Battle
for Life
At his
moment of triumph in the Falklands, Lt Robert Lawrence was shot in the
head. His struggle for survival is now the basis for BBC1’s film 'Tumbledown'.
Tumbledown is a sharp
cone of rock rising from the bare Falklands landscape south-west of Port
Stanley. As dawn broke on 14 June1982 the summit was seized by the 2nd
Battalion Scots Guards after one of the fiercest battles of the brief Falklands
campaign:hours later the Argentine garrison in the islands surrendered.
In the final stages
of the battle, in which pistols and bayonets were used, 3 Platoon of Right
Flank Company cleared a heavy
machine-gun post manned
by men of the 5th Marines, one of the few regular units deployed by the
Argentines in the conflict. As he stood in his moment of triumph,
the platoon commander, Lieutenant Robert Lawrence, 21, was shot in the
back of the head by a sniper. The high velocity bullet took away 40 per
cent of his brain.
Besides being the name
of a mountain and a battle, Tumbledown has come to be the metaphor of Robert
Lawrence’s life from that moment—three years of rehabilitation, his leaving
the army, of seeing his world in pieces and trying to reassemble them in
a new order. It is in this sense that Charles Wood has used it as the title
of his film based on Robert Lawrence’s experience which comes to BBC1 on
Tuesday, directed by Richard Eyre.
Making Tumbledown has
been part of the recovery process for Robert himself. He has worked on
the film as a special consultant, and hopes that this will bring him full-time
employment in television and film. For all the public exposure, Tumbledown
must have been an intensely private affair.
Charles Wood, now Robert’s
friend, says his film ‘challenges our preconceptions about what it is to
be a soldier...that we send the young men out to fight and kill, and we
feel guilty about it.’ In the end it is a drama drawn from the trauma of
one
young man. It
is not a documentary about the Falklands campaign, nor the stuff of regimental
history; the details on the conflict itself and the units and individuals
concerned are sketchy.
Viewed from the top
of Two Sisters, two-and-a-half miles away, the battle for Tumbledown looked
like a strange fireworks display as artillery shells and illuminating rounds
fired by the navy lit up the mountain covered with a thin layer of snow.
It was to take six hours to get Robert Lawrence down to the dressing station
at Fitzroy settlement. He lay outside the makeshift operating theatre for
several hours, with no painkillers to console him, imagining he had been
left till last as he was the least likely to survive.
From Fitzroy Robert
Lawrence was transferred to the converted hospital ship SS Uganda, where
he was not allowed to sleep for more than a few minutes for fear that he
would slip into a coma. Once he woke from a nightmare to find himself
attempting to strange a nurse.
Finally the flight home
from Montevideo in Uruguay, and the story begins—of recuperation and rehabilitation,
of the
sense of abandonment
and loss at leaving the army, and the new life in film and TV.
The main supporting
cast in these episodes, in life as in the film itself, is the Lawrence
family. John Lawrence had
served 28 years in
the RAF, retiring with the rank of wing commander, and is now assistant
secretary at Lord’s. Jean Lawrence, the least voluble but one suspects
most powerful member of the family, is a lecturer at London’s Westminster
College.
John Lawrence has lived
his son’s story with passionate intensity. The great moment of pride was
the award of the
Military Cross to Robert
for his conduct and leadership in the battle. On the other hand he has
taken up the weapons of pen and phone with alacrity against what he describes
as the obtuseness of authority, and the misunderstanding of the press.
Today Lawrence father
and son are very much a team, down to writing their memoir of events after
the Falklands, When the Fighting Is Over, being published by Bloomsbury.
John Lawrence is the model of a retired wing commander, down to the
neatly trimmed
RAF moustache. ‘But,’ he confesses, ‘though I wouldn’t say I’ve shifted
sides politically, my view has changed quite a lot through all this.’
The first phase of recuperation
for Robert Lawrence, once back in England, was a round of examinations
and assessments, a sojourn at the Woolwich Hospital, and at a military
rehabilitation centre.
The agony of recovery
was compounded by the sense of loss in leaving the army. Father and son
were enraged by a letter from the Military Secretary’s office announcing
discharge from active service without even a medical: it was retracted
quickly. There is an element of dramatic inevitability about the
path of mutual misunderstanding traced by Robert Lawrence and the army.
As a teenage tearaway
in the action-man mould—he had left his Scottish public school, Fettes,
by mutual consent—the Scots Guards were to be his life. After his injury,
he felt abandoned. In the film we see him undergoing the symptoms
described by psychiatrists as the trauma of parental separation: anxiety,
rage, and finally a gesture to emotional conciliation.
When discharge came,
much was mended in the flesh as well as the spirit. He could walk, which
experts at first had
feared might never
happen, and, though, paralysed down his left side, his brain was in full
vigour. He had received a pension and an initial payment from the South
Atlantic Fund, a body he still likes to bombard with demands and questions,
producing a diverting stream of correspondence.
At this point he was
introduced by a mutual friend to Charles Wood, who interviewed him at length
before producing a Tumbledown script. Charles Wood recalls: ‘He was
still very frail, but I realised that Robert’s employment in the project
would have to be part of the deal of making the film.’
Rejection and disappointment
was to follow. Movie mogul David Puttnam considered the script but couldn’t
in the end come to an agreement with the Lawrences. It seemed
that the script would never be filmed, until producer Richard Broke
persuaded the BBC to make it, with Richard Eyre, soon to head the National
Theatre, as director.
Filming was to produce
testing and stressful times for the production team, their adviser Robert
Lawrence, and his
alter ego, the Lawrence
of the drama played by Colin Firth. Robert Lawrence says his worst moments
were reenacting the episode of the Fitzroy dressing station in a Nissen
hut in Oxfordshire (he carries photographs of his wounds like a talisman).
Both Eyre and Broke
are full of praise at the way Robert applied himself to learning his new
trade. ‘I think he could
certainly make a career
in the film industry,’ says Broke. ‘I thought he might have ceased to function
when he got cold, but in the event his stamina and resilience was astonishing.’
During the battle scenes
on location in Wales Robert was in his element. ‘His contribution to the
logistics of moving the extras and equipment up the mountain was brilliant,’
says Charles Wood. ‘If we still made epic films in this country he might
have a role as a producer.’
For actor Colin Firth,
playing Robert Lawrence has been a powerful experience. ‘At times it has
been pleasant, at times very difficult,’ he said on location in London.
‘It might have been very tough having the real Robert by my side, but he
was very helpful. I do worry, though, how Robert is going to get through
all this. He has got to come home from the wars some time.’
In the past six months
another form of production has absorbed Robert and his wife Tina—their
young son Conrad, born just after filming was completed. ‘For someone like
me it’s hard to find another stealing all the attention, so I come fifth
in the pecking order after the baby, the house, the shopping, the
dog.’ Otherwise it is a question of ‘cracking on with the future’, working
for two films as production assistant and military adviser.
The next milestone is
possible emigration at the end of the year to Australia. Opportunities
in film and television production beckon, he feels. Above all there is
the sun: cold can still affect him cruelly. There he should get the chance
to come home from war at last and Robert Lawrence should conquer his private
Tumbledown.
By Robert Fox, a
special correspondent of the Daily Telegraph, reported the Falklands War
for BBC Radio and is the author of Eyewitness Falklands (Metheun). The
script of Tumbledown by Charles Wood is published by Penguin.
Copyright
© 1988 Radio Times
Reproduced
with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution
is prohibited without permission.
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