Tennant praise for psychiatric ‘revolutionary’
● Broadchurch star unveils biopic of psychiatrist on festival’s final night
Actor David Tennant has spoken of his admiration for the “revolutionary” Scottish psychiatrist RD Laing as the film of his life brought the Glasgow Film Festival to a close.
He was at the festival for the world premiere of Mad To Be Normal, which recalls the impact Laing had at Kingsley Hall – a centre he set up in London in 1965.
David Tennant drew the Glasgow Film Festival to a close as he unveiled his portrayal of a controversial Scottish psychiatrist.
More than 25 years after developing an interest in Glasgow-born RD Laing while studying at drama school in the city, Tennant has starred in a film depicting his unconventional methods.
The Broadchurch actor was at the festival for the world premiere of Mad To Be Normal, which recalls the impact Laing had at Kingsley Hall – an experimental residential treatment centre he set up London in 1965.
Born in Govanhill, Laing was educated at Hutchesons’ Grammar, studied medicine at Glasgow University and worked as a psychiatrist in the Army in the 1950s.
He would go on to become one of the most divisive “counter-culture” figures in Britain in the late 1960s by trying to create a haven for people diagnosed with psychosis and schizophrenia, arguing for the breakdown of divisions between patients and the medical profession, and advocating the use of the psychedelic drug LSD for treatment.
Tennant said: “I first became aware of RD Laing when I was at the RSAMD, when one of the other years did the David Edgar play Mary Barnes, which is about one of the patients in Kingsley Hall and which he comes into as a character. I was intrigued by him.
“I’ve always known there was this character from Glasgow out there and that there were stories to tell about him.
“I’ve always had a bit of a sneak fascination with him and when I read the script I thought: ‘This is a story that has to be told.’
“He’s one of these people whose name crops up again and again in all sorts of weird different places because of his influence and ideas. He was more than a psychiatrist, he was a sort of counter-culture philosopher.
“His legacy is still hotly debated but the ideas that he was writing about and the debates he started are still rolling on today. He still infuriates as many people as adore him – he is still a very divisive figure. I don’t think people quite know what to make of him.
“In some ways he was his own worst enemy. He seemed to be some kind of strutting peacock who would upset everybody but was also doing extraordinary work, which redefined how we think about psychosis. People struggle to make sense of these two contradictory elements, but from an acting point of view that is delicious.
“There were so many paradoxes. He had wells of empathy but at the same time could be something of a bully. His own family saw nothing of him while he poured love into people he had never met before. He didn’t always seem to practise what he preached. That’s an extraordinary character to try to get to grips with.”
Robert Mullan, the film’s director, said: “I made the film partly because I felt sorry for Laing. Everyone expresses an opinion about him and thinks they know what he believed in. I wanted to look at the heroic things he did.
“He had a houseful of people who were, in conventional terms, completely mad, He let them stay without any medication or treatment and tried to treat them like human beings. It really was a revolutionary thing he tried to do.”