1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 3 00:00:19,853 --> 00:00:24,483 [dramatic music] 4 00:00:24,483 --> 00:00:29,238 [Errol Morris] Usually, I have absolutely no idea of where to begin, 5 00:00:29,238 --> 00:00:31,865 but you gave me an idea of where to begin. 6 00:00:33,617 --> 00:00:34,826 And what was that? 7 00:00:36,537 --> 00:00:41,250 [Errol] You asked me about the nature of our relationship. 8 00:00:41,250 --> 00:00:43,836 It went further than that, I think. It said, "Who are you?" 9 00:00:43,836 --> 00:00:46,630 Because, I've looked at much of your work. 10 00:00:46,630 --> 00:00:51,635 Sometimes, you're a spectral figure, sometimes you're God. 11 00:00:51,635 --> 00:00:53,762 And sometimes you're present. 12 00:00:58,100 --> 00:01:03,146 I needed to know who I was talking to. Were you my friend across the fire? 13 00:01:03,146 --> 00:01:06,066 Were you a stranger on a bus? 14 00:01:06,817 --> 00:01:08,193 Who are you? 15 00:01:09,444 --> 00:01:11,613 This is a performance art. 16 00:01:11,613 --> 00:01:18,078 You need to know whether you're performing to a trade union, an elite audience. 17 00:01:20,080 --> 00:01:24,877 You need to know something about the ambitions of the people you're talking to. 18 00:01:25,836 --> 00:01:28,172 [Errol] And if I can't answer that question? 19 00:01:28,172 --> 00:01:30,841 Not that I won't, but maybe I can't. 20 00:01:31,884 --> 00:01:35,762 Then we'll struggle on and find out who you are. 21 00:01:35,762 --> 00:01:36,972 [chuckles] 22 00:01:36,972 --> 00:01:39,683 [wings flapping] 23 00:01:52,279 --> 00:01:54,656 [David] When I was first in Army Intelligence, 24 00:01:54,656 --> 00:01:58,952 I'd conducted a lot of interviews, which were also interrogations. 25 00:01:58,952 --> 00:02:04,416 Immediately, in the relationship, there is a dependence upon me, the interrogator. 26 00:02:05,834 --> 00:02:09,545 "Is your mother okay? Do you want me to make a call to your home?" 27 00:02:09,545 --> 00:02:14,885 It's the bonding, real or artificial, that opens the discussion. 28 00:02:16,053 --> 00:02:19,806 First of all, a statement that I'm the only person you've got. 29 00:02:20,933 --> 00:02:23,268 [Errol] Establishing a dependence? 30 00:02:24,144 --> 00:02:27,648 Establishing their dependence on the interrogator, yes. 31 00:02:29,149 --> 00:02:33,153 When you want something to be expressed that may not be true, 32 00:02:33,153 --> 00:02:36,907 and you know it's not true, that's a beginning. 33 00:02:39,993 --> 00:02:44,164 {\an8}[David] "There's scarcely a book of mine that didn't have The Pigeon Tunnel 34 00:02:44,164 --> 00:02:47,793 at some time or another as its working title." 35 00:02:50,838 --> 00:02:52,130 [muffled thud] 36 00:02:52,130 --> 00:02:54,883 [David] "Its origin is easily explained. 37 00:02:55,551 --> 00:02:58,929 I was in my mid-teens when my father decided to take me 38 00:02:58,929 --> 00:03:02,599 on one of his gambling sprees to Monte Carlo. 39 00:03:05,519 --> 00:03:08,981 Close by the old casino stood the sporting club." 40 00:03:08,981 --> 00:03:11,191 [wings flapping] 41 00:03:11,191 --> 00:03:13,986 [David] "At its base lay a stretch of lawn 42 00:03:13,986 --> 00:03:16,321 and a shooting range looking out to sea." 43 00:03:16,321 --> 00:03:17,614 [gunshot] 44 00:03:23,579 --> 00:03:24,580 [gunshot] 45 00:03:24,872 --> 00:03:26,415 [gunshot] 46 00:03:28,917 --> 00:03:32,838 {\an8}[David] "Under the lawn, ran small, parallel tunnels 47 00:03:32,838 --> 00:03:35,507 {\an8}that emerged in a row at the sea's edge. 48 00:03:40,179 --> 00:03:44,183 - Into them were inserted live pigeons..." - [pigeon coos] 49 00:03:44,183 --> 00:03:47,769 "...that had been hatched and trapped on the casino roof. 50 00:03:52,608 --> 00:03:56,653 Their job was to flutter their way along the pitch-dark tunnel 51 00:03:56,653 --> 00:03:59,656 until they emerged in the Mediterranean sky 52 00:03:59,656 --> 00:04:03,702 as targets for the well-lunched sporting gentlemen..." 53 00:04:03,702 --> 00:04:04,995 [Russian soldiers] "Halt! Halt!" 54 00:04:04,995 --> 00:04:08,248 "...who were standing in wait with their shotguns." 55 00:04:12,836 --> 00:04:13,837 [gunshot] 56 00:04:17,007 --> 00:04:18,050 [gunshot] 57 00:04:18,050 --> 00:04:21,094 "Pigeons who were missed or merely winged 58 00:04:21,094 --> 00:04:24,932 returned to the place of their birth on the casino roof, 59 00:04:24,932 --> 00:04:27,768 where the same traps awaited them. 60 00:04:31,063 --> 00:04:34,441 Quite why this image has haunted me for so long 61 00:04:35,609 --> 00:04:37,528 is something the listener..." 62 00:04:37,528 --> 00:04:38,487 [gunshot] 63 00:04:38,487 --> 00:04:41,698 "...is perhaps better able to judge than I am." 64 00:04:42,533 --> 00:04:43,742 [gunshot] 65 00:04:52,960 --> 00:04:57,339 [Errol] The name David Cornwell is probably unfamiliar to most of you. 66 00:04:57,339 --> 00:05:01,176 He's an expert on secrets, a former spy himself, 67 00:05:01,176 --> 00:05:04,888 and the author of two dozen books, virtually all of them best sellers, 68 00:05:04,888 --> 00:05:07,808 {\an8}written under the pen name of John le Carré. 69 00:05:09,393 --> 00:05:13,188 {\an8}[Errol] Cornwell has been living this double life for more than 50 years now 70 00:05:13,188 --> 00:05:14,606 {\an8}and rarely gives interviews. 71 00:05:16,984 --> 00:05:19,444 - [intriguing music] - [David] Betrayal fascinates me. 72 00:05:20,028 --> 00:05:23,824 I've lived through a period of endless betrayal. 73 00:05:26,243 --> 00:05:29,913 When I went into the secret world, I served in two successive services, 74 00:05:29,913 --> 00:05:32,416 both of which were betrayed to the hilt. 75 00:05:33,333 --> 00:05:35,794 I felt betrayed as a child, if you like. 76 00:05:37,462 --> 00:05:39,882 I felt that I had betrayed people myself. 77 00:05:48,223 --> 00:05:49,975 Like many artistic people, 78 00:05:51,351 --> 00:05:57,691 I have lived from early childhood inside an imaginative bubble. 79 00:06:00,235 --> 00:06:03,155 When I was in the secret world, it wasn't enough for me. 80 00:06:03,155 --> 00:06:07,326 I did very little of it. I was very junior, I wasn't told much. 81 00:06:07,326 --> 00:06:11,538 So, what I did was reinvent the secret world and fill my own people with it. 82 00:06:13,916 --> 00:06:19,922 [Errol] In many of the stories, there are dupes and string pullers. 83 00:06:22,216 --> 00:06:26,136 Those in control and those controlled by others. 84 00:06:28,805 --> 00:06:29,806 [camera shutter clicks] 85 00:06:29,806 --> 00:06:31,975 [David] Well, now we're talking about my childhood. 86 00:06:31,975 --> 00:06:34,186 [projector slide changes] 87 00:06:38,815 --> 00:06:41,527 My father was a confidence trickster. 88 00:06:41,527 --> 00:06:45,030 Life was a stage. 89 00:06:47,199 --> 00:06:49,159 Where pretense was everything. 90 00:06:50,494 --> 00:06:53,539 Being off stage was boring. 91 00:06:53,539 --> 00:06:56,041 And risk was attractive. 92 00:06:56,041 --> 00:07:00,379 But above all, what was attractive was the imprint of personality. 93 00:07:02,673 --> 00:07:04,800 Of truth, we didn't speak. 94 00:07:04,800 --> 00:07:06,760 Of conviction, we didn't speak. 95 00:07:06,760 --> 00:07:09,429 [Errol] So, you felt like a dupe? 96 00:07:10,764 --> 00:07:13,684 No, I joined. I joined. 97 00:07:16,061 --> 00:07:20,524 You polish your act, learn to tell funny stories. Show off. 98 00:07:22,109 --> 00:07:25,279 You discover early that there is no center to a human being. 99 00:07:27,906 --> 00:07:31,535 I wasn't a dupe. I was invited to dupe other people. 100 00:07:32,661 --> 00:07:36,790 If we moved from one place to another, didn't pay the bills. 101 00:07:36,790 --> 00:07:39,168 If we had to put the lights out on the house 102 00:07:39,168 --> 00:07:43,505 because somebody was after my father, Ronnie, 103 00:07:43,505 --> 00:07:47,593 that seemed at the time, the way people lived. 104 00:07:47,593 --> 00:07:49,970 Now, these are not hard luck stories. 105 00:07:50,721 --> 00:07:53,849 Graham Greene said, and I quote him often, 106 00:07:53,849 --> 00:07:57,269 "Childhood is the credit balance of the writer." 107 00:07:57,269 --> 00:08:00,981 It's not a lament, it's just a self-examination. 108 00:08:04,526 --> 00:08:07,487 [intriguing music] 109 00:08:08,739 --> 00:08:11,491 [David] "I have seen the house where I was born, 110 00:08:11,491 --> 00:08:14,745 but the house of my birth that I prefer 111 00:08:14,745 --> 00:08:18,582 is a different one built in my imagination. 112 00:08:20,959 --> 00:08:24,713 It's red brick and clattery and due for demolition, 113 00:08:24,713 --> 00:08:30,260 with broken windows, a 'For Sale' sign and an old bath in the garden. 114 00:08:30,260 --> 00:08:33,722 A place for kids to hide in rather than be born. 115 00:08:35,390 --> 00:08:39,645 But born there I was, or so my imagination insists." 116 00:08:40,395 --> 00:08:42,563 - [woman cries and pants] -"I was born in the attic 117 00:08:42,563 --> 00:08:44,566 among a stack of brown boxes 118 00:08:44,566 --> 00:08:48,320 that my father always carted round with him when he was on the run." 119 00:08:49,571 --> 00:08:52,699 [birds tweet] 120 00:08:52,699 --> 00:08:57,162 "My mother lies on a camp bed, pitifully doing her best, 121 00:08:57,162 --> 00:08:59,331 whatever her best may entail." 122 00:09:00,958 --> 00:09:02,334 [David's mother pants] 123 00:09:04,503 --> 00:09:08,215 [David's mother wails] 124 00:09:13,303 --> 00:09:15,597 -"So, I am born..." - [baby cries] 125 00:09:15,597 --> 00:09:18,809 "...and packed up with my mother's few possessions, 126 00:09:18,809 --> 00:09:22,062 for we have recently suffered another bailiffs' visitation 127 00:09:22,062 --> 00:09:23,814 and are travelling light." 128 00:09:24,982 --> 00:09:27,150 [baby gurgles] 129 00:09:29,152 --> 00:09:31,405 "The lid of the boot is locked from the outside." 130 00:09:31,405 --> 00:09:33,073 [engine starts] 131 00:09:34,366 --> 00:09:39,705 "I'm already on the run. I've been on the run ever since." 132 00:09:46,253 --> 00:09:50,549 [distorted flapping wings] 133 00:09:50,549 --> 00:09:53,594 [pigeons coo] 134 00:10:00,142 --> 00:10:02,644 [David] My mother disappeared when I was five. 135 00:10:04,188 --> 00:10:06,398 I had no relationship with her at all. 136 00:10:07,900 --> 00:10:11,445 There were many substitute mothers who passed through my father's hands. 137 00:10:11,445 --> 00:10:15,616 {\an8}One particular stepmother, who in her own way was heroic, 138 00:10:15,616 --> 00:10:17,492 {\an8}steadied the ship for a while. 139 00:10:18,118 --> 00:10:20,120 [dramatic music] 140 00:10:24,875 --> 00:10:27,294 {\an8}[David] My mother was a mystery. 141 00:10:27,294 --> 00:10:31,006 {\an8}Because it was never properly revealed what had happened to her. 142 00:10:31,006 --> 00:10:33,050 Was she dead, was she alive? 143 00:10:38,639 --> 00:10:41,016 Ronnie didn't like hard truths. 144 00:10:46,855 --> 00:10:49,149 I met her again at 21. 145 00:10:51,735 --> 00:10:54,696 I wrote to her brother, he wrote back, saying, 146 00:10:54,696 --> 00:10:58,492 "Here's her address. Never tell her that I told you." 147 00:10:59,159 --> 00:11:01,578 So, I wrote to my mother, said, "Your brother tells me..." 148 00:11:01,578 --> 00:11:04,414 So, I felt completely unbound by this injunction. 