Happy birthday, Graham Chapman! Graham would have been 73 years old this Wednesday, and the world is a far less silly place without him. He left us nearly a quarter of a century ago, and he is sorely missed.
Readers Digest used to run a feature about "The Most Unforgettable
Person I Ever Met." While I have known a few people who would qualify,
I don't know if anyone fit the bill more than Graham. In addition to
being a member of Monty Python, he was also a goatherder, a Petula
Clark writer, an alcoholic and then a recovered alcoholic, openly gay
at a time when it wasn't well-accepted, a mountaineer, and a fully
qualified medical doctor who went to New Zealand as the result of an
off-handed comment during a meeting with the Queen Mother. He was
sometimes prolific, sometimes not, though at one point, he was
simultaneously writing for three different television shows.
[He would undoubtedly have been at the forefront of the gay rights/gay
marriage movement over the past 25 years, as he was when he was
alive--he never really got the credit, but he was, arguably, the first
openly gay star of a Hollywood movie.]
His greatest accomplishment may have been his triumph over alcohol. He
used to party with his friends Keith Moon, Harry Nilsson, and Ringo
Starr, a group not known for their temperance (they all eventually
quit--or in the case of Keith, tried to quit--drinking; all but Ringo
are gone now). At the beginning of the filming of Monty Python and the
Holy Grail, Graham self-diagnosed himself as alcoholic and made the
decision to quit drinking, though it took some time. But when he
finally came out of it newly sober, he proved himself to be wonderful
capable in films like Life of Brian.
The first couple of times I met Graham, he was still hampered by
alcohol. The Chicago premiere of Holy Grail (where he was accompanied
by Terry Jones) was early in the day, and he did not seem to be
affected. The following year, I met him again backstage at New York's
City Center, between two Saturday evening performances of the Monty
Python Live! stage show. He wandered around shirtless with a large
tumbler of something that looked suspiciously like Gordon's Gin. He
emitted the occasional random squawks! and sang "Ya De Buckety!" for
no apparent reason. But he held himself together enough during the
performance that I saw, and I enjoyed it immensely.
When I flew to London two years later, I met a completely changed
Graham. Quiet and soft-spoken, but still with a wickedly funny sense of
humor, he had quit drinking at the beginning of the year and was a
totally different person. He invited me to stay at his house on
Southwood Lane, along with his partner David, foster son John, dogs
Harry, Sly, and Clint, and a semi-regular assortment of drop-in guests,
including a semi-scary man in black leather called Spike, and Bernard
McKenna, with whom he was writing at the time. He introduced me to the
Angel Pub in Highgate (where there is now a plaque in his honor), where
he drank ginger ale. Having read about it in guidebooks, I ordered
the shepherd's pie; when it came, Graham eyeballed it, looking a bit
disturbed, and asked me "Are you sure that's what you wanted?" (Graham
was right about the shepherd's pie.)
And so began our long friendship, one which lasted as long as Graham
himself. Happy birthday, Gray.
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