A beacon for a thin night in Saturday evening's TV schedule; a documentary exploring the public and personal identities of Francis Bacon with interviews from fellow artists and some of the people who new him best. In particular, I was intrigued by an article in last weekend's press which discussed Bacon's long time relationship with his nanny, Jessie Lightfoot, who cared for him as a child in Ireland. The art historian, Sir John Richardson, got to know Bacon after WW2 while living with his mother, opposite the artist's home in Kensington. "I would go there often. There was a lot of incredibly strong cocktails, so you got plastered pretty quick. Nanny would appear and say, 'Would anybody like something to smoke?' And this didn't mean Player's cigarettes.
'She was totally blind. How on earth she cooked, and how she knew what she was doing, I don't know. She organised the gambling parties he gave.' Lightfoot also placed adverts in local shops asking for "a gentleman's gentleman" - a euphemism for young lovers for the gay Bacon. Nanny Lightfoot then went with Bacon to live in the south of France but died in 1951. "Francis was heartbroken." Bacon's relationships with the 'straight' Terence Stamp, Lionel Blair and Marianne Faithfull are also included.
Later on, BBC2, 01.00-02.25hrs, there is a screening of "Love Is The Devil" (1998) with Derek Jacobi as Bacon and a young Daniel Craig as a thief who becomes his model and lover. I already have an off-air DVD; I seem to recall a stylish wit somewhat beset by a contrived effort to suggest the paintings but Jacobi is brilliant.
'She was totally blind. How on earth she cooked, and how she knew what she was doing, I don't know. She organised the gambling parties he gave.' Lightfoot also placed adverts in local shops asking for "a gentleman's gentleman" - a euphemism for young lovers for the gay Bacon. Nanny Lightfoot then went with Bacon to live in the south of France but died in 1951. "Francis was heartbroken." Bacon's relationships with the 'straight' Terence Stamp, Lionel Blair and Marianne Faithfull are also included.
Later on, BBC2, 01.00-02.25hrs, there is a screening of "Love Is The Devil" (1998) with Derek Jacobi as Bacon and a young Daniel Craig as a thief who becomes his model and lover. I already have an off-air DVD; I seem to recall a stylish wit somewhat beset by a contrived effort to suggest the paintings but Jacobi is brilliant.
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