149 00:11:09,002 --> 00:11:13,882 [Errol] Did you imagine her having regrets about leaving you and your brother? 150 00:11:15,092 --> 00:11:19,388 [David] Well, when I met her, [laughs] I asked how she felt about it. 151 00:11:20,264 --> 00:11:23,892 And she replied, and it was always her reply, 152 00:11:24,852 --> 00:11:27,646 that my father had been intolerable to live with, 153 00:11:27,646 --> 00:11:31,483 that she got sick of the trail of mistresses he was bringing to the house. 154 00:11:31,483 --> 00:11:34,528 That there was never any money passing through. 155 00:11:34,528 --> 00:11:37,948 And she didn't like all these crooks coming through his life. 156 00:11:37,948 --> 00:11:42,369 She said, if, if she had attempted any other measure, 157 00:11:42,369 --> 00:11:45,706 he knew so many wonderful lawyers, which indeed he did, 158 00:11:45,706 --> 00:11:49,293 that she would never have had a chance in the marital court. 159 00:11:49,293 --> 00:11:53,172 So, she gave up all that stuff and thought she'd just push off. 160 00:11:53,172 --> 00:11:55,799 [pigeons coo] 161 00:11:59,887 --> 00:12:02,472 [Errol] Do you remember the day she left? 162 00:12:02,472 --> 00:12:03,640 [David] No. 163 00:12:06,101 --> 00:12:10,355 If you are going to leave your children, that night, 164 00:12:11,690 --> 00:12:13,483 with your white suitcase packed, 165 00:12:15,485 --> 00:12:17,070 do you kiss them goodbye? 166 00:12:17,070 --> 00:12:18,238 [door creaks] 167 00:12:20,699 --> 00:12:24,453 Did she come into the room where we slept? Take a last look at us? 168 00:12:25,329 --> 00:12:26,580 [she sighs gently] 169 00:12:31,919 --> 00:12:35,923 [David] So, I imagine it. I imagine that she did. 170 00:12:40,135 --> 00:12:41,220 [she exhales] 171 00:12:46,558 --> 00:12:47,643 [door closes firmly] 172 00:12:48,936 --> 00:12:51,146 [footsteps echo] 173 00:12:56,276 --> 00:12:59,530 [Errol] You came into possession of this suitcase. 174 00:12:59,530 --> 00:13:01,031 [David] When she died, 175 00:13:01,865 --> 00:13:05,619 I spotted this beautiful white hide suitcase from Harrods 176 00:13:05,619 --> 00:13:07,955 lined with silk inside. 177 00:13:07,955 --> 00:13:12,751 {\an8}With her initials on the outside, "O.M.C.," Olive Moore Cornwell. 178 00:13:14,169 --> 00:13:20,133 {\an8}That must have been the suitcase into which she packed her clothes. 179 00:13:21,593 --> 00:13:25,222 I imagined the amazing flimsies that it would have contained. 180 00:13:27,140 --> 00:13:29,017 {\an8}And the most exquisite clothes. 181 00:13:34,648 --> 00:13:37,734 {\an8}She took it into a kind of poverty. 182 00:13:37,734 --> 00:13:40,112 She ran away with a chap who had no money. 183 00:13:40,112 --> 00:13:42,114 I imagined the suitcase being unpacked 184 00:13:42,114 --> 00:13:45,200 and the last of the luxury gradually fading away. 185 00:13:46,410 --> 00:13:48,787 I kept the suitcase. It's the only relic I have of her. 186 00:13:48,787 --> 00:13:51,748 Physical evidence that that thing happened. 187 00:13:53,166 --> 00:13:57,546 [Errol] What did the suitcase mean to you? Why keep it? 188 00:13:58,338 --> 00:14:01,925 I accused it in my mind of being, as it were, a conspirator 189 00:14:01,925 --> 00:14:05,012 in her secret departure from the house one night. 190 00:14:05,012 --> 00:14:07,472 [vehicle passes faintly] 191 00:14:07,472 --> 00:14:09,057 To me, it's historic. 192 00:14:13,353 --> 00:14:17,107 She was impenetrable emotionally. 193 00:14:17,107 --> 00:14:21,695 I never heard her express a serious feeling. 194 00:14:21,695 --> 00:14:26,950 But when she went to nursing home for her last year or so, 195 00:14:27,784 --> 00:14:31,413 then she created a fantasy with the nurses. 196 00:14:31,413 --> 00:14:37,586 She had painted to the nurses a picture of maternal loyalty to us. 197 00:14:37,586 --> 00:14:41,340 The long lives we had shared, all the fun we'd had. 198 00:14:41,340 --> 00:14:44,468 So, she'd filled in the gap years, if you like. 199 00:14:44,468 --> 00:14:47,262 And when I attended her dying, 200 00:14:49,348 --> 00:14:52,809 the irony of the moment was she mistook me for my father. 201 00:14:56,563 --> 00:14:59,525 [foreboding music] 202 00:14:59,525 --> 00:15:03,987 [David] She said, "You never brought me orchids." 203 00:15:05,864 --> 00:15:09,576 I think it was a reference to some other amour he had. 204 00:15:10,369 --> 00:15:11,703 I will never know. 205 00:15:13,038 --> 00:15:14,623 And I said, "What color do you like?" 206 00:15:14,623 --> 00:15:17,751 She said, "I don't care. I've never seen them. Bring me an orchid." 207 00:15:17,751 --> 00:15:20,087 [mysterious music] 208 00:15:25,342 --> 00:15:29,596 {\an8}[David] People loved Ronnie to the end of his days, even people he'd robbed. 209 00:15:33,934 --> 00:15:37,145 {\an8}[David] When he was on stage beguiling people, 210 00:15:37,145 --> 00:15:40,732 he absolutely believed in what he was doing and saying. 211 00:15:42,317 --> 00:15:47,155 {\an8}These spasms of immense charm 212 00:15:47,155 --> 00:15:53,579 and persuasiveness were his moments of feeling real. 213 00:15:53,579 --> 00:15:58,750 "Son? When I'm judged, as judged I shall surely be, 214 00:15:59,751 --> 00:16:04,715 I shall be judged on how I treated you and your brother Tony. 215 00:16:04,715 --> 00:16:06,175 That will be God's will." 216 00:16:06,175 --> 00:16:10,888 God was a big pal of his. [laughs] 217 00:16:10,888 --> 00:16:15,893 Whether he believed in God is mysterious, but he was certain God believed in him. 218 00:16:15,893 --> 00:16:18,270 [pigeons coo] 219 00:16:19,605 --> 00:16:24,318 These extraordinary, ingenious, confidence tricks 220 00:16:24,318 --> 00:16:27,487 were part of a conversation he was having with God. 221 00:16:29,823 --> 00:16:34,661 "If I do this, can I get away with it? If I do that, can I get away with it?" 222 00:16:34,661 --> 00:16:36,747 [Errol] Bargaining with God. 223 00:16:36,747 --> 00:16:40,918 Yeah, I think more betting with God. [laughs] 224 00:16:40,918 --> 00:16:44,004 "If I put this much on the table, how about that?" 225 00:16:47,299 --> 00:16:51,678 Ronnie always, whether he had to steal or borrow or bribe the headmaster, 226 00:16:51,678 --> 00:16:54,389 wanted me to have the posh education. 227 00:16:55,807 --> 00:17:00,395 I learned the manners and the attitudes of a class to which I did not belong. 228 00:17:04,858 --> 00:17:08,654 I studied and I frequently felt slighted. 229 00:17:14,117 --> 00:17:18,539 There were times when I hated the class to which I had been assigned. 230 00:17:18,539 --> 00:17:20,249 I was on enemy territory. 231 00:17:20,249 --> 00:17:23,627 But I learned to dress properly. I learned to speak properly. 232 00:17:23,627 --> 00:17:27,673 I turned myself into one of them, but I never felt like one of them. 233 00:17:31,593 --> 00:17:34,513 {\an8}[David] From a very early age I was a little spy. 234 00:17:37,015 --> 00:17:40,185 Whenever Ronnie left the house, I investigated. 235 00:17:43,105 --> 00:17:45,566 I did not know what the world held. 236 00:17:49,611 --> 00:17:54,241 When the debt collectors came in, my toys disappeared. 237 00:17:54,241 --> 00:17:56,827 The furniture disappeared. Women disappeared. 238 00:17:56,827 --> 00:17:58,370 {\an8}Mothers disappeared. 239 00:18:02,833 --> 00:18:04,710 When Ronnie was really frightened, 240 00:18:04,710 --> 00:18:07,004 and it was, "Black the house out, put the lights out, 241 00:18:07,004 --> 00:18:09,047 put the cars in the back garden." 242 00:18:09,923 --> 00:18:13,677 He wasn't afraid of the law, he was afraid of the mob. 243 00:18:13,677 --> 00:18:15,137 ["Jealous Heart" by Al Morgan] 244 00:18:15,137 --> 00:18:19,266 ♪ Jealous heart Oh, jealous heart ♪ 245 00:18:19,266 --> 00:18:20,809 ♪ Stop beating ♪ 246 00:18:22,519 --> 00:18:28,233 ♪ Can't you see the damage You have done... ♪ 247 00:18:29,526 --> 00:18:34,323 [David] When he died, he had offices in Jermyn Street. 248 00:18:35,824 --> 00:18:38,493 On the top floor lived ladies of the night. 249 00:18:41,747 --> 00:18:45,834 Who, as he put it, were always ready to cook some sausages for him. 250 00:18:45,834 --> 00:18:47,794 [woman laughs] 251 00:18:48,670 --> 00:18:51,757 He had two Ford Zephyr cars, 252 00:18:51,757 --> 00:18:56,428 a house in Henley, a house in Tite Street, Chelsea. 253 00:18:56,428 --> 00:18:58,805 For what purpose, I know not. 254 00:18:58,805 --> 00:19:00,516 And he had these offices. 255 00:19:01,683 --> 00:19:07,898 We could not find on his person, in the drawers of his desk, 256 00:19:07,898 --> 00:19:10,567 enough money to pay the staff until the end of the week. 257 00:19:10,567 --> 00:19:12,236 There was no money. 258 00:19:12,236 --> 00:19:14,112 [horse neighs] 259 00:19:14,112 --> 00:19:17,658 There was a horse in France at Maisons-Laffitte, 260 00:19:17,658 --> 00:19:19,910 a couple of horses in Ireland. 261 00:19:20,702 --> 00:19:22,996 [hooves pound] 262 00:19:22,996 --> 00:19:25,666 [Errol] You called them, "the never-was-ers." 263 00:19:25,666 --> 00:19:27,417 [David] The never-was-ers. 264 00:19:29,962 --> 00:19:33,549 He had a world champion jockey, Gordon Richards. 265 00:19:36,009 --> 00:19:41,348 When Gordon retired, he agreed to select horses at auction for Ronnie, 266 00:19:41,348 --> 00:19:43,183 and, at some point, he must have paid for them. 267 00:19:45,853 --> 00:19:50,440 His great joy was to appear at Ascot and have a horse in a race. 268 00:19:51,149 --> 00:19:54,152 [indistinct race track announcements] 269 00:19:54,152 --> 00:19:56,697 [bell rings] 270 00:19:56,697 --> 00:19:59,741 [indistinct race commentary] 271 00:20:00,534 --> 00:20:04,746 [David] Ronnie clearly reached a point where the fraternity of bookmakers 272 00:20:04,746 --> 00:20:07,457 would not have him on the course anymore, 273 00:20:07,457 --> 00:20:10,252 and they had enforcers that made that clear. 274 00:20:10,252 --> 00:20:12,004 [crowd cheers] 275 00:20:12,004 --> 00:20:14,882 [David] And you better look out if you show up at a race course, 276 00:20:14,882 --> 00:20:16,925 and you haven't paid your debts. 277 00:20:19,887 --> 00:20:23,098 I was dispatched with a suitcase full of money 278 00:20:25,475 --> 00:20:28,395 to distribute among the bookmakers. 279 00:20:28,395 --> 00:20:31,690 [commentator] Wow! It's Rupert. He's pulling away now! 280 00:20:33,108 --> 00:20:35,777 [David] He had a horse named after my half-brother, 281 00:20:35,777 --> 00:20:38,238 and it ran in the Cesarewitch. 282 00:20:38,238 --> 00:20:42,034 [indistinct commentary] 283 00:20:42,034 --> 00:20:44,077 [crowd chatter] 284 00:20:48,665 --> 00:20:52,002 [David] All of a sudden, we had a real harvest of cash. 285 00:20:52,920 --> 00:20:54,213 Thank you, boys. 286 00:20:58,592 --> 00:21:00,636 [David] I sat on the train with it. 287 00:21:02,304 --> 00:21:05,307 [footsteps] 288 00:21:12,689 --> 00:21:14,816 [David] A big man came up to me. 289 00:21:24,535 --> 00:21:26,245 You're Ronnie Cornwell's son, aren't you? 290 00:21:34,920 --> 00:21:37,381 Don't do that again, sonny. 291 00:21:39,883 --> 00:21:42,094 [David] And he just touched my nose. 292 00:21:43,929 --> 00:21:47,516 And when I got back, Ronnie was waiting. 293 00:21:54,356 --> 00:21:56,650 And he counted and counted, 294 00:21:57,985 --> 00:22:00,654 and he couldn't believe I hadn't kept some. 295 00:22:00,654 --> 00:22:01,780 [Ronnie] Come on, boy. 296 00:22:01,780 --> 00:22:03,448 Show me your pockets. 