I
was going to post the next extract from my 1973 interview with John Lennon
today but decided instead to throw a curved ball and post this book review instead.
More John tomorrow.
On the cover of this impressive
biography of Sir James Savile OBE is a picture of the subject as an old man reclining
in an armchair in a flat that overlooks Scarborough’s South Bay sea front which
is clearly identifiable through a large picture window. This is the sea front that
I describe elsewhere on Just Backdated in a Beatles-related post that recalls
the summer of 1963, the summer of ‘She Loves You’; the sea front where I
strolled with a girl on my arm and where Savile strolled on many occasions with
his beloved mother, ‘The Duchess’, for whom he bought this flat when he became rich.
Thankfully
this is the only parallel I can find between Savile and myself though I have also
posted about two close encounters with him that led me to conclusions not
unlike those shared by most everyone following the revelations that have
surfaced since his death in 2011, and which readers of this bulky 600-page book
will also undoubtedly reach. To wit: Savile was a thoroughly nasty piece of work;
shifty, vain, duplicitous and possessed of a genuinely vicious streak that he
cleverly suppressed when mixing with defenders he needed to nurture, most
notably HRH Charlie Wales and Thatcher PM but also numerous shady senior
policemen and scatter-brained clerics. All these and more seemed in thrall to
his overbearing personality, like rabbits caught in the glare of a particularly
bright headlight. That he was a serial sex-offender was probably suspected by
many but never acted upon because he was a big celebrity who hid his crimes
behind a massive wall of charity work. Also, cunningly, he often joked about
his predilection for ‘dolly birds’ so that he became perceived as a sort of
benign ‘Jack the Lad’ figure when he was nothing of the sort. He was a grade-A
pervert, rapist and paedophile, almost certainly the most prolific sex offender
this country has ever seen.
The
more he sinned the more he expanded his charity work, evidently believing that,
as a practising Catholic, when he reached the Pearly Gates his debit and credit
columns would cancel each other out and he’d be allowed through. He had all
sorts of weird ideas about religion and, visiting Israel, walked in the desert
with a wooden staff in the footsteps of Christ or so he believed. On the same
visit he attempted to broker a peace deal between Israel and Palestine, just as
on another occasion he tried to do the same thing between the loyalists and
republicans in Northern Ireland.
All
this and more is told in this superbly researched but only tolerably well-written book by
an author who admits to being obsessed with Savile for a very long time. Davies
evidently knew him well and interviewed him on many occasions, not that the
interviews ever revealed much as Savile was a liar and fantasist who invented
and exaggerated in order to muddy the waters, or if he didn’t like a question simply
clammed up and changed the subject like politicians on TV. Trying to find out
the truth can’t have been easy and Davies admits as much as we move through his
life.
The
book opens with the destruction of Savile’s gruesome headstone at the cemetery in
Scarborough where it had been unveiled amidst much pomp and ceremony just 19
days before. Thereafter it ramps up the tension through a non-linear narrative
in which the upward momentum of Savile’s career is told between chapters that describe
the author’s own meetings with Savile at his homes in Scarborough and Leeds,
and the behind-the-scenes shenanigans at the BBC as details of his crimes begin
to emerge after his death; their dilemma over whether to broadcast a fawning Christmas
tribute show or a damning exposure on Newsnight,
and the cack-handed manner in which they dealt with it.
The
building blocks upon which Savile’s eccentric character was formed are
carefully examined; the youngest of seven, childhood poverty and illness,
minimal education, unskilled work, ducking and diving, grab all you can.
Distanced from his father but adored by his mother, he saw dancehalls as an
entry into teenage lives and became a DJ, first in Leeds, then in Manchester,
moving from live work in Mecca nightspots to radio, firstly with Luxembourg and
then the BBC. That he was a good decade and a half older than others in this line of work was
somehow overlooked, largely because he disguised himself with outlandish
clothes, bling and long hair dyed blond. Despite the concerns of a few sceptics
at the BBC, he moved smoothly from radio to TV and by the time of Jim’ll Fix It he was simply too popular
– 15 million watched it every week – to dump. By this time he’d become a big
charity campaigner, most often by performing stunts of physical endurance, running
and cycling marathons, which drew attention to him. He liked attention all
right. He mixed with the Royal Family, acting as an ‘advisor’ to Charles and
Diana when their marriage was failing, and became pally with Thatcher who,
because of his fundraising for Stoke Mandeville Hospital, pushed through his
knighthood in 1990 after several previous attempts and against the advice of wiser heads in the cabinet.
