Read A Very Private Celebrity Online
Authors: Hugh Purcell
Charles Wheeler, 1955.
Catherine Dove, 1955.
Face to Face
with Tony Hancock, ‘pursing his lips and grimacing’.
Face to Face
with Augustus John: ‘It was a fiasco. He said little that was coherent and nothing that was interesting.’
The wedding: John and Catherine, with Lizi behind, in Hampstead, 1962.
The Freeman family at 2 KG, New Delhi, 1967. From left to right: Tom, Catherine, Lucy, Matthew, John.
Burns Night in Washington, 1970. JF submits to ‘flummery’.
The ambassador’s wife and her social secretary: Catherine with Judith.
In the Oval Office: President and Mrs Nixon, Henry Kissinger, the UK ambassador and Mrs Freeman.
Professor Freeman on his bicycle at UC Davis, 1986.
Judith with Tors and Jessie at the home of Jean and Dan Snyder.
JF at Triggsy’s wedding in Barnes, 1998.
âThe best brigade major in the Eighth Army.'
â Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery
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âAll the best young men are on the other side.'
â Winston Churchill
(former Prime Minister, in tears after Major Freeman's maiden speech opening the 1945 parliament on behalf of the Labour government)
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âHe would have made a wonderful Prime Minister.'
â Dr Henry Kissinger
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âHe is the most dangerous one of all of us, a man of Saturn.'
â Nye Bevan MP
(a Labour leader)
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âAfter years of studying his complex personality, I decided he was afraid of giving himself too fully to anything or anyone. I once told him his motto ought to be
Je me sauve
[I protect myself ].'
â Barbara Castle MP
(a former lover)
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âJohn has the capacity to put up the shutters that is excelled by nobody except a shopkeeper during riots.'
â Professor Norman MacKenzie
(writer and academic)
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âJohn is the only man who has ever made himself celebrated by turning his arse on the public.'
â Kingsley Martin
(editor of the
New Statesman
, referring to Freeman's back-to-camera interviewing on
Face to Face
)
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âIt's astounding and sad â and not surprising in a fast-changing world â that our heroes are nobodies to our grandchildren. People of our generation revered John Freeman as one of the foundation stones of early television. If I learned one thing from him it was the art of doing an interview without proving what a clever chap you were. It's a piece of advice often ignored by the current generation of interviewers. I worked with him at ITV and without ever getting close to him â did anyone? â constantly admired his ability to inspire a mixture of admiration and awe from the staff. He was a great man and the present generation who know not of him don't know what they are missing.'
â Michael Parkinson
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âOne of the three best ambassadors I ever served with.'
â Lord Renwick
(former ambassador to the USA)
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âHe was very formidable â definitely not a man you would tell lies to. He would have made a gobsmacking QC.'
â Lord Grade
(former executive chairman of ITV)
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âA man of many epiphanies to remind us what England was once about.'
â Paul Johnson
(writing in
The Spectator
on Freeman's eightieth birthday)
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âJohn was well known but hard to know well; and that's exactly how he wanted it.'
â Catherine Freeman
(Freeman's third wife)