Patrick McGoohan
Patrick Joseph McGoohan (19 March 1928 – 13 January 2009) was an American-born actor, director, producer, and writer of Irish descent, raised primarily in Ireland and England, who rose to prominence as a leading figure in British television during the mid-20th century.[1][2] Best known for portraying the resolute secret agent John Drake in the series Danger Man (also broadcast as Secret Agent in the United States) from 1960 to 1968, McGoohan earned a reputation for embodying characters driven by individual integrity and resistance to authoritarian control.[3][4] He later created, starred in, wrote, and directed episodes of the influential 1967–1968 cult series The Prisoner, in which his character Number Six defies a mysterious organization's attempts to suppress personal autonomy, reflecting McGoohan's own philosophical commitments to individualism over collectivism.[5][6] A two-time Primetime Emmy Award winner for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series (1977 for Columbo and 1980 for Braveheart wait no, films later), he appeared in notable films such as Escape from Alcatraz (1979), Scanners (1981), and Braveheart (1995), often in authoritative or antagonistic roles that leveraged his intense screen presence.[4][7] McGoohan's career was marked by selective choices, rejecting high-profile offers like the role of James Bond due to moral objections to depictions of seduction and violence, prioritizing roles aligned with his Catholic-influenced ethics and aversion to compromising artistic principles.[3]Early Life
Childhood and Family Background
Patrick McGoohan was born Patrick Joseph McGoohan on March 19, 1928, in Astoria, Queens, New York City, to Irish immigrant parents Thomas McGoohan and Rose Fitzpatrick.[8][9] Both parents originated from County Leitrim in Ireland, with roots in the Carrigallen area, where they had been farmers before emigrating to the United States in the 1920s seeking work.[10][11] Shortly after his birth, McGoohan's family returned to Ireland, settling on the parents' farm in Leitrim during his early childhood.[6][9] The family relocated again around 1935, when McGoohan was seven years old, to Sheffield, England, where his father found employment in the steel industry.[9][12] Raised in a Roman Catholic household, McGoohan was influenced by his father's limited literacy but strong affinity for Shakespearean verse, which the elder McGoohan recited from memory despite his rural farming background.[13][1]Education and Formative Influences
McGoohan was born on March 19, 1928, in Astoria, Queens, New York, to Irish immigrant parents Thomas McGoohan, a farmer, and Rose Fitzpatrick, who had temporarily relocated to the United States for economic opportunities before returning to Ireland with their infant son shortly after his birth.[14] The family settled in Sheepbridge, County Leitrim, Ireland, where McGoohan spent his early childhood, acquiring elements of an Irish accent amid a rural Catholic environment that emphasized discipline and moral rigor.[10] At age six, the family moved to Sheffield, England, seeking better prospects, with his father taking work in local industry; this relocation exposed McGoohan to industrial urban life and prompted his enrollment in local Catholic schools.[15] In Sheffield, McGoohan attended St. Marie's School, followed by St. Vincent's School and De La Salle College, institutions run by Catholic orders that provided a structured education focused on religious instruction alongside academics.[14] During World War II, following the outbreak of hostilities in 1939, he was evacuated from Sheffield to Loughborough, Leicestershire, for safety, where he continued his studies at Ratcliffe College, a Catholic boarding school; there, he excelled in mathematics and developed a passion for boxing, participating in school matches that honed his physical discipline and competitive spirit.[9] These experiences in Catholic-run schools instilled a strong sense of personal ethics and individualism, rooted in Jesuit-influenced teachings on free will and moral accountability, which later informed his selective approach to acting roles.[16] McGoohan left formal education at age 16 in 1944, forgoing higher studies to support his family amid postwar austerity; he took up manual jobs including work in a rope factory, on a chicken farm, as a bank clerk, and driving lorries, periods that fostered self-reliance and a practical worldview detached from academic elitism.[17] Lacking drama training, his early interests leaned toward intellectual pursuits like mathematics and physical sports rather than performance, though the peripatetic childhood across cultures—American birth, Irish roots, English schooling—cultivated a neutral accent and adaptable persona suited to international roles.[12] This formative phase, marked by Catholic moralism and economic pragmatism, contrasted with prevailing postwar cultural norms, shaping his later advocacy for themes of autonomy and resistance to conformity in works like The Prisoner.[14]Theatre Career
Stage Debut and Early Roles
