Press. voanews.com
A documentary
about the life of renowned guitarist Eric Clapton does not attempt to whitewash
over the darker side of the hard-drinking musician's life, even though it is
directed by his longtime friend, filmmaker Lili Fini Zanuck said Monday.
Zanuck, who has
known Clapton for 25 years, directed "Eric Clapton: Life in 12 Bars,"
following the life of the 72-year-old British guitarist from childhood to
international stardom, through his struggle with drugs and alcohol and the 1991
death of his four-year-old son.
"To watch
myself going through that was not easy," Clapton told reporters on Monday
at the Toronto International Film Festival, where the film made its debut. "Right
up until the time I stopped drinking, everything I said was complete
blather," he added, to laughter from the audience.
In his 2007
autobiography, Clapton described a 20-year drug and alcohol addiction that he
said saw him spending about $16,000 a week on heroin in the 1970s. The death of
his son Conor, in a fall from a New York high-rise, was the trigger to
sobriety.
The musician,
who is a producer on the film, spoke about his struggles with having his life
documented on screen and doing interviews with Zanuck in a film that does not
shy away from examining his faults. "I do not like having my picture
taken, I do not like talking to journalists. I love to play music,"
Clapton said.
Zanuck, who won
an Oscar for 1989's "Driving Miss Daisy," said Clapton did not
second-guess the responsibility he gave her in telling his story. "For me,
the movie is about redemption — personal redemption, not necessarily what
society thinks," Zanuck told Reuters.
"No one got
him out of despair, he did it himself," she added. With hits such as
"Bell Bottom Blues," "Cocaine" and "Layla,"
Clapton has won 17 Grammy Awards, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in 2000. He was ranked No. 2 on Rolling Stone magazine's 2015 list of
100 greatest guitarists of all time, behind Jimi Hendrix. "Eric Clapton:
Life in 12 Bars" will be released in North American theaters later this
year and air on premium cable channel Showtime in February.