Patty Duke: Bipolar
Disorder's Original Poster Girl
(August 2, 2002) -- If Dickens had written a book
about Hollywood, he could not have penned a childhood more desperate yet
inspirational than Patty Duke's. Born Anna Marie Duke 54 years ago, Patty was
systematically alienated and virtually kidnapped from her troubled mother and
alcoholic father by talent managers Ethel and John Ross at an age when most
children are learning their ABC's. In the hands of the Rosses, she endured
unabated abuse for more than a decade. Her startling acting talent was at once a
key to escaping the sorrow of her life and a doorway to a mental affliction that
very nearly took her life.
When she was 7, Duke was already smiling in commercials and small
television parts. Next, her young career led her to Broadway and later to
a role as Helen Keller in a stage version of
The Miracle Worker. She starred in a screen
adaptation of the play, which garnered a frenzy of praise and an Oscar,
and she was later offered her own TV series.
The Patty Duke Show's hugely popular three-year run
in the mid-1960s clinched her status as a teen icon. Yet Anna was never
able to find joy in her success. She would endure a long struggle with
manic depression and medicinal misdiagnoses before she would find the
girl she was forced to pronounce "dead" and learn to live her life
without fear. In a
Psychology Today exclusive, she discusses some key
moments on the path to her well-being.
I was 9 years old and sitting alone in the back of a cab as it
rumbled over New York City's 59th Street bridge. No one was able to come
with me that day. So there I was, a tough little actor handling a
Manhattan audition on my own. I watched the East River roll into the
Atlantic, then I noticed the driver who was watching me curiously. My
feet began tapping and then shaking, and slowly, my chest grew tight and
I couldn't get enough air in my lungs. I tried to disguise the little
screams I made as throat clearings, but the noises began to rattle the
driver. I knew a
panic attack was coming on, but I had to hold on, get to
the studio and get through the audition. Still, if I kept riding in that
car I was certain that I was going to die. The black water was just a few
hundred feet below.
"Stop!" I screamed at him. "Stop right here, please! I have to get
out!"
"Young miss, I can't stop here."
"Stop!"
I must have looked like I meant it, because we squealed to a halt
in the middle of traffic. I got out and began to run, then sprint. I ran
the entire length of the bridge and kept going. Death would never catch
me as long as my small legs kept propelling me forward. The
anxiety,
mania and
depression that would mark much of my life was just
beginning.
Ethel Ross, my agent and substitute parent, was combing my hair one
day a few years earlier, wrestling furiously with the tangles and knots
that formed on my head, when she said, "Anna Marie Duke, Anna Marie. It's
not perky enough." She forced her way through a particularly tough hair
bramble as I winced. "OK, we've finally decided," she declared "You are
gonna change your name. Anna Marie is dead. You are Patty, now."
I was Patty Duke. Motherless, fatherless, scared to death and
determined to act my way out of sadness but feeling as if I was already
going crazy.
Although I don't think that my bipolar disorder fully manifested
itself until I was about 17, I had struggles with anxiety and depression
throughout my childhood. I have to wonder, as I look at old films of mine
when I was a child, where I got that shimmering, supernatural energy. It
seems to me that it came from three things: mania, fear of the Rosses and
talent. Somehow I had to, as a child o f 8, understand why my mother, to
whom I was attached at the hip, had abandoned me. It may be that part of
her knew that the Rosses could better manage my career. And maybe it was
partly due to her depression. All I knew was that I barely saw my mother
and that Ethel discouraged even the smallest contact with her.
Because I wasn't able to express anger or hurt or rage, I began a
very unhappy and decades' long pursuit of denial just to impress those
around me. It's odd and thoroughly displeasing to recall, but I do think
that my unnatural vivacity in my very early movies was largely because
acting was the only outlet I had for exorcising my emotions.
While working on
The Miracle Workerplay, the movie and later,
The Patty Duke Show, I began to experience the first
episodes of mania and depression. Of course, a specific diagnosis was
unavailable then, so each condition was either ignored, scoffed at by the
Rosses or medicated by them with impressive amounts of stelazine or
thorazine. The Rosses seemed to have an inexhaustible amount of drugs.
When I needed to be ratcheted down during a crying spell at night, the
drugs were always there. I understand now, of course, that both stelazine
and thorazine are antipsychotic medications, worthless in the treatment
of manic depression. In fact, they may well have made my condition worse.
I slept long, but never well.
The premise of
The Patty Duke Show was a direct result of a few days
spent with TV writer Sydney Sheldon, and if I'd had enough wit at the
time, the irony would have deafened me. ABC wanted to strike while my
stardom iron was still hot and produce a series, but neither I nor Sidney
nor the network had an idea as to where to begin. After several talks,
Sidney, jokingly but with some conviction, pronounced me "schizoid." He
then produced a screenplay in which I was to play two identical
16-year-old cousins: the plucky, irascible, chatty Patty and the quiet,
cerebral and thoroughly understated Cathy. The uniqueness of watching me
act out a modestly bipolar pair of cousins when I was just beginning to
suspect the nature of the actual illness swimming below the surface must
have given the show some zing, because it became a huge hit. It ran for
104 episodes, though the Rosses forbade me from watching a single
one...lest I develop a big head.
