I wish I’d met him, myself. Instead, I was given the opportunity to make a 30 minute tribute to him for the BBC. We started by filming at his public memorial service in the summer, which was attended by the great and the good of British Labour Old and New. The Miliband brothers were there. Lord Kinnock was there. Alf Morris, Bernard Donohue, David Dimbleby, Andrew Marr, Ed Balls, Yvette Cooper, Baroness Betty Boothroyd and many more. They were all there to celebrate someone whose passing also felt like the end of a political era.
I interviewed Lord Kinnock, the Milibands, and his three daughters Jackie, Caroline and Jane. I viewed dozens of tapes of archive material of Jack’s life, as a young TV producer for the BBC, as an MP, as a campaigner, as a TV presenter, through all this, a clear picture of the man himself started to emerge.
The hardest part wasn’t working out what to put in the finished programme, but what to leave out. The 30 minute running time was nowhere near enough to do him justice. The programme is really an extended highlights reel of his life, celebrating the man and his achievements.
Lord Kinnock, when I interviewed him, talked laughingly about how the two of them would get together and try to one up each other, Four Yorkshiremen style, about their impoverished upbringings. But Jack, Kinnock admitted, really had it difficult. They lived in a house in a slum area of Widnes shared with another family, and with a leaky roof. They would become adept at scraping the last dregs from a jam jar, making the most of what they had. It was this background which led him to fight for other people’s rights – starting with a battle against the local slum landlord, improved working conditions at his factory, then on to a local council seat.
He then worked as a BBC Producer, making several documentaries. After 15 years he informed the BBC of his intention to stand as an MP, winning Stoke South for Labour.
It was at this point, with a promising career ahead of him, and whispers of a ministerial role, that he went totally deaf due to an otherwise routine operation. People who had previously been close allies in Parliament wouldn’t give him the time of day. Following debates was impossible. He was devastated, and decided to stand down. The public outcry that followed in the press, the public, and even the intervention of then Prime Minister Harold Wilson, led him to reconsider.
Learning to lipread, and with the help of fellow MPs and from his wife, partner and close ally Lady Pauline, he forged a career that spanned decades, as the first Deaf MP in Parliament at first, but also as a campaigner on disability, for the rights of the downtrodden, for those who didn’t have a voice.
He also smoothed the way for huge technological advances for deaf people – increased subtitling on television, live captioning through palantype, increased in vision signing on TV, campaigned for better provision of hearing aids… and was one of the first people to have a cochlear implant. He described the implant as sounding like ‘A Dalek with Laryngitis’, but it restored some hearing for him, if not, according to Lord Kinnock, his singing voice!
He went on to become a Lord, and to enjoy life with his grandchildren – but in everything he did, in everything he achieved, there was always that sense of putting things right, of justice for all.
The memorial service, and also the programme I made, ended with David Miliband reading a poem, The Measure of a Man. In making this programme I came to the conclusion that Lord Ashley was no ordinary man, but a great one.
I also owe my career, at least in part, to Lord Jack. Back in 2001, I was given funding by the NDCS’s Jack Ashley Millennium awards to develop my own short films. That early funding, and those early short films I made, were my first steps along the path I’m on today, as an award winning filmmaker and as a producer/director for the BBC.
Thanks for everything, Jack. You’re very much missed.
The Jack Ashley tribute special on See Hear airs at 11am today (Wednesday 5th December) on BBC TWO and will then be on BBC iPlayer.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01pcs9f
Further Reading:
Lord Jack Ashley Memorial Site http://www.lordjackashley.co.uk/
The Measure of a Man http://www.scrapbook.com/poems/doc/26887/374.html
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Linda Richards
December 5, 2012
Looking forward to seeing your programme later today Billy …. I met Jack Ashley .. A very gentle man…. With steadfast beliefs, passion for the causes he championed and commitment. I remember reading in his autobiography that he tried many cures when he became deaf…. One such ‘cure’ was that the nerve endings in the ear could be stimulated by drinking whisky. It didn’t work but he drank a lot of whisky trying! Lmr xx
wmager
December 5, 2012
Excellent, an excuse for me to drink more whisky then!
Tim
December 5, 2012
Sure, a great man, but my admiration is mostly reserved for the “ordinary” Deafie.
wmager
December 5, 2012
Interesting comment Tim. Which “ordinary” Deafies are worthy of our admiration?
Tim
December 5, 2012
I think Lord Ashley would possibly have understood what I am getting at here, William, as he was able to see the stark difference between how he was treated as a hearing person and how he was treated as a deaf person. As you said:
“People who had previously been close allies in Parliament wouldn’t give him the time of day.”
Many ‘ordinary’ Deaf people spend an entire lifetime not being given the time of day, but nevertheless successfully negotiate life. They are often ignored even by the people who are paid handsome salaries to concern themselves with what Deaf people think and feel.
I suppose it’s a bit like different people’s choice of role models; it’s a subjective matter.
David M. Morris
December 5, 2012
What a fantastic and amazing man. Lord Ashley defined the epitome of always believing that disability is not the end but a challenge to curtail those limitations. Stoke on Trent ought to be most proud of this social mover and shaker.
Ted Evans
December 5, 2012
I too had the honour of doing a film on Lord Ashley just after he died for the BBC and just like Billy wrote, it became very clear to me, very quickly, that I wasn’t going to be able to fit it all in. I knew little about him growing up but working on that film really stuck a chord with me and I have nothing but respect for the man. What a top bloke!
Robert Mandara
December 8, 2012
Fascinating and excellent programme! The only thing I felt was missing was a brief explanation of why/how Lord Ashley lost his hearing in both ears (rather than just one) as a result of a routine operation.
“The measure of a man” is a most inspiring and appropriate poem!
Jimmy Craw
December 30, 2012
Albeit Sir Jack Ashley was a great campainer for all deaf categories i am at loss to understand as to why
he always required s/l interpreters for communication when appearing on TV programmes like
See HEAR etc, perhaps there is a reason for his use of interpreters otherwise ANYONE representing deaf people at organisation level should be able to use/profile s/l at least at basic
standard.