PATRICK McGOOHAN 1928-2009
The
recent death of the creator of The Prisoner Patrick McGoohan
was given surprisingly little publicity. One of those items towards
the end of the news where the newsreader adopts an appropriately
nostalgic, slightly reverential tone. Some fairly muted obituaries in
the newspapers, with the standard shots of McGoohan in his iconic
striped blazer as No. 6. ... Front page news this was not. The death
of John Mortimer, creator of 'much loved' courtroom drama Rumpole
Of The Bailey seemed to attract
more attention. By an odd coincidence the star of Rumpole
was the brilliantly garrulous Australian actor Leo McKern, perhaps
McGoohan's most prominent collaborator in The Prisoner.
Yet while Rumpole was
an intelligently written, entertaining and occasionally challenging
series, The Prisoner
was much more. It was it a ground breaking, iconoclastic and
revolutionary use of the medium of television which managed to hold
onto a mass audience even as it became increasingly 'weird', morphing
from what seemed to be a rather 'offbeat' take on the then-prominent
Cold War spy genre into a piece of Orwellian, Kafkaesque prophecy and
cold-eyed, dark social satire; culminating in the bizarre
theatricality and surrealism of its visionary final episodes Once
Upon A Time and Fall
Out.
In
some ways, however, the relative lack of comment is unsurprising. In
terms of his public persona and his impact on popular culture,
McGoohan was very much a figure of the past. For the past forty years
or so he had remained mostly in seclusion in Los Angeles, directing
and making guest appearances in a few episodes of Columbo
in the late '70s and making the occasional film appearance -
most notably in David Cronenberg's Scanners (1980) and
Mel Gibson's Braveheart
(1996)). Only the rather obscure independent film Kings and
Desperate Men, made in collusion
with his Prisoner cohort
Alexis Kanner in 1981, featured
the talents as a writer which had been so clearly showcased in the
key episodes of The Prisoner.
Over the years, as interest in the seventeen-episode series grew
through continual re-runs, widely available DVD box sets and the
activities of its own 'Appreciation Society', The Prisoner
has become established as a
televisual classic which now stands out prominently from much of the
forgotten morass of 1960s television. Yet sadly there was no
significant 'follow up' to the series from McGoohan, who found his
subsequent ideas for scripts and film projects would be rejected by
major film and TV producers as too avant-garde or 'uncommercial' for
a mass audience. In this way McGoohan can be said to resemble Orson
Welles. Like Welles' Citizen Kane
McGoohan's The Prisoner
managed to 'buck the system' of the major mass entertainment medium
of his day to produce a work that was an extremely quirky, highly
challenging, brilliantly realised and highly individual
vision. And, as with Citizen
Kane, the full impact of The
Prisoner only emerged in
posterity while its creator languished in increasing obscurity. Just
as Citizen Kane influenced
generations of film makers around the world by demonstrating the
immense artistic possibilities of popular film as medium, so The
Prisoner – which marries
action/adventure with a philosophical fable for our times - became
seen by subsequent TV 'auteurs' as a model for what a TV series could
achieve. The makers of sophisticated modern series such as Lost
have paid explicit tributes to
The Prisoner, citing
it as a key influence.
McGoohan
was an Irish-American who, with his clipped, upper class accent and
suavely cynical persona nevertheless seemed quintessentially
English. It was in England that he made it as an actor, firstly in
the theatre and then in the long-running and increasingly quirky
British 'secret agent' series Danger Man
which ran from 1963-1968, making him a household name in Britain.
From here on McGoohan could easily have gone on, like his
contemporary Sean Connery, to a long and 'glittering' Hollywood film
career playing edgy,'intelligent' action heroes. Despite how tempting
this must have been, McGoohan had his own agenda, and his own, highly
uncompromising, intransigent and often downright belligerent attitude
to popular culture in TV and film. He had principles.
