MUSIC CHATTER AND MATTER

Loved at Home: Heath Ledger 1979-2008

Posted about 1 year ago
You know the old Oscar Wilde saying, ‘We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars’? The meaning behind it seems to get grimmer and more perverse as we continue to watch train wrecks like Anna Nicole Smith and Britney Spears careen along in their lives – and into ours. The more voyeuristic our culture gets the less compassionate we become as a society. It takes a death to soften us again, to wake us back up. It takes a death to remind us of the human stuff buried at the core of our entertainment machine.And yet as soon as I read of Heath Ledger’s death my feelings for his loss went far deeper than usual. The morning here in Sydney was a little overcast when I took in the news, before the clouds broke with sun, covered over again, then broke with light at last in the afternoon. The day seemed to taking on his spirit, as it were, all the while the information kept filtering through online.Inevitably I started thinking about the deaths of other people ‘just like him’ and how they marked significant days in my life. Moments when a distant event on the cultural map and how you simply feel about someone famous becomes personal and connected: Kurt Cobain and his suicide; Jeff Buckley and his drowning; River Phoenix’s drug overdose; Michael Hutchence’s lonesome, ambiguous farewell in a Double Bay hotel room; the similarly shadowy end of David McComb of The Triffids, whose greatly under-estimated music was recently revived and celebrated in ‘A Secret in the Shape of a Song’ at the Festival of Sydney. Isn’t that a fine title, ‘A Secret in the Shape of a Song’? Isn’t that what all these people were to us, even if they weren’t musicians – living songs, human poems?“I have a public life, a private life and a secret life,” the novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez once said. “And of my secret life I have not revealed a word.” I’ve always taken that to mean there is a mysterious and unknowable core in people that cannot be easily known or given away or summed up. Maybe our families or closest friends or lovers glimpse it. Artists more than most suffer nonetheless from an illusion of familiarity, a fake intimacy, particularly in these highly mediated times. The kind of tick-a-box pop psychology that people swallow whole from self affirmation books these days makes this phenomenon even worse – glib summaries accepted as insights on someone’s soul. It’s the bedrock of the modern celebrity interview and I’m sad to say I’ve been sucked into its maw like many other jobbing journalists.Ledger was known to hate this stuff. I actually interviewed him once on the phone. It was well over a decade ago, when he was making the move from Perth to Sydney, a hot young talent on the go – or so I was so told back then. I didn’t really give a damn. I resented being forced to talk to some guy who was barely more than a teenager, a kid who had done nothing to warrant a conversation for a magazine story other than be good looking and have some hype behind him. As it turned out he was equally embarrassed about doing the interview so prematurely, even apologetic. Sorry you got pressured into this. Let’s have a drink some time. Yeah sure, sure... He seemed like a nice guy, like someone straining to be real. That’s what I remember anyway.You look back over someone’s career at times like these, rake over the coals. It’s hard to miss certain qualities: Ledger’s pained smile and interior gaze, as if you can sense him watching the world and turning it over hesitantly in his mind (a quality the camera loved); his ability to suggest an ironic view of his own good looks (the Errol Flynn raised eyebrow and lithe skip he used in more fun or light weight leading roles for A Knight’s Tale and 10 Things I Hate About You), the shadows of hurt and confusion and repression he summoned up in his greatest films: the gay cowboy in Brokeback Mountain and the junkie in Candy. There was the off-screen stuff too of course. Notably the reticent and sometimes weird or rude behaviour he exhibited with journalists and at public events – peeling an orange obsessively throughout an interview, giggling non-stop while presenting an award – along with a larger feeling that all the attention was like a rock he’d like to crawl out from under. That hunched slouch of his whenever he hit the red carpet. The hurt and anger he felt at not being able to drift around unbothered by paparazzi on the streets of Sydney any more. I’m going back to New York, man, where people will leave me alone. I feel driven out of Sydney… It’s not clear yet whether Ledger killed himself - or if the more likely conclusion will be ‘death by misadventure’. All that’s known so far is that his relationship with his fiancee Michelle Williams ended last year, that he’d been suffering from pneumonia, taking pills for anxiety, using Ambien tablets to help fall asleep, and talking about his relationship to death and his two year old daughter Matilda in a recent interview: “I feel good about dying now because I feel I’m alive in her. But at the same hand, you don’t want to die because you want to be around for the rest of her life.”Who really knows what that all adds up to? That he was struggling to keep his head afloat, well yeah, clearly that’s there to be interpreted. That his relationship had ended and it hurt, that he loved his daughter madly, that he worked way too hard on his last roles as Bob Dylan in I'm Not There and The Joker in the new Batman film Dark Knight, that he was sleeping badly… It’s all there I guess, somewhere between the lines. Skimming through news on the internet there are photos of him everywhere. It seems to increase the loneliness surrounding his departure, the sense of waste amid the prevalence of his curiously tired smile. No one should die when they’re 28, it’s too young. No father should leave a young daughter behind to wonder what he was like. But I don’t have any grand theories to paste over his death. Any instant insight or false intimacies to assume. Like I say, the guy brushed past me once in a nice phone conversation a long time ago. I loved his acting in a few fine films. I found his uneasiness with fame interesting, and, I guess, unnecessarily tormented when I saw him being interviewed on TV. Now I’m just sad he has left this world too soon; that his family and friends are in so much pain. That there was so much good work still left to do. Like Michael Hutchence, who Australians have a particularly sad affection for, Heath Ledger might be surprised to wake from his sleep and discover just how well loved he was at home today – and as he sleeps how we have been awoken to that love.- Mark Mordue