McGoohan began his professional involvement in theatre in 1947 at the age of 19, securing a position as assistant stage manager at the Sheffield Repertory Theatre in Sheffield, England.[13] His acting debut followed soon after, when he substituted at short notice for an ailing company member during a performance.[9] This impromptu entry into acting marked the start of his on-stage career, initially within the repertory system where he honed his skills through frequent performances in a variety of roles.[18] By 1949, at age 21, McGoohan had progressed to lead roles at Sheffield Rep, where he remained for approximately five years under director Geoffrey Ost, accumulating extensive stage experience across small and large productions.[17][19] He subsequently worked at the Bristol Old Vic, continuing in repertory theatre and building a reputation for versatility before transitioning to higher-profile London stages.[9] McGoohan's West End debut came in 1955 with the play Serious Charge by Philip King, which opened on 17 February at the Garrick Theatre.[20] In it, he portrayed Reverend Howard Phillips, a Church of England vicar falsely accused of homosexuality—a role that generated controversy for addressing taboo themes of the era.[21] His performance impressed Orson Welles, leading to further opportunities, including a role in Welles's 1955 production of Moby Dick—Rehearsed.[17] These early stage appearances established McGoohan as a compelling dramatic actor prior to his dominance in television.Notable Stage Productions
McGoohan's early stage experience included repertory productions in Sheffield in 1951, such as adaptations of The Taming of the Shrew and Sheridan's The Rivals, marking his entry into professional acting after working as a stage manager.[18] His West End debut came in 1955 with Serious Charge by Philip King at the Garrick Theatre, running from February 7 to May 7, where he played the lead role of a vicar falsely accused of homosexuality amid themes of youthful rebellion and moral panic.[22] The performance impressed Orson Welles, who subsequently cast him as Starbuck in the West End production of Moby Dick Rehearsed at the Duke of York's Theatre that same year, a stylized adaptation emphasizing dramatic intensity over literal fidelity to Melville's novel.[13] [17] In 1956, McGoohan appeared in Ring for Catty by Jack Popplewell at the Criterion Theatre, a comedic drama produced by Michael Codron in his first West End venture, though it received mixed reviews for its domestic plotting.[23] Following these roles, McGoohan largely shifted to television and film, with no major stage appearances for nearly three decades, reflecting his preference for media allowing greater creative control over projects.[13] McGoohan's return to the stage occurred in 1985 with the Broadway premiere of Hugh Whitemore's Pack of Lies at the Royale Theatre (later renamed Bernard B. Jacobs), adapted from a true Cold War espionage case involving the betrayal of British neighbors harboring Soviet spies.[24] He portrayed Stewart, the pragmatic MI5 handler pressuring a suburban couple into surveillance, opposite Rosemary Harris and George N. Martin, in a production that ran 126 performances from February 11 to May 25 and earned praise for its tense domestic realism over thriller tropes.[25] [26] This role, his only Broadway credit, highlighted his ability to convey moral ambiguity and institutional pressure, drawing on his established screen persona of principled authority figures.[24]Television Career
Initial Television Appearances
McGoohan's transition to television occurred in the mid-1950s, following his stage successes, with initial guest roles in British adventure and crime anthology series that showcased his versatility in supporting parts. His earliest credited television appearance was in 1955 on The Vise (also known as Saber of London), a gritty ITV crime drama featuring stories of international intrigue and law enforcement, where he played a minor role in an episode centered on smuggling operations. In September 1956, McGoohan portrayed the villainous Sir Glavin in "The Outcast," the fourth episode of The Adventures of Sir Lancelot, ITC Entertainment's pioneering color-filmed sword-and-sorcery series set in Camelot, which aired on ITV and emphasized chivalric quests against corrupt knights. This role marked an early collaboration with producer-director Ralph Smart, who later created Danger Man, and highlighted McGoohan's ability to embody authoritative antagonists.[27][28] McGoohan continued with another guest spot in 1957 as Captain Valadon, a stern French Foreign Legion officer confronting cowardice and mutiny, in the episode "The Coward" of Assignment Foreign Legion, a syndicated adventure series depicting Legionnaires' exploits in North Africa. These appearances, limited to single episodes across low-budget productions, provided exposure on British screens but did not yet elevate him to lead status, reflecting the competitive landscape of 1950s ITV programming where theatre actors vied for breakout opportunities.Danger Man and Secret Agent