297 00:22:03,448 --> 00:22:05,409 Come on, show me what you've done. 298 00:22:10,497 --> 00:22:13,917 [David] Then I think I got a fiver at the end of it for being a good boy. 299 00:22:16,295 --> 00:22:20,841 [Errol] Was this a disappointment to your father, this lack of larceny? 300 00:22:20,841 --> 00:22:23,969 It was puzzlement that... [laughs] 301 00:22:23,969 --> 00:22:27,556 "You can't be that good," he thought. [laughs] 302 00:22:27,556 --> 00:22:31,018 "No one is. This isn't human nature." 303 00:22:31,018 --> 00:22:34,855 [Errol] But this is such a romantic childhood, is it not? 304 00:22:34,855 --> 00:22:37,858 Well that-- yes. I-I really need to get that across, 305 00:22:37,858 --> 00:22:41,278 that whatever revelations came to me later, 306 00:22:41,278 --> 00:22:47,242 and whatever deprivals I seem to have suffered, mothers and things, 307 00:22:47,242 --> 00:22:49,161 it was terribly exciting. 308 00:22:49,161 --> 00:22:52,706 [suspenseful music] 309 00:22:54,124 --> 00:22:55,459 [projector slide changes] 310 00:22:55,459 --> 00:22:59,880 [David] We haven't mentioned the fact that I was destined to become a barrister. 311 00:23:00,881 --> 00:23:03,967 And my elder brother was destined to become a solicitor. 312 00:23:06,094 --> 00:23:12,142 I was determined to go to Oxford, and they offered me a place. 313 00:23:14,311 --> 00:23:17,105 Ronnie demanded to know what he was paying for. 314 00:23:19,733 --> 00:23:23,695 In cowardice, I said that I would be studying Law. 315 00:23:24,863 --> 00:23:30,953 And when he heard on the grapevine that I was reading Modern Languages, 316 00:23:30,953 --> 00:23:36,250 he descended on my tutor and demanded to know how the hell this had happened. 317 00:23:37,209 --> 00:23:39,127 Was it their fault or mine? 318 00:23:41,672 --> 00:23:44,675 My mentor, Vivian Green, showed him the door. 319 00:23:52,057 --> 00:23:54,101 {\an8}So, I went on reading Modern Languages. 320 00:23:59,106 --> 00:24:03,402 And in the middle of the second year, he made a really dramatic bankruptcy. 321 00:24:03,402 --> 00:24:06,321 It was massive, for a million and a quarter pounds. 322 00:24:09,533 --> 00:24:14,997 The Westminster Bank in Oxford, then, for reasons of its own, 323 00:24:14,997 --> 00:24:17,624 refused to keep my account and closed it. 324 00:24:20,377 --> 00:24:27,134 I had been very close to my girlfriend at the time, so we decided to marry. 325 00:24:31,054 --> 00:24:35,017 {\an8}I went and taught at a low life private prep school. 326 00:24:36,393 --> 00:24:39,271 And that was the same preparatory school which, in my mind, 327 00:24:39,271 --> 00:24:42,482 I put at the beginning of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. 328 00:24:45,819 --> 00:24:48,363 We lived in real poverty 329 00:24:48,363 --> 00:24:51,909 with an outside loo and that stuff, and a tin bath. 330 00:24:51,909 --> 00:24:54,703 And then, to my mind, heroically, 331 00:24:54,703 --> 00:24:58,498 Vivian Green inspired the college to call me back. 332 00:25:01,043 --> 00:25:03,462 And they would somehow find the money for me. 333 00:25:04,922 --> 00:25:07,758 So, we went back and they found us a grand flat to live in. 334 00:25:07,758 --> 00:25:09,801 Life had changed completely. 335 00:25:10,969 --> 00:25:13,847 The institutional allure returned 336 00:25:13,847 --> 00:25:17,434 when Eton invited me to come and teach the top class. 337 00:25:17,434 --> 00:25:20,729 I thought I'd be an Eton schoolmaster for the rest of my life. 338 00:25:22,439 --> 00:25:25,025 Then, after two years, I was fed up with it. 339 00:25:25,817 --> 00:25:29,821 And the spies lured me, and I thought I would be a spy for the rest of my life. 340 00:25:29,821 --> 00:25:34,409 [mysterious music] 341 00:25:34,409 --> 00:25:38,163 [David] It's terribly difficult to recruit for a secret service. 342 00:25:38,163 --> 00:25:41,667 In the end, you're looking for somebody who's a bit bad, 343 00:25:43,752 --> 00:25:45,754 but at the same time, loyal. 344 00:25:48,799 --> 00:25:55,347 There's a type they were looking for in my day, and I fit it perfectly. 345 00:25:57,975 --> 00:26:00,227 Separated early from the nest. 346 00:26:02,771 --> 00:26:04,147 Boarding school. 347 00:26:06,233 --> 00:26:08,443 Early independence of spirit. 348 00:26:11,029 --> 00:26:14,074 But looking for institutional embrace. 349 00:26:15,534 --> 00:26:21,248 I can see my own life still as a succession of embraces and escapes. 350 00:26:21,248 --> 00:26:23,750 [wings flutter] 351 00:26:29,715 --> 00:26:34,052 [David] I joined one intelligence service, went sour on it. 352 00:26:34,761 --> 00:26:37,264 {\an8}Moved to a second, went sour on it. 353 00:26:38,265 --> 00:26:44,021 I was disenchanted by the Cold War itself, which was easy to be 354 00:26:44,021 --> 00:26:48,233 when you saw all those Nazis wandering around in West Germany. 355 00:26:48,233 --> 00:26:51,028 And indeed in East Germany. 356 00:26:51,028 --> 00:26:52,905 What had we really fought for? 357 00:26:52,905 --> 00:26:55,282 [Errol] As if the war had never happened? 358 00:26:56,366 --> 00:26:57,534 It felt like that. 359 00:26:57,534 --> 00:27:04,625 The power of enforced forgetting was extraordinary. 360 00:27:06,710 --> 00:27:11,715 I was posted under diplomatic cover to West Germany. 361 00:27:13,133 --> 00:27:15,969 And it was one of the great good fortunes of my life, 362 00:27:15,969 --> 00:27:18,889 because I was there for the erection of the Berlin Wall. 363 00:27:21,642 --> 00:27:26,730 The standoff between East and West was exemplified in Berlin. 364 00:27:26,730 --> 00:27:29,983 Tension was constant. It affected everybody. 365 00:27:30,609 --> 00:27:31,610 [jet engine whines] 366 00:27:31,610 --> 00:27:34,988 [male announcer] The attention of an anxious world is focused on Berlin. 367 00:27:34,988 --> 00:27:38,367 The last great exodus of refugees from the East is processed 368 00:27:38,367 --> 00:27:41,703 as the Communist German regime moves to close their border. 369 00:27:41,703 --> 00:27:44,915 The flow of those seeking asylum here on the fringe of freedom 370 00:27:44,915 --> 00:27:46,959 has reached 1,500 a day. 371 00:27:49,253 --> 00:27:53,632 [David] I went to Berlin and saw for myself what was going on. 372 00:27:55,676 --> 00:28:01,014 The big dramas occurred before the wall was built. 373 00:28:01,014 --> 00:28:06,770 West German firemen were spreading their trampolines below the building. 374 00:28:08,063 --> 00:28:10,691 People were jumping into these things. 375 00:28:18,407 --> 00:28:22,035 Sights which were heart-breaking. 376 00:28:25,163 --> 00:28:26,957 [roaring] 377 00:28:26,957 --> 00:28:28,417 [muffled explosion] 378 00:28:36,091 --> 00:28:39,803 {\an8}[Errol] What was your emotional response to seeing this thing? 379 00:28:39,803 --> 00:28:46,685 A mixture of anger, disgust and empathy. 380 00:28:46,685 --> 00:28:50,022 It was for me a milestone. 381 00:28:50,022 --> 00:28:54,109 It was the impetus that produced The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. 382 00:28:55,903 --> 00:28:58,739 [Errol] A crucible for your understanding of the world? 383 00:29:01,658 --> 00:29:05,621 [David] More like confirmation of my understanding of the world. 384 00:29:09,541 --> 00:29:15,923 [David] This was the most obscene symbol of the insanity of the human struggle. 385 00:29:15,923 --> 00:29:17,382 [gunshot] 386 00:29:23,430 --> 00:29:28,519 I felt that on both sides, East and West, 387 00:29:28,519 --> 00:29:32,940 were inventing the enemy that they needed. 388 00:29:34,858 --> 00:29:39,863 The seamless transition from anti-Nazism to anti-Communism. 389 00:29:46,828 --> 00:29:48,956 [David] I came back from Berlin. 390 00:29:48,956 --> 00:29:52,835 I knew that I wanted to write a strong novel about the thing. 391 00:29:52,835 --> 00:29:55,546 It was summer. I think I worked mainly in the garden. 392 00:29:56,296 --> 00:29:57,798 The kids were around. 393 00:30:00,050 --> 00:30:02,886 I would maybe start at four or five in the morning. 394 00:30:04,012 --> 00:30:06,807 And I had this rush of blood and anger. 395 00:30:07,307 --> 00:30:12,563 Found, as it were, a fable that served my purposes 396 00:30:12,563 --> 00:30:14,481 and that was, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. 397 00:30:14,481 --> 00:30:16,900 [Richard Burton] What the hell do you think spies are? 398 00:30:16,900 --> 00:30:18,861 Moral philosophers measuring everything they do 399 00:30:18,861 --> 00:30:21,071 against the word of God or Karl Marx? 400 00:30:21,071 --> 00:30:25,117 They're not. They're just a bunch of seedy, squalid bastards like me. 401 00:30:25,117 --> 00:30:28,203 Little men, drunkards, queers, henpecked husbands, 402 00:30:28,203 --> 00:30:32,457 civil servants playing Cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten little lives. 403 00:30:32,457 --> 00:30:35,419 Do you think they sit like monks in a cell balancing right against wrong? 404 00:30:35,419 --> 00:30:39,339 The author who is the biggest sensation right now, 405 00:30:39,339 --> 00:30:42,050 his real name is David Cornwell, 406 00:30:42,050 --> 00:30:45,345 but he's much better known to us as John le Carré. 407 00:30:46,180 --> 00:30:48,724 How many did The Spy Who Came in from the Cold sell? 408 00:30:49,308 --> 00:30:53,562 I think in all editions, book club, paperback, all over the world, 409 00:30:53,562 --> 00:30:57,316 they say somewhere around twelve, fifteen million. 410 00:30:57,316 --> 00:30:58,400 [whistles] 411 00:30:58,400 --> 00:30:59,943 [mouthing] 412 00:30:59,943 --> 00:31:01,778 [audience laughs] 413 00:31:05,157 --> 00:31:10,746 {\an8}[Errol] I take it that the success of Spy was a surprise. 414 00:31:13,540 --> 00:31:17,961 [David] I think it was no surprise to me in the sense that I felt 415 00:31:17,961 --> 00:31:20,881 that when I'd finished it, I'd written something 416 00:31:20,881 --> 00:31:23,800 that was profoundly expressive of my own feelings, 417 00:31:23,800 --> 00:31:25,802 and that it might have legs. 418 00:31:30,224 --> 00:31:34,561 The early rumbles from agent and publisher suggested it really did have legs. 419 00:31:34,561 --> 00:31:37,564 You have to remember the context in which it was published. 420 00:31:37,564 --> 00:31:40,067 We were sated with James Bond at that time. 421 00:31:40,817 --> 00:31:44,154 {\an8}I admire your luck, Mister... 422 00:31:44,154 --> 00:31:47,741 Bond. James Bond. 423 00:31:47,741 --> 00:31:51,703 The reality that had been offered by the news 424 00:31:51,703 --> 00:31:54,915 and by all the events that were happening around us 425 00:31:54,915 --> 00:31:58,669 was spies as a shabby army of lonely deciders. 426 00:31:58,669 --> 00:32:01,713 I happened to deliver the antidote. 427 00:32:01,713 --> 00:32:07,469 What was wrong about it, and I lived with that problem still to this day, 428 00:32:07,469 --> 00:32:11,306 was that it painted the secret services as so bloody brilliant. 429 00:32:11,306 --> 00:32:17,354 Whereas, by that time, we were a crippled organization 430 00:32:17,354 --> 00:32:21,483 that could very well have been scrapped to begin again. 