The inspiration for my Passionate Woman By Kay Mellor

The inspiration for my Passionate Woman

by Kay Mellor

I must have been about 28 when my mother told me. She was at the sink washing up at the time and I was drying the pots. It’s hard to remember what’s fact and what’s fiction now, but I’ll try.

“We had a bit of a thing,” was how she described her affair with the Polish neighbour that lived in the two-roomed flat below her. I thought I was hearing things. One minute we were talking about me and my husband having a bit of a fall out and somehow the conversation turned to Mum telling me how she’d committed adultery with a Polish fairground worker.

 

Now you’d have to have known my mum to realise how shocking that was. She was the most ordinary woman, very mumsy, not a vain bone in her body. She wasn’t one to show her emotions, she was strong but affectionate with me and my brothers. She wasn’t a man’s woman, she had three sisters and was, in her own way, a bit of a feminist – way ahead of her time.

My dad had a violent streak and she divorced him when I was three, refused to wear a wedding ring, wouldn’t accept money off him and refused to take ‘handouts’ from the state, preferring to work full time as a tailoress instead. It sounds nothing now, but you’ve got to remember this was the 1950s, people didn’t get divorced. You married and that was it – for better or worse. I remember the other kids off the council estate making fun of me and my brother, saying we didn’t have a dad.

Anyway I digress.

“His name was Craze and I loved him with every breath in my body,” she continued. She’d mentioned a man and the word love in the same breath – it was unheard of for her to say that; even her second marriage had not been successful.

But even more shocking than that, I realised that tears were falling from her eyes into the washing up bowl. I tried to reassure her.

“I’m happy for you Mum, I’m glad you found someone to love.”

“He was murdered.”

“What? In Leeds?”

“In a fairground brawl. I’ve never been able to tell anyone.”

It was hard to take it all in and then I realised that not only had Mum never told anyone about this affair, she’d never been able to grieve properly for the man she’d loved and lost.

For the best part of thirty years she’d held onto this grief – it had been locked in. No wonder her marriages hadn’t worked and she found it difficult to show emotion. She had no trouble showing emotion now – 30 years of tears cascaded into the washing up bowl as she continued with her story. At the end of it she was exhausted.

“You won’t ever tell anyone will you?” She made me promise. And I didn’t – for 10 years. Then it was my younger brother Philip’s wedding and I could see this really pained her as she faced a life alone with my stepfather Alan.

He was a good man and the marriage should’ve worked. He was the same religion (my dad was a Catholic, Alan was Jewish) and he was political – a strong socialist, but they clashed.

 

The look in my mother’s face reminded me of the day she told me about Craze. Somehow these two events – my mother’s affair and her youngest son getting married – were linked.

A play was burning inside of me and I started to write it for the West Yorkshire Playhouse. I called it A Passionate Woman – because I realised that’s what my mother was.

I set it on the day of her son’s wedding. Betty climbs into the loft to escape from all the arrangements and chaos and drops the flap shut! Her dead lover Craze comes to her and she relives her time again with him. Her son and husband realise she’s in the loft and try and coax her down to the wedding, but she’s not going anywhere – except up!

The play went into rehearsal with the glorious Anne Reid playing the middle-aged Betty. Two days before press night, I thought I should take Mum to see the play. It was essentially Mum’s story, but I’d changed loads of things and I was interested to see if she realised it was her story. She absolutely loved it, wanted to see it again.

The second time she saw it, she turned to me at the end and with tears and bewilderment in her eyes she said: “This is my story.”

I reassured her. “Yes, but I’m not going to tell anyone and you’re not, so who’s going to know?”

Then came the opening night of the show. All the press were there. The play went well and as is customary with a new play, the cast, myself and the director David Liddiment all sat on the stage to answer questions. One particular journalist kept asking me where I got the idea for the play – “Did something or someone inspire it?”

I could see my mother sat in the middle of the audience – I had to protect her and keep my promise. I replied: “Yes, someone did inspire me to write it, but I’m not at liberty to say who it was.”

And then from the middle of the auditorium came –

“It was me!”

I looked up. My mother was waving her hand in the air; her eyes were gleaming with pride. “It’s MY story!”

And as the press turned to interview her, I watched the years of shame and secrecy drop away. My mother came out publicly – she’d had an affair, she’d known love, she had a sexual awakening, she was A Passionate Woman.

Two years later the play opened in the West End to rave reviews. The play ran for a year at the Comedy Theatre and has toured extensively all over the world. Film rights were fought for, but I held on to them tightly as I didn’t want Cher playing my mum on a rooftop in Detroit.

It’s still running in Poland I think.

Kay Mellor is the writer of A Passionate Woman.