Danger Man premiered on ITV in the United Kingdom on September 11, 1960, with Patrick McGoohan starring as John Drake, a special operative for NATO's security section tasked with high-stakes international assignments.[29] The initial series consisted of 39 half-hour black-and-white episodes produced by ITC Entertainment, emphasizing Drake's intellectual prowess and procedural efficiency over gadgetry or seduction, in line with McGoohan's preferences for restrained espionage narratives.[30] Created and largely written by Ralph Smart, the program depicted Drake as an American-accented agent navigating Cold War tensions without romantic subplots or gratuitous violence, reflecting McGoohan's insistence on scripts avoiding guns, kissing scenes, or moral compromises.[31] The series was placed on hiatus after its first run concluded in 1962, amid McGoohan's rising commitments and producer Lew Grade's strategic delays, but revived in an expanded one-hour format starting October 31, 1964, yielding 47 episodes filmed through 1968.[32] In this iteration, Drake transitioned to employment with the fictional British intelligence branch M9, allowing for deeper character exploration and standalone stories involving counter-espionage, defections, and internal threats, often with McGoohan contributing to scripts under pseudonyms like Robert Fairclough.[33] The revived episodes aired in the United States under the title Secret Agent from 1964 to 1966 on CBS, where the theme song's lyrics were altered to "Secret Agent Man," boosting McGoohan's transatlantic profile while maintaining the core aversion to Bond-like sensationalism.[34] McGoohan's creative control shaped the production profoundly; he rejected advances to portray James Bond for similar ethical reasons rooted in his Catholic faith, prioritizing Drake's integrity as a non-violent, celibate professional who relied on cunning and ethics rather than firepower or dalliances.[35] This approach, enforced despite resistance from executives, resulted in episodes like "The Galloping Major" (1964) and "The Battle of the Cameras" (1965), where Drake's interrogative style and moral dilemmas underscored themes of duty and autonomy, foreshadowing McGoohan's later work.[36] The series' success, with audiences exceeding 10 million viewers per episode in the UK during the revival, stemmed from this distinctive realism, distinguishing it from contemporaneous spy fare.[29]The Prisoner: Creation and Production
The concept for The Prisoner originated during Patrick McGoohan's work on the espionage series Danger Man (known as Secret Agent in the United States), where he grew disillusioned after producing 54 episodes and sought to explore themes of individual resistance against bureaucratic and societal conformity.[37] McGoohan collaborated with script editor George Markstein, who contributed ideas such as modeling the enigmatic Village on Allied prisoner-of-war camps from World War II to emphasize themes of confinement and interrogation.[38] The initial spark occurred while filming Danger Man episodes at Portmeirion, a whimsical Italianate village in North Wales, which McGoohan envisioned as the primary setting for a story about a resigned secret agent abducted and stripped of identity, becoming Number Six.[37] McGoohan pitched the series to ITC Entertainment head Lew Grade in 1966, presenting a detailed format, photographs of Portmeirion, and a 10-minute overview without a full script; Grade approved it immediately based on the budget and McGoohan's reputation, initially commissioning it as a seven-episode serial.[37][39] To secure a U.S. network deal with CBS, Grade expanded the order to 17 episodes, altering the planned linear narrative into a more allegorical and experimental structure blending spy thriller elements with psychological drama and surrealism.[37] McGoohan established Everyman Films with producer David Tomblin to retain creative control, serving as executive producer, star, writer of several scripts (often under pseudonyms like Paddy Fitz and Archibald Schwartz), and director for select episodes.[40][39] Production commenced in mid-1966 and extended into early 1968, with principal photography at Portmeirion for exterior Village scenes, interior work at MGM British Studios in Borehamwood, and additional locations across England such as Santa Pod raceway.[40] McGoohan provided writers with a 40-page dossier on the Village's history and lore to ensure consistency, though tensions arose with Markstein over the shift from grounded espionage to abstract symbolism, leading Markstein to depart after editing the first 13 episodes.[37][39] Challenges included improvising the guardian Rover balloon after mechanical props failed and rushing a Western-themed episode in four days due to script shortages, reflecting McGoohan's perfectionism and insistence on thematic depth over commercial formulas.[37] The series debuted on ITV in the United Kingdom on September 29, 1967, concluding on February 1, 1968, with episodes aired in varying orders that disrupted intended continuity.[39]Later Television Roles and Guest Appearances
