Yesterday,
Saturday, on the march again and needing something to do while avoiding the
rain and waiting for the performance to begin, a newspaper was bought and the
pages flicked through to see if there was anything of interest.
Then in the
obituaries page was one about someone I knew slightly from a long time ago. He was Joe Melia, the actor with a fine
reputation and well respected in the profession. At one time in the early 1950’s he did his
National Service, so Remembrance Sunday is a good time to reflect on his life.
He did the
Russian course as a member of the Intelligence Corps, so what he then did is an
interesting question. As he served with
Dennis Potter whose memories were of long days slogging through Russian press
and journals he could have been doing this, or perhaps working on intercepts or
other sources. Perhaps Joe’s later
talent for the surreal was based on this experience.
He went on
to Downing College ,
Cambridge on a
scholarship and may well have turned out for one of the College soccer teams;
he was big and quick enough. He studied
English under F.R. Leavis (see Wikipedia) a leading exponent of a major school
of criticism. His talents on the stage
meant he was noticed and became part of leading Reviews.
Given that
Joe came from a family who were blitzed out of London to live in a very ordinary district of
Leicester it shows that social mobility was alive and kicking in the mid 1950’s. He would have been at a local Council Elementary
or Junior School before escaping at 11 into the “City
Boys” grammar school. It was located
between the city centre Municipal Tram Depot and the Palais de Dance.
One of the
intellectual conflicts of the late 1950’s and early 1960’s was between C.P.
Snow who argued against the division of Britain into two distinct cultures, one
of Arts and the other the Sciences and F.R Leavis who had his own views on
context and what mattered in life.
In the
newspaper chosen, “The Times” because it fitted better into the rucksack, the
debate was rehearsed by Sir James Dyson, the man who has joined science to the
production of household appliances. Sir
James is arguing that we need a lot more graduates in science and technology
and a lot fewer in the Arts.
The case is
simple enough. If Britain is to pay its
way and earn enough in foreign markets it needs a lot more science and the rest
and a lot less spent on Arts education for which vacancies and careers will be
few relative to the numbers qualifying.
This argument is too big for a short post in this blog.
To return to
the past, the town we grew up in, both of us having arrived from other places,
was the Leicester of Joe Orton (see Wikipedia), the dramatist. One of the important influences on him and us
was the local library service, unusually well provided for and with a wide
range of books available.
It was at
the library in my early teens that I bumped into Joe from time to time and
exchanged ideas on books and other matters.
Then we each moved onto other things, me into local rugby and he into
stage productions. From time to time we found
ourselves at the same jazz clubs and arts events.
Some we
knew who were called for National Service did not come back and others were
marked by the experience. You now have
to be close to at least or more often over 70 to have done it. Looking at Joe on screen there were times
when I could see the “bolshie squaddie” under the surface.
He was one
of the “good guys” and always returned his books on time, unlike some.
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