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John McGrath
1935 - 2002
by Michael Russell MSP


John McGrathBilly Wolfe tells an excellent story about John McGrath and his most famous play, "The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil".

Billy went to see the first performance of the play in 1973 when he was leader, taken there by Chrissie MacWhirter who was National Secretary of the Party. He was overwhelmed by it and asked John McGrath at the end if it could be performed at the SNP National Conference in Oban — to be held only a month later.

Amazingly John agreed and the performance in Oban was the biggest to date. The cast were energised by the hugely supportive reaction and took repeated curtain calls at the end. Eventually John McGrath joined them and indicated he wanted to speak. In total silence he stepped forward and said "I think I should tell you that none of us are nationalists". Whatever he expected as a response, all he got was even louder applause!

None of the cast may have been Nationalists at the time but it was not long before one or two joined — most notably Dolina MacLennan, still making PPBs for the Party when called upon and still a passionate advocate of both independence and Gaelic.

John himself, at least to my knowledge, never joined the Party but he certainly expressed very considerable support and sympathy for it as year succeeded year. His "Border Warfare" is at times overtly Nationalist (no wonder Donald Dewar looked askance at it) and all his work on Scottish themes owes something to the "Satire of the 3 Estates" which is as good a pedigree for a Scottish writer as you can get. John McGrath himself saw all such work as being part of the struggle for a Scottish Parliament and for a nation that would wish to build its democracy onwards and upwards.

John McGrath’s background was Irish and Liverpudlian and he made his early reputation with a very English play — "Events while guarding the Bofors Gun" — which was filmed in 1968 with a cast that included John Thaw.

"The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil" was agit-prop theatre and arose out of lobbying by a group of politicians and community activists. But what could have been only propaganda — no matter how good — was transformed by John’s theatrical skills into a huge entertaining tour of Scottish and Highland history which combined real passion for the people and their plight with real anger about past and present exploitation.

It toured Scotland during 1973 and was filmed and broadcast in 1974 to great acclaim. It needs to be seen again on screen and I am surprised that the BBC has not scheduled it in tribute to a man who contributed much to broadcasting and to broadcast audiences.

Some of John’s subsequent work with 784 showed less skill, falling as it did over the edge into didactic preaching. But "The Game’s a bogey", about the life of John MacLean, was as inspiring as the Cheviot, though perhaps justifiably even more angry.

McGrath’s prodigious talents found an outlet in other places too. He spent a period of time on the Board of Channel 4 Television, before which he had set up Freeway Films at the invitation of the Channel’s first Director Jeremy Isaacs. Freeway contributed some important items to the Channel and to UK cinema over years including Carrington and Ma Vie en Rose which won the 1996 Golden Globe for best foreign picture.

He developed a strong interest in Gaelic, making sure it was used creatively not just in the Cheviot but also in films such as Main Mhor for BBC Scotland and his final project (not brought to completion alas because of the obstruction of the usual small minds in the Scottish creative community) was Neil Gunn’s "The Silver Darlings" which arose from a Highland tradition and which would have brought to the screen a work and a writer that have been long and unjustifiably neglected.

John was the most approachable of men and the most civilised of companions. His socialism was of the open and inclusive sort — no Tommy Sheridan, he, fortunately —and his genuine passion for a better country that belonged to its citizens made him gentle in all but his criticisms except when roused to anger by the arrogant abuse of privilege and wealth. He was also a fine teacher, holding positions at Cambridge University and the University of London and being an Honorary Doctor of Stirling University. Just two years ago he became, at the request of Robert Redford, Artistic Director of Moonstone International Screen-Labs, the European equivalent of the Sundance Institute in Utah. It is already a strong force in developing professional talent.

Writers and artists who have a strong affection for our country but who are not afraid to speak of its faults are rare commodities. Scotland does not just need cheer leaders — it needs affectionate critics whose intelligence can guide us forward.

John McGrath was such a man. Nationalist or not, he is a loss to a Scotland that needs to continue to change. "The Cheviot" woke up a generation that was beginning to lose sight of its duty to struggle for a better, fairer, more equal Scotland. We could do with being woken up again to those vital imperatives as the dead hand of New Labour deliberately dumbs down expectations and deserts the ideal of social justice.


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