McGoohan hosted the British anthology series Journey into Darkness from 1968 to 1969, presenting episodes featuring supernatural and thriller narratives adapted from short stories. The series aired on ITV and consisted of 16 episodes, with McGoohan providing narration and occasional on-screen appearances to frame the tales.[5] His most significant later television contributions were four guest-starring roles as the antagonist in the NBC/PBS series Columbo, spanning 1974 to 1998, each time portraying a cunning murderer outmaneuvered by Lieutenant Columbo. In the Season 4 episode "By Dawn's Early Light," which aired on October 27, 1974, McGoohan played Colonel Lyle C. Rumford, a strict military academy commandant who orchestrates a cadet's death to conceal embezzlement and advances his career; this performance earned him the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series in 1975.[5] He returned in the Season 5 episode "Identity Crisis," aired on November 2, 1975, as Nelson Brever, a CIA operative who kills a colleague mistaken for an assassin, and also directed the episode, which featured experimental stylistic elements including dream sequences.[41] McGoohan directed and starred again in "Agenda for Murder" (Season 10, Episode 3, aired on February 14, 1990), portraying Oscar Finch, a lawyer who murders his unfaithful wife and frames her lover. His final Columbo appearance was in "Ashes to Ashes" (Season 13, Episode 2, aired on October 11, 1998), reprising a variation of Eric Prince, a mortician who eliminates a blackmailing actress. These roles showcased McGoohan's versatility in playing authoritative, intellectually arrogant figures, often drawing on his earlier persona of controlled intensity from The Prisoner.[42] In animation, McGoohan provided the voice of Number Six, reprising his iconic Prisoner character, in the Simpsons episode "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes" (Season 12, Episode 6), which aired on December 3, 2000, and parodied conspiracy and surveillance themes through Homer Simpson's online escapades.[43] This marked his final credited television role before his death in 2009. Throughout the 1970s to 1990s, McGoohan largely avoided extensive television commitments, prioritizing film work and expressing disinterest in conventional series formats due to his preferences for creative control and aversion to formulaic storytelling.[5]Film Career
Breakthrough Film Roles
McGoohan's entry into feature films occurred in 1955 with the supporting role of McIsaacs, a volatile crew member who leads a near-mutiny over substandard provisions, in the British maritime drama Passage Home, directed by Roy Ward Baker and starring Peter Finch.[44] The film, set aboard a cargo ship transporting a female passenger amid rising tensions, highlighted McGoohan's capacity for portraying brooding intensity in confined ensemble dynamics.[45] In 1957, he delivered a standout antagonistic performance as 'Red', the sadistic Irish truck driver and gang enforcer, in the gritty film noir Hell Drivers, directed by Cy Endfield and led by Stanley Baker as an ex-convict exposing trucking rackets.[46] McGoohan's portrayal of the hot-tempered rival, marked by physical confrontations including a brutal fight scene, earned notice for its raw aggression and contributed to the film's reputation as a seminal British crime thriller emphasizing post-war machismo and moral ambiguity.[47] These early roles, alongside appearances in The Dark Avenger (1955) and High Tide at Noon (1957), established McGoohan in cinema as a versatile supporting player adept at complex, often villainous characters, bridging his theatre background with emerging television prominence.[5] By 1962, he appeared as the paranoid musician Mike in All Night Long, a jazz-club reimagining of Shakespeare's Othello directed by Basil Dearden, where his suspicions fuel interpersonal intrigue among a band over one night. This adaptation underscored his skill in psychological tension, though his film career remained secondary to television successes during this period.Key Feature Films and Collaborations
McGoohan's entry into feature films occurred in the late 1950s with British productions emphasizing gritty realism. In Hell Drivers (1957), directed by Cy Endfield, he portrayed Tom Yately, an ex-convict joining a ruthless trucking firm amid intense rivalries and moral dilemmas. This role showcased his ability to convey internal conflict and physical intensity, marking an early cinematic success following his stage work.[48] By the early 1960s, McGoohan collaborated with director Basil Dearden on two notable films. All Night Long (1962) reimagined Shakespeare's Othello in a modern London jazz milieu, with McGoohan as Rod Hamilton, a manipulative band manager fueling jealousy among musicians including Richard Attenborough and Paul Harris. The production featured a score by John Dankworth and highlighted McGoohan's commanding presence in ensemble dynamics.