Hull Daily Mail

Robin was wildly funny and a genius... there’s this other side to him, that was deeply human

New documentar­y Robin’s Wish, details actor Robin Williams’ heartbreak­ing final months. Director Tylor Norwood tells KEIRAN SOUTHERN all about it

-

IT IS perhaps surprising that for a celebrity as beloved and wellknown as Robin Williams, the truth surroundin­g his untimely death is itself not more widely known. In the days after the 63-year-old actor and comedian took his own life in August 2014, reports focused on his historic battles with addiction and depression, while there was even speculatio­n that financial woes may have played a role.

The truth, however, was, Robin, one of the brightest talents of his generation, had been struggling with Lewy body dementia (LBD), which was only diagnosed after his death.

His harrowing final months – suffering with deteriorat­ing mental abilities, hallucinat­ions and physical infirmity – are told in the documentar­y Robin’s Wish, which features his wife, Susan Schneider, as she tries to raise awareness about the disease she described as “the terrorist inside my husband’s brain”.

Directed by Tylor Norwood, it features interviews with not only Susan, but Robin’s neighbours, friends and some of the celebritie­s the Oscar winner worked with over his glittering career. Tylor explains setting the record straight became one of the film’s goals.

“Early on, I didn’t really understand the depth of what Lewy body dementia was,” Tylor says. “But there was a beautiful love story here of people that went through something traumatic, and it was one of the biggest movie stars of all time.

“But as we started adding people... by the time we got Shawn Levy (the director of films such as Night At The Museum) and David E Kelley (the producer behind shows such as Big Little Lies and The Undoing), the pressure was really on the project to deliver a film that righted all the bad reporting that was done when he (Robin) passed.”

Robin was a supremely talented performer. After impressing on the stand-up circuit with his frantic pace and improvisat­ional brilliance, he found wider fame in the late 1970s playing an alien in the sitcom Mork & Mindy. Hollywood soon came calling with roles in movies like Popeye (1980) and The World According to Garp (1982), while 1988’s Good Morning Vietnam saw Robin nominated for his first Oscar. He worked steadily throughout the 90s, appearing in some of the period’s biggest movies, such as Dead Poets Society and Awakenings. In 1992 he voiced the Genie in Disney’s animation Aladdin, and he won a Golden Globe for his performanc­e in the 1993 smash hit comedy Mrs Doubtfire. He picked up his first Academy

Award four years later playing a therapist in Good Will Hunting.

While Williams’ career features prominentl­y in Robin’s Wish, the film is a highly personal depiction of the man behind the movies, with a strong focus on his illness.

Originally not sure if he wanted to make a science-heavy feature, Tylor was won over by Susan, who married Robin in 2011.

“She started telling me all these stories about this neurologic­al disease that I’d never heard of and this story I’d never heard about Robin,” the filmmaker says.

“I said if you’re willing to tell those stories about what you and he went through, that’s a movie I would watch and would love to be a part of.”

Like Robin and Susan, Tylor lives in Marin County, just north of San Francisco.

He describes Robin’s death as a “local trauma”, as well as one that shocked millions of fans around the world, and stresses how beloved he was in the community.

“That was the thing that got me most excited about the project, because I’d never seen a documentar­y about a global superstar where you’re hearing from his neighbours.”

When Susan invited the filmmaker to the couple’s home, Tylor expected a gated community: “I’m thinking there’s going to be a mile-long driveway and a guard out front, and it’s going to be this compound.”

Instead, Robin lived on a residentia­l street, albeit in a luxury home with sweeping views of San Francisco Bay. Hardly a two-up two-down, but not a Beverly Hills mega-mansion.

It was just one of the things that marked Robin as different from the average superstar, Tylor says.

“It would have been difficult to dehumanise him,” he adds. “He was so intentiona­l. You hear him saying in the movie, ‘I wouldn’t do well in LA, I wouldn’t do well behind a big fence’. These were choices he made so you have to ignore those choices to get to the bigger-than-life guy (he was on screen).”

Neighbours appearing in Robin’s Wish tell how the star attended backyard barbecues and played with the local children.

“You assume that people of that level of celebrity are very cloistered by necessity,” Tylor says.

“They can’t allow themselves to be that way. And that was something I ended up seeing as courageous. The idea that Robin was so set on a certain type of life that he wanted to lead, he opened himself up to people who could have hurt him.

“They could have talked about things they’d heard at a party, they could have been taking pictures of him, but the idea he opened himself up and this community of people really took care of him, it felt so much that he was just a guy in the neighbourh­ood. I thought, if we missed that piece of the story, it would really not separate itself in the way it could from other movies.”

Doctors feature prominentl­y in Robin’s Wish, providing a grim assessment of the horrors Robin would have experience­d with LBD.

A man known for an electric wit struggled to remember his lines, had trouble sleeping and suffered from a Parkinson’s-like tremor. Suicide, one of the doctors featured says, is a common outcome.

Shawn Levy directed him in 2014’s Night At The Museum: Secret Of The Tomb and tells how Robin became riddled by insecurity as he struggled to remember his lines.

David E Kelley worked with him on TV series The Crazy Ones and similarly reveals the star had at times not seemed his usual brilliant self.

His final hours are told through the heart-breaking testimony of those close to him. Robin was spotted standing outside his home on the night before his death, looking distracted. He told his neighbour, “Boss, I really need a hug”, before breaking down in tears.

His final words to Susan were: “Goodnight, my love.” He was found dead at their home the next day.

One of the final tributes in the movie comes from the 93-year-old comedian Mort Sahl, who says Robin “understood the bigness of love”.

That quality was key to capture in Robin’s Wish, according to Tylor.

“I think that was very difficult to not lose in the making of this film. Yes, he was wildly funny and a genius and so quick and beautiful and kind, but there’s this other side to him, that he was deeply human.”

■ Robin’s Wish is available now on digital and on demand.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Left, Robin as Mork and above tributes outside his home
Left, Robin as Mork and above tributes outside his home
 ??  ?? Robin with wife Susan Schneider on their wedding day
Robin with wife Susan Schneider on their wedding day
 ??  ?? Screen legend Robin Williams
Screen legend Robin Williams

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom