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Mike Smartt, a long-time friend, colleague and Ealing neighbour of Sully's, writes:
Sully’s funeral at Ealing Abbey
Friends, family and many former colleagues gathered in Ealing’s imposing Roman Catholic Abbey on Monday afternoon to remember Michael Sullivan, who died after losing his long battle with cancer on May 28.
Michael’s brother-in-law Jim Flannery led the tributes, recalling Mike the naughty schoolboy who, despite a loathing for all forms of authority, nevertheless excelled as a national serviceman before learning the craft of journalism as a junior in Manchester.
“Sully was a fully paid-up member of the awkward squad,” said Jim,” who became an outstanding journalist and cartoonist. He was drawing scenes of the ward from his hospital bed right up until his death. He left us with a smile on his face showing great grace under pressure”.
Michael Cole, a BBC contemporary and close friend, remembered Sullivan becoming a national TV News reporter after a spell as a star of regional broadcasting. “Covering the troubles in Northern Ireland, Michael was brave when necessary and discrete when it was required,” said Cole.
“He loved reporting from South Africa and hoped his work would expose the iniquities of the apartheid regime there”.
He retold a tale, related by Sullivan against himself, in which Michael was enjoying a poolside party with fellow journalists in Johannesburg. Intrigued by a set of new scuba-diving gear, Michael decided to try it out. However, as he was inspecting the bottom of the pool, word arrived of a major news development and when Sullivan resurfaced, everyone had disappeared to the nearest airport having forgotten to alert Mike. It was one of the rare occasions when the man missed the story.
Sadly, BBC News never appreciated Michael Sullivan, said Cole, and it was something the reporter felt deeply.
It was at Sky News, where Michael moved after leaving the Corporation, that he was finally respected by management as an outstanding writer to pictures – one of the very best – said Simon Cole, his boss there as news editor.
“Michael was as good as gold at Sky,” said Cole, “well most of the time”. He added that Sullivan would also spend time helping his colleagues with the English language, about which the reporter was very particular.
“He would continue to email on points of syntax and grammar long after he left us. He was a journalist’s journo,” concluded Cole, quoting Sky presenter Jeremy Thompson.
Bob Young, of the West London Aero Club, spoke of Michael’s great passion for flying and building planes, both full size and model. He also brought his journalistic talents to bear as editor of the club’s newsletter for many years.
It was this enthusiasm for the air to which Michael’s partner, Jannie, also referred when she looked back on the almost 35 “lovely, lively years” that the two spent together. She thanked the large number of mourners for attending which, she said, truly reflected the “respect and love” people had for the man. The order of service was decorated with a collection of Michael’s best cartoons and amongst those in the Abbey was Nicholas Witchell, who took time out from his current duties as a BBC Royal Correspondent and who was the subject of a number of Sullivan’s most famous efforts with pen and ink.
Michael Sullivan’s coffin travelled down the aisle on its final journey to the crematorium to the Dave Brubeck Quartet’s Take Five, played on the organ, but it wasn’t the day’s last musical offering.
Later, in the club attached to the Abbey, a long-preserved recording was played of There Is Nothing Like A Dame, from South Pacific – performed, in part, by a youthful junior reporter in Manchester to a collection of colleagues. When the song was over, he no doubt resumed doing what he did best all his adult life: telling stories like no other.
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