431 00:32:27,573 --> 00:32:30,784 {\an8}[David] "If your mission in life is to obtain traitors, 432 00:32:30,784 --> 00:32:33,245 to win them over to your cause, 433 00:32:33,912 --> 00:32:37,749 {\an8}you can hardly complain when one of your own 434 00:32:37,749 --> 00:32:41,128 {\an8}turns out to have been obtained by somebody else. 435 00:32:42,045 --> 00:32:45,257 When I came to write Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, 436 00:32:45,257 --> 00:32:49,845 it was Kim Philby's murky lamp that lit my path." 437 00:32:49,845 --> 00:32:51,346 [camera shutter clicks] 438 00:32:51,346 --> 00:32:55,601 "MI6's brilliant former head of counterintelligence. 439 00:32:56,268 --> 00:33:01,940 Once tipped to become chief of the service, who was also a Russian spy." 440 00:33:08,822 --> 00:33:12,910 [David] Halfway through my tenure in West Germany, 441 00:33:12,910 --> 00:33:15,579 Philby's defection was announced. 442 00:33:18,582 --> 00:33:25,214 His disappearance from Beirut and his appearance on the Moscow stage. 443 00:33:27,382 --> 00:33:32,095 That was shocking to the ethic of the secret services at that time. 444 00:33:32,930 --> 00:33:35,974 [suspenseful music] 445 00:33:53,283 --> 00:33:55,077 [in Russian] Someone is following. 446 00:34:02,918 --> 00:34:08,257 [David] The question is whether MI5, MI6 wanted him to go. 447 00:34:09,550 --> 00:34:14,346 Nobody wanted that exposure. You have an extraordinary problem. 448 00:34:14,847 --> 00:34:19,935 Very substantial former spy coming up for trial. 449 00:34:19,935 --> 00:34:24,565 It would do great national damage and achieve very little. 450 00:34:29,945 --> 00:34:34,116 In sober reflection, the powers that be said, "Thank God." 451 00:34:36,451 --> 00:34:39,621 [Errol] "Thank God"? So, they let him escape? 452 00:34:40,496 --> 00:34:41,748 [David] Yeah. 453 00:34:49,797 --> 00:34:51,842 [muffled ship's horn] 454 00:34:55,721 --> 00:34:58,515 [in Russian] Thank you, comrade. 455 00:35:04,438 --> 00:35:08,150 [David] Philby's defection went straight to the heart 456 00:35:08,150 --> 00:35:10,527 of the establishment of the day. 457 00:35:13,947 --> 00:35:15,949 He was a Westminster boy. 458 00:35:17,201 --> 00:35:20,078 Part of the inner circle of English society. 459 00:35:28,378 --> 00:35:29,421 [slurps] 460 00:35:29,421 --> 00:35:33,091 [David] People kind of overlooked, on those grounds, 461 00:35:33,091 --> 00:35:37,054 the rather evident past that Philby had. 462 00:35:41,767 --> 00:35:43,727 It would not have been difficult to establish 463 00:35:43,727 --> 00:35:47,147 that he had early associations with Communist people. 464 00:35:47,147 --> 00:35:49,858 {\an8}He'd married a Communist woman in Vienna. 465 00:35:51,902 --> 00:35:55,989 Those things could be swept aside because he's... he's one of us. 466 00:35:55,989 --> 00:35:57,282 He's one of us. 467 00:35:57,282 --> 00:36:00,035 So, if you'd really gone into Philby's background, 468 00:36:00,035 --> 00:36:02,162 you would have said this chap is... 469 00:36:02,162 --> 00:36:04,915 He's a bit sniffy. We don't want that. 470 00:36:04,915 --> 00:36:07,584 But quite the contrary, he was Mister Charm, 471 00:36:08,418 --> 00:36:10,671 and he loved to deceive. 472 00:36:11,421 --> 00:36:12,422 [camera shutter clicks] 473 00:36:17,261 --> 00:36:22,266 {\an8}[David] "Enter now, Nicholas Elliott, Philby's most loyal friend, confidant, 474 00:36:22,266 --> 00:36:27,312 devoted brother-in-arms in war and peace. Child of Eton. 475 00:36:27,312 --> 00:36:32,901 Son of its former headmaster, adventurer, alpinist and dupe." 476 00:36:32,901 --> 00:36:34,736 [elevator squeaks] 477 00:36:34,736 --> 00:36:39,491 "Among the many extraordinary things that Elliott had done in his life, 478 00:36:40,492 --> 00:36:45,747 and undoubtedly the most painful, was to sit face to face in Beirut 479 00:36:45,747 --> 00:36:50,419 with his close friend, colleague and mentor, Kim Philby, 480 00:36:50,419 --> 00:36:54,840 and hear him admit that he had been a Soviet spy 481 00:36:54,840 --> 00:36:58,468 for all the years that they had known each other." 482 00:37:07,186 --> 00:37:13,358 Nick Elliott told me that when he went out to interview Philby in Beirut 483 00:37:13,358 --> 00:37:17,112 and to obtain from Philby the confession. 484 00:37:17,821 --> 00:37:22,159 He said that really, when he wasn't playing a double game, 485 00:37:22,951 --> 00:37:25,495 that he was extremely lonely. 486 00:37:25,495 --> 00:37:28,207 He found life had gone flat for him, 487 00:37:28,207 --> 00:37:32,127 so the addiction to betrayal was essential to him. 488 00:37:33,587 --> 00:37:38,133 And he betrayed everybody, really, from childhood onward. 489 00:37:39,301 --> 00:37:42,846 {\an8}[Nicholas Elliott] There's an awful lot of misuse of the word "double agent." 490 00:37:42,846 --> 00:37:47,309 {\an8}Philby is often described in the press as a double agent. 491 00:37:47,309 --> 00:37:49,895 In point of fact, Philby was a straightforward, 492 00:37:49,895 --> 00:37:53,023 high-level, disreputable traitor. 493 00:37:53,023 --> 00:37:54,441 What's the difference, exactly? 494 00:37:54,441 --> 00:37:57,194 Well, I mean, he was a straightforward spy for the Russians. 495 00:37:57,194 --> 00:37:59,905 If he'd been a double agent, he'd have been a spy for the Russians. 496 00:37:59,905 --> 00:38:02,032 But we'd have been playing back against the Russians. 497 00:38:03,951 --> 00:38:07,871 [David] I knew Elliott pretty well. And he was this tall figure. 498 00:38:08,747 --> 00:38:12,668 The hollowed-out body, waistcoats, spectacles. 499 00:38:13,627 --> 00:38:17,381 An Etonian voice, the son of an Etonian headmaster, 500 00:38:17,381 --> 00:38:21,718 long line of Etonians behind him, very aristocratic. 501 00:38:21,718 --> 00:38:23,637 [Errol] Can you do his voice? 502 00:38:23,637 --> 00:38:28,016 Yes. I said to him, "Nick, 503 00:38:29,685 --> 00:38:34,022 when you went to see Kim, what kind of sanctions did you have?" 504 00:38:34,022 --> 00:38:36,108 [as Elliott] "Sanctions, old boy? What do you mean by that?" 505 00:38:36,108 --> 00:38:37,818 [normal] "How could you threaten him? 506 00:38:37,818 --> 00:38:40,487 Could you have him sandbagged and brought back to London?" 507 00:38:40,487 --> 00:38:43,282 [as Elliott] "Oh," he said, "my dear chap, nobody wanted him in London." 508 00:38:43,282 --> 00:38:46,368 [normal] I said, "Well, what could you threaten him with? 509 00:38:46,368 --> 00:38:49,955 Nick, come on, come clean." He said, 510 00:38:49,955 --> 00:38:53,375 [as Elliott] "I told him, if he didn't come clean, 511 00:38:53,375 --> 00:38:57,087 there wouldn't be a legation, an embassy, 512 00:38:57,087 --> 00:39:00,132 a business, or a club in the whole of the Middle East 513 00:39:00,132 --> 00:39:02,176 who'd have a first damn thing to do with him." 514 00:39:02,176 --> 00:39:04,136 [normal] So, I said, "Well, that must have frightened him." 515 00:39:04,136 --> 00:39:06,013 [as Elliott] "It did." [laughs] 516 00:39:07,264 --> 00:39:09,474 He played the English bloody fool, 517 00:39:09,474 --> 00:39:13,270 whether he was one, as many maintain, I don't know. 518 00:39:14,980 --> 00:39:18,275 [Errol] You do have that line in what you wrote. 519 00:39:18,859 --> 00:39:22,362 {\an8}"Philby was adept at deceiving others. 520 00:39:22,362 --> 00:39:26,074 {\an8}Elliott was equally adept at deceiving himself." 521 00:39:26,909 --> 00:39:28,202 {\an8}[David] I'm glad I said that. 522 00:39:30,829 --> 00:39:33,081 It was always my argument 523 00:39:33,081 --> 00:39:37,628 that it was instinct rather than reason that drove Philby to do what he did. 524 00:39:38,837 --> 00:39:44,843 That thrill of stepping into the street knowing what you know and they don't. 525 00:39:44,843 --> 00:39:50,599 It's the joy of self-imposed schizophrenia that the secret agent loves. 526 00:39:52,518 --> 00:39:55,187 [Errol] "Self-imposed schizophrenia." 527 00:39:56,063 --> 00:39:59,441 [chuckles gently] The duality all the time. 528 00:39:59,441 --> 00:40:02,236 Of being the opposite of your outward self. 529 00:40:02,903 --> 00:40:07,491 [Errol] But isn't there some joy that you are actually making policy? 530 00:40:09,535 --> 00:40:11,954 Yes, I think the joy is voluptuous. 531 00:40:15,082 --> 00:40:17,292 A sensual journey 532 00:40:17,292 --> 00:40:22,548 of constantly challenging your luck and surviving. 533 00:40:25,050 --> 00:40:28,345 Making a real difference too, absolutely. 534 00:40:28,345 --> 00:40:32,891 To feel you're the hub of the universe is wonderful for the vanity. 535 00:40:32,891 --> 00:40:39,523 To be passing that, that pure gold, to the Soviet Union, to your masters. 536 00:40:40,357 --> 00:40:43,902 "Now, do you love me? If I give you this, will you love me?" 537 00:40:45,529 --> 00:40:50,742 I can imagine that voluptuous instinct very well. 538 00:40:50,742 --> 00:40:53,370 Not in myself, but in him. 539 00:40:55,163 --> 00:40:57,708 Mister le Carré, you've described Kim Philby as, 540 00:40:57,708 --> 00:41:01,753 "The avenger who destroyed the citadel from within." 541 00:41:01,753 --> 00:41:05,048 Well, I think he's one of those strange people who was born into privilege 542 00:41:05,048 --> 00:41:08,719 and, in some way, resented the advantages with which he was born. 543 00:41:08,719 --> 00:41:13,348 A person who, on the one hand, felt that he was better than society 544 00:41:13,348 --> 00:41:17,311 and, on the other hand, couldn't forgive society for putting him in that position. 545 00:41:17,311 --> 00:41:19,479 He was very much at war with himself, I think. 546 00:41:19,479 --> 00:41:22,024 [suspenseful music] 547 00:41:27,279 --> 00:41:33,535 When I finally went to Moscow in 1988, 548 00:41:34,828 --> 00:41:39,917 I was at a party given by the Union of Soviet Writers. 549 00:41:42,711 --> 00:41:45,547 There was a big man called Genrikh Borovik. 550 00:41:46,673 --> 00:41:50,010 Borovik came up to me and said, 551 00:41:50,010 --> 00:41:56,892 [as Borovik] "David, I would like you to meet a very good friend of mine. 552 00:41:56,892 --> 00:41:58,810 Keen admirer from your books. 553 00:42:00,812 --> 00:42:02,022 Kim Philby." 554 00:42:02,022 --> 00:42:06,068 [normal] I replied, sick to the heart as I felt, 555 00:42:07,236 --> 00:42:11,114 that I'm soon to have dinner with our ambassador, 556 00:42:12,199 --> 00:42:17,746 and I can't see myself having dinner with the Queen's representative one night, 557 00:42:17,746 --> 00:42:20,541 and dinner with the Queen's traitor the next. 558 00:42:20,541 --> 00:42:24,461 I just thought there is such a thing as evil. 559 00:42:27,422 --> 00:42:33,220 Somebody who had blindly served Stalin for so long. 560 00:42:33,762 --> 00:42:38,350 {\an8}How he could go on serving such a person, such a cause, 561 00:42:39,184 --> 00:42:41,770 {\an8}as Soviet communism, was beyond me. 562 00:42:42,604 --> 00:42:45,190 He knew better than anyone what he was doing. 563 00:42:49,111 --> 00:42:53,615 It was the addiction, it was the fun of betrayal that got to him. 564 00:42:53,615 --> 00:42:57,661 It was the feeling that he was playing both ends against the middle. 565 00:42:57,661 --> 00:43:02,165 He was the center of the earth. He was playing the world's game. 566 00:43:02,165 --> 00:43:05,085 It had precious little to do, in the end, with ideology. 567 00:43:05,085 --> 00:43:06,712 It may have begun as ideology. 568 00:43:06,712 --> 00:43:09,339 After that, it became an addiction, the betrayal. 