Last year
my friend and colleague Jay Mukoro died and life is not fair.
A few
times in life something happens that puts everything in perspective. An event
so dramatic that it shocks the system and either forces you to re-evaluate your
beliefs or spurs you on to redouble your efforts.
Last
April I was on holiday in America when my personal phone started ringing at
3.50am in the morning. It was my Production Manager and I knew instantly
something was wrong. Back in the UK it was still only ten to nine.
"There's
no easy way to say it, so I'm just going to say it" was all the warning I
got by way of preamble. "We think Jay is dead - drowned in Barbados".
Just typing this conversation still makes my lip quiver. He was in Barbados for
a wedding but he was also directing a film for me about the 1986 Commonwealth
Games. One of the interviewees happened to live in Barbados and so the day
before he had shot an interview with him. Work done the following day he had
gone back to enjoying his holiday. My understanding is that he swam out to sea
and simply never returned.
There are
supposedly seven stages to grief and now nine months on I think I have gone
through them all, but if I think too much about it I am quickly transported
back to the “anger stage”.
Jay was a
brilliant Assistant Producer. He had worked on numerous high profile landmark
Current Affairs films. Everything from The History of Modern Britain with
Andrew Marr to Mixed Britanica. But like hundreds of black people working in
television before him he felt he had hit a glass-ceiling.
No one
would give him the break he needed to direct his first film.
I've lost
count of the conversations we would have in Pret A Manger or Costa Coffee by
the BBC where we'd discuss the problems of the glass-ceiling. Part career
advice, part therapy session they were fundamentally just two black people
discussing the obstacles we face. But no matter how difficult the issues were
Jay would always be laughing and smiling.
Everyone
I spoke to who worked him all said the same thing;
“Jay
is brilliant”. “He should be directing”.
“He deserves a break”.
Last year
I was finally in a position to give him that break. BBC Scotland - due to the
Commonwealth Games and The Referendum - had more opportunities than usual. I
didn't give him the break out of some act of goodwill but because I knew he was
perfect for the job. The film was about the 1986 Commonwealth Games, a
fascinating story of an African led boycott due to South African apartheid. Jay
had a great track record in history docs, understood how to distill complex
race issues to a mass audience (in this case apartheid) and had brilliant
visual ideas.
He had to
move up to Glasgow to direct the film but he didn't hesitate. The first month
he moved into my spare bedroom while he looked for a place to stay. That's when
I'd like to say the professional relationship became a friendship. I found out
he loved Radiohead (although knew the difference between a Tribe Called Quest
track and a De La Soul song) and I discovered how he proposed to his wife
Olivia and about his relationship with his Nigerian father.
It is
trite when someone young dies suddenly to talk about "what a loss it
is", "a waste of talent" or "how we lost him in their
prime". But with Jay these oft quoted phrases have an added edge that
literally fills me with anger and sorrow.
Jay may
have been finally directing his first broadcast film but there was no way this
should have been his directing debut. His talent was so immense and obvious,
not just to me but everyone you spoke to, he should have had a plethora of
directing credits. I shouldn't have been "giving him a break", he
should have been "doing me a favour" to direct a film I was exec'ing.
We often
talk about "glass-ceilings" in the abstract. Jay's death exposes the
cruel reality behind such an innocuous phrase. It is about wasted talent. It is
about people being held back despite amazing talent. It is about the fact that
for far too many black people working in the media fundamentally life is
unfair. Jay's tragic and untimely death just brings that into focus.
Jay was
never able to fulfil his potential. The same is true for too many people from
diverse backgrounds working in television – although rarely as obvious or tragic.
I will
miss Jay terribly, as I am sure will everyone who ever worked with him. It
might be almost a year later but I am sure all our thoughts and prayers are
with his wife Olivia and the family he leaves behind.
Thank you Marcus for your thoughtful and moving blog. I know we all miss Jay and we will work to ensure that his legacy continues. Some of your blog readers will be interested in this memorial site for Jay and details about a journalism bursary. https://jaymerrimanmukoro.wordpress.com/legacy/
ReplyDelete