Principles which must have rather baffled his paymasters, TV moguls
such as Lew Grade who viewed TV shows merely as popular
entertainment. Towards the end of Danger Man's
run, McGoohan exerted more and more influence on its production,
writing a number of scripts himself and continually insisting that
his character John Drake (the basis for the persona he later took
into The Prisoner as
No. 6) remain 'the spy with no guns and no girls', who would succeed
through wit and intelligence alone. McGoohan was scathing about the
use of what he called 'sex and all that rubbish' in popular genre
dramas and argued that John Drake should not be seen to be having
casual relationships with women as to do so would be irresponsible
given the level of danger in his job. Such a comment may have seemed
rather bizarre in the midst of the 'sexual revolution' of the 1960s
but in retrospect both Danger Man
and The Prisoner now
seem very sensibly respectful towards women while the contemporary
James Bond series looks rather nastily (if sometimes laughably)
misogynistic.
Sticking
to these principles, McGoohan twice turned down the extremely
lucrative offer of playing the role of James Bond. Instead he
preferred to move on from Danger Man
to create a series in The Prisoner
in which he could express his own specific concerns about what he saw
as the squeezing out of individuality and a growing culture of
mindless conformity in contemporary society, cleverly disguised as a
'spy thriller'. The series centres around a British spy who (after
his resignation from the service) is kidnapped by an unknown
organisation and held captive in a bizarre location known only as
'The Village' populated by former spies and officials from around the
world. In the early episodes the eponymous hero tries various
unsuccessful attempts to escape before eventually putting his efforts
into subverting The Village itself. As in Orwell's 1984,
The Village is a society in which every citizen is under constant
surveillance by cameras – the TV watches you rather than you
watching it. Yet while Orwell's vision of the future is grey,
monotonous, impoverished and bleak - what Orwell's hero Winston Smith
refers to as' a boot stamping on a human face forever' - the
residents of The Village are well fed, well dressed in smart,
colourful, informal 'uniforms' and superficially happy with their
lot, left to enjoy innocent pleasures as long as they conform.
Residents are known only by their alloted numbers, not their names,
which have been 'forgotten' in this supposed utopia. In reality The
Village maintains control over all its residents by a regime of
mind-control involving brainwashing, torture and the use of new
computer technologies and psychotropic drugs. The system is one of
totalitarianism with a smiling face, characterised by the Village's
cheery public address system which markedly resembles the mindlessly
superficial blandness of similar systems used in Butlins and other
holiday camps of the day. Throughout the series our hero - who we
know only as 'Number 6' - has to resist the many attempts which The
Village makes to 'break' him, to make him like the other citizens,
whom Number 6 contemptuously refers to as 'a row of cabbages'. As
Number 6, McGoohan radiates anger and defiance. His refusal to
explain the reasons for his resignation to his captors becomes
symbolic of the individual's defiance of society's strenuous attempts
to make him conform.
The
Prisoner is thus an allegorical
story and one which has many resonances with contemporary society and
political culture. Much of its appeal to contemporary audiences today
lies in its prophetic satirical vision of a future Britain which has
- particularly under the rule of 'New Labour' in the last decade -
come to pass. The chatty, informal , self-deprecating personal style
of the ever-changing 'Number 2s' who rule The Village bears an
uncanny resemblance to that of 'call me Tony' Blair and his acolytes
and successors. Under 'New Labour' Britons have become subject to a
regime of surveillance which covers virtually all its public spaces -
town centres, roads, railway and bus stations, shops, libraries,
cinemas, concert halls... the list is almost endless. Signs outside
shops tell us we must 'remove hats and headgear' before entering (as
if the wearing of hats is now illegal!). Everywhere we go the cameras
watch us. Crazed New Labour bureaucrats dream up schemes whereby
every car journey we make is monitored so that the authorities know
exactly where we are
going at all times. Announcers on trains blandly repeat that 'CCTV
cameras are in place for your security'. Britain, in short, has
become The Village. Just as in The Village, our 'masters' have become
extremely keen to use every form of new technology they can to
control and monitor us. There are plans to monitor every phone call,
every email... not to mention the centralization of data implied by
the creation of New Labour's ultimate totalitarian fantasy, the
National Identity Card. Significantly, the activist organisation
opposing the Identity Card is known as NO 2 ID, a direct reference to
The Prisoner.
