Seán Manchester's final comment on the Highgate case:
It was necessary to tell the full story, even though this
was not an easy decision, due to the overwhelming public interest
in the case, but I really now feel the subject has been exhausted
and all there is to say about it has been said. It has also
exhausted me after decades of television and radio
interviews, film documentaries and related projects concentrating on this one topic. There will
always be people seeking to cash in
and exploit my work for their own ends. Many, of course, will be too young to remember the happenings at Highgate. That notwithstanding, my book The Highgate Vampire is optioned for cinematic
treatment, but that is not
something I wish to elaborate upon here.
I am willing to quietly and privately set the record straight where need
be, but I gave my final interview about this case to the
broadcast media some years ago and have no intention of returning
to the topic despite persistent requests from television and radio
programmes for me to do so almost every week. I still make contributions on unrelated matters, but this subject of intense public fascination — in some cases obsession — concerning
events at Highgate Cemetery more than forty-four years ago is not something I have an appetite to return to any longer. Having said that, my memoir
in its unexpurgated form obviously mentions the case in a proper and fitting context to my
life. However, I have no plans to have my memoir published — now or ever.
Unimaginable horrors were experienced by folk at the time
of the contagion and these I feel are best not evoked. They should
be left undisturbed. The reality that I and others, most now sadly deceased, experienced all those many years ago no longer
exists, and next to the hunger to experience the supernatural,
albeit in this case at its most maleficent and deadly, there is
perhaps no stronger hunger than to forget.
Should an individual have a particular query about those
mysterious happenings, I will give that person an answer (but not
an interview); otherwise I have too much in the present with which
to be concerned without reliving nightmares from the past.
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