Terence was born into a working-class, Roman Catholic family, the youngest of ten children in the Kensington district of Liverpool, just after the end of the Second World War in the Autumn of 1945. He was the son of Helen and Thomas, a chimney sweep by trade who he remembered as : “rough, alcoholic and utterly callous”. He later said his father’s protracted, glowering silences, made him feel : “Terrified all the time. The one thing I can’t bear now is atmospheres. I can come into a room full of people and I can tell you who’s had the row. I always say : if I’ve upset you, just come out with it. If you cold-shoulder me, I instantly see him sitting in the corner of the parlour and I’m a seven-year-old again”.
One of his greatest memories was being taken to the cinema to see 'Singin’ in the Rain' by his sister at the age of seven in 1952. Over forty years later he recalled : “During that scene in the rain, I cried and cried and cried. She asked : "Why are you crying?" and I told her : "Because he looks so happy!" Nothing does that for me like the old Hollywood musicals. I love Bergman’s 'Cries and Whispers', too, but it’s hardly a toe-tapper, is it? I wish I could say I’d made something as great as 'Singin’ in the Rain' but alas, no, I haven’t”.(link)As a film director, he later mused : "When I heard it had taken three days to shoot and they had to mix milk with water in order for the rain to photograph, and you actually look at it and it’s only from eight camera positions - Hard to believe! Only eight camera positions. There’s nine cuts, but it cuts back to one of the previous camera positions. But, in eight positions! I still want to cry at the end of it when that extra is being given the umbrella, and you think, 'I wonder who he was?'. I often wonder 'what happened to him?' That’s heartbreaking somehow. You wonder what he thought when he saw it : “There I am with Gene Kelly”.(link)
This happy phase in his life came to an abrupt end when he was eleven and was packed off to a catholic boarding school, The Sacred Heart Roman Catholic High School. He recalled : “I was conscious of being ecstatically happy but knowing it was going to go” and sure enough it did and : “The first day, these lads saw their victim – and I was beaten up every day for the next four years”. He was fifteen when he realised that he was gay and said : "For somebody like me, who discovered at puberty that they were gay and it was then a criminal offense in Britain, the Church offered no succour. I felt then that if I prayed and was really good, God would make me like everybody else. Those years when I prayed until my knees bled were awful".
Living back at home, in 1962 he said he heard Alec Guinness recite from memory Eliot’s 'Four Quartets' on television, and now read them once a month. He also discovered Bruckner, his great love and Sibelius, and Shostakovich. He said that they worked into his unconscious to such an extent that, in later life when he looked at images, he thought of music.
He sought release from the trap he felt he was at work by doing some amateur acting and thinking back to 1967 he said : "I finally realized the priests were just men in frocks, and I dropped the church when I was twenty-two. It left a deep emotional hole in me - a sense of chaos". Then in 1971, at the age of twenty-six, he left Liverpool to study acting at the Coventry School of Drama on a grant awarded by the Local Education Authority. In 2009 he said : "The environs I grew up in were tiny. It consisted of house, church, street and the movies. I felt I had to leave. I wanted a creative life, rather than becoming an accountant, which I did for twelve years, and I detested it. It was like a slow death". In Coventry he started writing the screenplay that eventually became 'Children' and when he was thirty-one in 1976, his script found favour with the BFI Production Board.
Now that he was funded by the Board, Terence became part of a vital wave of new British talent that also included Bill Douglas, Peter Greenaway and Derek Jarman. The experience of directing it was a traumatic one for him because he was openly disdained by his crew, but the film itself was a triumph, crowned by a miraculous shot of Robert and his mother standing on the doorstep, their reflection in the hearse window erased as the father’s coffin is slid into the back of the vehicle. (link) When once asked by one sceptical audience member why his films were so slow and depressing, he replied : “It’s a gift.”
He then signed up at the National Film School in London, eventually shooting 'Madonna and Child' as his graduation film in 1980. (link) When he added 'Death and Transfiguration' in (link) 1983, the trio were released commercially under the title of 'The Terence Davies Trilogy'. Their protagonist, Robert Tucker was a surrogate, of sorts, for Terence's own experiences growing up gay and devoutly Catholic in a working-class Liverpudlian neighbourhood. He was encountered in 'Children' as a bullied, tentatively gay schoolboy, then in middle age in 'Madonna and Child' and in his dotage in 'Death and Transfiguration'. He himself said : “Being in the past makes me feel safe because I understand that world”. He also said : “My great love is Eliot’s Four Quartets and these were my modest version of the Four Quartets, based on the suffering of myself and my own family”.

Terence used the Trilogy as a springboard to complete a pair of dramas that, if not entirely autobiographical, nevertheless felt close to home. His 'Distant Voices, Still Lives made in 1988, centred on a family living in the shadow of an abusive alcoholic patriarch played by Pete Postlethwaite.(link) The shoot was extremely taxing for Terence and he was sometimes seen, between takes, sitting on Postlethwaite’s lap and being comforted. When Pete said he couldn't believe the truth behind the scene in which his character breaks a broom across the back of his own daughter, Terence handed him his sister’s telephone number and said : “Call her.” (link) The film critic Mark Kermode finished his review of the film with the judgement that Terence : "Has remained one of our singular cinematic artists, a film maker to be cherished, admired and adored." (link)
"My point of view comes from instinct and heart. I try to be as truthful to memory as possible. I remember the intensity of those moments, which I still reverberate to even today. So I have no esthetic distance from the material". The Liverpool I knew has disappeared. I’ve recreated a city that is no longer there. The last cinema in my old neighborhood, the Odeon, has been pulled down. The city is now a mythical city for me, because memory is myth. I love the city, but have no illusions that there isn’t a great deal wrong with it".

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