Bipolar Disorder: Two-Sided Trouble
The public's understanding
of bipolar disorder is often flawed, especially when it hits celebrities.
(March 3, 2003) - At first glance, legendary music producer Phil Spector and Oakland
Raiders center Barret Robbins may seem to have little in common, but they
both apparently struggle with bipolar disorder. Not that the condition has
made the two celebrities behave in the same way.
Robbins had reportedly been hospitalized and placed on
suicide watch
shortly after he was suspended from playing this year's Super Bowl against
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In the hours leading up to the big game in late
January, there were accounts of the 29-year-old
going on a drinking binge,
missing crucial team meetings, and being disoriented and utterly depressed.
Spector, 62, supposedly resisted arrest in early February, minutes after
police found the bloodied body of B-movie actress Lana Clarkson in the foyer
of his Los Angeles mansion. The record producer, responsible for more than a
dozen Top 40 Hits in the 1960's ("Be My Baby," "You've Lost That Lovin'
Feelin'"), was accused of shooting Clarkson in the face and faces
first-degree murder charges.
Although Spector has been notorious for his drunkenness and violent
behavior over the decades, Rolling Stone reports that in the months before
the murder, colleagues had found him sober, pleasant, and productive.
In the Raiders camp, some teammates publicly criticized Robbins for
bailing out on the team in the Super Bowl, where Raiders lost to the Bucs
48-21. Despite the center's record of missed games and unexplained absences,
guard Frank Middleton says he and many fellow players never knew Robbins as
a depressed guy.
What happened to Robbins and Spector, and how did people working closely
with them miss what was really going on? Psychiatric experts say a number of
factors contribute to society's
misconceptions about bipolar disorder and
make treatment of it all the more difficult.
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