 

Sue Johnston On A Passionate Woman

 

A Passionate Woman: Sue Johnston plays Betty in the Eighties

 

How easy was it to portray Betty – the character Kay’s mother is based upon?

“Kay told me the whole story about how her mother admitted to a lost love. There is a scene in the second episode where I tell Mark (Andrew Lee Potts) about Betty’s affair and the fact she never loved her husband and that’s what happened to Kay – she came up to me afterwards in tears.

“It added a certain kind of pressure and in a way, the compliment that she wanted me to play her mother gave me confidence and there must have been some essence of her mother that she saw in me.”

What happens to Betty 30 years on from the affair?

“Betty has a mini-breakdown. She leaves her son, Mark’s wedding and eventually finds herself on the roof – you don’t know whether she is going to throw herself off or not…”

How do you feel about Billie Piper playing Betty 30 years younger?

“I was flattered and I kept thinking – as long as they don’t show my nose… Betty must have fallen over at some point and broken it! We both had brown hair for the character and I wore brown contact lenses.

“When I look at old photographs of me at 19 and 20 I don’t look anything like I do now! Billie is lovely – sure she’ll be brilliant. I met her as I was finishing and she starting. We had a drink and had a chat.”

You have played wife to Alun Armstrong before?

“It’s my third time married to Alun Armstrong! Donald is a different character – very loving. He is taken for granted though and is the safe one Betty married. She carries this yearning, and of course she’s put it all into her son – the love that she thought she’d lost.

“The biggest loss is when she discovers he is going to Australia to live with his new wife – that’s the breaking point.”

Do you get the impression that Betty is not happy because of this marriage?

“You get the impression that she’s lived through her son, so she has been happy as she has had him. Donald’s always on the outside and she never realises – when it all comes to a head, that’s his point – Donald is upset as he says to her that she has never needed him, and never wanted him. Betty and Mark have been a tight unit and she’s lived her life through him so now she doesn’t feel that she has anything left to live for…”

Do you think people will identify with the character of Betty and her situation?

“I think they might, I know I did because my mother lived a lot of her life through me and when I left and went to live in London she said: ‘My life’s ended now’, which felt terrible! Not bad enough to say: ‘Well, ok, I won’t go’, though!”

Did you spend any time on the roof when you were doing the shoot?

“I spent about three days on that roof. We had a stunt woman, but I like getting up there and doing it myself and I was well supported. Once you’re up there it’s quite amazing. Alun made me laugh when he was climbing up the roof, I think he was waiting for them to shout cut but they didn’t so he kept going and his face was very funny!”

What are you most passionate about?

“Liverpool Football Club, I’m afraid!”

 

A Passionate Woman DVD Review

 
A Passionate Women comes from Kay Mellor, so I expected it to be good. I’m glad to say I wasn’t disappointed. It is a well written piece of drama and wonderful to see stories about women’s lives on TV. Something we don’t necessarily see enough off. It’s a sprawling, engaging piece of drama.

The series boasts a strong cast, with Billie Piper putting in another brilliant performance, Theo James also gives a great performance as ‘Craze’, the Polish womaniser who Pipers character has an affair with. James did this show before his star turn in Downton Abbey. He is a star in the making. A Passionate Women is a great piece of drama that gets you thinking. Set in the 50s and 80s, it has beautiful cultural reference points and a wonderful ending that pays off. Your mother will love it and I reckon you will too. I particularly liked the moral tail of the story, it opens up the debate on infidelity and it’s long-reaching consequences.
 
The mini-series charts two stories in two feature-length episodes – the first focusing on a mother’s affair in the 1950s while the second is set in the 1980s and looks at the consequences of that affair 30 years on.  Set in Leeds in the 1950s Cold War period, Billie Piper stars as Betty, a young wife and mother who reluctantly falls passionately and hopelessly in love with her charismatic Polish neighbour.  But little does Betty know that some 30 years later, in 1980s Britain, her affair will implode on her beloved son Mark’s wedding day…
Sue Johnston plays the older Betty in the 1980s, while Andrew Lee Potts, Frances Barber, Theo James, Rachel Lesokovac, Alun Armstrong and his real-life son, Joe Armstrong, also star.

Kay Mellor OBE, one of Britain’s leading TV writers, has penned numerous hit dramas including The Chase, Fat Friends, Playing The Field and the seminal Band Of Gold. A Passionate Woman is based on the real-life affair of the writer’s own mother, and is a very personal look at the changing role of women over the last 50 years, making it an ideal Mother’s Day gift.    
The DVD of A Passionate Woman will be released on 27 February 2012 by High Point Home Entertainment through HMV and other retailers and is soon to be available on Amazon and Play for Pre-ordering A Passionate Women