In the summer of 1969 a rising star of Irish poetry took his
first steps into the world of television, a world in which he would
shine as an outstanding social and political commentator for Northern
Ireland.
Seamus Heaney, or ‘Famous Seamus’ as he became known, Celebrates
his 70th birthday on April 13th and to mark the event a new BBC One
Northern Ireland documentary, Seamus Heaney: A Life in Pictures, looks
back on his life in television.
While Heaney, awarded the Nobel Prize in 1995, is a globally Renowned
poet, the programme focuses on his career as a
presenter and interviewee on TV during the past 40 years. It looks at
how he has used TV to speak to the public and how he has been portrayed
on TV.
After making his television debut in ‘Door Into The Dark’
in 1970, one of the first times that a Northern Ireland writer wrote
and presented a television programme, Seamus Heaney appeared regularly
on our TV screens as presenter, commentator and interviewee.
The programme, on Wednesday, April 15 at 10.45pm, features rare, early
footage of Heaney giving his thoughts about Northern
Ireland in the early days of the Troubles as well as extensive footage
from his television career. There are also contributions from those
who have worked with him on his programmes or have interviewed him including
Melvyn Bragg, Kirsty Wark, John Kelly and producer Derek Bailey. “He
comes from Northern Ireland, I come from Scotland where men just don’t
talk about their emotions and here he was doing something quite extraordinary...
talking about his honeymoon. It’s quite shocking?” said
Kirsty Wark.
Heaney became a respected commentator on the Troubles for local and
network television programmes and channels. Kirsty Wark added: “He
was a voice in the Troubles - very much part of the civil rights movement.
You really felt that he was perplexed and angry and concerned about
the whole thing but that he would never let himself be hi-jacked in
one particular position.
“And he was always against violence. You get people on TV and
you think you know their positions and they end up getting heeled
out every time. Seamus always treated these things with the complexity
they deserved. And he was not willing to be drawn into
the kind of black and white arguments. He was much more thoughtful than
that and challenging.”
Away from the Troubles, Melvyn Bragg remembers a different side to Heaney
on a visit to interview him during the ‘80s: “I had gone
over to interview Seamus and by that time Seamus and I knew each other
quite well and so did our wives. So we had a night of it the night before,
which was absolutely not a good idea. I’ve never done it since
– I’d scarcely done it before. So we did this interview
the next day which we were both very uncomfortable with... and
we both had hangovers. Thank goodness something went wrong with the
film. So we agreed to go back and do it again. And we were extremely
Spartan about it.”
Bragg continues: “It’s very few poets can talk as effortlessly
and calmly and fully about their work and then read their work. One
goes into the other; they’re in parallel lines, just like he’s
a very good prose writer as well as a good poet.”
BBC Northern Ireland’s Johnny Muir who directed the new ocumentary
said: “A lot of people probably don’t realise that
Seamus Heaney made such a substantial contribution to television. That’s
why we wanted to mark Seamus’ 70th birthday by
looking back at what is an extremely important role as presenter, interviewee
and commentator – from his very first broadcast right up to his
more recent readings of his work on television and his recent interviews.
“Through the medium of television, Seamus
was able to bring his work to a wider audience and because Seamus was
such a natural in front of the camera, this audience
was able to enjoy not just his beautiful poetry but also his thoughts
on events in his personal life and in the wider world. His rich commentary
and presenting style draws you in - even in programmes made nearly forty
years ago.”
Seamus Heaney: A Life in Pictures is on BBC One Northern Ireland on
Wednesday, April 15 at 10.45pm. The 1999 programme, Keeping Time: The
Poet and the Piper, will be shown behind the red button at 11.20pm after
Heaney: Life in Pictures. It features
Heaney reading a wide selection of his work accompanied by renowned
Uillleann piper Laim O’Flynn.
About the Programme


