HE WAS: Tributes to Heathcote Williams by David Erdos

 

For anyone unfamiliar with the work and life of Heathcote Williams, writer/poet/playwright, actor, socio-political activist, urban pirate/provocateur, enfin terrible and much, much more, David Erdos’s book He Was is a triumphal celebration of both the man and his work.  A book of brilliance and insight into a creative and protean being of polymathic gifts.  Here, Erdos, a consummate writer and poet himself, reviews and discusses the nature of some of the alchemical plays, poetry and manifestos of a man who shareda similar background, preoccupations, and history to Shelley, and who was able to retrieve that abandoned, still warm quill, in order to continue transforming words into their anagram of ‘sword’.  A sword that cuts through and exposes the egregious works of Establishment, State, and humanity generally.

Erdos gives breath to that sword now sadly within its scabbard, through this book and his own annual celebratory hymns and poems to someone who was/is both his hero and his personal musereflecting the light from that incendiary quill for his own work. 

Heathcote Williams was a beloved and seemingly karmic friend of mine from our early twenties, and it gives me great comfort to recognize David as his rightful and deserving Boswell, in hopefully bringing Heathcote’s often incandescent work to a wider readership in these blighted times.  What David Erdos does most importantly, is to show that while giving the title He Wasto this great little celebratory book, he at the same time establishes that He Is.

                                                                    Malcolm Ritchie 

 

 


 

Get the book HERE

 

HE WAS: Tributes to Heathcote Williams

 


John Henley Heathcote-Williams: prince of poets and squatters everywhere, actor, playwright, activist, conjuror, anarchist, father, lyricist, errant student of the law, grandfather, celebrant, conservationist, painter, Hollywood collaborator, inspirer, paramour and courter of models, musicians, historians and novelists, journalist, polemicist, smooth-voiced sage, cupboard dweller, word-whisperer, trouble and mischief maker, seminalist, rabble rouser, editor, reformed wild man and tarnished saint in the making was also a tribe gatherer of the first order. At his funeral on July 14th 2017, one roamed through a crowd containing every strand of human and artistic endeavour, from famous actors, writers, directors, painters, and musicians, to the children and grandchildren of famous actors, writers, directors, painters and musicians, each shuffling uncertainly, like partly stunned cattle, alongside publishers, Lords, activists, long deposed figures of power and responsibility and more than a headful of what could still be called the lunatic fringe. It was a bewildering day. Nobody could really understand what had happened. Suddenly there was a small wicker coffin lined with blue hearts, and utter disbelief at the fact that this particular totem had toppled and passed into the wind which exists beyond all other weather, borne now, above us, with each attendant name there and status left impossibly small on the ground.

 

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