logo
Derek Jarman: Modern Nature review – a starry and tempestuous tribute

Derek Jarman: Modern Nature review – a starry and tempestuous tribute

The Guardian09-04-2025
Is Derek Jarman the first director to be more famous for his foliage than his films? At Prospect Cottage, his black-and-yellow sanctuary squatting in the shadow of the nuclear power station at Dungeness on the Kent coast, Jarman nurtured a garden in the inauspicious shingle; plants thrived between the jagged upturned stones he likened to dragon's teeth. Thanks to his writings – notably the diaries published as Modern Nature in 1991, three years before his death – and the 2020 crowdfunding campaign to preserve the dwelling for the nation, the cottage and its gardens are now familiar and accessible to people who have never seen Sebastiane or Edward II, and may never want to.
Film is the flickering backdrop to the Barbican's evening of music and readings celebrating Modern Nature, rather than its focal point, though Super 8 footage of a youthful Tilda Swinton (Jarman's muse) provides a neat counterpoint to the pre-recorded sound of her 21st-century voice. Here in person are performers including the musician Simon Fisher Turner – a Jarman collaborator – along with Jessie Buckley, Shaun Evans and Will Young as well as It's a Sin co-stars Olly Alexander and Omari Douglas.
Each one reads from the journals, their distinct tones suggesting different aspects of Jarman – like the six contrasting Bob Dylans in Todd Haynes's film I'm Not There. Buckley is piercing, Evans booming, Young cosily avuncular, Alexander coquettish and Douglas wry and rueful. If so low-key an evening could be said to have a scene-stealer, it is the countertenor Nils Wanderer, who blasts in like a gale – appropriately so, given the emphasis on the meteorological.
As directed by James Dacre, the readings dwell on the tempests in Jarman's life: his battles with a failing body (he bought Prospect Cottage in 1986, the year of his HIV diagnosis) and with the state-sanctioned homophobia of Section 28. As the weather at Dungeness worsens, it can all seem like a cold front of symbolism complete with gusts of metaphor. But there is vitality here, too, in this place that the film-maker called the sunniest in all of England, as well as waves of catalysing anger and defiance which will come in handy now that LGBTQ+ people face levels of hostility not seen since Jarman's day.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Basil Newby: Blackpool's pioneering drag bar owner to retire
Basil Newby: Blackpool's pioneering drag bar owner to retire

BBC News

timea day ago

  • BBC News

Basil Newby: Blackpool's pioneering drag bar owner to retire

One of Blackpool's most well-known figures on the nightclub scene who became a pioneering cabaret drag bar owner has revealed he is to Newby has been a major business leader in the town's nightlife scene for more than 45 years, first opening the town's Flamingo Club in went on to open Funny Girls in 1994 and received an MBE in the Queen's New Year Honours list in 2014 for services to business and the lesbian, gay, bisexual transgender as he now approaches his 75th birthday, Mr Newby said: "After a lot of soul-searching and sleepless nights, I know now is the time for me to bow out gracefully and retire". "I want to see the Redwood Forests in California, the Northern Lights and many more things before I'm too old," he said."Close family members have health problems and I need to spend more quality time with them so it really is right for me." He said it was also a "joint decision" with Ian, his partner of more than 40 years."Although I still love Funny Girls, it needs new blood to take it forward for another 30 years," he said "nothing will change for the next few months" and "it could be three months or even three years before the right person comes along that I feel is the one I trust to take it on".Mr Newby opened the Flamingo on Talbot Road as Blackpool's first gay club in 1979. It was demolished in 2007 but Funny Girls, in the former Odeon building on Dickson Road, is still going strong and marked its 30th anniversary last year. He said he was partly inspired to open it to make a protest against Section 28 - a law passed in 1988 by Margaret Thatcher's government, which banned councils and schools from "promoting homosexuality"."At that time I was going for licensing and getting knocked back," Mr Newby said."Eventually I went to the courts and got one, and I got this idea for Funny Girls in my head."I wanted it to be for everyone, no matter what colour, creed or sexuality."He said he is "still passionate about Funny Girls and I'll only sell it to the right people, I just love the place".He added: "I've dedicated my life to the gay community and loved every minute of it,' he added. "But I know it's just the right time to call it a day." Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.

Olly Alexander says It's A Sin helped him confront his 'fear of HIV and sex'... as Tatler cover star reveals what he really thinks of his Eurovision nightmare
Olly Alexander says It's A Sin helped him confront his 'fear of HIV and sex'... as Tatler cover star reveals what he really thinks of his Eurovision nightmare

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Olly Alexander says It's A Sin helped him confront his 'fear of HIV and sex'... as Tatler cover star reveals what he really thinks of his Eurovision nightmare

