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RAYMOND BRIGGS INTERVIEW
Fungus the Bogeyman exploded into childhoods thirty
years ago with the disgusting thrill of a boil bursting.
He was green! He was slimey! He loved eating dead snails,
smelling farts and wearing filthy clothes. His entire
life consisted of doing and promoting all the things
that children are forbidden to do or even think about.
Perhaps more surprisingly, he was the work of Raymond
Briggs, now better-known for his pristine fantasies
The Snowman, The Bear and Father Christmas – all
favourite Yuletide TV fare.
Fungus was a huge underground hit with children and
teenagers, but never quite achieved the fame he deserved.
Now, however, Fungus and his family are about to hit
our TV screens, in a three-part BBC adaptation, starring
Martin Clunes in a script by the Whitbread winning
Mark Haddon. Stardom beckons at last for the monster
with horns and a special fondness for slime, who regards
all humans with horror as “dry-cleaners” and
who guards the existence of Bogeys from human knowledge
or interference.
“I think it’s brilliant” says Briggs. “It’s
been in development for seven or eight years, and so
many different people wanted to do it and failed I’d
just switched off. First it was going onto the stage
at the National Theatre, and one of my great heroes,
Terry Gilliam, did the pilot. But nothing came of that.
Then Michael Palin and Terry Jones wanted to do an
animatronic version, with four different people working
the levers for the face and ears – but nothing
came of that. So many people in so many countries have
been involved in making the TV version, I thought nothing
would ever come of it. But it has.”
The problems facing adaptors were understandable,
in a sense. Brigg’s original book – constrained,
like all picture-books, to 32 pages – introduced
Fungus and his world in enormous detail, but didn’t
tell a story. Readers learnt all about the Bogey’s
ideas of a good meal (crushed slugs and snails, golden
waxy bits, maggots and sour milk), about the Bogey
anatomy, and their pleasure in giving us boils, but
nothing more.
“I wanted to show the petty nastiness of life,” Briggs
says; “the slime and snot and spit and dandruff,
all this awful stuff which is slightly funny because
it detracts from human dignity and our pretensions.”
The son of a milkman and a lady’s maid, Briggs
was born in Wimbledon in 1934, and went to the Wimbledon
School of Art and the Slade before becoming an illustrator.
His parents’ jobs had an acknowledged influence
on his books. He comments that “Father Christmas
and the milkman both have wretched jobs: working in
the cold, wet and dark;” and a mother who worked
as a maid must have alerted the son to the intrinsic
comedy of human mess and filth. He was later to celebrate
their lives in Ethel and Ernest, but as a child he
was given daily speech lessons, and learned how to
be middle-class. His work, however, is about life’s
underdogs – working-class characters who make
do, griping and complaining, yet savouring life’s
small pleasures. Fungus himself is an extreme version
of this, and his daily chores and glum existence are
made tolerable only by his affection for his family
and his pride in creating a boil on a human’s
neck.
Yet Briggs’s work, while possessed of an excoriating
satirical vision (expressed most clearly in his picture
book about a couple innocently preparing for the nuclear
bomb, When the Wind Blows) is also full of excitement,
love and happiness. The novelist Philip Hensher has
called it “instantly recognisable both in its
warm look and in its serious moral world. It is peculiarly
English – his attractively fuzzy style draws
on a line of beautifully domestic and idealistic English
artists going back to Samuel Palmer.” His characters
express and embody a state of wonder, whether flying
through a winter’s night with a snowman or revelling
in the sewer; yet end being dragged back to the mundane
and dreary.
It wasn’t easy to marry this kind of sensibility
with regular employment, and as a graduate of the Slade,
Briggs says he found conventional children’s
illustration work, emphasising the clean and pretty,
tedious. He began doing his own books after realising
that he “could do better” than the anodyne
stories he was illustrating, winning the prestigious
Kate Greenaway medal, for his Mother Goose Treasury
in 1966. He only began developing his darker side when
playing around with an illustrated alphabet.
