The Real Peter Pan

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Authors: Piers Dudgeon

BOOK: The Real Peter Pan
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THE REAL PETER PAN

THE TRAGIC LIFE OF
MICHAEL LLEWELYN DAVIES

PIERS DUDGEON

Contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Epigraph
  3. Foreword
  4. Chapter One
    1905: An Awfully Big Adventure
  5. Chapter Two
    1860–1900: A Rich Harvest of Possibility
  6. Chapter Three
    1895: A Key to Kensington Gardens
  7. Chapter Four
    1897: Spellbound
  8. Chapter Five
    1897: Barrie Comes Out
  9. Chapter Six
    1897–99: Lost Boy
  10. Chapter Seven
    1900: Peter and Michael Break Through
  11. Chapter Eight
    1901–03: Island Games
  12. Chapter Nine
    1901–03: Unrest Within the Family
  13. Chapter Ten
    1903–04: The Real Play
  14. Chapter Eleven
    1904–05: Arthur’s Retreat
  15. Chapter Twelve
    1905–07: Death Takes a Hand
  16. Chapter Thirteen
    1906: Barrie’s Scotland
  17. Chapter Fourteen
    1907: The Widow Sylvia
  18. Chapter Fifteen
    1908: Dependence and Uncertainty
  19. Chapter Sixteen
    1909: Mind Games and Manoeuvres
  20. Chapter Seventeen
    1910: No Idle Steer
  21. Chapter Eighteen
    1910–11: Scourie: Learning to Fly
  22. Chapter Nineteen
    1912: The Outer Hebrides: Catching Mary Rose
  23. Chapter Twenty
    1913–14: Broken to Eton
  24. Chapter Twenty-One
    1914–15: Loving, J. M. B.
  25. Chapter Twenty-Two
    1915: The Blue Bird of Happiness
  26. Chapter Twenty-Three
    1916–17: Home Fires Burning
  27. Chapter Twenty-Four
    1917–18: Michael Turns Away
  28. Chapter Twenty-Five
    1918: The Real Peter Pan
  29. Chapter Twenty-Six
    1918: Within the Gothic Chamber
  30. Chapter Twenty-Seven
    1919: Oxford
  31. Chapter Twenty-Eight
    1919: Garsington
  32. Chapter Twenty-Nine
    1920: Romance
  33. Chapter Thirty
    1920: Michael Breaks Out
  34. Chapter Thirty-One
    1920: Between Earth and Paradise
  35. Chapter Thirty-Two
    1920–21: Barrie Gets His Way
  36. Chapter Thirty-Three
    1921: Disposal
  37. Afterword
  38. Acknowledgements
  39. Sources
  40. Index
  41. Plates
  42. Copyright

 

 

A lovely youth, – no mourning maiden decked,

With weeping flowers, or votive cypress wreath,

The lone couch of his everlasting sleep:

Gentle, and brave, and generous, – no lorn bard

Breathed o’er his dark fate one melodious sigh:

He lived, he died, he sung in solitude.

 

‘Alastor’ by P. B. Shelley (1816)

O
F THE LLEWELYN
Davies boys who were the inspiration for
Peter Pan
, Michael was J. M. Barrie’s favourite. ‘We all knew Michael was The One,’ wrote his younger brother Nico. Barrie loved him with ‘a great love’, as Michael’s friend at Eton and Oxford, Robert Boothby, recalled.
1

The Real Peter Pan
is the story, both joyous and tragic, of a beautiful boy who was chosen by Barrie to be his gateway to the magical world of childhood, which he longed to recapture, and to the strange spiritual world of his later work.

Unlike Alice Liddell and Lewis Carroll (in the context of
Alice in Wonderland
), and Alastair Grahame and Kenneth Grahame (
The Wind in the Willows
), Michael was not simply the audience of stories related by Barrie. He was a participant in a creative improvisation that produced
Peter Pan
, a collaboration that continued into Michael’s teenage years and the writing of the later plays.

There have been films, novels, biographies and plays aplenty since Peter first made an appearance in Barrie’s 1902 novel,
The Little White Bird
, but no perfect accord as to what ‘the poor little half-and-half’ – this half human, half supernatural boy – means.

Barrie’s play opened in London in 1904, and played annually to huge audiences for many decades into the future. In America it opened the following year and was just as popular nationwide. In 1911 came Barrie’s
Peter and Wendy
, the equally famous novel, and in 1924 the first film, a silent movie faithful to the original.

Barrie was surprised by what audiences and critics in America read into the play, particularly about their own history and culture, in which of course Tiger Lily and the American Indians feature more meaningfully than elsewhere. But he could not have wished for more
gravitas
than he got from Mark Twain’s note to
Peter Pan
’s American star, Maude Adams, that the play was ‘a great and refining and uplifting benefaction to this sordid and money-mad age’.

The feeling in America in 1905 was that Peter Pan was a significant symbol of something that society was in danger of losing, even that already we in the West had lost.

But then Walt Disney seized upon the more saccharine elements of the story and produced an animated film which far from censuring our money-mad age turned them to huge commercial advantage.

