Copied from The Independent
24 May 2004
Milton Shulman
Jovial film and theatre critic with a curmudgeonly reputation
Milton Shulman, writer, journalist and critic: born
Toronto, Ontario 30 August 1913; film critic, Evening Standard 1948-58,
theatre critic 1953-91, television critic 1964-73; film critic, Sunday
Express 1948-58, book critic 1957-58; producer, Granada Television 1958-62;
Assistant Controller of Programmes, Rediffusion 1962-64; film critic,
Vogue 1975-87; married secondly 1956 Drusilla Beyfus (one son, two daughters);
died London 21 May 2004.
When any journalist dies in great old age, he is liable
by then to be more of a name than an immediate presence to younger colleagues,
and a man who had spent more than half a century in old Fleet Street
was in any case in danger of becoming a "character", better known for
what he was than for what he did. Milton Shulman, who has died at the
age of 90, suffered to some degree from both these fates, but for an
older generation of newspaper people, and for many readers and radio
listeners, his name is remembered with much warmth.
In the course of a varied life, he had been lawyer and
soldier before entering what he always believed would be his trade of
journalism. He was born in 1913 in Toronto, the son of Samuel and Ethel
Shulman, poor Jewish immigrants from Ukraine. His father died in the
1919 flu epidemic and Milton was educated at school in the city before
studying law at the University of Toronto. He was called to the Canadian
Bar and practised from 1937 to 1940, but said later that he had few
prospects there because of the strong anti-Semitism still prevalent
both in English-speaking Canada and Quebec. He already hankered after
show business as well as journalism, and, during that brief career at
the Bar, "Whispering Milt" supported himself as a crooner.
The Second World War was the making of him. Shulman joined
up in 1940 and may well have been the first Jew ever commissioned in
the Canadian Army. Even then his background counted against him in the
Armoured Corps, but he moved into Intelligence, where he excelled. By
the time of the Normandy landings he was one of the leading authorities
in the Canadian Army on the Wehrmacht's order of battle.
He also made friends. One day in Normandy in the summer
of 1944, a young British officer called Lieutenant Worsthorne wandered
into his tent. Nearly 50 years on it was amusing and touching to see
the two veterans, Sir Peregrine by then celebrated as columnist and
editor, and Milton as critic, reminiscing over a drink in Fleet Street
about that first meeting. Shulman may have been lucky to have survived
another occasion when, to test security, he strolled into his camp dressed
as a German officer. Then again, it's hard to believe that he looked
very convincing in the part.
After VE day, now a major and mentioned in despatches,
he interrogated numerous senior officers, from Field Marshal Gerd von
Rundstedt down. For all the horrors of Nazism, he was impressed by the
skill and organisation of the German army, and yet at the same time
he wanted to know how, as he put it, the combined discipline and ignorance
of the German military machine served Hitler well and Germany badly.
This was the subject of Defeat in the West, published in 1947,
his first book and his best.
It made his name, and effected his entry into journalism
when he came to the attention of his fellow Canadian Lord Beaverbrook,
whose stable he joined in 1948. Beaverbrook asked him whether he knew
any film actresses and Shulman said not. This answer satisfied "the
lord", who thought his new recruit wouldn't be corrupted by the amorous
attentions of stars or starlets (Shulman indeed always had an eye for
a pretty girl), and shortly thereafter he became film critic of the
London Evening Standard.
In that role he acquired a reputation as a curmudgeon
more likely to damn than to praise, as he did again when he turned to
theatre criticism. In fact he loved plenty of films as well as plays,
but it was true that he was repelled by much of the tawdry product of
Hollywood in the 1950s, and said so. So sharp were his strictures that
the film companies at one point withdrew their advertising, and Shulman
gave up the cinema.
He was theatre critic of the Standard for much
longer, from 1953 to 1991. Here again his strongest tastes were often
negative, and unfashionable. He thought that Look Back in Anger
(1956) was "a self-pitying snivel", and added that "nothing is so comforting
to the young as the opportunity to feel sorry for themselves" - a judgement
which may now seem sounder than Kenneth Tynan's rhapsodies about that
play - while he found Harold Pinter a trifle short on humour.