“
Instead of F is for Flower, which I thought tiresome,
I did F is for Fart, and it evolved. Most of my ideas
are based on the simple premise, “let’s
assume something imaginary - a snowman, a Bogeyman,
a Father Christmas – is wholly real, and then
proceed logically from there.”
Getting Fungus accepted in 1977 was an act of courage
on behalf of his publisher, Jonathan Cape because,
Briggs says, “It was rammed down my throat when
I started illustrating that we were all threatened
by librarians. In those days, there were 10,000 libraries
up and down the country, and if they each took a copy,
your publisher was covered financially. We were terrified
of these women, whom we imagined as strict Victorian
spinsters, peering through their pince-nez and saying,
This Won’t Do.”
What saved Briggs’s creation was the counter-cultural
revolution, which adopted Fungus, like Maurice Sendak’s
Wild Things, as emblematic. Fungus, who is, as the
critic Nicolette Jones pointed out “a suitable
hero for an age of punk”, inspired Paul McCartney’s
1980 hit, Bogey Music, and became the mascot of the
Cystic Fibrosis Trust. His existential angst (“Why
am I a Bogeyman. For slime’s sake, WHY?”)
made him a pin-up to teenagers as well as children.
Yet despite writing sequels and having an entire filing
cabinet full of Bogey material, Briggs published no
further books other than a “plop-up” version
of the original, which displayed not only the Bogey’s
3 nipples, 4 stomachs and six webbed toes but the secret
Bogey Umbilical Cord in its full glory.
The BBC adaptation by Mark Haddon provides a plot
in complete keeping with the spirit of this weird,
cloacal hero. Fungus’s teenaged son Mould, formerly
the pride of his parents in being “the smelliest
boy in the street” is rebelling by becoming every
Bogey parents’ nightmare, and “dropping
in.” He is washing, and wearing clean clothes.
Worst of all, he has made contact with a “dry
cleaner” from the overworld….and the Bogey’s
very existence is about to be uncovered by Martin Clunes
as an ambitious journalist.
Briggs, who has no children of his own, relishes the
anarchic spirit of the young while feeling he is no
expert on them. “It’s so good to see their
uninhibited behaviour – the way a toddler will
pee in full view of others, or run around naked. I
think Fungus is an appeal to the forbidden, to making
a mess. Kids love mud,” he says. Yet living in
the Bogey world did exhaust him.
“For the two years I worked on Fungus, buried
amongst muck, slime and words so I wanted to do something
which was clean, pleasant, fresh and wordless.” The
result was The Snowman. People who read this, or see
the animated version, often miss the way that, too,
is suffused with melancholy and a sense of loss. The
Snowman, after taking the boy on a magical journey
to the North Pole, melts, leaving the boy alone and
lonely.
“Some people says it’s about the death
of a friend,” Briggs says, but will not be drawn
on whether this was his intention. Other picture-books,
such as The Bear and The Man also leave the child,
temporarily transported into a different world, bereft.
Briggs says that his impulse to become an illustrator
probably began when he was evacuated. Sent to live
with his aunts in Dorset, he sent back letters whose
margins featured pictures of cows in a field or the
sun in the sky. That loneliness, combined with affection,
is characteristic of his work, and makes a deep emotional
appeal to thoughtful children. When his heroes provide
their own solutions to problems, such as his Stone
Age cave-boy-genius, Ug, when searching for soft trousers,
these are not understood or valued, with parents preferring
to go on as before. “They aren’t disgusting,
just ignorant,” he says of Ug’s family.
A long, lean man without a trace of muck or slime
on his silvery hair, Briggs is dryly funny and protects
his privacy while having a considerable presence on
the internet, where sites devoted to him and his work
abound. He lives near Lewes in Sussex, and is at present
working on illustrating Ted Hughes’s poems for
children.
“The essence of being able to draw from memory
is to be a mini-actor,” he says. “All these
characters are aspects of yourself, as Martin Amis
said. If the figure is to walk jauntily with its nose
in the air, you have to imagine what that feels like.”
I don’t quite dare ask him if he, like Fungus,
sleeps in a sardine-can, but from the end of this month
we can all have a better idea what that might feel
like.
The Sunday Times, November 2004 |