569 00:43:09,965 --> 00:43:12,926 If you'd given him your cat to look after for a couple of weeks, 570 00:43:12,926 --> 00:43:15,012 he'd have betrayed the cat somehow. 571 00:43:23,854 --> 00:43:27,983 I had some inner relationship with Philby. 572 00:43:30,027 --> 00:43:31,987 The temptation, somehow, 573 00:43:34,698 --> 00:43:38,160 to turn your back on everything you've been taught and picked up 574 00:43:38,160 --> 00:43:39,703 and go your own route. 575 00:43:40,746 --> 00:43:43,624 I can understand how that happened to Philby. 576 00:43:44,666 --> 00:43:47,878 And I've felt that thank God I never went in that direction. 577 00:43:47,878 --> 00:43:52,549 But there came a point in my life where I seemed to be offered the crossroads. 578 00:43:52,549 --> 00:43:55,552 I could have become a really bad guy. 579 00:43:55,552 --> 00:43:59,056 And mercifully, I found a home for my larceny. 580 00:44:00,974 --> 00:44:04,520 {\an8}[David archive] A writer is slightly out of tune. He is different. 581 00:44:05,103 --> 00:44:09,399 {\an8}His methods of creation are the methods of a lonely person 582 00:44:09,399 --> 00:44:12,319 who is borrowing, abstracting experiences here and there, 583 00:44:12,319 --> 00:44:15,948 and putting them together and trying to make a parcel, if you like, 584 00:44:15,948 --> 00:44:17,908 which you can then offer to the public. 585 00:44:17,908 --> 00:44:19,826 In that sense, he's an illusionist. 586 00:44:19,826 --> 00:44:22,371 And if people are constantly trying to look up his sleeve, 587 00:44:22,371 --> 00:44:24,748 then he's going to spoil his trick. 588 00:44:24,748 --> 00:44:25,999 [camera shutter clicks] 589 00:44:27,125 --> 00:44:32,172 For me, writing is a journey of self-discovery every time. 590 00:44:32,172 --> 00:44:35,926 How characters behave, how they emerge, who they are, 591 00:44:35,926 --> 00:44:37,386 what appetites they have, 592 00:44:37,386 --> 00:44:40,848 they deliver themselves on the blank page 593 00:44:40,848 --> 00:44:43,475 and they tell me a little bit about who I am. 594 00:44:46,144 --> 00:44:49,022 {\an8}In writing about George Smiley, of course, 595 00:44:49,022 --> 00:44:52,192 I'm writing about the ideal father I never had. 596 00:44:55,779 --> 00:44:58,365 These are attempts at self-knowledge. 597 00:44:59,700 --> 00:45:03,245 Little glimpses along the way of who one really is. 598 00:45:03,245 --> 00:45:05,330 I have never submitted to analysis. 599 00:45:05,330 --> 00:45:10,210 I feel if I knew any secrets about myself, I'd deprive myself of writing. 600 00:45:12,171 --> 00:45:13,338 [chuckles gently] 601 00:45:15,632 --> 00:45:18,427 [Errol] What did you learn about yourself from Bill Haydon? 602 00:45:20,846 --> 00:45:24,516 [David] Well, that was something I guess I already knew. 603 00:45:24,516 --> 00:45:26,977 It was something I knew of Philby, too. 604 00:45:27,519 --> 00:45:31,398 And obviously Haydon is to some extent modelled on Philby. 605 00:45:31,398 --> 00:45:34,401 An instinct that is latent in me, 606 00:45:34,401 --> 00:45:38,030 which I have never to my knowledge deployed, used, fallen for, 607 00:45:38,030 --> 00:45:43,619 it's to be king of the world, as Haydon thought he was. 608 00:45:43,619 --> 00:45:49,541 There was a time when the very pleasure of being in the secret world 609 00:45:49,541 --> 00:45:52,419 close to what was going on, what was really going on, 610 00:45:52,419 --> 00:45:54,922 {\an8}filled me with a sense of exultation. 611 00:45:56,924 --> 00:46:01,678 This is, in the Faustian sense, what the world contains at its inmost point. 612 00:46:01,678 --> 00:46:05,057 [mysterious music] 613 00:46:17,945 --> 00:46:21,365 "Was die Welt im Innersten zusammenhält", is the line. 614 00:46:30,290 --> 00:46:34,378 [Errol] Then there's that despairing line in The Secret Pilgrim, 615 00:46:34,378 --> 00:46:36,797 "Knowing that the inmost room..." 616 00:46:37,881 --> 00:46:39,716 "...doesn't contain anything." Yes. 617 00:46:39,716 --> 00:46:43,136 Somehow, we believe that there is an inmost room 618 00:46:43,136 --> 00:46:45,848 where policy is being conceived. 619 00:46:45,848 --> 00:46:48,600 I think it's being played completely ad hoc, 620 00:46:48,600 --> 00:46:51,186 from day to day, from hour to hour. 621 00:46:51,186 --> 00:46:52,771 [Errol] History is chaos! 622 00:46:52,771 --> 00:46:58,861 History is chaos, and therefore to imagine, as I might have done 623 00:46:58,861 --> 00:47:01,613 in my perpetual innocence, 624 00:47:02,364 --> 00:47:08,745 that there was some great secret to the nature of human behavior. 625 00:47:08,745 --> 00:47:09,830 There is none. 626 00:47:17,713 --> 00:47:22,759 {\an8}[David] "'Spying is eternal,' Smiley announced simply. 627 00:47:25,804 --> 00:47:31,351 'There's no career on Earth more cockeyed than the one you've picked. 628 00:47:34,521 --> 00:47:39,276 {\an8}You'll be at your most postable while you're least experienced. 629 00:47:41,195 --> 00:47:45,199 And by the time you've learned the ropes, no one will be able to send you anywhere 630 00:47:45,199 --> 00:47:48,202 without a trade description round your necks. 631 00:47:53,999 --> 00:47:59,463 Old athletes know they've played their best games when they're in their prime. 632 00:48:02,883 --> 00:48:05,969 Spies in their prime are on the shelf.'" 633 00:48:06,553 --> 00:48:08,555 [slow, echoing footsteps] 634 00:48:10,599 --> 00:48:13,644 "'And then, at a certain age, 635 00:48:15,896 --> 00:48:17,856 you want the answer.' 636 00:48:21,401 --> 00:48:25,155 'You want the rolled-up parchment in the inmost room 637 00:48:26,532 --> 00:48:30,244 that tells you who runs your lives and why. 638 00:48:39,419 --> 00:48:41,672 The trouble is, that by then, 639 00:48:41,672 --> 00:48:44,466 you're the very people who know best... 640 00:48:46,885 --> 00:48:49,930 ...that the inmost room is bare.'" 641 00:48:59,940 --> 00:49:04,528 [Errol] When I read it, I took it as more deeply existential. 642 00:49:05,445 --> 00:49:10,450 Is the inmost room ourselves? Maybe there's nothing there? 643 00:49:13,370 --> 00:49:17,457 In my case that is true, yes. I can't speak for everybody else. 644 00:49:17,457 --> 00:49:19,626 [suspenseful music] 645 00:49:23,589 --> 00:49:27,384 [David] I think we, all of us, live partly in a clandestine situation 646 00:49:27,384 --> 00:49:32,556 in relation to our bosses, in relation to our families, our wives, our children. 647 00:49:33,807 --> 00:49:36,810 We frequently affect attitudes to which we subscribe, 648 00:49:36,810 --> 00:49:39,229 perhaps intellectually, but not emotionally. 649 00:49:40,981 --> 00:49:43,358 We hardly know ourselves. 650 00:49:44,234 --> 00:49:46,820 The figure of the spy does seem to me 651 00:49:46,820 --> 00:49:50,866 to be almost infinitely capable of exploitation, 652 00:49:50,866 --> 00:49:55,704 for purposes of articulating all sorts of submerged things in our society. 653 00:50:05,797 --> 00:50:08,884 [Errol] The experience that I have reading le Carré is, 654 00:50:08,884 --> 00:50:12,971 "Am I in a world of fiction? Am I in a world of fact? 655 00:50:12,971 --> 00:50:16,225 Am I in some strange blend of the two?" 656 00:50:19,603 --> 00:50:21,230 [gunshot] 657 00:50:21,230 --> 00:50:25,442 [David] I really don't think any artist, whether he's a writer, 658 00:50:25,442 --> 00:50:28,070 a painter, or anybody else, 659 00:50:28,862 --> 00:50:32,950 I don't think he has to explain his work beyond a certain point. 660 00:50:32,950 --> 00:50:37,079 If it's raised those questions in you, you're already having a good time. 661 00:50:37,079 --> 00:50:39,831 I have tried, over these conversations, 662 00:50:39,831 --> 00:50:44,378 to talk about the process of abstraction from real life. 663 00:50:44,378 --> 00:50:46,964 Now, I very consciously wrote a book, 664 00:50:47,923 --> 00:50:49,466 A Perfect Spy... 665 00:50:51,426 --> 00:50:57,140 {\an8}...which gave a parallel version, if you like, of much that had happened to me. 666 00:50:58,058 --> 00:51:02,938 For Ronnie, read Rick, for me, read Magnus. 667 00:51:04,022 --> 00:51:07,234 I cannot define for you 668 00:51:07,234 --> 00:51:13,282 where reality goes through the secret door into fiction. 669 00:51:15,033 --> 00:51:19,997 I would much rather go back to the notion that I painted of, 670 00:51:19,997 --> 00:51:23,959 "I live in that bubble, and I import stuff." 671 00:51:35,304 --> 00:51:38,682 It is a kind of solitude in the sense that 672 00:51:39,391 --> 00:51:42,019 {\an8}you're not sharing your thoughts with anyone. 673 00:51:42,686 --> 00:51:43,937 [page turns] 674 00:51:43,937 --> 00:51:48,817 You're composing in secret from the elements you see around you. 675 00:51:50,402 --> 00:51:56,200 A fictional entity which is rational, which makes order out of chaos. 676 00:51:56,200 --> 00:51:58,202 I think that's such a normal process. 677 00:51:58,202 --> 00:52:00,495 If I were a painter, I'd be feeling the same way. 678 00:52:00,495 --> 00:52:02,497 I'd be taking the light, the window 679 00:52:02,497 --> 00:52:07,503 and I would try to make an image of how I feel now. 680 00:52:09,421 --> 00:52:13,675 [Errol] I was going to ask you how you do feel now, but that seems silly. 681 00:52:13,675 --> 00:52:15,761 Errol, I feel very comfortable. 682 00:52:15,761 --> 00:52:20,807 I enjoy very much talking about things I haven't talked about before. 683 00:52:20,807 --> 00:52:26,271 I saw this prospect, at my great age, as something definitive. 684 00:52:26,271 --> 00:52:30,192 I knew that I was not going to lie. I wasn't going to fabricate. 685 00:52:30,192 --> 00:52:33,111 I'm not even interested in self-defense, 686 00:52:33,111 --> 00:52:36,406 because I really don't know what the accusation is in the air. 687 00:52:40,619 --> 00:52:44,289 [David] "Sir Magnus, you have in the past betrayed me, 688 00:52:45,207 --> 00:52:48,752 but more important, you have betrayed yourself. 689 00:52:48,752 --> 00:52:52,881 Even when you are telling the truth, you lie. 690 00:52:52,881 --> 00:52:57,219 You have loyalty and you have affection. 691 00:52:57,219 --> 00:53:00,180 - But to what? To whom?" - [Axel echoing] To what? To whom? 692 00:53:00,764 --> 00:53:02,349 I don't know. 693 00:53:02,349 --> 00:53:04,309 One day, maybe you will tell me. 694 00:53:06,019 --> 00:53:12,234 What I am saying, Sir Magnus, you are a perfect spy. 695 00:53:13,443 --> 00:53:15,445 [faint chatter] 696 00:53:21,493 --> 00:53:25,622 [David] Characters don't actually work until they've got a bit of you in them. 697 00:53:27,583 --> 00:53:29,418 They're just paper men. 698 00:53:30,878 --> 00:53:34,673 I voice my characters. I read them to myself. 699 00:53:36,049 --> 00:53:38,552 That's terribly important, how they speak. 700 00:53:38,552 --> 00:53:43,182 After that, they kind of tell you who they are, how they dress, how they move. 701 00:53:55,277 --> 00:54:00,699 [David] That's the emergence of character as you write, page after page. 702 00:54:03,744 --> 00:54:07,039 {\an8}Gradually, this fellow emerges and is yours. 703 00:54:09,750 --> 00:54:12,461 My natural instinct when I meet people 704 00:54:12,461 --> 00:54:15,506 is to consider the possibilities of their characters. 705 00:54:15,506 --> 00:54:18,675 I begin to invest them with things they probably don't possess. 