Actor and director David Hayman is determined not to close his eyes to
life's injustices . . . even if it means getting up everyone else's
nose, finds JACKIE McGLONE.
PEOPLE seem to either love or hate David Hayman. ''Oooh, aaah, you are
interviewing David are you?'' sighed an actress friend. ''He's
absolutely gorgeous,'' she breathed, very heavily. ''Who are you writing
about this week?'' asked a man in the office. ''David Hayman? I can't
stand him. Isn't he the Jimmy Boyle character? No, I definitely don't
like him. I don't care for what he stands for.''
How, I wondered, did this chap know what Hayman stands for? He has
never met him and seems to avoid all his performances and his works like
the plague. Surely, on the basis of one role in one film, albeit one as
contentitious and controversial as A Sense of Freedom, Hayman can't be
dismissed as ''the Hardman'' of Scottish artistic life.
Consider the 42-year-old's achievements so far. He has been in theatre
for more than 20 years, ran 7:84 for three years, directed the multiple
award-winning Silent Scream, as well as Govan Ghost Story and the recent
mini-series, Firm Friends, has just finished directing a feature film,
The Hawk, starring Helen Mirren, and has a terrific piece of work, Black
and Blue, about police corruption and racism, going out on BBC1 tomorrow
night in the Screen One slot. The film has upset the English
Establishment even before it has been shown, with John Stalker
fulminating in a Sunday broadsheet about this ''parcel of too much
fiction in an unconvincing wrapping''. Black and Blue, wrote Stalker,
''raises disturbing new questions about the portrayal of the police on
television''.
Perhaps that's the problem. David Hayman, actor, director and
political animal with a burning desire to change the world, doesn't mind
getting right up people's noses. And he is not going to apologise to
John Stalker if the former police officer does not find his work --
dread words, politically correct. There is something so up-front, so
painfully honest about Hayman, that you feel he would never be able to
hide his true feelings. That is surely what makes him such a compelling
actor and such a good director.
''I only put my name to things I actually believe in,'' he says, the
light of battle in his eyes. ''Without being pompous, that is what keeps
me going. I am not interested in fame and fortune or living in my ivory
tower. I want to change the world, foolishly, because I will die failing
in that attempt. But if in the process I can influence and provoke and
make people think and somehow shatter their preconceptions about things
they hold dear, like the institutions in this country, then I'll have
done my job.
''But first and foremost, you have to entertain people, otherwise I
might as well call a political meeting and tub-thump, which I'm
certainly not geared to. You have to subsume the politics, but you must
also make sure the message comes across because Black and Blue is a
piece of political cinema, which I hope still brings out the basic
humanity of the characters involved.'' Hayman certainly brings out
tremendous performances from a starry white cast, brilliantly backed up
by a group of young black actors, of whom more should be heard and seen
soon, although Hayman suspects that ''they will all sit around on their
arses for a year, wondering what the hell has happened to them, because
the work is simply not there for black actors in this country''.
The son of working-class parents -- Hayman's father's family is from
Arran, his mother's from Glasgow via Australia -- he grew up in
Bridgeton and joined the Citizens' Close Theatre company from drama
school, having left school with not an ''O'' level to his name. His
first job was in the steel industry. The boy David strutted his stuff to
glorious effect for 10 years at the Citz, where he played virtually
every classical role in the canon and then some. When he left, his life
changed dramatically because his steelworker father's had also changed
-- he was suddenly made redundant in the middle of the seventies. An
event which opened Hayman's eyes to a more political sense of
responsibility as an artist.
The first role he was offered on leaving the Citz, with whom he will
be forever associated as ''the nude Hamlet'' (he wasn't, he wore a
jock-strap) and Lady Macbeth in the famous all-male production of the
Scottish play, was that of Jimmy Boyle in A Sense of Freedom. It was his
first grown-up role in front of the camera, although he had worked
extensively as a child actor on television. When the film was shown on
national television, the viewing figures were around the 20 million
mark. As he admits, his market value, his price, changed overnight.
HE SAYS, modestly: ''By all accounts, it was a reasonable performance
and not a bad showcase for a classical actor who had spent 10 years with
one company. The minute I had done that, the phone never stopped ringing
for two years. 'Come and do The Sweeney, Minder, The Professionals, be
the Glasgow Hardman, be the Hit Man, come and be Jimmy Boyle, just
repeat your Jimmy Boyle performance for us'. I turned them all down. I
thought, what more do I have to do to prove I can act? Instantly, I was
pigeon-holed. And that's why I started to direct. I no longer had any
control as an actor.''