[48] Dearden's subsequent Life for Ruth (1962), also known as Walk in the Shadow, cast him as a doctor navigating ethical tensions in a case involving blood transfusions and religious convictions, co-starring Michael Craig. Transitioning to international projects, McGoohan appeared in Ice Station Zebra (1968), a Cold War thriller directed by John Frankenheimer, playing British submarine commander David Ferrie alongside Rock Hudson and Ernest Borgnine; the film involved espionage over a satellite film recovery at the North Pole.[49] His role emphasized strategic cunning and naval authority. In later decades, McGoohan took on diverse supporting roles in Hollywood films. He portrayed the prison warden in Escape from Alcatraz (1979), directed by Don Siegel, opposite Clint Eastwood's Frank Morris, depicting the 1962 escape attempt with procedural detail.[49] In David Cronenberg's Scanners (1981), he played Dr. Paul Ruth, a scientist developing telepathic agents amid corporate intrigue and explosive psychic confrontations. Further collaborations included Braveheart (1995), where he embodied the ruthless King Edward I of England under Mel Gibson's direction, contributing to the epic's portrayal of Scottish resistance. McGoohan also voiced the pirate Billy Bones in Disney's animated Treasure Planet (2002), adapting Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island with science fiction elements. These roles underscored his versatility across genres, from action to voice work.[49]Directing and Creative Control
Episodes Directed and Written
McGoohan exerted substantial creative influence over The Prisoner (1967–1968), writing three episodes and directing five, often to infuse the series with his philosophical vision of individualism and resistance to authoritarianism. These contributions allowed him to shape narrative tone and visual style, emphasizing psychological tension and allegory over conventional spy thriller elements.[50] In the episode "Free for All" (aired 6 October 1967), McGoohan wrote the script under the pseudonym Paddy Fitz and directed, marking his first such dual role in the series; the story depicts Number Six's coerced participation in a village election, highlighting themes of manipulated democracy.[51] He directed "The Schizoid Man" (17 November 1967), exploring identity duality through a doppelgänger plot, and "The Girl Who Was Death" (22 December 1967), a surreal fairy-tale narrative that McGoohan adapted to underscore existential peril. McGoohan also wrote and directed "Living in Harmony" (18 January 1968), a Western parody shifting the Village to an American frontier setting to examine coercion and hallucination. The series finale, "Fall Out" (1 February 1968), was written and directed by McGoohan, delivering a chaotic, revolutionary climax that defied network expectations and contributed to the show's abrupt end after 17 episodes.[52][53]| Episode Title | Air Date | Writing Credit | Directing Credit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free for All | 6 October 1967 | Yes (as Paddy Fitz) | Yes | First dual credit; election satire.[51] |
| The Schizoid Man | 17 November 1967 | No | Yes | Identity-themed psychological duel.[50] |
| The Girl Who Was Death | 22 December 1967 | No | Yes | Surreal adaptation of peril motifs.[53] |
| Living in Harmony | 18 January 1968 | Yes | Yes | Western genre shift; pseudonym used for writing in some credits.[53] |
| Fall Out | 1 February 1968 | Yes | Yes | Revolutionary finale; uncredited pseudonyms possible.[52] |
Involvement in Production Decisions
McGoohan exerted considerable influence over production elements in Danger Man (known as Secret Agent in the United States), stipulating that his character, John Drake, would never carry a gun, reflecting his aversion to firearm glorification in espionage narratives.[13] He also demanded that episodes avoid gratuitous sex, car chases, and repetitive violence, insisting instead on varied fistfights and intellectually driven resolutions to maintain narrative depth.[29] These conditions, rooted in McGoohan's Catholic principles against explicit content, shaped the series' tone during its 1964–1966 run, prioritizing cerebral intrigue over sensationalism.[29] In The Prisoner (1967–1968), which McGoohan co-created and produced with David Tomblin, he held veto power over scripts that introduced romantic subplots, rejecting pairings of Number Six with female leads to preserve the character's isolation and thematic purity.[56] He persuaded ITC executives to forgo sex and violence, enabling the series' continuation despite network pressures for conventional spy elements, and banned the word "television" from the set to underscore its meta-critique of media conformity.[35] Additionally, McGoohan enforced a no-kissing policy in scripts, aligning with his moral stance against on-screen intimacy, while overseeing production logistics such as location arrangements in Portmeirion, Wales.[57] These decisions, often executed under pseudonyms like Joseph Serf for directing credits, ensured the 17-episode series reflected his vision of individual resistance against collectivist control.[58]Personal Life and Beliefs
