‘I’m fighting for the right to live’: Liz Carr on acting, friendship and her campaign against assisted dying (2024)

It’s a tense time for Liz Carr. “You should be in our house at the moment!” she says. Better Off Dead?, her documentary on assisted dying, is soon to air on BBC One. She is making the case against. “You’re probably thinking that, looking like me, I’d be campaigning for the choice to ask a doctor to put me out of my misery,” she deadpans near the start of the film.

Carr has wanted to make this programme for years. In 2011, after the documentary Terry Pratchett: Choosing to Die featured the assisted death of a 71-year-old man with motor neurone disease, she wrote to the BBC to say that it was its duty to present the alternative view.

Back then, Carr wasn’t the familiar face that she is now. It was before her roles in TV shows including Silent Witness, Good Omens, The Witcher and Loki. It was before her performance in The Normal Heart at the National Theatre, which won her an Olivier. Now that she has finally got the documentary done, it coincides with a new batch of celebrities– Prue Leith, Jonathan Dimbleby, Esther Rantzen – calling for the legalisation of assisted dying, backed by what seems like rising media support, as well as more parliamentary debate and steps tolegalise it in Jersey, the Isle of Man and Scotland.

‘I’m fighting for the right to live’: Liz Carr on acting, friendship and her campaign against assisted dying (1)

“It feels like it’s coming at us from all angles,” she says. “I’m so incensed that there is never any balance on this topic. Of course I’m worried I’ll be slagged off, that it’ll get nasty on social media. Will people come up to me on the street? But I worry more about my friends that are in the programme. The film is full of my world, my loveand support. I feel a duty of care to them.”

Better Off Dead? takes a deep dive into assisted dying and disability. Carr believes the two can’t be separated. It’s disturbing, of course, but also life-affirming and darkly funny, which isn’t surprising; Carr was a standup comic for years. In the opening shots, she and her disabled friends remember the times they have been told they would be better off dead. One, Jamie Hale, has even had someone offer to kill him. (“And this wasn’t someone I was particularly close to,” he says.)

The film is also intensely personal. Carr looks back at her childhood and the impact of having her life turned upside down by a rare autoimmune condition at seven. It’s something she has been reluctant to share in the past. “Our perception of disability is that it’s the greatest tragedy to befall you and I don’t want to compound that,” she says. “But I did want to show that I do know how your life changes so hugely when you join that camp – the most unsexy, unfun, unglamorous group. Who’dwant that?”

Carr, 52, grew up in Wirral and, until her diagnosis, was “the popular kid”. “I was fit, the best girl runner in the class; smart; Iwas in the school plays. Everyone wanted to be my friend,” she says. Her family then moved to the US for two years, for her father’s work as aresearch chemist. It was there thatCarr became ill.

“I didn’t return home as the all-conquering ‘Wow, you’ve been to America, tell me more’ – like the beginning of Grease,” she says. “Itwas: ‘Eeew. You’re not the same. You’re not her.’ And I wasn’t the same. I was walking, but I couldn’t run. I struggled to sit on the floor in assembly. I was chubbier because of the steroids I’d been taking. I had a really bad rash on my face. The boys called me an impostor. Before I went to America, I had loads of friends – and then … I didn’t.”

At 11, Carr became a wheelchair user. In her early teens, a doctor told her bluntly that she wouldn’t live to be old. For Carr, the hardest scene from the programme was the one filmed in her mum’s kitchen, inwhich her mum reads aloud from the diaries she kept during that period, where she recorded what her daughter was experiencing. “She is very lonely,” reads one entry. “She gets very down and often says she wants to die rather than carry on, as she can’t see any good in the future.”

“I sat and listened to every awful thing that happened for the camera,” says Carr. “I had naively thought: ‘I’m in control of this,’ and then I wasn’t. I was quite damaged by it. I couldn’t tell my mum – she thought she was doing brilliantly. My mum was proud as punch!

‘I’m fighting for the right to live’: Liz Carr on acting, friendship and her campaign against assisted dying (2)

“Afterwards, I got back to London and I was really quite ill. Ifelt bereft, so much more impacted than I ever thought I would be, seeing what young me went through, feeling so sad to think: what if assisted suicide had been available then? In Canada, there are moves to extend it to ‘mature minors’ [12- to 17-year-olds] – the age I was when I was saying I wanted to die.” Carr visits Canada in the film to show how criteria for assisted dying can widen. Initially available only to terminally ill people, it was extended to those “suffering unbearably”. There are now plans to extend it those with mental health conditions, as well as matureminors.

Leaving home to study law at the University of Nottingham turned Carr’s life around. “I went on a personal development course that introduced me to the ‘social model of disability’,” says Carr. “It showed me that it’s the attitudes, environments and systems around you that are usually more disabling than your condition. It can be your condition, too, but it was incredible to learn that there were things that could be changed when I’d spent my entire teenage years thinking: ‘Unless I can change, then I can’t have a decent quality of life.’”

