Michael Parkinson’s son says broadcaster suffered with ‘working class guilt’ throughout career
Veteran broadcaster’s son, director Mike Parkinson, says father was ‘constantly questioning’ himself despite onscreen confidence
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Your support makes all the difference.Sir Michael Parkinson’s son has revealed that the late broadcaster suffered from “imposter syndrome” and “carried with him a sense of working-class guilt” throughout his career.
Parkinson’s family announced that the chat show host died aged 88 on 17 August, after an illustrious career in which he interviewed celebrities including Orson Welles, John Wayne, Sir Michael Caine, Madonna, John Lennon and Muhammed Ali. A spokesperson said he “passed away peacefully at home in the company of his family” after a “brief illness”.
Parkinson’s son, director Mike Parkinson, appeared on BBC Radio 4’s Last Word on Thursday (24 August) for an interview with John Wilson about his father.
Mike said his father was “constantly questioning himself” after joining the mainstream media and “didn’t have as much self-confidence as he appears”, despite his onscreen success.
He added that, even after his father’s stratospheric success, he was “still very class-ridden”.
“There were people in positions of authority, at the BBC, that were questioning his talent, questioning his right to be an interviewer,” the director said.
“He was always acutely aware that he was with people that he felt were brighter than him, were more educated than him.
“He went to the BBC, and he felt very much… not inferior, [but] he was very insecure.
“He was a man who was constantly questioning himself and didn’t have as much self-confidence as he appears to have on television.”
Speaking about what Wilson said was an “apparent lack of self-confidence” and asked how that had manifested itself, Mike said: “I always think, as well, that he carried with him a sense of that working-class guilt, that, you know, when he became successful, when he became famous, in inverted commas, he always looked back to his childhood and looked back to what his dad endured.
“And he always felt, not guilty so much, but almost responsible, and that’s why he always wanted to help his mum and dad, he did lovely things for them…”
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Asked if it was “almost like imposter syndrome”, he replied: “It is imposter syndrome, totally, absolutely, 100%.
“He didn’t feel confident in his own skin for a long, long time.”
He said if you compared the Parkinson of the 1970s to the person he was when he came back in 1998 “there’s a different man there”, adding: “He’s a much more confident man, much more, but then that’s because he’d earned his stripes. But in the ’70s, it was a constant battle to fight against, you know, people that wouldn’t really be bothered if you failed…”.
Despite going on to success at both Granada Television and ITV, Parkinson harboured “an innate distrust of the establishment” and had “no interest in politics”.
Mike said his grandfather’s worldview had given his father “a very ‘political with a small p’ outlook on the world”.
“He never trusted the establishment because he always felt that the establishment treated people like his father – terribly, and wrongly,” he said.
“And he carried that with him all through his life. He always wanted to stand up against what he thought was unfairness.
“He wasn’t interested in politics… he was interested in policy. He always was quite suspicious of people who wanted power for power’s sake.
“What he was was very socially aware, and he was very political in that sense.
“And he always carried it through life – incredibly principled about things. Even to the end of his days he was very principled.”
Mike said it was his father’s love of his parents that had spurred him to accept a knighthood from the Queen in 2008, despite being anti-establishment.
“What you can’t do is you can’t take the working-class lad out of him, and you can’t take the love he had for his parents out of him,” he said.
“And, in the end, he couldn’t honestly turn down something that would have made his father in heaven smile and beam with pride, and also not allow his mum to have a day at the Palace. It’s as simple as that, really.
“And also, you’ve got to understand that this says a lad who was born in a pit village, went to a grammar school… worked for the local newspaper and all of a sudden, 67 years later, he’s kneeling in front of the Queen, being knighted…
“It’s too good a story for a journalist and a writer not to give it the endpoint.”
Parkinson had always been “most proud” of his writing and journalism, having taken his first steps with local papers in Yorkshire before moving to Fleet Street.
“It gave him the most pleasure and it gave him the most feeling of satisfaction,” his son said.
“He always said that ‘the day job was journalism, the fun job was interviewing’, because he loved it.
“He loved doing the interviewing because it was like a busman’s holiday for him.”
Following Sir Michael’s death, tributes poured in from around the world from fans and high-profile figures, many of whom had been guests on Parkinson, his long-running, eponymous chat show.
He was hailed as being “beyond region or class” and “irreplaceable” by contemporaries including broadcaster Sir David Attenborough, former cricket umpire Dickie Bird and actor Sir Michael Caine.
Mike said the volume of reaction had been “difficult” for his family, having been related to such a beloved figure.
Becoming audibly emotional, he said: “The difficulty with having a public figure as a father is that you feel you can’t grieve until everyone else has.
“It’s a silly thing to say, but that’s the truth – you feel that everyone else must express what they feel about him because he meant so much to them.
“And that’s important because he gave… my father was a very selfless man in many ways. He spent his entire time trying to make other people look good… and also in his small way to try and make the world a bit of a better place by making people behave better.
“He meant so much to so many people but, actually, as a family, it’s hard because your experience is overshadowed by noise and an outpouring that you feel almost that you have to step back from and allow that to happen, and allow that wave to subside.
“And then you, as a family, can remember him as a father, as a husband.”
Additional reporting by the Press Association