Marriage and Family
McGoohan married actress Joan Drummond on May 19, 1951, after meeting her at the Sheffield Playhouse where both were involved in repertory theater.[59][14] The couple remained wed for 57 years until McGoohan's death in 2009, maintaining a private family life amid his acting career that often required relocations between the United Kingdom and the United States.[59][60] They had three daughters: Catherine, born May 31, 1952; Anne, born 1959; and Frances, born 1960.[59][61] Catherine pursued acting, appearing in episodes of Columbo alongside her father and in films such as Elizabethtown (2005).[62] The family emphasized stability, with McGoohan later reflecting on the simplicity of his early married life in Sheffield before professional demands intensified.[15]Catholic Faith and Moral Stance
Patrick McGoohan was raised by devoutly Catholic parents who instilled strong religious principles in him from childhood, including consideration of the priesthood before pursuing acting.[63][64] His faith led him to reject roles involving explicit sex or excessive violence, viewing such content as morally incompatible with his beliefs.[65][66] A prominent example was his refusal of the James Bond role in the 1960s, which he declined citing an overemphasis on sex and violence that he described as having "an insidious and detrimental effect" on audiences, particularly youth.[66] McGoohan similarly avoided onscreen love scenes throughout his career, prioritizing roles that aligned with his ethical standards over commercial opportunities.[65] These decisions reflected a broader moral stance rooted in Catholic teachings on chastity and restraint, including opposition to the contraceptive pill, which he regarded as contrary to natural law.[63] Though McGoohan occasionally described himself as a lapsed Catholic and critiqued certain institutional practices from his youth, such as rigid indoctrination, his professional choices consistently demonstrated adherence to core Catholic moral tenets over secular industry norms.[67][68] Accounts from contemporaries and obituaries portray him as embodying traditional virtues amid Hollywood's permissive culture, with his faith informing a principled resistance to compromise.[69][63]Philosophical and Political Views
McGoohan articulated a philosophy emphasizing individual autonomy and moral resistance against societal and institutional pressures to conform. He viewed modern existence as inherently confining, likening it to a metaphorical "Village" in which people surrender their identities, as expressed in his 1977 interview with Warner Troyer: "We all live in a little Village… we are all prisoners."[70] This perspective underpinned The Prisoner, the 1967–1968 series he co-created, where the protagonist Number Six repeatedly declares, "I am not a number, I am a free man," rejecting dehumanization and surveillance as tools of control.[71] McGoohan described the series' core conflict as an unyielding effort "to destroy the individual by every means possible; trying to break his spirit, so that he accepts that he is No. 6 and will live there happily as No. 6 for ever after," highlighting his belief in the primacy of personal spirit over collective assimilation.[70] Politically, McGoohan expressed skepticism toward unchecked technological and governmental expansion, warning in the same 1977 interview that "progress is the biggest enemy on earth, apart from oneself," citing escalating weaponry and speed as harbingers of misuse: "there’s never been a weapon created yet on the face of the Earth that hadn’t been used."[70] He critiqued dominant institutions as orchestrators of conformity, stating, "We’re run by the Pentagon, we’re run by Madison Avenue, we’re run by television, and as long as we accept those things and don’t revolt we’ll have to go along with the stream to the eventual avalanche."[70] This reflected a broader anti-authoritarian stance, evident in The Prisoner's portrayal of state-like entities employing psychological manipulation and privacy erosion to enforce compliance, themes later recognized by the Libertarian Futurist Society as emblematic of individualism against the "cult of the state."[71] McGoohan decried consumerism and media as agents of "brainwashing," arguing that excessive exposure stripped individuals of soul and agency: "The majority of them have been sort of brainwashed. Their souls have been brainwashed out of them. Watching too many commercials is what happened to them."[70] Central to his thought was a spiritual dimension of individualism, positing an inner moral force as essential to defiance: "a moral force which says, ‘I have a spirit of my own, a soul of my own and it’s joined with a greater force beyond me.’"[70] Yet he tempered optimism with realism, asserting, "Freedom is a myth. There’s no final conclusion to it," underscoring perpetual struggle rather than attainable utopia.[70] These convictions manifested in professional choices, such as declining the James Bond role in 1962 due to its depiction of promiscuity conflicting with his principles of personal integrity.[18] McGoohan's ideas, drawn from post-World War II observations of totalitarianism and cultural passivity, positioned society as a soul-bearing entity requiring vigilant individualism to preserve ethical order.[72]Controversies and Criticisms