706 00:54:18,675 --> 00:54:23,138 Curiously, in the end product, those features may not be there anymore. 707 00:54:23,847 --> 00:54:26,225 But that's the beginning of the story. 708 00:54:28,769 --> 00:54:31,855 And then I discuss, what do these people want? 709 00:54:32,856 --> 00:54:38,403 And out of discerning contrary appetites, you get the essence of conflict. 710 00:54:38,987 --> 00:54:43,158 [Errol] You've written, "The cat sat on the mat is not a story, 711 00:54:43,158 --> 00:54:46,495 but the cat sat on the dog's mat is." 712 00:54:46,495 --> 00:54:47,579 That's right. 713 00:54:47,579 --> 00:54:50,290 [Errol] And then I have my le Carré version. 714 00:54:50,290 --> 00:54:51,291 [they laugh] 715 00:54:51,291 --> 00:54:56,046 [Errol] "The cat betrayed the dog by sitting on his mat." 716 00:54:56,046 --> 00:55:00,592 I think the cat was a double. [laughs] 717 00:55:16,775 --> 00:55:20,070 {\an8}[Errol] Why is betrayal an important concept to you? 718 00:55:22,489 --> 00:55:25,492 {\an8}[David] Well, it has a long family background. 719 00:55:28,912 --> 00:55:33,417 Reality did not exist in my childhood, performance did. 720 00:55:37,129 --> 00:55:42,467 I felt, observing life, that much of what people said overtly 721 00:55:42,467 --> 00:55:44,636 was not what they thought inwardly. 722 00:55:44,636 --> 00:55:48,849 You have to remember that in each of the secret services 723 00:55:48,849 --> 00:55:51,685 where I was ineffective but employed. 724 00:55:54,146 --> 00:55:55,898 {\an8}[David] They were the decades of betrayal. 725 00:55:55,898 --> 00:55:58,734 {\an8}You just wondered who was gonna pop out next. 726 00:56:02,821 --> 00:56:09,828 We received, at MI5, very strong representations from the Americans 727 00:56:09,828 --> 00:56:13,373 to clean up our act and get rid of the communists in our midst. 728 00:56:13,373 --> 00:56:16,543 A man appeared 729 00:56:17,044 --> 00:56:20,130 and he had some kind of authority, which he made clear to you, 730 00:56:20,130 --> 00:56:22,716 and he would say, "Come around, have a drink." 731 00:56:22,716 --> 00:56:23,800 [birds tweet] 732 00:56:23,800 --> 00:56:27,930 And he had a most extraordinary wall with live birds behind it. 733 00:56:28,639 --> 00:56:30,933 They silently flitted about. 734 00:56:35,646 --> 00:56:37,940 I think he was a fool, I may add. 735 00:56:37,940 --> 00:56:41,693 Must have been some kind of analyst, psychologist. 736 00:56:41,693 --> 00:56:46,073 He would question you in a sort of fatuous schoolmasterly... 737 00:56:46,073 --> 00:56:48,033 "Getting on all right with your wife, are you?" 738 00:56:48,033 --> 00:56:52,079 We were all being examined as potential communist spies. 739 00:56:54,331 --> 00:56:59,795 The comedy in my case was that I had, for MI5, 740 00:56:59,795 --> 00:57:04,633 entered the communist community at my university at Oxford. 741 00:57:07,970 --> 00:57:11,598 I was picked up and wooed, sat in the Soviet embassy, 742 00:57:11,598 --> 00:57:14,810 watched the Battleship Potemkin about six times, 743 00:57:14,810 --> 00:57:17,229 was fed with vodka and then dropped. 744 00:57:17,855 --> 00:57:19,231 [Errol] It's a good movie. 745 00:57:19,231 --> 00:57:23,652 It's a good movie, except that it has no happy ending. [laughs] 746 00:57:32,035 --> 00:57:33,287 [gunshot] 747 00:57:34,371 --> 00:57:39,501 [Errol] Wait a second. Is the desire to be a double agent from the very beginning? 748 00:57:40,085 --> 00:57:41,253 Yes. 749 00:57:41,253 --> 00:57:44,840 It was an extremely exciting thought at the time. 750 00:57:44,840 --> 00:57:47,092 [Errol] It's not just an agent, it's a double a-- 751 00:57:47,092 --> 00:57:49,928 It happens all the time with every security service 752 00:57:49,928 --> 00:57:52,556 and every offensive intelligence service. 753 00:57:52,556 --> 00:57:57,060 That you put people up alongside the recruiter, 754 00:57:57,060 --> 00:58:01,690 hope he will recruit, and then you own the person he has recruited. 755 00:58:01,690 --> 00:58:06,445 That's, as the Germans would say, normal. 756 00:58:10,240 --> 00:58:13,076 Out of that came the very painful relationship 757 00:58:13,076 --> 00:58:18,957 {\an8}with the secret head of the communist group at Oxford at the time, 758 00:58:18,957 --> 00:58:22,794 {\an8}a most innocent man, Stanley Mitchell. 759 00:58:25,380 --> 00:58:29,343 {\an8}We were in the same college, he was reading Russian and German. 760 00:58:30,552 --> 00:58:32,846 He was of Russian-Jewish extraction. 761 00:58:35,098 --> 00:58:38,227 And we went on a walking holiday together in Dorset. 762 00:58:38,227 --> 00:58:41,480 He had all the names of students 763 00:58:41,480 --> 00:58:45,651 who were members of the Communist Party at that time. 764 00:58:46,860 --> 00:58:51,323 My job for MI5 was to identify these people. 765 00:58:52,908 --> 00:58:57,788 And of course, it's horrific. I was betraying Stanley. 766 00:58:59,289 --> 00:59:01,124 [Axel shouts in distance] 767 00:59:02,042 --> 00:59:07,381 Although, I squirm and I'm horrified by my behavior now, 768 00:59:07,381 --> 00:59:10,175 I still think it had to be done. 769 00:59:10,175 --> 00:59:14,972 Stanley, in later years, made the very simple deduction 770 00:59:14,972 --> 00:59:16,890 that I was that person in his life. 771 00:59:16,890 --> 00:59:21,270 It upset him terribly. "It was you, Judas. You swine. 772 00:59:22,980 --> 00:59:27,484 How could anybody do it? How could anybody be as foul as you?" 773 00:59:29,403 --> 00:59:30,946 [Errol] And your defense? 774 00:59:31,947 --> 00:59:35,701 Was, "Well, sorry, Stanley, but you belong to a revolutionary movement 775 00:59:35,701 --> 00:59:38,954 which was determined to destabilize our country. 776 00:59:38,954 --> 00:59:44,168 We were, at that time, technically at war with the Soviet Union. 777 00:59:44,168 --> 00:59:45,919 You were on the wrong side." 778 00:59:49,298 --> 00:59:51,925 [Errol] Can you be so sure that you're on the right side 779 00:59:51,925 --> 00:59:55,762 - as opposed to the wrong side? - Of course not. No. Of course not. 780 01:00:06,732 --> 01:00:11,236 [Errol] In A Perfect Spy, why the need to have the son kill himself? 781 01:00:14,865 --> 01:00:18,911 {\an8}[David] Firstly, because he knew that as a double agent, he was rumbled. 782 01:00:22,247 --> 01:00:25,125 He could have cut a deal, I suppose, in the real world. 783 01:00:25,751 --> 01:00:28,337 I think he also found life insupportable. 784 01:00:29,922 --> 01:00:34,051 And he was ashamed in the eyes of his child. 785 01:00:36,011 --> 01:00:38,555 [Errol] Did Ronnie have a sense of shame? 786 01:00:39,348 --> 01:00:40,682 I really don't believe so. 787 01:00:40,682 --> 01:00:44,603 I've heard him do it, kind of through the keyhole, 788 01:00:45,562 --> 01:00:47,689 to the first of my stepmothers. 789 01:00:49,066 --> 01:00:52,402 Howling he would never do something again. 790 01:00:52,903 --> 01:00:54,446 I don't know that he did shame, 791 01:00:54,446 --> 01:00:57,282 I don't know how he could live with himself. 792 01:00:57,282 --> 01:01:01,036 Living with his fantasies, 793 01:01:01,036 --> 01:01:04,998 which didn't necessarily begin as criminal plans 794 01:01:04,998 --> 01:01:08,293 but it... it was like writing a novel, 795 01:01:08,293 --> 01:01:12,506 in the sense that he would hear the right line, 796 01:01:12,506 --> 01:01:16,176 or spot in the crowd some clue. 797 01:01:16,718 --> 01:01:19,429 And that would be the beginning of a scam. 798 01:01:19,429 --> 01:01:24,518 [pensive music] 799 01:01:25,644 --> 01:01:30,440 [David] "I am in the city of Exeter, walking across a patch of wasteland. 800 01:01:32,109 --> 01:01:35,195 I'm holding the hand of my mother, Olive. 801 01:01:35,904 --> 01:01:39,992 As she was wearing gloves, there is no fleshly contact 802 01:01:39,992 --> 01:01:44,371 and indeed, so far as I recall, there never was any. 803 01:01:47,332 --> 01:01:51,879 At the far side of the wasteland is a grim, flat-fronted building 804 01:01:51,879 --> 01:01:54,965 with barred windows and no light inside them." 805 01:01:54,965 --> 01:01:57,092 [pigeon coos softly] 806 01:02:01,138 --> 01:02:03,640 "And in one of these barred windows, 807 01:02:03,640 --> 01:02:08,770 looking exactly like a Monopoly convict, stands my father. 808 01:02:09,521 --> 01:02:12,733 I wave at Ronnie high up in the wall 809 01:02:12,733 --> 01:02:15,569 and Ronnie waves the way he always waved." 810 01:02:16,320 --> 01:02:17,946 [young David] Daddy, Daddy! 811 01:02:20,282 --> 01:02:22,826 [David] "On Olive's hand, I march back to the car, 812 01:02:22,826 --> 01:02:24,786 feeling thoroughly pleased with myself. 813 01:02:27,247 --> 01:02:31,460 Not every small boy, after all, has his mother to himself 814 01:02:31,460 --> 01:02:33,754 and keeps his father in a cage." 815 01:02:33,754 --> 01:02:35,088 [cell door slams] 816 01:02:40,093 --> 01:02:43,388 "But according to my father, none of this happened. 817 01:02:43,388 --> 01:02:46,266 The notion that I might have seen him in any of his prisons 818 01:02:46,266 --> 01:02:48,477 offended him very much." 819 01:02:50,771 --> 01:02:54,149 [Ronnie] Sheer invention from start to finish, son. 820 01:02:54,816 --> 01:02:58,153 Anyone who knows the inside of Exeter jail 821 01:02:58,153 --> 01:03:03,033 knows perfectly well you can't see the road from the cells. 822 01:03:05,494 --> 01:03:07,621 [cell door clanks, slams] 823 01:03:07,621 --> 01:03:09,206 [David] "And I believe him. 824 01:03:10,749 --> 01:03:12,709 I'm wrong and he was right. 825 01:03:12,709 --> 01:03:15,879 He was never at that window and I never waved to him. 826 01:03:16,463 --> 01:03:18,924 But what's the truth? What's memory? 827 01:03:19,633 --> 01:03:21,260 We should find another name 828 01:03:21,260 --> 01:03:25,055 for the way we see past events that are still alive in us." 829 01:03:32,062 --> 01:03:36,483 [Errol] I don't think confronting you is the right way to put it. 830 01:03:37,609 --> 01:03:41,280 But there was something that you said that I found curious 831 01:03:42,406 --> 01:03:45,492 and worth further examination. 832 01:03:46,410 --> 01:03:50,581 Maybe this is an interrogation. Maybe I am self-deceived. 833 01:03:52,374 --> 01:03:56,170 I can't imagine that as an interrogator or an interviewer, 834 01:03:56,170 --> 01:03:59,089 you aren't also in part looking for yourself. 835 01:04:00,007 --> 01:04:03,343 I don't think that we really can penetrate people very much, 836 01:04:04,970 --> 01:04:09,057 but we can form imaginings about them and then we relate to them. 837 01:04:16,815 --> 01:04:22,529 [Errol] You hired private detectives [laughing] to investigate your father. 838 01:04:23,780 --> 01:04:28,535 [David] One fat, one thin. I asked my solicitor, 839 01:04:28,535 --> 01:04:29,995 "How can I get hold of these people?" 840 01:04:29,995 --> 01:04:32,664 He said, "Well, don't tell them I told you, 841 01:04:32,664 --> 01:04:35,584 but these are about the most ruthless men [laughing] I know." 842 01:04:35,584 --> 01:04:38,962 {\an8}I hired them, at an absurdly large sum of money. 843 01:04:42,299 --> 01:04:44,676 [David] Really, they came on very little. 