Although she was offered a paid role with a law firm when she graduated, Carr chose to volunteer at a law centre; her care package was means-tested and she couldn’t risk losing it. Her 20s were taken up with activism and travelling the world. In her 30s, she fell in love with her partner, Jo Church, and got married, became a standup and co-hosted the BBC disability podcast Ouch!. At 40, she got her role as the forensic examiner Clarissa in Silent Witness, which lasted seven years.

“I’ve never had a plan,” says Carr. “A lot of things have happened just because I was in the right place. I got an audition for Silent Witness because I was known for doing the Ouch! podcast. I know that the person who created Clarissa has a disabled son – there’s often something like that behind it. He was a genius and made Clarissa and Jack [her lab partner, played by David Caves] have such a connection that it would be really hard to get rid of me. Initially, viewers were suspicious – they thought that I must be a baddie. Then, I don’t know, people fell in love with the character.”

The Normal Heart at the National in 2021 was a career high point. Carr played Emma Brookner, a character based on Linda Laubenstein, a pioneering doctor in the early days of the Aids epidemic who was a polio survivor and a wheelchair user. To Carr’s knowledge, she was the first disabled actor to play the role in a professional production. (In the 2014 TV film, Brookner was played by Julia Roberts.)

‘I’m fighting for the right to live’: Liz Carr on acting, friendship and her campaign against assisted dying (3)

“That role was a combination of the many things I’d done,” says Carr. “Activism, standup, acting, becoming me. It felt like it was my role and my time. My career’s getting better and better the older I get. I’m not employed for attractiveness or my conventional female appearance, so actually there’s no bar on what I can do.”

Through all this, the issue of assisted dying has been there, on her mind, in the background – but it crystallised and became urgent after the case of Daniel James in 2008. James had been paralysed during rugby training and died at a clinic in Switzerland 18 months later. He was 23. “I’m not here to judge him, but what I judged about that situation was the media response, the public response,” says Carr.

“He had died 18 months after becoming disabled. Not terminally ill – just disabled. But the press and public reaction was: ‘Of course, it’s the right things to do. It’s difficult, but it’s the brave decision.’ A disabled young man wants to end his life and we don’t question that? Nobody was asking: ‘How can we change? What must we do so that someone who can’t walk or do certain things has a quality of life that’s acceptable?’ I’d always known assisted dying was about disability – but oh my God.”

‘I’m fighting for the right to live’: Liz Carr on acting, friendship and her campaign against assisted dying (4)

After this, Carr became “nerdy about it”. There is little she doesn’t know about assisted dying law, statistics, pressure groups, its practice and trajectory around the world. She and her wife spent their second wedding anniversary at an assisted dying conference in The Hague. “One thing I wanted to include in the film, but didn’t, was alist of conditions people have used successfully to be eligible, starting with A,” she says. “Anorexia, autism …”

Surely, though, assisted dying is about personal choice? Even if legislation were brought in and included “unbearable suffering”, which might make someone with Carr’s condition eligible, no one would be forced to take that route. “This isn’t because we think we’re going to be grabbed and taken,” says Carr. “The biggest catastrophe is that we’d choose it ourselves because there was no more choicefor us.

“If an individual chooses to end their life, I’m very sorry and sad, but it’s private and personal– it doesn’t impact me. Changing the law to legalise assisted dying does. I know so many people who are suffering, not because of their condition, but because life is so much more difficult than it needs tobe, because they need more than a 15-minute visit from a care worker in which to go to the loo and have asandwich, because they’ve grown up in a world where they’ve been devalued, maybe told they’re a burden, and expectations of their lives are so low.

“I don’t understand why people aren’t fighting that. We’re talking about suffering that, on the whole, we could sort out. Instead, we can make suicide someone’s choice and feel good that we’ve supported them. Meanwhile, guilt-free, we don’t have to do anything to really change things.”

Whatever your views, Better Off Dead? is worth a watch. Perhaps the most moving scene comes towards the end, when Carr hangs out and chats with her activist friends, none of whom were expected to survive into adulthood. (“Society are terrified of becoming us,” says one. “I can’t remember the last time Icould reach my own bum,” says the author Penny Pepper. “Buttowant to kill yourself over who wipes your backside?”)

‘I’m fighting for the right to live’: Liz Carr on acting, friendship and her campaign against assisted dying (5)

Is Carr pleased with the final cut? “Watching it at the screening last week, I felt a real rush of pride,” she says. “For 13 years, this has been talked about and now it’s real. Being me, and constantly thinking I’m about to die, I said to Jo: ‘I’ve done it. I’ve got a legacy.’ Jo’s response was: ‘You’re so dramatic …’”

Carr’s next project is in similar territory. She will be at Galway international arts festival in July in a play called Unspeakable Conversations, based on the debate between the late lawyer and disability rights activist Harriet McBryde Johnson and the Princeton professor Peter Singer, who has argued that parents should be able to kill disabled babies. (“It’sabout the same sh*t,” says Carr.) After that, she has some TV lined up that she can’t yet talk about: “But it’s fun stuff.”