Two
incidents I witnessed recently brought home to me just how
prophetically accurate McGoohan's vision was. One was when I
attempted to buy a 'family ticket' at the entrance to, of all places,
Blackpool Tower. I was asked first not for my name, but for my
postcode, as if my postcode was indeed 'my number'. Another time I
was standing in a railway station in London. A man was standing on
the stairs next to me, rather idly staring into space, when a
disembodied voice from above suddenly ordered him to move, as he was
'blocking the steps'. At first the man ignored the order, before it
was barked back at him. Then he looked up, startled, as if suddenly
realising that the voice was directed at him. Of course, after that,
he moved immediately. The scene was eerily reminiscent of several in
McGoohan's series. In one episode of The Prisoner
our hero suddenly finds himself shunned by his fellow residents who
keep calling him 'Unmutual!'. Today he'd probably be arbitrarily
given an Anti Social Behaviour Order.
The
most shocking thing about all this is the way in which the British
population has so quietly acquiesced to this intense level of
surveillance and social control. Indeed, you could almost argue that
we have brought it on ourselves by our passivity and natural
acquiescence. These days, the training starts early...This
is a country in which almost every child in the country is forced
into a school uniform at the age of four. Until a few years ago
school uniforms were only usually imposed in secondary schools. Now
even primary schools adopt them as a
corporate badge of identity. The change swept through the country
unheralded. Who complained? The ease with which the British
Government introduced its smoking ban and measures by which anyone
'seeming to be under 25' is likely to be 'IDed' when attempting to
buy alcohol (when the relevant legal age is all of seven years
younger) are further examples of the British public's cowed
acceptance of whatever its masters declare is 'necessary'. Indeed, we
seem to actively fetishise surveillance and control - witness the
huge popularity of the reversed Orwelllianism of Big
Brother and other so-called
'Reality TV' shows, where the act of surveillance becomes a national
pastime (you can even watch the contestants in these shows as they
sleep, just as if you are No. 2 himself!). Then we can take pleasure
in controlling the inhabitants by a 'democratic' eviction process
until only one stupefied 'victim' remains. As No. 2 tells No. 6 on
his helicopter ride over The Village ' we have our own Town Council
here. Democratically elected, of course....' Thus The
Prisoner, though it was made
over forty years ago now, stands as a brilliantly caustic, funny and
very scary picture of our modern life and culture. Though he was
influenced by Orwell, McGoohan's vision is more accurate as a
prediction of the future. What McGoohan got especially right was the
essential nature of passivity in British culture which he saw as
inevitably leading us towards the kind of 'soft totalitarianism'
which dominates our culture today. 'A row of cabbages' indeed...
Soon
a new production of The Prisoner is
to hit our screens. This will apparently be a six part mini series
and has been filmed in, of all places, Namibia. It features an
American actor, Jim Caveziel as No. 6 and Ian McKellan as No. 2.
Initial reports are promising. For years a Prisoner
sequel was mooted and various disparate rumours of film and TV
versions abounded. Many of the proposed remakes were quashed by
McGoohan, who was naturally protective of the work he will always be
remembered for. It is sad that he will not be around to see this new
version. Maybe the new production will add further contemporary
relevance to the story and even open up the possibility of future
Prisoners. Or maybe it
will be a mere footnote to McGoohan's masterpiece. Despite his
failure to follow the series with anything equally substantial, The
Prisoner will - whatever its
contemporary relevance to future generations- always stand as a
landmark in television; the first time the medium of the TV series
was used to express a clear authorial vision and a personal
philosophy. Its imagery, set design and use of locations -
particularly the Portmeirion Hotel in North Wales - have become
iconic. And some of its key phrases have survived as still-powerful
statements of defiance against the attacks on personal liberty which
'our masters' have seen fit to impose upon us. In particular, No. 6's
most famous declarations are
ones we might well repeat as we cast
those National Identity Cards into the flames where they belong. They
also stand as a testament to McGoohan's own defiant individuality and
his refusal to be cowed by 'the system'. 'I am not a number' he tells
us, 'I am a free man!' And 'I will not be pushed, filed, briefed,
debriefed or numbered. My life is my own!'
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CHRIS GREGORY is the author of BE SEEING YOU: DECODING THE PRISONER, the only full scale analytical work as yet published on THE PRISONER. It can be obtained directly HEREor through amazon.co.uk
HEREEvery copy is personally signed and dedicated by the author.
Chris' new series of blogs THE PRISONER EPISODE BY EPISODE will be appearing here very soon.
Watch this space!!!!