The disease came over me slowly in my late teens, so slowly and
with such duration of both
manic and depressive states that it was tough
to tell just how sick I had become. It was all the more difficult because
I would very often feel just fine and rejoice in the success I had. I was
made to feel coveted and invulnerable, despite the fact that I came home
to the Rosses who treated me as a thankless, bumbling ingrate. By 1965, I
was able to see the awfulness of their home and their lives, so I found
the courage to say that I would never set foot in their house again. I
moved to Los Angeles to shoot the third season of
The Patty Duke Showand started my tenth year as an
actor. I was 18.
There were successes thereafter, and plenty of failures, but my
struggle always concerned my
bipolar disorder more than the
eccentricities and paper-thinness of Hollywood or the challenges of
family life. I married, I divorced, I drank and I smoked like a munitions
factory. I cried for days at a time in my twenties and worried the hell
out of those close to me.
One day during that period, I got into my car and
thought I heard
on the radio that there had been a coup at the White House. I learned the
number of intruders and the plan they had concocted to overthrow the
government. Then I became convinced that the only person who could
address and remedy this amazing situation was me.
I raced home, threw a bag together, called the airport, booked a
red-eye flight to Washington and arrived at Dulles Airport just before
dawn. When I got to my hotel, I immediately called the White House and
actually spoke to people there. All things considered, they were
wonderful. They said that I had misinterpreted the events of the day, and
as I spoke to them I began to feel the mania drain from me. In a very,
very real sense I awoke in a strange hotel room, 3,000 miles from home
and had to pick up the pieces of my manic episode. That was just one of
the dangers of the disease: to wake up and be somewhere else, with
someone else, even married to someone else.
When I was manic, I owned the world. There were no consequences for
any of my actions. It was normal to be out all night, waking up hours
later next to someone I didn't know. While it was thrilling, there were
overtones of guilt (I'm Irish, of course). I thought I knew what you were
going to say before you said it. I was privy to flights of fancy that the
rest of the world could scarcely contemplate.
Through all of the hospitalizations (and there were several) and
the years of psychoanalysis, the term manic-depressive was never used to
describe me. I have to take some of the credit (or blame) for that,
because I was also a master at disguising and defending my emotions. When
the bipolar swung to the sad side, I was accomplished at using lengthy
spells of crying to hide what was bothering me. At the psychiatrist's
office, I would sob for the entire 45 minutes. In retrospect, I used it
as a disguise; it kept me from discussing the loss of my childhood and
the terror of each new day.
I'd cry, it seemed, for years at a time. When you do this, you
don't need to say or do anything else. A therapist would simply ask,
"What are you feeling?" and I'd sit and cry for 45 minutes. But I would
work out excuses to miss therapy, and some of these plans took days to
concoct.
In 1982 I was filming an episode of the series
It Takes Twowhen my voice gave out. I was taken to a
doctor who gave me a shot of cortisone, which is a fairly innocuous
treatment for most people, with the exception of manic-depressives. For
the next week I battled an all too familiar anxiety. I could barely get
out of the bathroom. My voice cadence changed, my speech began to race,
and I was virtually incomprehensible to everyone around me. I literally
vibrated.
I lost a noticeable amount of weight in just a few days and was
finally sent to a psychiatrist, who told me he suspected I had
manic-depressive disorder and that he would like to give me
lithium. I
was amazed that someone actually had a different solution that might
help.
Lithium saved my life. After just a few weeks on the drug,
death-based thoughts were no longer the first I had when I got up and the
last when I went to bed. The nightmare that had spanned 30 years was
over. I'm not a Stepford wife; I still feel the exultation and sadness
that any person feels, I'm just not required to feel them 10 times as
long or as intensively as I used to.
I still struggle with depression, but it is different and not as
dramatic. I don't take to my bed and cry for days. The world, and myself,
just gets very quiet. That's the time for therapy, counseling or a
job.
My only regret is the time lost in a haze of despair. Almost at the
exact moment I began to feel better, I entered a demographic in show
business whose members are hard-pressed for work. I've never felt more
capable of performing well, of taking on roles with every ounce of
enthusiasm and ability, only to find that there are precious few roles
for a woman in her fifties. The joke in our house was "I finally got my
head together and my ass fell off."
I can be, and often am, sad, but not bitter. When my daughter died
in an automobile accident last year, I was forced to take a long look at
bitterness and regret and sadness. The process of missing her and
rebuilding myself will continue for years, but I know that the children,
friends and love I have will plant seeds and patch holes I didn't even
know were there. I worry more about the people who struggle with sadness
alone, and there are millions of them.
Just the other day I was walking through a parking lot and heard a
woman yell, "Is that Patty?" I saw how she moved, how her eyes danced and
I listened to her frenzied vocabulary. She was bipolar. I spoke with this
woman for a few minutes, and she told me of her struggles with the
disease, that she was having a tough time of it lately but that she
appreciated my help in championing manic depression. The implication was
that if I could make it, she could. Damn straight.
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