The Jewish Chronicle

Jonathan Miller

Brilliant director whose cultural passions ignited drama and fireworks

- DAVID HERMAN Jonathan Miller: born July 21 1934. Died November 27 2019

ONE OF the most creative figures in a golden age of post-war culture, Jonathan Miller, who has died in London aged 85, was an outstandin­g theatre and opera director, a broadcaste­r, satirist, comedian and raconteur and an intellectu­al immersed in philosophy, medicine and the sciences.

At his happiest he was able to bring all these passions together in exciting and original production­s and television programmes. On the theatre and opera stage he directed such leading artists as Sir John Gielgud, Sir Lawrence Olivier, John Cleese and Placido Domingo, Kevin Spacey and Jack Lemmon.

Miller’s astonishin­g career ranged from Footlights and Beyond the Fringe to writing about Freud and Darwin. He contribute­d to the first issue of

The New York Review of Books, edited the noted BBC arts programme

Monitor and presented acclaimed TV series on psychology and the history of medicine.

Eric Idle and Dudley Moore starred in different production­s of his Mikado and Peter Sellers, Alan Bennett and Michael Redgrave appeared in his TV production of Alice in Wonderland.

Miller won internatio­nal acclaim and was awarded honorary fellowship­s and a knighthood, but he also had his critics. ITV’s Spitting Image famously made fun of his range of talents. In one sketch he performed a liver transplant while simultaneo­usly making calls to the “National Opera” and managing a mini-cab service on the side.

Born in London, Miller grew up in a well-connected Jewish family, the son of Emanuel Miller, a distinguis­hed child psychiatri­st, and Betty Miller (née Spiro), a novelist and biographer. His first home was just off Harley Street and a few streets from Broadcasti­ng House. The two worlds of medicine and science on the one hand, and arts and the media on the other, were to dominate his life.

He studied at St Paul’s School in west London where he developed an early (and enduring) interest in the biological sciences. His contempora­ries included Oliver Sacks, who became a lifelong friend. In the mid-1950s he studied medicine at St John’s College, Cambridge and became involved in the Cambridge Footlights.

After graduating in 1956 he married Helen Rachel Collet and they had three children. He qualified as a doctor in 1959 and almost immediatel­y formed

Beyond the Fringe together with Alan Bennett, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, one of the most successful comedy groups in the so-called “Satire Boom” of the early 1960s.

Miller went on to have three different careers. First, as a performer, a young comedian and later chat-show raconteur. He was a dazzling conversati­onalist. Alan Bennett once said that his first experience of interviews had meant “being in the shadow of Jonathan”, witnessing his verbal fireworks “and never being able to do it.”

Second, as a broadcaste­r, popularisi­ng science, medicine, psychology and philosophy in studio interviews like States of Mind, documentar­y series such as The Body in Question and one-off documentar­ies about how neurologic­al damage destroys human lives, such as Ivan and Prisoner of Consciousn­ess.

These observatio­nal documentar­ies showed a warm, empathic side to Miller. He was not just brilliant and funny. He could also be extremely kind and warm-hearted.

Thirdly, he was an outstandin­g director in television drama, theatre and opera. Perhaps his greatest achievemen­t was to bring together his different interests, using his knowledge of science, medicine and art to illuminate his theatre and opera production­s. He famously took classic plays and operas and brought them to life by putting them in a different historical setting. His BBC Taming of the Shrew made Petruchio (John Cleese) an extreme 17th century Puritan; he set his ENO production of Rigoletto in 1950s Little Italy, and best known of all, his famous ENO Mikado was set in a dazzling white Grand Hotel on the south coast.

It is perhaps the range of these works that was most impressive. For the BBC he directed Michael Hordern in an adaptation of MR James’s ghost story, Whistle and I’ll Come to You, his legendary adaptation of Alice in Wonderland and a dialogue about death between James Boswell and the philosophe­r David Hume. For the theatre, he directed Olivier in The Merchant of

Venice, Jack Lemmon in A Long Day’s

Journey Into Night and a famous season at Greenwich Theatre, Family Romances, in which the main parts in Ghosts,

The Seagull and Hamlet were played by the same three actors. In opera, he worked mainly with Kent Opera and the ENO, before becoming increasing­ly involved in Europe.

A household name, Miller was something of an outsider. He never became a national treasure like David Attenborou­gh or his old friend Alan Bennett. In the 1980s he attacked Thatcheris­m and its effect on this “mean, peevish little country”. He felt part of the post-1945 settlement (the Fabian-Bloomsbury world of NW1, the NHS, the BBC and our universiti­es) which had come under attack.

Although Miller was Jewish, he commented in a famous sketch in

Beyond the Fringe, “I’m not really a Jew. Just Jew-ish. Not the whole hog, you know.” Sometimes his relationsh­ip with the Jewish community was more strained. There was something very English about him. He set his adaptation of Plato’s Symposium in a public school and Alice in Wonderland in an old country house. His sense of Englishnes­s embraced Shakespear­e, Victorian neurology and The Mikado. “Every part of my memory,” he said, “is saturated with English imagery.”

He is survived by Rachel, his wife of 60 years, and his children Tom, William and Kate.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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