Dear Bill
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The "Dear Bill" letters were a regular feature in the British satirical magazine Private Eye. It was written by Richard Ingrams and John Wells, and illustrated with sketches by George Adamson for the first five years, and subsequently by Brian Bagnall.
The series took the form of fortnightly letters to "Bill" by his friend and golfing partner "Denis" (Denis Thatcher, husband of the Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher). The letters were split equally between reactionary grumblings about the state of the country and vituperative comments on contemporary politics, with regular passing references to the goings-on of a fictional collection of acquaintainces and the consumption of a quite remarkable quantity of "electric soup". "Bill", whilst never identified as such in the series, was often taken as being Thatcher's close friend Bill Deedes; indeed, Deedes later titled his autobiography Dear Bill: a memoir.
The series ran throughout the Thatcher government, first appearing two weeks after Margaret Thatcher was elected. It spawned a number of annual editions of the collected letters, one for each year, and even a stage play, Anyone for Denis?, with creator John Wells playing the title role. This later moved to television on the BBC, under the same name, in 1982.[1]
The concept of writing satire from the point of view of a Prime Ministerial spouse was not new to the magazine, who had published Mrs Wilson's Diary (also a collaboration between Wells and Ingrams) along the same line during the Wilson government. It allowed the writers wide rein to comment on the personal pecularities of senior politicians without seeming overly absurd, and was presented in a context that was - whilst clearly fictional - quite plausible. The assumed characteristics of the subject - a conservative reactionary, an "buffer's buffer" surveying the world through the bottom of a glass and not liking it one inch - gave ample opportunity for a rich and identifiable style; the image of Denis portrayed in the letters - a gin-soaked half-witted layabout, whose sole activity was to try and escape the wrath of "the Boss" - was a popular one, and Denis Thatcher remained in the public imagination as a less gaffe-prone version of the Duke of Edinburgh long after both the Thatcher government and the series itself had ended. The portrayal was not entirely negative; Thatcher was portrayed as having a sharp and witty tongue, and a keen eye for events around him.
Whilst the letters may not have represented the real Denis Thatcher, they represented the Denis Thatcher their readers believed in. Philip Larkin described the letters as consolidating "an imaginative reality that is more convicing than the morning papers" in an Observer review, and John Wells once argued that he had done more than every Downing Street publicist to endear the Thatchers to the British public.[2] They played a major part in fashioning Denis Thatcher's popular public image.[3]
Recently, Bill Deedes, along with Thatcher's daughter Carol, has argued that Denis himself played up to this image - by encouraging the portrayal of himself as a harmlessly incompetent buffoon, he could deflect any claims that he was manipulating government from "behind the throne".[4][5]
[edit] References
- Dear Bill, Last orders at the 19th. Buggeration - The Telegraph, 27 June 2003
- Sir Denis, R.I.P. - John O'Sullivan, National Review, 27 June 2003
- ^ Anyone for Denis - BBC Comedy Guide
- ^ Satirist John Wells dies - BBC News, 11 January 1998
- ^ The glory that was Denis - Christopher Dawson, Quadrant Magazine, December 2003
- ^ Dear Bill: gin-soaked halfwit was all a ruse - Edward Pilkington, The Guardian, 26 February 1996
- ^ Man of stature behind 'Dear Bill' image - Jason Beattie, The Scotsman, 27 June 2003