Comments (22)

  1. Jonh Ingham says This is a beautiful eulogy for someone who's passing is a terrible waste.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  2. wdog says Not to speak unkindly of the dead.. but if his death was self-inflicted intentionally or negligently (over-use of drugs to dull the pain).. I for one am a constant voice that we don't idolize celebrities who die stupidly.. while I'm as right-wing as they come, there are too many people in our society who struggle to live day to day under incredible adversity and I think that we owe it to them to openly oppose the lionization of those who choose to throw a life away. A good friend of my wife is currently struggling with brain cancer, which is terminal, and will be leaving behind her young children whose graduation and marriage and first born she will never see.. yet, she meets each day with a smile, and vows to give it everything she has to savor as many days as she can on this earth. If Heath's death was beyond his control, an anneurism or heart attack due to some illness or other physical defect, that is indeed tragic and I will feel sadness - however, if he's one in a long line of self-obsessed celebrities who throw a life away needlessly, I for one say, the world is better off.. and the same goes for Michael Hutchence, Kurt Cobain, Ian Curtis, and all of their ilk. Better we salute the Christopher Reeves of this world a thousand times, than write one word to worship a quitter.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  3. steve simon says mark, this is your finest post ever, thank you
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  4. Michael Goldberg says Great post, man!!! And so good to have a new post from you!
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  5. Alex P Morrisson says aw god, this is a seriously good post. people like buckley and cobain never really hurt me like this did. i grew up with this guy and he was probably my first crush...hearthrob whatever... me and my friends always say, 'god we're never going to get old, im going to killmyself at 28' but i think that now we're getting to our 20 year mark, we want to leave an impact on the world. Heath had done that, but i think there was more in him, and that just sad. thanks a lot
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  6. david hyman says beautiful.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  7. Lyrikhan says in Ledger i saw someone i respected both as an actor and a man....the world is poorer without him beautiful post
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  8. Misstee says truly lovely post Mark....
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  9. milkshake says Well written post! I was looking forward to seeing him in Batman - not an obvious choice for The Joker but I was really impressed when I saw him in costume.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  10. Lizziegreeneyes says Truly beautiful. Thank you for this post... a most intimate tribute to a man few knew, but so many so highly regarded as a good & kind soul. A tragedy to be sure. I too spoke of the great loss today in my post... if you're interested "*CLICK HERE*":http://mog.com/Lizziegreeneyes/blog_post/139349
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  11. capndad says What's really sad is that his death seems to have been such a surprise. I don't think anyone can take their own life without some build up that would be noticed by all. Or is the pressure to be on your game professionally as well as emotionally so intense in tinsletown that the individual does all in his power to avoid having his/her angst revealed for scrutiny? If Ledger did take his own life, then that's one theory. Harking back to wdog's post above, I understand where you're coming from with your comments, and they become especially true when you get a personal opportunity to observe those fighters who soldier on. But emotional strength is just as much a learned trait and the lack of it can be just as much an an illness as any other, and many of us do not carry it out in as stellar a way as others feel we should. If he took his own life, that strength was obviously not in sufficient supply. The individual himself still deserves mourning, not for the great talent that has left us, for that is selfish on our part, but because of the machinations of society as a whole and Ledger's stake in it in particular that convinced him there was no other way to cope.