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Subject:

Nuttall obit

From:

Pierre Joris <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Pierre Joris <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 6 Jan 2004 11:18:11 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (148 lines)

here is the Jeff obit from the independent:

Jeff Nuttall



Artist, poet, actor, and pioneer of the 'happening'





06 January 2004





Jeff Nuttall, artist, actor, poet and teacher: born Clitheroe,
Lancashire 8 July 1933; married 1954 Jane Louch (marriage dissolved
1979); died Abergavenny, Monmouthshire 4 January 2004.





Jeff Nuttall played Friar Tuck on screen (in Robin Hood, 1991), good
typecasting, and he would have made an excellent Falstaff. His natural
bonhomie overflowed in every direction and his boundless enthusiasm for
art in all its aspects found its outlet in teaching, acting, writing,
painting and much experiment: he did nothing by halves. His paunch was
well-earned, his large florid face, that of a fox-hunting,
port-drinking squire, was evidence enough of his liking for good times,
good company, eating and drinking. It was impossible to be depressed
for long in his presence.



He was a Renaissance man without much personal ambition, but with a
compulsion to communicate, who did nothing badly, but the ubiquity of
his talents and interests often made it difficult to evaluate his
finished work.



Born in 1933, he was of just the right generation to get the full
benefit of the Sixties, not as a flower child or a pot-head, but as a
mature artist who could exercise creative influence at a time that was
receptive to new ideas and experiment. He believed that art was good
for you and that life meant little without it: its function was to
shake people out of dull habit-orientated lives and clichéd thinking.



When, in 1970, the House of Commons debated the puzzling attitudes and
behaviour of the youth of the day, his 1968 book Bomb Culture was
cited: it argued that a generation that has grown up under the
ever-present threat of nuclear extinction could hardly be expected to
think or behave as if it had a future ahead of it - "Seize the day" was
its motto.



Born and educated in Lancashire, he went to the Hereford School of Art,
leaving in 1951. He did his National Service in the Royal Army
Education Corps and then became Art Master at Leominster, going on to
schools in London and then the Art College in Bradford. While
developing his own reputation as a painter, moving from conventional
styles into semi-representational colourism, he became a lecturer at
Leeds Polytechnic and then Head of Fine Arts in Liverpool. He was an
inspiring teacher, but he had long before begun to use the theatre as
another didactic medium.



In 1966, together with Mark Long and others, he founded the People
Show, a touring company of actors (some untrained), musicians, poets
and artists, who performed the scripts he wrote for them, sometimes in
small theatres, but more often in specific environments where the
script was only the starting point for a largely improvised spectacle.
Open spaces, docks and public squares were usually the settings and
casual passers-by often did not realise that the event that they
stopped to watch was a theatrical performance. By 1980 the group had
created more than 80 productions and had toured Europe and the United
States as well as Britain.



Jeff Nuttall was one of the first British creators of the "happening",
a loose informal type of theatrical presentation that depended on
surprise and audience participation for its success. In one such early
event, held in Better Books' performance space on Charing Cross Road in
London, the audience had to endure large pieces of meat being flung
around. By the end the whole room was covered in blood.



His Performance Art (1979) contained his memoirs of the People Show,
with his scripts in a second volume. Nuttall was nearly always part of
its performances, playing parts that were often menacing - he was a
fine character actor - and he would find ways to explore the audiences'
reactions and comment on them. The group sometimes performed in
department stores and hotels, without informing the management,
developing situations that would gradually get out of hand - one
involved a mock murder in a hotel, the actors spreading rumours for
days in advance - and the arrival of the police was often part of the
scripted action. Although they were not overtly political there was
much social and radical comment in these presentations.



Nuttall wrote several novels, of which Snipe's Spinster (1975) was the
most successful, and many other books based on his experiences,
theories and interests; one, King Twist (1978), was a study of the
North Country comedian Frank Randle. He was also a prolific poet with
over a dozen volumes published - the most substantial being Poems,
1962-69 (1970) - and was featured in Penguin Modern Poets (no 12,
1968). His Selected Poems was published only last month.



Political correctness was foreign to him: he was an élitist who
believed in bringing high culture to everyone, whether they wanted it
or not. His teacher's salary had to finance many other activities,
including the magazine he founded and edited in his early years, My Own
Magazine (1964-67).



He loved women, was married once, but had no children: they might have
competed with art.



John Calder


___________________________________________________________
Pierre Joris
6 Madison Place And they call reading a sin, and writing is a crime.
Albany NY 12202 And no doubt this is not entirely false.
h: 518 426 0433 They will never forgive us for this Somewhere Else.
c: 518 225 7123
o: 518 442 40 85 -- Thomas Bernhard
email: [log in to unmask]
http://www.albany.edu/~joris/
____________________________________________________________

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