In some ways, she will be glad when this is behind her. “It’s a tough subject, a tough campaign – you have to be so resilient,” she says. “Life is more fun when you’re not doing this stuff. Acting is what I love and what I really need to get back to. There are those that are fighting for the right to die. I’m fighting for the right to live.”

Better Off Dead? is on BBC One at9pm on 14 May

‘I’m fighting for the right to live’: Liz Carr on acting, friendship and her campaign against assisted dying (2024)

FAQs

What is the right to a dignified death? ›

Death with Dignity, or medical aid-in-dying, statutes allow certain adults with terminal illness to request and obtain a prescription for medication to end their lives in a peaceful manner. The acts outline the process of obtaining such medication, including safeguards to protect both patients and physicians.

What are the criteria for assisted death? ›

To receive the aid-in-dying drug, a person must: Be 18 years or older and a resident of California. Have a terminal disease that cannot be cured or reversed and is expected to result in death within six months. Have the capacity to make medical decisions and not have impaired judgment due to a mental disorder.

What is the right to end life status? ›

This right is generally associated with individuals suffering from a terminal illness or lacking the will to continue living, and it may allow them to terminate their own life, refuse life-prolonging treatment, or opt for assisted suicide or euthanasia.

What is medical aid in dying interest groups? ›

Medical Aid in Dying Compassion & Choices is leading efforts to authorize, implement and defend medical aid in dying so all terminally ill people who are eligible will have access to the full range of end-of-life care options.

What are the rights of the dying? ›

The right to be treated as a living human being. The right to maintain a sense of hopefulness, however changing its focus may be. The right to be cared for by those who can maintain a sense of hopefulness, however changing this may be. The right to express feelings and emotions about death in one's own way.

Does insurance cover death with dignity? ›

If a person is deemed terminally ill, they may have the option to legally and voluntarily end their life on their own terms. Although “death with dignity” is allowed in several states, it could still be deemed a suicide by a life insurance provider if it occurs during the exclusionary period.

What is the End of Life Option Act? ›

California's End of Life Option Act (EOLA) became effective on June 9, 2016. The EOLA allows terminally ill adults living in California to obtain and self-administer aid-in-dying drugs. 1,2 The EOLA requires the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) to provide annual reports under strict privacy requirements.

Whose death is the hardest for survivors to ever come to terms with? ›

A loss due to suicide can be among the most difficult losses to bear. They may leave the survivors with a tremendous burden of guilt, anger and shame. Survivors may even feel responsible for the death.

What conditions qualify for death with dignity? ›

Who is eligible for medical aid in dying?
  • An adult (aged 18 or older);
  • Terminally ill with a prognosis of six months or less to live;
  • Mentally capable of making their own healthcare decisions; and.
  • Able to self-ingest the medication.

What is the right to life law? ›

This right shall be protected by law and, in general, from the moment of conception. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.

Who has the right to make end of life decisions? ›

The attending physician must explain all end-of-life options to the patient and review what it means to ingest an aid-in-dying medication. The patient must discuss the decision with his/her physician without anyone else present (except an interpreter, if needed) to make sure the decision is voluntary.

What is considered end of life? ›

People are considered to be approaching the end of life when they are likely to die within the next 12 months, although this is not always possible to predict. This includes people whose death is imminent, as well as people who: have an advanced incurable illness, such as cancer, dementia or motor neurone disease.

How to qualify for medical aid-in-dying? ›

Reside in the state of California. Have a diagnosis of a serious, life-limiting illness with a prognosis of six months or less (as estimated by two doctors) Be able to self-administer aid-in-dying medications via mouth, rectum or feeding tube.

How much does medical aid-in-dying cost? ›

When California's aid-in-dying law takes effect this June, terminally ill patients who decide to end their lives could be faced with a hefty bill for the lethal medication. It retails for more than $3,000.

What type of support is available for dying patients? ›

Formally speaking, hospice care is available to people with a life expectancy of six months or less. Hospice care does not focus on treatments to cure the cause of the terminal illness, it seeks to keep the individual comfortable and make their remaining time as meaningful as possible.

What is meant by a dignified death? ›

Dignified death, death with dignity, dying with dignity or dignity in dying is an ethical concept aimed at avoiding suffering and maintaining control and autonomy in the end-of-life process.

What is the ethics of death with dignity? ›

Respect for Autonomy: Death with Dignity legislation fulfills the 4 criteria for making autonomous choices: knowledge of the intended procedure, ability to weigh various alternatives, mental competence and lack of coercion.

How to have a dignified death? ›

The dying person's wishes must take priority and should be regularly reviewed and revised. The patient's wishes should be clearly documented so that all members of the healthcare team are aware of them and care is well co-ordinated.

What is an honorable death? ›

In the name of religion, ideology, nation or emotion, some people have accepted or even sought death. In some instances, the ultimate sacrifice of life is thought to serve the greater social good; such deaths may be seen as honourable, noble and altruistic.

References

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