So pervasive did the Disney interpretation of Peter Pan become in the national consciousness that even today there is for many no incongruity in the eternal boy, the child in all of us, being associated with a pleasure park designed by the singer Michael Jackson, a
bus company in Springfield, Massachusetts, a make of peanut butter, and Hummingbird egg candy.

Other animated films followed – one from Australia in 1988, and Disney’s sequel
Return to Neverland
in 2002.

There was however also a different movement, an increasing interest in the life of Peter’s creator, J. M. Barrie, and of the Llewelyn Davies boys with whose lives Barrie made the play ‘streaky’, as he put it.

Andrew Birkin’s brilliant docudrama mini-series, starring Ian Holm as Barrie, led the way in 1978. And Marc Foster’s fictional
Finding Neverland
again featured Barrie in 2004, this time played by Johnny Depp.

But
Finding Neverland
was not as true to life as it made out. The biographical aspect had been sanitised so that Barrie came upon the Llewelyn Davies family
after
the boys’ father had died; thereby removing any possible suggestion that he might have come between Sylvia and her husband.

This phenomenon of writers and makers deftly dampening down or altering facts to idealise Barrie is another pervasive element. Possibly lurking behind it is the fear of the curse levelled at all who would write about him. Even Andrew Birkin admitted to this: ‘I feel somewhat felled by Barrie’s curse – “May God blast any one who writes a biography of me.”’

But the curse was not going to stop it happening because there were now two theatres of interest – the fantasy story of Peter and the reality of the Davies boys’ lives. It was only a matter of time before someone noticed that the creative improvisation that led to
Peter Pan
had not only effected the fiction it had affected the boys who were part of it, deeply.

The first germ of the idea of Peter, long before the original play was written, was a vision of a boy lost in a wood, singing for joy
because he knew now that he could be a boy forever and not be compelled to grow into a man.

In the world of film this seemed like the perfect theme for a musical. Dwight Hemion’s 1976 adaptation of
Peter Pan
starred Mia Farrow and Danny Kaye. Joseph Weinberger’s version appeared in 2001, and in 2014 Phil Willmott’s
Lost Boy.

Willmott’s
Lost Boy
was interesting not only because it was a musical, but because it reunited some of the characters of the original play as young adults on the eve of the First World War, that great watershed which separated the old world from the new. There is something about Peter Pan that makes him eternally part of the new, with potential for growth and hope for the future.

Meanwhile, the analytical psychology movement had got hold of him and declared Peter a
puer aeternus
, one of the archetypal ideas that define the ‘primordial, structural elements of the human psyche’.

Inevitably there followed attempts to show him at work in the modern world. Damion Dietz’s 2003, award-winning
Neverland: Never Grow Up, Never Grow Old
, was set in an amusement park, with Peter an older, androgynous teenager, and Steven Spielberg’s
Hook
, 1991, presented Robin Williams as a corporate lawyer who discovered the Peter Pan in himself.

Many a production started out with high hopes and ground to a halt before being revived with heavily revised scripts, as if there remained in the minds of their ageing creators an uncertainty of who or what Peter Pan is.

Barrie knew this would be a problem. When it was all over with the boys, he wrote that the ‘tree of knowledge in the wood of make-believe vanishes if you need to look for it’. This, of course, is why he had needed Michael.

In search of an anchor in authenticity, every so often a production
returns to the Barrie prototype. P. J. Hogan’s 2003
Peter Pan
was faithful to it, but the audience had been led astray so often now that it failed to break even at the box office.

Ten years later Ella Hickson for the Royal Shakespeare Company produced
Wendy and Peter Pan
. Hickson admitted how difficult it was to convince people that the sentimental, heroic, Disney adventure was not the whole story. She looked hard at the scripts and the book of
Peter Pan
and noticed how much the theme of death features. With Peter it began with his speculation at the mermaid’s lagoon, faced with the possibility of drowning, that death would be ‘an awfully big adventure’.

In his life with Michael and in two of his later plays –
A Well-Remembered Voice
and the ghostly
Mary Rose
– Barrie became ever more concerned with the question, and the feeling we get is that childhood and death, like two ends of a circle, meet somewhere, and that it is here in this misty arena that the deeply meaningful half of Peter – the supernatural half – really lies.

It was in this arena that with joy in his heart Michael alone was able to explore the real Peter Pan, and it was here that he met his destiny.

Meanwhile, in 2015, well over 100 years after Peter first appeared, the cinematic and theatrical bandwagon rolls on. Ella Hickson’s
Wendy and Peter Pan
returns as this book is published. Piers Chater Robinson’s musical
Peter Pan
has a USA Arena Tour. Harvey Weinstein’s theatrical musical production of the Johnny Depp film
Finding Neverland
has its premiere in America. And Joe Wright’s
Pan
, a film starring Hugh Jackman, Amanda Seyfried, Rooney Mara, Garrett Hedlund and Levi Miller, is scheduled to open across the world.

 

Piers Dudgeon, February 2015

1
Interviews with the film-maker Andrew Birkin in the 1970s.

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