844 01:04:51,683 --> 01:04:58,482 {\an8}A much more reliable source for Ronnie's first criminal case and imprisonment 845 01:04:58,482 --> 01:05:00,817 {\an8}is the local press of the day. 846 01:05:04,947 --> 01:05:09,159 He got, I think, a four-year sentence for fraud at a very young age, 847 01:05:09,159 --> 01:05:11,912 but then he was taken out in mid-sentence 848 01:05:11,912 --> 01:05:15,374 and given a second sentence, uh, with hard labor. 849 01:05:15,374 --> 01:05:17,751 I once said, "How bad was it?" 850 01:05:17,751 --> 01:05:20,003 He said, "Well, the Gypsies were the worst." 851 01:05:20,003 --> 01:05:22,089 And he's talking about handicuffs. 852 01:05:22,840 --> 01:05:29,471 {\an8}Ronnie had a big chest. I think he was capable of being very physical himself. 853 01:05:34,226 --> 01:05:41,149 {\an8}[David] I was in Chicago promoting a British week, riding on London buses, 854 01:05:41,900 --> 01:05:45,445 pretending to make phone calls from telephone kiosks. 855 01:05:52,119 --> 01:05:55,455 The British consul-general then handed me a telegram 856 01:05:55,455 --> 01:05:59,251 {\an8}he'd received from the embassy in Jakarta. 857 01:06:03,297 --> 01:06:08,594 Saying Ronnie was in prison, it would take so much money to get him out. 858 01:06:08,594 --> 01:06:10,929 Would I agree to pay it? 859 01:06:14,808 --> 01:06:17,936 It wasn't an enormous sum, but it was quite painful all the same, 860 01:06:17,936 --> 01:06:20,314 and that got him out. 861 01:06:20,314 --> 01:06:23,650 And we never talked about it until I did much later and he said, 862 01:06:23,650 --> 01:06:26,236 "Oh, it was nothing, just currency stuff." 863 01:06:26,236 --> 01:06:29,531 We now know that he was engaged in arms dealing 864 01:06:29,531 --> 01:06:35,078 at a time when Indonesia was just recovering from a huge genocide. 865 01:06:40,292 --> 01:06:44,213 But then the last time, to my knowledge, that he was in prison, 866 01:06:44,213 --> 01:06:48,967 he was in the Bezirksgefängnis, the district prison in Zurich 867 01:06:48,967 --> 01:06:50,928 for swindling hotels. 868 01:06:50,928 --> 01:06:53,847 He was allowed a reverse charge call to me. 869 01:06:53,847 --> 01:06:58,060 He said, "I can't do any more jail, son. Get me out." 870 01:06:59,186 --> 01:07:00,687 And that was money again. 871 01:07:00,687 --> 01:07:04,942 I mean, it wasn't big money, but it was extremely painful to me. 872 01:07:04,942 --> 01:07:06,276 [cell door slams] 873 01:07:06,276 --> 01:07:12,407 I still have nightmare visions of this hugely active physical man, caged. 874 01:07:14,409 --> 01:07:17,246 In the aggregate, I don't know how much prison he did. 875 01:07:18,455 --> 01:07:21,500 Probably altogether no more than six or seven years. 876 01:07:22,543 --> 01:07:26,171 But what effect it had on him, I can't imagine. 877 01:07:26,171 --> 01:07:28,090 [unsettling music] 878 01:07:28,090 --> 01:07:30,592 [indistinct prisoners chatter] 879 01:07:36,557 --> 01:07:38,809 [Errol] By the way, Ronnie sued you! 880 01:07:39,977 --> 01:07:45,566 [David] Yes, he did. I gave an interview to London Weekend Television. 881 01:07:47,067 --> 01:07:50,988 I omitted to say that I owed everything to him. 882 01:07:52,865 --> 01:07:55,284 I didn't want to give Ronnie the credit. 883 01:07:57,035 --> 01:08:00,205 Why should I find a line that said I owed it all to my father? 884 01:08:00,205 --> 01:08:06,503 But the reality probably is, in many ways, that I do. 885 01:08:18,390 --> 01:08:20,767 [David archive] I've never felt I belonged anywhere, 886 01:08:20,767 --> 01:08:23,228 I've been very lucky in that respect. 887 01:08:23,228 --> 01:08:25,229 I've had a very rich life. 888 01:08:25,939 --> 01:08:29,484 And I've seen a lot of institutions and a lot of things. 889 01:08:30,569 --> 01:08:33,947 I've led a lot of lives, in an odd way. 890 01:08:33,947 --> 01:08:36,491 I don't feel that I belong to any of them. 891 01:08:37,117 --> 01:08:41,705 What I am left with is a sense of being on my own. 892 01:08:47,085 --> 01:08:49,755 [Errol] Was your father tortured by the fact 893 01:08:49,755 --> 01:08:54,009 that you became rich and successful and he did not? 894 01:08:56,303 --> 01:08:57,513 [David] I don't know. 895 01:08:59,680 --> 01:09:05,562 The principal effect of my success upon him 896 01:09:05,562 --> 01:09:08,273 was to create in him a sense of entitlement. 897 01:09:08,273 --> 01:09:12,778 He bought huge quantities of my books, usually on credit, signed them, 898 01:09:12,778 --> 01:09:15,113 "From the author's father." 899 01:09:15,113 --> 01:09:17,115 Gave them around like confetti. 900 01:09:23,121 --> 01:09:29,795 I met the hard-edge, the real edge, I suppose, when he summoned me to Vienna. 901 01:09:33,590 --> 01:09:34,841 "Son, 902 01:09:35,884 --> 01:09:38,386 I've worked out what your education cost me. 903 01:09:38,386 --> 01:09:41,807 And I have some idea of the kind of money you're making." 904 01:09:43,225 --> 01:09:45,560 And then he went on to make a pitch. 905 01:09:45,560 --> 01:09:49,898 "Son, all I've ever wanted in my life is pigs and cattle, 906 01:09:49,898 --> 01:09:52,943 and then a little piece of Dorset. Pigs and cattle. 907 01:09:53,484 --> 01:09:57,739 Somewhere nice to live, nice lady to live with, and I'll be all right. 908 01:09:58,699 --> 01:10:01,618 So, what I need is..." And he named an enormous sum of money. 909 01:10:01,618 --> 01:10:05,414 "Father, I can't do that. It makes no sense to me. 910 01:10:05,998 --> 01:10:10,377 What I will do, if that's really what you want, with your pigs and cattle, 911 01:10:10,377 --> 01:10:12,963 is I will buy a house and own it and put you into it. 912 01:10:12,963 --> 01:10:15,966 I will make an allowance to you for running your farm. 913 01:10:15,966 --> 01:10:18,177 I don't trust you for one second." 914 01:10:18,177 --> 01:10:22,806 He actually had appointed me a mark. He was going to con me. 915 01:10:23,348 --> 01:10:27,269 And I'd join the club of people on the roadside. 916 01:10:27,269 --> 01:10:28,770 And I wasn't going to let that happen. 917 01:10:30,230 --> 01:10:32,983 We were in Sachers, in Vienna, 918 01:10:32,983 --> 01:10:36,528 the most refined, excellent restaurant in those days. 919 01:10:37,237 --> 01:10:41,033 He let out the most awful feral howl. 920 01:10:41,825 --> 01:10:46,496 And shouted, "You're paying your own father to sit on his arse!" 921 01:10:46,496 --> 01:10:49,917 In a voice that could have been heard across the street. 922 01:10:49,917 --> 01:10:55,130 And then he emitted this howl, howl, half rose to his feet, 923 01:10:55,130 --> 01:11:00,177 and I put my arm round his very ample back, 924 01:11:00,177 --> 01:11:06,808 and we hobbled to the front door of the... of the hotel, 925 01:11:08,227 --> 01:11:13,398 down some steps, then there was a cab and he looked up at me in supplicant's face, 926 01:11:13,398 --> 01:11:15,776 "How am I going to pay for this cab?" 927 01:11:16,985 --> 01:11:19,404 And I gave the driver some money. 928 01:11:20,072 --> 01:11:21,698 And off he went. 929 01:11:21,698 --> 01:11:26,286 I could've accepted his pitch, at least given him some money. 930 01:11:27,329 --> 01:11:32,167 But I was so angry that it was a pain to pay for the cab. 931 01:11:32,960 --> 01:11:36,046 [Errol] But it's a feeling of being betrayed. 932 01:11:36,672 --> 01:11:41,552 Yes, it is. There was quite a bit of that in it. "How can you do this to me?" 933 01:11:41,552 --> 01:11:42,719 [melancholy music] 934 01:11:48,058 --> 01:11:50,811 [Guillam] Come on, old friend. It's bedtime. 935 01:11:52,563 --> 01:11:55,399 George? You won. 936 01:11:58,902 --> 01:11:59,987 [Smiley] Did I? 937 01:12:02,114 --> 01:12:03,198 Yes. 938 01:12:04,825 --> 01:12:06,410 Yes, I suppose I did. 939 01:12:14,960 --> 01:12:16,587 [Errol] Did you love Ronnie? 940 01:12:17,421 --> 01:12:19,131 I really don't know what love is. 941 01:12:19,131 --> 01:12:21,633 I must have loved him as a child. 942 01:12:22,134 --> 01:12:25,971 But then, the consequences of his life became clear to me. 943 01:12:26,805 --> 01:12:31,226 Later in life, when he wanted everything I had, like my money. 944 01:12:33,187 --> 01:12:36,857 I was able to pull out the necessary stops. 945 01:12:36,857 --> 01:12:39,318 I could do affection with him. 946 01:12:39,318 --> 01:12:43,530 I could do indifference and, secretly, I could do hatred. 947 01:12:43,530 --> 01:12:45,532 Those things exist, actually, 948 01:12:45,532 --> 01:12:48,160 in any father-son relationship at different times. 949 01:12:48,160 --> 01:12:52,331 They're like seasons. I had to muster hatred in order to escape him. 950 01:13:02,841 --> 01:13:04,885 {\an8}[David] They had three funerals for him. 951 01:13:06,678 --> 01:13:08,263 {\an8}I went to the first one. 952 01:13:09,389 --> 01:13:12,476 {\an8}I was urged to make a speech and declined. 953 01:13:12,476 --> 01:13:15,395 And then there was another funeral 954 01:13:15,395 --> 01:13:18,232 and then, God help us, there was a memorial service. 955 01:13:18,232 --> 01:13:20,275 But I didn't go to either of those. 956 01:13:22,778 --> 01:13:26,907 I wanted to believe that my feelings were dead. 957 01:13:27,908 --> 01:13:29,451 And I've never seen his grave. 958 01:13:31,828 --> 01:13:33,997 [birds sing] 959 01:13:35,457 --> 01:13:37,835 [Errol] But you paid for the funerals. 960 01:13:38,919 --> 01:13:40,420 I'm sure I did, yes. 961 01:13:40,420 --> 01:13:42,798 I paid for everybody's funerals. [chuckles] 962 01:13:42,798 --> 01:13:45,551 I paid for my mother's funeral. I mean, I paid for them. 963 01:13:45,551 --> 01:13:49,263 What-- What the hell does that mean? I'm well off, I paid. 964 01:13:51,723 --> 01:13:55,727 The most loyal of his servants, 965 01:13:55,727 --> 01:13:59,439 who had done jail for him, was a man called Arthur Lowe. 966 01:13:59,439 --> 01:14:03,819 All these people have monosyllables as surnames. 967 01:14:03,819 --> 01:14:05,696 There was a Mister Bent, believe it or not. 968 01:14:07,781 --> 01:14:12,619 I went to Jermyn Street immediately upon hearing of his death 969 01:14:12,619 --> 01:14:16,957 to see whether there was anything there to be redeemed and to be present. 970 01:14:17,916 --> 01:14:23,422 Arthur said, "Let's all go and have a bit of a blowout. Do us good. 971 01:14:23,422 --> 01:14:26,216 Let's go to Jules Bar across the road." 972 01:14:28,093 --> 01:14:30,804 So, about eight of us went, and Arthur presided. 973 01:14:30,804 --> 01:14:34,516 We had champagne and oysters, w-w-whatever the hell we wanted. 974 01:14:34,516 --> 01:14:36,935 We thought we'd cheer ourselves up. Or Arthur did. 975 01:14:36,935 --> 01:14:42,399 Very graciously, he paid. And it was his party, it was fine. 976 01:14:43,066 --> 01:14:47,321 {\an8}It's my party, George. I'll get the bill when I'm ready. 977 01:14:51,074 --> 01:14:53,827 Two days later, I got the receipt in the post. 978 01:14:53,827 --> 01:14:57,164 "Will I please [laughs] adjust as soon as possible?" 979 01:14:57,164 --> 01:14:59,249 Ronnie never had money. 980 01:14:59,249 --> 01:15:05,422 He made killings, but as soon as he made a killing, on the... the sound principle, 981 01:15:05,422 --> 01:15:11,053 that expenditure always exceeds income... it was gone again. 982 01:15:14,556 --> 01:15:18,143 He was some kind of crisis addict. 