The script he chose to direct was John Byrne's The Slab Boys at the
Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, and he went on to direct plays at the Bush
Theatre and the Royal Court in London. After 10 years of the divine
decadence that was the Citz throughout the seventies, Hayman also knew
he hungered to explore film and naturalism. ''I was a born radical; I
love getting up people's noses. Brecht said that theatre should create
moral scandal, and Giles Havergal and Philip Prowse understood that very
well. It was a heady time, and the lifestyle we were involved in was
almost as exciting as the work itself.''
The actors played around with their sexuality onstage and off. In
1969, Hayman has recalled wearing eye make-up (offstage, mind), an
ear-ring, a woman's fur coat, a great sombrero hat, and hair down to his
shoulders. His aunts and uncles would run up the street as this vision
bore down upon them, he once said.
David Hayman 1992-style is very different. His head is shaved bald as
a coot -- ''directors don't need hair,'' he says, mysteriously. He wears
a casually fashionable black leather jacket, black jeans, rubber-soled
shoes and a black leather cap. A famished wolf, as one critic noted, he
is as lean and hungry-looking as he was in the Citz days when the Royal
Shakespeare Company was wont to offer him more and more money to play
Hamlet and Caesar (he is so thin, he'd be better casting as Cassius).
''I said, 'no thanks'. I have played Hamlet twice, in two different
productions, to my own people, I told them, in my own town and in my own
country; I am not going to come to Stratford and play it to Japanese and
American tourists. It wouldn't excite me and you wouldn't get the best
out of me. They couldn't understand that I had had my 10 years of all
that stuff, it was exciting, it was extraordinary, it was innovative.
Yes, it was bliss in that dawn to be alive and to be young. We were
sitting with the head on fire, while schoolkids whose teachers had
cancelled the show after all the stuff in the local press queued to see
the Hamlet. It was amazing.
''I still remember at the screening of A Sense of Freedom, a wee man
coming up to me and saying, 'Mr Hayman, I just want to tell you how much
your performance as Lady Macbeth meant to me. I hugged him because he
had just watched me for 90 minutes playing Jimmy Boyle on this huge
screen and yet it was the Lady Macbeth that lived in his memory. Now I
have to admit I have a real longing to get back onstage.''
THERE is, says Hayman, one great sadness in his life. His work is
almost always in England. ''I live a stone's throw from BBC Scotland and
10 minutes' walk away from STV, and I'd love to stay and work in
Glasgow. I want to work in my own city, in my own country, but the
offers come from elsewhere, so I have to go; it's crazy when you think
about something like Silent Scream, say, which won multiple awards all
over the world, as well as a British Academy Award, yet nobody in
Scotland is giving me a job. They import English directors all the time
to do whatever it is they do. I know I have just spent #2[1/2]m of the
BBC's money in London and I know that they don't have that sort of money
up here, but I don't want to have to go away to work.
''I miss my kids. I have to commute something like 24 months out of
26.'' He has two sons, Sam, 6, and Dave, 4, and has been with their
mother, his former social worker wife, Alice Griffin, for a dozen years.
''I do not see any reason why we shouldn't make a Black and Blue set in
Glasgow. This is an international melting-pot of a city, with its own
dynamic and its own drama. Why can't we have films like that produced
here, films which reflect the true nature of this country? If this
country is to have any democratic future, these are the issues we ought
to be examining.
''What do we get on our television screens? Strathblair, with two men
and a dug running over a hillside and you think, 'why?' And why the hell
are they doing a remake of Dr Finlay's Casebook? Why don't they make any
programmes about contemporary life?
''For instance, the National Front is on the rise here, something I
never thought I would see. There are 27,000 handguns in Strathclyde,
there are many, many stabbings every week in this city, the murder rate
is rising in Paisley, for instance, the crime rate is shocking, there
are problems with drug addiction and pushing, look at the state of the
housing people have to live in in Castlemilk and Drumchapel . . . just
look at it! I can't close my eyes to all that. I can't close my eyes to
kids dying in Somalia, to what is happening in Yugoslavia, to horror
upon horror, to one bleak news bulletin after another. Why do I want to
change the world? Well, I certainly don't like the way the world is, do
you?'' he snaps back.
''I can't put on rose-coloured spectacles and hope it will go away
because it makes me feel uncomfortable. I want people to stop and think
about the kind of world we are going to hand over to our children. I
want my kids to grow up in and develop in a better world than I grew up
in. Unlikely. But I will go on trying.''
* Black and Blue is on BBC1 tomorrow at 9.25pm.
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