Conflicts with Producers and Networks
McGoohan encountered early tensions with Danger Man producers during its extended run, culminating in clashes with management that prompted the dissolution of his contract after 86 episodes in 1966.[73] He argued the series had reached its narrative limits and expressed unwillingness to perpetuate spy-themed content indefinitely, prioritizing artistic evolution over prolonged commercial output.[74] This decision frustrated network executives seeking sustained profitability from the program's international success. Transitioning to The Prisoner, McGoohan pitched the concept directly to ITC Entertainment head Lew Grade as a successor project, securing executive producer status and significant creative autonomy. However, fundamental disagreements emerged over production scale: McGoohan advocated for a concise seven-episode arc to preserve thematic integrity and avoid dilution, while Grade demanded 26 episodes to facilitate U.S. syndication requirements, resulting in a compromise of 17.[75][76] These negotiations highlighted McGoohan's resistance to network-driven extensions that he viewed as compromising the series' allegorical depth on individualism and authority. Further strains involved script oversight and content alterations; McGoohan disputed contributions with script editor George Markstein, each claiming primary origination of the premise, which complicated collaborative dynamics.[77] U.S. broadcaster CBS exacerbated issues by censoring the episode "Living in Harmony" in 1968, deeming its Western parody and anti-violence motifs too provocative amid Vietnam War sensitivities, a decision underscoring networks' prioritization of advertiser-friendly conformity over McGoohan's unyielding vision.[78] Grade later recounted CBS inquiries about managing McGoohan, reflecting industry perceptions of him as temperamentally challenging amid his insistence on ambiguity and rejection of explanatory resolutions demanded by executives.[79] Such standoffs, rooted in McGoohan's commitment to auteur-driven storytelling, contributed to post-production fallout, including his abrupt departure from the UK following the 1968 finale airing.[80]Role Refusals and Professional Demands
McGoohan frequently declined prominent roles that conflicted with his moral principles, particularly those featuring gratuitous violence or sexual content, which he viewed as incompatible with his Catholic faith. He rejected the role of James Bond in the 1962 film Dr. No, citing an excessive emphasis on sex and violence that he believed promoted an insidious and destructive quality in entertainment.[66] This decision was reiterated when he passed on the opportunity again for a later Bond project, prioritizing character integrity over commercial appeal.[81] Similarly, he turned down the lead in The Saint, objecting to its portrayal of casual promiscuity and ethical ambiguity.[68] In accepting roles, McGoohan imposed strict professional demands to align productions with his standards. For the ITV series Danger Man (known as Secret Agent in the U.S.), which aired from 1960 to 1962 and revived in 1964, he insisted that the protagonist John Drake rely on intellect rather than firearms, minimizing gun use and avoiding romantic entanglements.[82] He explicitly refused to portray scenes involving on-screen intimacy or unnecessary brutality, stating his abhorrence for "violence and cheap sex" in media.[83] These stipulations extended to script approvals and creative input, ensuring the character embodied cerebral problem-solving over physical or sensual exploits.[84] Such selectivity limited his opportunities in mainstream Hollywood and British television during the 1960s, as producers often sought actors willing to conform to genre conventions of espionage thrillers. McGoohan's refusals, while principled, contributed to periods of underemployment, yet he maintained that compromising his values would undermine authentic performance.[85] His approach influenced subsequent projects like The Prisoner (1967–1968), where he secured veto power over casting and content to preserve thematic depth over sensationalism.[86]Death and Legacy
Final Years and Health Decline
