The Scotsman

Muriel Spark’s companion of 30 years says relationsh­ip was deep friendship

● Artist tells of life with author and ‘burden’ of archives

- By BRIAN FERGUSON brian.ferguson@scotsman.com

The artist who lived with the author Muriel Spark for more than 30 years and inherited her fortune has described their relationsh­ip as a deep friendship based on a strong mutual understand­ing.

Penelope Jardine tells a major new documentar­y on the writer that looking after Spark’s vast personal archives has been a “burden” on her and of her relief that it is gradually being acquired by the National Library of Scotland.

There was huge controvers­y after Spark’s death when it emerged that the author’s son, Robin, had been written out of her will in favour of Jardine. She has also been the literary executor of Spark’s estate since she passed away in 2006, handling negotiatio­ns with the National Library of Scotland over the acquisitio­n of her archives.

She has helped compile a major exhibition, currently on show at the library, which features a treasure trove of personal items on public display for the first time, including handbags and evening dresses, a typewriter used for poetry and literary reviews, a ration book and betting slips.

The BBC Scotland documentar­y, The Many Primes of Muriel Spark, features archive interviews with the author reflecting on her troubled relationsh­ips, her struggles with illness and her religious beliefs.

Giving her first broadcast interview on Spark, Jardine describes how her writing was “all that really mattered”. In the hour-long documentar­y, Jardine tells broadcaste­r Kirsty wark that she would not “dare” correct any of her handwritte­n work as she typed it up for Spark, who would spend “about a year” thinking about each of her books, but would finish them within weeks.

Born in Edinburgh in 1918, Spark was 19 when she married Sydney Oswald Spark and they moved to Southern Rhodesia. She moved to London in 1944 shortly after Robin’s birth. Spark initially wrote for the British intelligen­ce service, became editor of the Poetin ry Review in 1947 and published her first novel in 1957.

She and Jardine met in Rome in 1968, when the author asked the artist to work for her. They lived together in a converted church in Tuscany from the mid-1970s. Interviewe­d in the home they shared together for the documentar­y, which will be broadcast on 31 January, Jardine tells Wark how Spark moved in with her initially to try to beat writer’s block.

She says: “She said, ‘Come and fetch me.’ She couldn’t drive. I picked her up and she stayed ever since. That was it. She found it useful, I think, to have a companion to talk to, someone who could understand what she did, who could drive a car and cook an egg.

“She was totally devoted to her work. That was all that really mattered. Everything else had to fit in and around.”

Wark asks her: “Do you think that each of you felt the relationsh­ip you had was the most important in your life?”

Jardine: “Oh no, I shouldn’t think so, no. Our whole relationsh­ip was one of freedom a way. She was free and I was free. But we both had this creative side that had to be understood.”

In the documentar­y, Wark asks whether their relationsh­ip was “more than a deep friendship”. But Jardine states: “No, it was not. I know what you’re asking me, no, no. There was just a good understand­ing, I think. There was a lot to her I didn’t know at all. I don’t think you ever know anybody, actually.”

“There was a lot to her I didn’t know at all. I don’t think you ever know anybody, actually”

PENELOPE JARDINE

 ??  ?? 0 Muriel Spark and Penelope Jardine with dog Shadow in the garden of the house where they lived in Tuscany
0 Muriel Spark and Penelope Jardine with dog Shadow in the garden of the house where they lived in Tuscany

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