Along
the way Savile amassed a small fortune through kick-backs and endorsements and systematically
sexually abused teenage girls and the occasional boy wherever he went, at the
BBC, in hospitals, in children’s homes, in his motor home, in hotels, anywhere
and everywhere. The extent of this is staggering and discomforting to read,
though the book never stoops to sensationalism. On only one occasion – aboard a
cruise liner – did Savile’s addiction to pubescent female flesh come to the
attention of someone in a position to do something, in this case the ship’s
captain who was alerted to his misbehaviour and confined Savile to his cabin
until such a time as he could disembark and fly back to the UK. Regrettably
this went no further and the press didn’t report it. Towards the end of his life there was another episode in which Surrey police followed up complaints but Savile bluffed his way through the interview and no action was taken.
Eventually
Saville dies, alone and unloved, virtually friendless too as he avoided personal
relationships of any kind. Then, slowly at first but with increasing momentum,
the shit hits the fan. It’s an appalling story, fairly well crafted in this book
though there are some leads that could have been chased down further and the
editing is a tad sloppy here and there. I’m not sure whether to recommend it
and, I have to admit, the only reason I read it was out of lurid curiosity and
to find out how this ghastly man got away with all that he did. I have a bit better
understanding of that now but there’s no real explanation as to why so many
people simply let him do as he chose. The only reason seems to be that it was
easier to ignore him than confront him, easier to turn a blind eye than rock
the boat. In some ways you can forgive the nurses who knew what was going on
but were powerless to do anything but the same cannot be said about those in
positions of power, supposedly people of good judgement, who were either taken
in by him or, worse, let him abuse at will.
Incidentally,
I was disconcerted to discover that on the one occasion I saw The Beatles, at
Bradford on December 21, 1963, Savile was in the audience (and Rolf Harris was
the compere). I also spotted two silly errors – a reference to Savile wrapping
£20 notes around rolled up newspaper to give the impression he had a wad of
cash in the fifties (£20 notes weren’t introduced until 1970) and Johnny &
The Hurricanes described as a ‘popular singing act’!
Approach
with caution.
5 comments:
Horrible story, Chris. I just finished reading this slimeball's bio on Wikipedia. It's absolutely chilling how his behavior was never stopped. Ironically, we had a similar case in America, right here in my home state of Pennsylvania. Jerry Sandusky was a respected football coach at Penn State University. Under the nose of themost highly respected and admires head coach in all sports,Joe Paterno, Sandusky molested hundreds of boys. The sorrid case has all the same cover ups, noteriety, and celebrity as Saville. As shocking as these cases are, they are sadly frequent. Reminds me of the great quote " all that evil needs to succeed is for good men to do nothing".
* admired, not admires. And the quote is from Edmond Burke. Sadly, typos are common for this 45 year old typing on a phone the size of a matchbook, lol.
Thanks Ed. I do like that quote.
Strong review Chris. The New Yorker ran a piece about Jerry Sandusky that I believe also talked about Saville but certainly others; some of the most serial sexual abusers live incredibly public lives of apparent good deeds. It appears that those to whom they present the good side, usually the ones with power, are blinded to the possibility of the bad side, and typically deny such a possibility. The gall of it is astounding. And Edmund Burke's quote is all too relevant...
'Gall' is the perfect word Tony. So many innocent lives destroyed, and it could've, SHOULD'VE, been stopped dozens of times by people who knew. Disgusting. BTW, Tony, as a lifelong Who fan and Moon fanatic, I just want to thank you for Dear Boy. An absolutely stunning work. You did an incredible job with an amazing character. And likewise, Chris, the Lennon interview you posted has been great. I was always a big Who guy, not so much into the Beatles. But Ive always been intrigued by John, and I really feel you gave us great insight into who he was. You really piqued my interest. I liked what I heard, and
I'm gonna explore John more now. Well done, lads!
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