In the decade following his prominent role as King Edward I in the 1995 film Braveheart, McGoohan limited his acting appearances, reflecting his longstanding preference for selective projects aligned with his moral and artistic standards. He reprised guest roles as cunning adversaries in three episodes of the detective series Columbo during the 1990s, including "Agenda for Murder" (1990), "Murder: A Self Portrait" (1989), and "It's All in the Game" (1993), for which he received Emmy nominations. His final on-screen performance came in the 1998 Columbo episode "Ashes to Ashes," after which he retired from live-action roles. McGoohan's last credited work was providing voice acting for the character John Silver in the Disney animated film Treasure Planet (2002).[87] McGoohan resided quietly in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles with his wife Joan and family, maintaining a low public profile consistent with his reclusive tendencies and aversion to celebrity culture. He occasionally engaged in private conversations about potential projects but cited health constraints as a barrier to new commitments. Details of his medical history remained private, though earlier life events included a severe bout of bronchial asthma in his youth that sidelined him for months.[88][13] In late 2008, McGoohan's health deteriorated rapidly, culminating in a brief but fatal illness. He passed away on January 13, 2009, at Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California, at the age of 80, as confirmed by his son-in-law and film producer Cleve Landsberg. The precise cause was not publicly disclosed beyond the characterization of a "short illness," underscoring McGoohan's lifelong discretion regarding personal matters. His body was cremated, with no public funeral service held.[89][90][91]Cultural Impact and Enduring Influence
The Prisoner, the 1967 television series co-created by and starring Patrick McGoohan, pioneered a fusion of espionage, science fiction, allegory, and psychological drama that reshaped perceptions of narrative television, elevating it from episodic entertainment to avant-garde critique of conformity and authority. Its depiction of a former secret agent imprisoned in a surreal village—where residents are stripped of identity and subjected to manipulative oversight—foreshadowed real-world advancements in surveillance technology and data collection, rendering themes of privacy erosion prescient by the late 20th and early 21st centuries.[92] McGoohan's insistence on thematic depth over commercial formulas, including his rejection of formulaic spy tropes, positioned the series as a landmark in challenging viewer passivity, influencing how subsequent media interrogated power structures and individual agency.[92] The show's impact permeates diverse cultural domains, notably inspiring music with its mod futurism and anti-authoritarian ethos; rock acts like The Clash and XTC, alongside electronic producer Luke Vibert, drew from its rebellious iconography and sound design in their work.[93] In television, The Prisoner laid groundwork for psychologically intricate series such as Westworld and Mr. Robot, which replicate its disorienting explorations of simulated realities and systemic control, marking it as an early progenitor of "mindfuck" storytelling that prioritizes intellectual provocation over linear resolution.[94] Film echoes appear in works like The Truman Show, where orchestrated existences mirror the Village's engineered isolation, underscoring McGoohan's role in embedding dystopian individualism into mainstream narratives.[39] McGoohan's Number Six persona endures as a symbol of unyielding personal sovereignty, encapsulated in the declarative "I am not a number, I am a free man," which continues to inform discourse on autonomy amid encroaching institutional pressures.[92] Fan organizations like the Six of One appreciation society sustain scholarly and communal engagement, ensuring analytical reevaluation of episodes for countercultural insights into technology's societal costs.[95] Over five decades later, the series retains relevance in an era of digital oversight and identity commodification, affirming McGoohan's vision as a catalyst for ongoing reflections on freedom's fragility against collectivist encroachments.[96]Awards and Recognitions
McGoohan received the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor in 1960 for his performance in the series Danger Man (also known as Secret Agent), recognizing his portrayal of secret agent John Drake.[97][98] He won two Primetime Emmy Awards for guest appearances on Columbo. The first, in 1975, was for Outstanding Single Performance by a Supporting Actor in a Comedy or Drama Series for the episode "By Dawn's Early Light," in which he played the manipulative Lyle Rumford.[98][99] The second, in 1990, was for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series for the episode "Agenda for Murder," portraying the cunning Oscar Finch.[99][98] In 1959, McGoohan was named Best TV Actor of the Year in Britain, prior to his BAFTA recognition, highlighting his early impact in British television.[5]| Year | Award | Category/Work |
|---|---|---|
| 1959 | Best TV Actor of the Year (Britain) | General television work |
| 1960 | BAFTA Television Award | Best Actor (Danger Man) |
| 1975 | Primetime Emmy Award | Outstanding Single Performance by a Supporting Actor (Columbo: "By Dawn's Early Light") |
| 1990 | Primetime Emmy Award | Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series (Columbo: "Agenda for Murder") |