this illustrious roll call has
the opportunity to make a meaningful impact on the drama - another obvious
deficiency in a generally unsatisfactory screenplay which merely underscores
the film's superficiality and lack of coherence. Given the importance
that Orton's monstrously cruel mother and zombie-like father had on shaping
the man he became and his oeuvre (they crop up again and again in his plays)
it seems incredible that they scarcely get a mention in the film. Orton's
raging against authority and prim respectability were doubtless seeded by
the ill-treatment he received by his mother, who took a sadistic delight
in tormenting her offspring and humiliating her husband. Facets of
Mrs Elsie Orton crop up again and again in the greater part of her son's work,
from the grotesquely self-interested Kath in
Entertaining Mr Sloane
and Fay in
Loot to the frightening cavalcade of power-yielding, man-oppressing
matriarchs in
Head to Toe. Played by Julie Walters in the film
she is nothing more than a harmless old biddy.
The characterisation is undeniably a weak point of the film, but so is its
hackneyed elliptical narrative structure, which is an unsuccessful attempt
at bringing an illusion of coherence to a script that is manifestly lacking
in structure and substance. The film opens with the discovery of the
two dead bodies on the morning after Halliwell's murderous assault and suicide,
and then proceeds to tell the story, in an unevenly patchy manner, through
the somewhat lame device of Orton's biographer, John Lahr, seeking information
from the author's literary agent, Peggy Ramsay. A strong performance
from Vanessa Redgrave makes Peggy appear the central character in the drama,
drawing the focus needlessly away from Orton and Halliwell and thereby diminishing
the film's depth and emotional impact. Despite the credible performances
from Oldman and Molina - both highly accomplished actors who would go on
to shine in subsequent screen roles - we end up with only the sketchiest
impression of the characters they are playing.
The film is crying out for a more Ortonesque treatment, revelling in the
anarchy and mischief that made Orton's voice so fresh and distinctive that
you just had to prick up you ears and listen to what he had to say.
But this just isn't Alan Bennett's style and so what the film delivers is
a too inhibited, too self-consciously sanitised account of Joe Orton's life,
often excessively simplistic as it casually intersperses factually accurate
episodes (as recounted in Lahr's biography or Orton's diaries) with some
obviously fictional embellishments. The scene depicting Orton's apparent
deflowering by Halliwell whilst watching the coronation of Queen Elizabeth
II on television in 1953 is a typically Bennett-esque flight of fancy.
(It might be possible to accept the ludicrous premise that two impecunious
social drop-outs might have gotten their hands on a television set at this
time, but it is utterly laughable that the convention-hating Orton would
have sat through such a spectacle of pomp and majesty, even whilst being molested
by a man seven years his senior). The reality
is that the two men were already sharing the same bed (and enjoying doing
so) as early as 1951, at the time Orton was living in Halliwell's London
flat (with two other students) in their RADA days.
What is perhaps more surprising is what manages to get left out of the story.
Orton's nightmarish experience of having to constantly rewrite his play
Loot
during its seemingly doomed tour of the UK (an ordeal that drove him to distraction
and very nearly led him to give up writing for good) is completely omitted,
along with his grimly Kafkaesque attempt to obtain a temporary visa so that
he could visit New York and oversee rehearsals for a Broadway production
of
Entertaining Mr Sloane. Other oversights include: Orton's
close friendship with the actor Kenneth Williams, his guest appearance on
the TV show
Call My Bluff and a disastrous holiday excursion to Libya
that is too hilarious for words. Fortunately, the library book
defacing episode and subsequent trial and imprisonment are accurately portrayed
in the film, and rightly so as Orton's incarceration was the defining moment
that gave him the impetus to become a great writer.
Whilst it is patently lacking the authenticity, depth and rigour of John
Lahr's biography, Frears'
Prick Up Your Ears does a reasonable job
of introducing a mainstream audience to a largely (and justly) forgotten
literary talent who still manages to influence and inspire other writers
to this day, without shocking their delicate bourgeois sensibilities.
The biopic has often been considered one of the least satisfactory of cinema
genres, and very few films of this kind have lived up to expectations.
With that in mind, and given the controversial nature of its subject, a biopic
on Joe Orton was always going to be a pretty hit-and-miss affair. On the
plus side, the film is handsomely photographed, in a way that accurately
evokes the period and locations in which Orton lived, and benefits from an
excellent cast and Frears' typically meticulous mise-en-scène.
Not long before this, Frears had won acclaim for his gay-themed drama
My Beautiful Laundrette
(1985) and would go on to gain international prominence with his lavish period
piece
Dangerous Liaisons
(1988). Alan Bennett's dialogue is mildly witty and coyly suggestive
- adequate perhaps for a mainstream movie depicting gay men hoping to recover
its production costs, but not what is required in a biography of a man who
revelled in being scurrilously mischievous and laugh-out-loud funny.
Whatever shortcomings
Prick Up Your Ears may have, Stephen Frears
would redeem himself handsomely three decades later with his marvellous TV
mini-series
A Very English Scandal (2018), which offered a for more
truthful and explicit account of the scandalous love affair that destroyed
the political career of the Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe.
There is one thing that we can be reasonably confident about - Joe Orton
would almost certainly have loathed just about everything that Frears and
Bennett did with his life story. Snared up in the trite conventionalities
of the day and showing all too clearly a shameless reluctance to engage with
the underlying truths of what make us tick,
Prick Up Your Ears is almost
the absolute antithesis of a Joe Orton work. You can just imagine what
cold poison would flow from the pen of Mrs Edna Welthorpe (Orton's alter
ego, a fictional standard-bearer of self-righteous middle-class morality):
'Dear Mr Bennett, I cannot tell you how glad I am that, in the interests
of public decency, you have seen fit to expurgate the filth and depravity
from the life of that terrible Mr Orton. I enjoyed your film immensely
and was especially delighted with the happy ending.' And should we be so
shocked by the film's ending, a twisted inversion of that of Steinbeck's
Of Mice and Men? There is ample evidence that Joe Orton was
habitually tickled by the absurdities of life and appeared not to have the
slightest qualm over dying before his time. On 14th July 1967, just under
a month before Halliwell killed him, Orton wrote in his diary: 'I shall
be a disgusting old man myself one day... Only I have high hopes of
dying in my prime.'
© James Travers 2024
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