After dismissing Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat (1968) as "an Old Testament version of Up Pompeii",
he continued to take a dim view of Andrew Lloyd Webber's success with
that and later shows did not soften Shulman. When there was a bomb scare
at the New London Theatre at the first night of Cats in 1981,
he stayed his seat with the words "This theatre's never had a hit yet".
On the other hand, Shulman appreciated fine acting, of
which he was often a shrewd judge. He did not join in the chorus of
praise for Laurence Olivier's luridly overripe Othello in 1964, but
he saw Orson Welles playing Ahab "as a black-cloaked wrestler .
. . an aggressive organ . . . an artillery barrage caught on a rising
and falling wind. He is virtue, evil and ham in about equal quantities."
From the 1950s to the 1970s, when Fleet Street was still
a village, Shulman was often found in the village inn, most likely in
the company of John Raymond, Henry Fairlie or Philip Hope-Wallace, with
whom conversation was witty and free. Shulman fitted well into this
group, a Jewish Mr Pickwick, jovial and benign in appearance.
It was there in El Vino's around 30 years ago that Shulman
memorably said to Alan Watkins, "There are two things I'm better at
60 than I was at 30. One is tennis and one is fucking." Watkins replied
that, as to the latter, he recognised that acquired skills, responsiveness,
and so forth might make a difference, but that he simply refused to
believe Milton played tennis better than 30 years before. True or not,
he was certainly a good self-taught player, who took to the court at
the Hurlingham Club every week until his eighties.
In that hard-drinking Fleet Street set, Shulman was comparatively
temperate, and he never smoked a cigarette in his life, but he had other
weaknesses. One year the Evening Standard Christmas party was
adorned by a panto in which the chorines ran through the paper's staff,
including "Milton Shulman, he's no fool, man, / Though his horses come
in last". That was near the knuckle. Shulman was an incorrigible but
remarkbly unsuccessful punter, both in cash (his daily 50p each-way
yankee rarely seemed to return much for its £11 investment) and on credit.
At one point his inability to pay the bookies led to a
complaint to Tattersall's Committee, and, in the traditional and sonorously
chilling words, he was warned off Newmarket Heath and places where racing
is run. As it happened, Shulman never went to the races and had no interest
in horses except as a means for losing money, but he refused to take
the insult lying down. With some courage as well as skill, he fought
a legal action against the edict, which was finally overturned.
In 1958-62 he worked as a producer for Granada Television,
and briefly thereafter for Rediffusion. But television left him increasingly
unhappy. He was neither a puritan nor an anti-modernist (he collected
Abstract Expressionists). But, out of an innate decency and gentleness,
he detested gratuitous sex and violence on stage or screen. He made
that clear in his 1973 book The Least Worst Television in the World,
as well as in later denunciations of, for example, Mark Ravenhill's
work as "a psychotic babble written by someone with an anal fetish".
Apart from a novel and some children's books, Shulman
also published his memoirs: Marilyn, Hitler and Me (1998) was
so called because he had once spent a week covering Marilyn Monroe.
And he produced an anthology of bons mots, Voltaire, Goldberg
& Others (1999: Goldberg featured in the Jewish jokes with which
he liked to round off the Radio 4 programme Stop the Week,
which he regularly adorned from the beginning of its long run, 1974-92).
After a short-lived wartime marriage in Canada, Shulman
married Drusilla Beyfus in 1956, with Michael Foot as his best man.
"Dru" Beyfus was herself a considerable Fleet Street figure, with whom
he would sometimes appear on television chat shows. They had a son,
Jason, a designer and editor, and two daughters, both of whom have made
names for themselves, Alexandra as Editor of Vogue and Nicola
(the Marchioness of Normanby) as a writer and critic.
Milton Shulman hated the country as much as he loved London,
from Fleet Street, to the Garrick Club, to Belgravia, where he had the
good fortune early to acquire a rent-controlled flat in Eaton Square.
In all of those urban oases, he inspired sometimes ironical amusement,
but more often affection and regard for his deeper qualities of humour
and kindness.
© 2004, Geoffrey Wheatcroft/The Independent