Spirit In The Dark
Article by
Jessica Berens
Spin, September, 1986


Morrissey says he's celibate, hates Thatcher, DJs, Madonna, pop-music TV shows, and video. "I do feel sad most of the time about most things," he says. "I don't find there is a great deal to get jubilant about." That's show biz.

"Morrissey," remembers Paul Morley, "was always laughed at
in Manchester when we were kids. He was the village idiot. That's the
ironic thing - now he's the poet of a generation. But in those days he
was 'that-one-in-the-corner, Steve the Nutter'."
Morley left his hometown in the north of England to become a journalist
and, subsequently, generalissimo behind the coup that was Frankie Goes To
Hollywood. Steve the Nutter, meanwhile, maintained a brooding isolation
in the bedroom of his mother's house, surrounded by his huge collection of
James Dean and New York Dolls memorabilia. Then guitarist Johnny Marr
rescued him by appealing to Morrissey's other submerged obsession:
celebrity. Steve was, he has since admitted, the kind of person who wore
cumbersome overcoats on the sweltering summer days, because he believed
that what he wore was fashionable and what everyone else wore was not.
Jesus knows he wanted to be famous. He craved love.
He gained a reputation for being well-read, outspoken, funny, and
refreshingly deranged. He hurled gladiolas at his audience, wore a
hearing aid onstage, made a single with discarded '60's pop star Sandie
Shaw (his idol along with Oscar Wilde and David Johansen), sported flaccid
woolen cardigans and unattractive spectacles of the variety issued by the
ailing British National Health Service. "Some people think I invented
them." Voluminous floral shirts were selected from Evans, a nationwide
chain of shops specializing in clothes for large women.
As a person attracted to the morbid and macabre - Harold and
Maude (the scene where Harold chops off his own hand), Jackson
Pollock (the blood on the canvas), Hemingway (the gun), Jim Morrison (the
alcoholic cheeks) Sylvia Plath (debilitating mania), I always found the
Smiths' memento mori sensibility appealing. Marr's driving dirges,
illuminated by Morrissey's socially conscious lyrics, which dwell on
misery, death, loneliness, and despair, are summed up by the
quintessential line, "I think about life/And I think about death/And
neither one particularly appeals to me."
Morrissey stays in a quiet apartment near London's upmarket Sloane Square.
When I visited him, it was bathed in subdued daylight, cluttered with
boxes of books and the occasional blown-up photograph of himself. Tea was
served. He perched at the opposite end of the table. Divested of glasses
and contact lenses, he is seriously myopic and admitted he couldn't
actually see me from that distance. This was probably a good thing, since
I had an inane grin on my face, like one of those girls who used to hang
out at the Manson ranch. His sculptured features are albescent, almost
greenish. The hair could have been designed by an imaginative hedge
trimmer.
His purple shirt, "wildly expensive," was bought in Beverly Hills, his
moccasins were suede. Odd for someone whose strong politically green
stance was promulgated on the last Smiths album, Meat Is Murder.
We hear, "The flesh you so fancifully fry/Is not succulent, tasty or
nice/It's death for no reason/And death for no reason is MURDER." So,
leather shoes then? "I find shoes difficult to be ethical about - one
just can't seem to avoid leather. One is trapped, ultimately."
Morrissey was the child of a broken marriage and grew up with his mother,
a librarian. His childhood must have been marred by the Moors Murders, a
crime spree that astounded England and terrorized Manchester, where it
happened. Myra Hindley, an ice-queenish misfit, and Ian Brady, a man
obsessed by Hitler, were sent to prison for life. Their crime? Child
murder. One of their victims, 10-year-old Leslie Anne Downey, was
photographed in pornographic poses and tortured. Her screams were taped
and subsequently played to an appalled jury after police found her little
body on Saddleworth Moor. She was not the only child who disappeared at
that time. Mancunian parents were terrified, and when Brady and Hindley,
these extraordinary monsters, were sent to prison in 1966, Morrissey was
7. The song "Suffer Little Children," about that crime, is one of the
Smiths' most powerful.

The above article was originally published in the September, 1986 issue of Spin magazine. Reprinted without permission for personal use only.