983 01:15:18,143 --> 01:15:21,313 I think he had to be living on the edge all the time. 984 01:15:23,065 --> 01:15:25,567 And I think he certainly persuaded himself 985 01:15:25,567 --> 01:15:29,571 that this was an honorable and valuable contribution to the community 986 01:15:29,571 --> 01:15:32,991 and they would be happy and he would be mountainously rich. 987 01:15:32,991 --> 01:15:36,495 And mind you, he was within a whisker of that happening. 988 01:15:40,499 --> 01:15:43,794 I'm not making a case for him, I'm just trying to tell you 989 01:15:43,794 --> 01:15:49,466 how close he was to being a successful man. 990 01:15:50,050 --> 01:15:53,178 And how absolutely absurd were his fantasies. 991 01:15:53,178 --> 01:15:55,347 - [slamming] - [pigeon coos] 992 01:16:04,815 --> 01:16:06,984 [Errol] But the world runs on fantasy. 993 01:16:06,984 --> 01:16:12,030 [David] I agree. The membrane between what he does or failed to do, 994 01:16:12,030 --> 01:16:16,034 and enormously wealthy and successful and honored people 995 01:16:16,034 --> 01:16:18,579 that membrane was very, very feeble. 996 01:16:19,246 --> 01:16:22,958 [traffic hums] 997 01:16:25,002 --> 01:16:28,463 [David] "Ronnie is dead and I am revisiting Vienna 998 01:16:29,673 --> 01:16:31,550 in order to breathe the city air 999 01:16:31,550 --> 01:16:35,304 while I write him into the semi-autobiographical novel 1000 01:16:35,304 --> 01:16:37,472 I am at last free to ponder. 1001 01:16:42,144 --> 01:16:43,687 Not the Sacher again. 1002 01:16:44,229 --> 01:16:46,440 I have a dread that the waiters will remember 1003 01:16:46,440 --> 01:16:51,486 Ronnie crashing down onto the table and me half carrying him out. 1004 01:16:53,405 --> 01:16:56,074 My plane into Schwechat is delayed 1005 01:16:56,074 --> 01:16:59,828 and the reception desk of the hotel that I have chosen at random 1006 01:16:59,828 --> 01:17:02,873 is in the charge of an elderly night porter. 1007 01:17:06,376 --> 01:17:10,047 He looks on silently as I fill in the registration form. 1008 01:17:10,964 --> 01:17:16,303 Then he speaks in soft, venerable Viennese German. 1009 01:17:18,347 --> 01:17:21,558 'Your father was a great man,' he says. 1010 01:17:21,558 --> 01:17:24,019 'You treated him disgracefully.'" 1011 01:17:28,941 --> 01:17:32,736 [Errol] I keep hearing again and again and again 1012 01:17:32,736 --> 01:17:36,949 that I have not pressed you hard enough about betrayal. 1013 01:17:36,949 --> 01:17:41,995 I have failed in my interviewer's or interrogator's job. 1014 01:17:41,995 --> 01:17:48,126 Well, I feel that you got the last drop out of the sponge on that subject. 1015 01:17:48,126 --> 01:17:53,507 But I'll answer any question you wish me to answer, as truthfully as I can. 1016 01:17:53,507 --> 01:17:56,218 [Errol] Do they want you to break down and sob? 1017 01:17:56,218 --> 01:18:00,138 And weep? Yeah. I... I can do that. 1018 01:18:00,138 --> 01:18:03,475 Like I can do bird noises. [chuckles] 1019 01:18:03,475 --> 01:18:08,438 I'm not going to talk about my sex life, any more, I trust, than you would. 1020 01:18:08,438 --> 01:18:10,899 It seems to be an intensely private matter. 1021 01:18:10,899 --> 01:18:14,945 My love life has been a very difficult passage, as you would imagine, 1022 01:18:14,945 --> 01:18:19,366 but it's resolved itself wonderfully, and that's enough on that subject. 1023 01:18:21,451 --> 01:18:24,705 [Errol] So, what do people want? 1024 01:18:25,581 --> 01:18:31,503 They want to think that I am duplicitous, 1025 01:18:32,880 --> 01:18:34,798 false-tongued, 1026 01:18:34,798 --> 01:18:39,011 that I use my charm as a wreckers' light 1027 01:18:40,053 --> 01:18:42,806 and probably that I torture my children. 1028 01:18:43,557 --> 01:18:46,351 They want to unmask me as something, 1029 01:18:46,351 --> 01:18:50,230 but I need to know what is behind the mask first. 1030 01:18:51,398 --> 01:18:54,193 You have all I am, as far as I know. 1031 01:18:59,615 --> 01:19:04,286 {\an8}[Errol] In your memoir, you say none of it's true, it's as I imagined it. 1032 01:19:07,289 --> 01:19:12,836 [David] Inside the bubble, I am abstracting from non-fiction 1033 01:19:12,836 --> 01:19:14,338 and fictionalizing it. 1034 01:19:15,297 --> 01:19:20,302 I want to take tidy stories out of the perceived reality around me. 1035 01:19:23,639 --> 01:19:28,101 {\an8}But I didn't do any of that derring-do stuff that is reported in my books. 1036 01:19:30,229 --> 01:19:35,025 [Errol] But why tell people that a story is false right at the very beginning? 1037 01:19:36,360 --> 01:19:39,446 [David] If you and I had witnessed the same car accident, 1038 01:19:40,489 --> 01:19:43,283 each would have his version of what had happened. 1039 01:19:44,243 --> 01:19:45,911 So, what is truth? 1040 01:19:47,329 --> 01:19:52,125 Objective truth is perceived by some absent third party, 1041 01:19:53,085 --> 01:19:56,338 but otherwise, truth is subjective. 1042 01:19:58,674 --> 01:20:03,095 [Errol] Who is that third party? God? 1043 01:20:03,095 --> 01:20:07,558 There is some kind of factual record which we'll never get our hands on. 1044 01:20:09,101 --> 01:20:10,561 [footsteps echo] 1045 01:20:11,562 --> 01:20:15,899 My business has been to try to make credible fables 1046 01:20:15,899 --> 01:20:21,280 out of the worlds that I visited or visited me. 1047 01:20:32,708 --> 01:20:35,752 The journey for me has been one of the imagination. 1048 01:20:37,004 --> 01:20:39,715 The imaginative refuge from reality. 1049 01:20:42,551 --> 01:20:45,429 The recreation of chaos. 1050 01:20:47,055 --> 01:20:51,435 Not in an orderly way, but in a comprehensible, individualized way 1051 01:20:52,895 --> 01:20:59,902 that makes people feel not à la James Bond, 1052 01:20:59,902 --> 01:21:01,403 "I wish this was me." 1053 01:21:02,196 --> 01:21:07,242 But more kind of, "Jesus, I hope this isn't me." 1054 01:21:08,035 --> 01:21:10,621 [mysterious music] 1055 01:21:17,252 --> 01:21:20,464 [David] "When I was a young and carefree spy, 1056 01:21:20,464 --> 01:21:25,677 it was only natural that I should believe that the nation's hottest secrets 1057 01:21:25,677 --> 01:21:29,431 were housed in a chipped, green Chubbsafe 1058 01:21:29,431 --> 01:21:34,144 that was tucked away at the end of a labyrinth of dingy corridors... 1059 01:21:35,729 --> 01:21:38,649 on the top floor of 54 Broadway... 1060 01:21:39,942 --> 01:21:44,738 ...in the private office occupied by the Chief of the Secret Service. 1061 01:21:46,657 --> 01:21:50,869 {\an8}I had heard that there existed documents so secret 1062 01:21:50,869 --> 01:21:54,581 {\an8}that they were only ever touched by the Chief himself. 1063 01:21:57,918 --> 01:22:00,254 And now the sad day is upon us 1064 01:22:00,254 --> 01:22:04,633 when the final curtain will be run down on Broadway Buildings. 1065 01:22:07,261 --> 01:22:10,013 Is the Chief's safe exempt? 1066 01:22:10,013 --> 01:22:13,976 Will cranes, crowbars, and silent men convey it bodily 1067 01:22:13,976 --> 01:22:17,688 to the next stage along its life's long journey? 1068 01:22:19,940 --> 01:22:23,068 It is reluctantly ruled that the safe will be opened." 1069 01:22:23,068 --> 01:22:24,152 [keys jingle] 1070 01:22:26,238 --> 01:22:28,490 [shouts] So, who's got the bloody key? 1071 01:22:28,490 --> 01:22:30,409 [David] "Not the reigning chief, apparently." 1072 01:22:30,409 --> 01:22:31,535 [Chief] Ah! 1073 01:22:31,535 --> 01:22:34,621 [David] "He has made a point of never venturing inside the safe. 1074 01:22:36,164 --> 01:22:38,458 What you don't know, you can't reveal." 1075 01:22:40,210 --> 01:22:41,545 [Chief] Useless! 1076 01:22:42,296 --> 01:22:44,047 Send for Burglar Bill. 1077 01:22:45,299 --> 01:22:48,510 [David] "The Service has picked a few locks in its day, 1078 01:22:48,510 --> 01:22:51,263 so it looks like time to pick another." 1079 01:23:05,777 --> 01:23:06,945 [lock clunks] 1080 01:23:11,658 --> 01:23:13,368 [dial clicks] 1081 01:23:18,916 --> 01:23:20,709 [David] "The lock yields." 1082 01:23:20,709 --> 01:23:21,919 [lock clunks] 1083 01:23:22,711 --> 01:23:25,214 [David] "The safe is empty. Bare. 1084 01:23:25,964 --> 01:23:29,843 Innocent of even the most mundane secret." 1085 01:23:30,677 --> 01:23:31,803 Wait! 1086 01:23:32,679 --> 01:23:37,726 Is it a decoy safe to protect an inner sanctum? 1087 01:23:42,022 --> 01:23:45,108 [David] "The safe is gently prized from the wall. 1088 01:23:47,361 --> 01:23:49,905 The Chief peers behind it." 1089 01:23:49,905 --> 01:23:51,156 [Chief grunts] 1090 01:23:52,449 --> 01:23:57,996 [David] "And extracts a very thick, very old pair of trousers, 1091 01:23:59,289 --> 01:24:01,166 with a label attached to them. 1092 01:24:01,834 --> 01:24:08,465 The typed inscription declares that these are the trousers worn by Rudolf Hess..." 1093 01:24:09,049 --> 01:24:10,050 [thunder] 1094 01:24:10,551 --> 01:24:14,137 "...Adolf Hitler's deputy when he flew to Scotland 1095 01:24:14,137 --> 01:24:18,433 to negotiate a separate peace with the Duke of Hamilton. 1096 01:24:19,309 --> 01:24:24,648 In the mistaken belief that the Duke shared his fascist views." 1097 01:24:28,986 --> 01:24:31,989 [aircraft engine thrums] 1098 01:24:32,990 --> 01:24:35,117 [engine rattles] 1099 01:25:01,018 --> 01:25:04,813 [David] "Beneath the inscription runs a handwritten scrawl." 1100 01:25:06,440 --> 01:25:08,108 [aircraft roars] 1101 01:25:09,318 --> 01:25:11,445 "Please analyze. 1102 01:25:12,529 --> 01:25:18,619 May give an idea of the state of the German textile industry." 1103 01:25:20,287 --> 01:25:23,457 [Chief laughs] 1104 01:25:25,375 --> 01:25:28,462 [he continues to laugh] 1105 01:25:30,255 --> 01:25:36,053 [David] That was a story about men from a diminished imperial power 1106 01:25:36,053 --> 01:25:39,556 looking into a false reflection of themselves. 1107 01:25:39,556 --> 01:25:44,394 Still guarding a great nation, still playing the world's game. 1108 01:25:45,646 --> 01:25:51,151 And in fact, they were a tragically reduced crowd 1109 01:25:52,236 --> 01:25:54,321 driven by their own nostalgia. 1110 01:25:55,739 --> 01:25:57,991 [Errol] And when you look in the mirror? 1111 01:25:59,618 --> 01:26:00,994 Now? Today? 1112 01:26:01,620 --> 01:26:05,874 I'm much more at ease with myself now, in age. 1113 01:26:05,874 --> 01:26:10,921 More reconciled to who I was. And who I was not. 1114 01:26:10,921 --> 01:26:13,715 So, I'm not too unhappy when I look in the mirror, 1115 01:26:13,715 --> 01:26:16,009 unless I've got a dreadful hangover. 1116 01:26:16,844 --> 01:26:21,473 [Errol] I look at you as an exquisite poet of self-hatred. 1117 01:26:21,473 --> 01:26:24,518 Yeah, I would go with that. [laughs] 1118 01:26:24,518 --> 01:26:30,899 I think that it's only in the last few years that I feel I've found my freedom, 1119 01:26:30,899 --> 01:26:33,944 and I love being what I am best at. 1120 01:26:33,944 --> 01:26:38,407 Not just being a writer, that's incidental, but writing. 1121 01:26:38,407 --> 01:26:42,578 Without the creative life, I have very little identity. 1122 01:26:42,578 --> 01:26:45,914 I'm like an actor without a part. 1123 01:26:45,914 --> 01:26:51,879 With the work, I am as near as I get to being a happy man. 1124 01:26:52,838 --> 01:26:54,798 And I love, I love writing. 1125 01:26:55,674 --> 01:26:57,342 So, I am that animal. 1126 01:26:58,260 --> 01:27:03,807 And I dare hardly use the claim, but I'll make it here, I'm an artist. 1127 01:27:03,807 --> 01:27:06,226 [somber music] 1128 01:27:06,226 --> 01:27:08,520 [pigeons coo]