To date, it is arguably his most successful acting role - and with good reason. Set against the backdrop of 1980s London, the Russell T. Davies scripted It's A Sin won multiple awards for its heart wrenching portrayal of a gay community torn apart by the ravages of AIDS. But it was Olly Alexander who commanded the screen as Richie Tozer - a fun-loving young actor who would ultimately fall victim to the disease. Already established as lead singer of pop group Years & Years, Alexander, 35, consequently received multiple award nominations, while the show earned a BAFTA TV win for its harrowing portrayal of a society left blindsided by the AIDS crisis. Reflecting on his involvement in the Channel 4 mini-series with the September issue of Tatler, the British star admitted accepting the role helped him face an uncomfortable truth. He said: 'I didn't realise it until I went towards it, but I had inherited this fear around HIV and sex, which is connected to the shame I had about being gay. 'It helped me unpack all of that. I never understood actors who say they brought their characters home with them until I did.' In It's A Sin, Tozer is an openly gay man among friends, but remains closeted to his parents until they are forced to confront his sexuality head on after discovering he has AIDS. While Alexander has always been open about his own sexuality off-screen, he admits a media advisor warned him not to 'come out' to the public when he first entered the music industry in his twenties. 'You'd never give that advice now, and it was terrible advice then,' he said. 'I knew it was never really going to be an option for me, but it did feel like a fork-in-the-road moment.' But North Yorkshire born Alexander admits his own journey as a young gay man confronted by the bright lights of London mirrors that of Tozer. 'I feel like a lot of my identity has been fostered in London,' he said. 'I was a very young gay boy, too scared to go out until I was 20. 'Then I would just go to every club: Madame Jojo's, East Bloc, Dalston Superstore, The Joiners Arms and The George and Dragon. 'I was there every weekend, trying to find my people. It was just joyful chaos.' Away from the small screen, Alexander released solo album Polari - his first without Years & Years - in February, just nine months after representing the United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest. With his pop star pedigree, there were high hopes for the singer after he announced his involvement in the annual competition and unveiled his chosen song, the upbeat electro-pop single Dizzy. But it would end in bitter disappointment for Alexander after a sexually charged performance at Sweden's Malmö Arena failed to impress viewers across mainland Europe, with the United Kingdom winning 46 points and finishing in a miserable 18th place. 'Now that I've had a bit of time away, I'm so proud I got to do it,' he told Tatler. 'But it was also very stressful, it can be very vulnerable and isolating.' After years of failure at the competition, Alexander admits he'd predicted the outcome long before he took to the stage. 'Everyone said, 'You're going to bring it home, Olly'', he recalled. 'I knew I wouldn't.'

Irish Museum of Modern Art rejects censorship claims after Derek Jarman film cancellation
Irish Museum of Modern Art rejects censorship claims after Derek Jarman film cancellation

The Guardian

time22-07-2025

  • The Guardian

Irish Museum of Modern Art rejects censorship claims after Derek Jarman film cancellation

The Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) has rejected accusations of censorship after suspending screenings of a Derek Jarman film following a complaint against the showing of a gay kiss. In a statement, the museum's director Annie Fletcher said: 'We at the Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) are dismayed at the current supposition that we would actively censor the work of Derek Jarman and /or any artist from the LGBTQ+ community.' The museum cancelled screenings of Jarman's experimental 1985 film The Angelic Conversation, which depicts the relationship of two gay male lovers, after a parent raised a complaint in January that it was 'harmful' to their five-year-old child. According to a report in the Sunday Times, the complainant wrote: 'Your outdoor screen is displaying close-up footage of topless adults kissing intimately. My five-year-old daughter walks in this space.' The film, which features Judi Dench narrating 14 Shakespeare sonnets, was showing on IMMA's Living Canvas outdoor screen on the front lawn of its Dublin gallery, but was removed from the museum's programming following the complaint. However, IMMA insisted that they have removed the film briefly out of 'an abundance of caution' and that they 'would be delighted' to programme the film again. In the statement, Fletcher said: 'When the complaint was raised, towards the end of the film's two-week run, we made the decision to pause the screening of this work to seek clarification on the implication of showing a PG-rated film in a public domain to ensure we were not in conflict with any planning or screening legislation for art in a public space.' Fletcher added: 'It is regrettable that the event reported on in the Sunday Times has been misconstrued in a rush to judgment.' James Mackay, a close collaborator of Jarman's who produced many of his films including The Angelic Conversation says: 'Who would have thought that Angelic Conversation, the most tender of Derek's films, would offend. I know that we live in dark times but, really, two boys kissing with closed lips. Has it come to this?' Responding to the initial complaint, Mary Cremin, IMMA's head of programming, said the matter would be 'reviewed internally' and said the film was certified PG and suitable for public screening. The complaint was then referred to the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland who forwarded it on to the Irish Film Classification Office (IFCO). Jarman's film, only having shown for 10 days of its planned 14-day runtime, was removed from the museum as they awaited 'professional opinion'. Fletcher said that 'clarification has been attained' and they plan to reinstate screenings of the film, adding: 'We would like to assuage the valid disquiet of all our LGBTQ+ community that we shall continue to proudly programme inclusively across our site.' 'IMMA has been at the forefront of championing Jarman's practice, developing the first major retrospective since 1995 and a major accompanying publication. We have also purchased his works for the national collection. We have shown his films and will continue to do so as part of our public programme.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store