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  12. bubbleslives says sad. I think everything to be said has pretty much already been said, though my opinion on the suicide thing is this- if it was suicide, that doesn't nessecarily mean we should discard what we (the general public) feel about his death. If antything, if it was suicide, it will hopefully highten awarness of depression and the like, and let the public know that it can happen to someone they know, regardless of what they appear to have (fame, $$, family, good looks-- does not always equal happiness, sometimes it's a deeper mental problem). I'm all for congradulating the people who solider ahead, but sometimes the problem's more complex. Hope that makes sense! great post by the way. I find it fascinating the way people's lives intersect and effect each other, it was neat that you got to interview him.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  13. River Lethe says Fantasticly written, Mark.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  14. Charley Rogulewski says its just nuts. he had so much going for him. he was the next Paul Newman. i feel weirdly affected about this more than usual too. i don't know why. it's sad.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  15. James12 says so I just read your post. I don't what it was,but it was beautiful. We don't know anything about the cause of death at the moment, at least I don't, but you're right. No one should die at the tender age of 28. A new section of life begins at that age, a section where you're secure in who you are, you know what you want to do and you're set in how you will achieve this. Of course I'm speaking in general, I know that doesn't define everyone, but, once again, it was great. Really got to me. Keep writing like this, I'll be coming back for more....James.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  16. No Limit Travel says Mark, This is an excellent post that speaks volumes. Thank you.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  17. darmuzz says Well said.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  18. Mike the Knife says Eloquent and caring reflection, Mark. Got a feeling it was accidental - a clumsy mistake, if you will. From what I understand, his method put him in mind-lock with his characters - and the darkness started to get to him. This was no party-boy or junkie screwing up. I shouldn't need to remind anyone that mental illness is actual illness. Any suffering he endured does not deserve to be trivialized. And, as I said way before this tragic loss, I have a feeling that his work in "The Dark Knight" is going to be a career highlight. What a pity that it's also gonna be a swan song for a talented man who was just coming into his own.
    Permalink posted 01/23/2008
  19. Electric Touch says Great post man, nice one
    Permalink posted 01/24/2008
  20. Mark Mordue says Thanks everyone. Really appreciate all your comments. I tried to get this story published and couldn't get any newspapers interested. I freelance as a journalist for a living, so that was disappointing - not because I'd miss out on some money or attention, but because I really did want to share how I felt and saying something seemed important. You make me feel vindicated that there was something true in the response, something worthwhile. I agree with Mike the Knife, it was almost certainly an accident - apparently Ambien can get you very disoriented and some pretty strange and erratic reactions to it have been reported by some people.
    Permalink posted 01/24/2008
  21. QueenofHell says Excellent post.The MOG gazette alerted me to this. I was shocked and saddened by the news. I admire Heath Ledger as an actor. I take exception to darmuzz's point of view, as I've stated elsewhere. I have suffered from anxiety and sometimes still do, and I know how debilitating it can be: for anyone, be he or she in the public eye or not. I can't understand, though, how someone can take a combination or 'cocktail' of 6 prescription drugs (if he did) without expecting a serious negative reaction. Suicide, misadventure, accident - what does it matter, really; in any case, it's a tragic loss of life.
    Permalink posted 01/28/2008
  22. changling says A very sensitive, deep, realistic take on our increasingly surreal society. Thanx Mark RIP Mr Ledger XXX Peace
    Permalink posted 01/30/2008

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