I know we’ve all been hearing a lot about Robin Williams’ recent suicide. Theories, suppositions, thoughts. I do not mean to belabor the news or jump on a bandwagon by any means, but his death hit a major nerve in the Page household. My husband wrote an essay about Robin Williams in which he included his own personal journal entries and he shared it with BroadwayWorld.
I asked Patrick if I could post his BroadwayWorld essay as my blog entry this week. He graciously said yes. I know he wants it to reach as many people as possible.
Neither Patrick nor I dare to conclude that Robin Williams committed suicide definitively because he was suffering from depression, the same affliction Patrick has battled for decades, but beyond plausible, it seems probable. In any case, if you can relate to Patrick’s words, know you are not alone. Whether you are suffering with depression or living with someone who is suffering, please heed these words and think about them deeply.
I applaud Patrick for sharing his story so freely. You will see here he attributes his own saved life to another person doing the same for him. So, not only is it upon us to listen to Patrick’s warning, but it is upon us to pass it on. Don’t be quiet. Do not suffer in silence. Do not ignore others who show the same signs.
This entry is of some length. Promise me you will read it in its entirety. It is valuable and very important.
Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
This picture was taken on opening night of A Man For All Seasons, the play Patrick was starring in on Broadway opposite Frank Langella. It also happened to be my opening night in Boeing-Boeing on Broadway. It should have been one of the happiest nights for each of us, but little did I know within just a few weeks Patrick would collapse and be completely incapacitated by a crippling depression already underway for the past three years.
Please note: The full article was originally published on Broadway World.
Depression and Doubt
The suicide of Robin Williams baffled people. He seemed so open, so honest, so thrillingly alive. He seemed so… happy. How could someone who gave joy and laughter to so many take his own life?
The cable talk shows, radio commentators and chat boards demanded answers. One headline blared: “Doubtfire Did It!”—asserting that Williams had financial problems which forced him into a sequel to Mrs. Doubtfire—and surely, this would make anyone suicidal. Another guessed that it was his substance abuse—he had fallen off the wagon and killed himself rather than face the shame of another stint in rehab.
When Williams’ wife eventually released a statement saying that Robin was sober, solvent, and in the early stages of Parkinson’s Disease when he took his life, the pundits shouted a universal “Aha!” Finally an answer that made sense! He was, they said, taking an early exit rather than face the hardship of such a debilitating illness.
My take?
Robin Williams died of an illness he had been diagnosed with long before Parkinson’s Disease.
Robin Williams died of depression.
Depression is an illness shared by about 9 percent of adults in America, including me. It is frequently fatal. It claims its victims by suicide. It is an insanity that convinces you there will never again be a moment of peace, joy or tranquility in your life.
The night I heard that Robin Williams died, I slept very little. And it wasn’t just grief keeping me awake. It was fear. I know my depression is lurking just around the corner—waiting. As Harvey Fierstein says, “All it wants to do is get you alone in a room and kill you.”
I started talking about my own Depression publicly two years ago. It happened suddenly, during an interview with The New York Times conducted by Patrick Healy. He was writing a feature story that would cover my life and career. At the end of the interview Healy said: “That’s all the questions I can think of. Is there anything else you’d like to say?
I paused for a long, long time.
“Yeah. I have Depression. I’ve had it most of my life. I’m better now. But it’s one of the defining factors of my personality, so I guess we should talk about it.”
My confession had been brought on by the fact that a couple of months earlier a member of the Spider-Man—Turn Off the Dark family—Jason Lindahl, who worked on our video projections—had killed himself. His body had been found in the Hudson River and a suicide note was discovered in his apartment. I hadn’t known Jason well. He was, as his Twitter account said: “”The dude sitting in the theater behind the wall of computer monitors.” But we shared something crucial. He was a Depressive–like me.
If he had known about my struggle and my eventual recovery he might have asked me for help. He might have asked for my doctor’s number. I might have told him antidepressants had worked for me after 20 years of psychotherapy and suffering. I might have mattered.
But I had been ashamed. I had been afraid. I had been hiding.
And I knew how to hide. In over twenty years of recurring and crippling depressions I had never missed a performance. Never been late to a rehearsal. Never let on that I was frequently in agonizing pain. No one knew, except my therapist and my wife. Depressives can fake it better than Meg Ryan in “When Harry Met Sally”.
When this picture was taken I was very, very ill:
My last depression was in 2009. I had just finished playing King Henry In A Man For All Seasons and was rehearsing to play Claudius in “Hamlet” at Theatre For A New Audience. Because depression is so notoriously hard to describe—and (once the insanity has lifted) so difficult to remember precisely–I made an effort to keep a journal:
February 20, 2009
It feels like it’s been winter forever. I grew up with gloomy skies in Oregon, but the green of the trees and the grass was some compensation for the constant drizzle and dreary skies. In Manhattan when January comes the snow covered city seems to be shot in black and white, like those old Life Magazine photos of The Great Depression. The holiday lights are gone, along with the tourists and their pastels, and the city is drained of color, dressed in black, laid out like a corpse in a casket lined in muddy white velvet. Then, when the snow melts, it’s just grey. Grey skies, grey buildings, grey pavement, grey people.
Depression, the kind I have been fighting for the past couple of decades, is notoriously hard to describe. Closer to horror than to grief, a feeling like a stomach full of old newspaper soaked in dirty ice-water. This time, in addition to the all consuming heaviness and torpor, I feel an oncoming rush of panic. Today’s symptoms include irrational crying jags (embarrassing when they happen, as one did today, on the subway), generalized physical pain, tightness in my throat like strangulation, and an inability to take a full breath. This last symptom is the most pervasive and the most troubling—the constant feeling of suffocation puts me in a fight or flight state of mind.
It also prevents me from being able to act. Olivier said that the one thing an actor needs is breath. Without it there is no relaxation, no freedom, no voice, no access to the emotions or the imagination.
The final symptom is dread. Dread as a physical sensation–like the onset of a sneeze or a vomit. Dread as a certainty that tomorrow will be worse than today. That there is no light at the end of the tunnel. Or rather, that the end of the tunnel is actually behind me–I remember feeling happy in the past, although I cannot imagine it in the future. Memory, not hope, keeps me going.
We need a new word for the illness called depression. Depression is not a mood. It’s a life-threatening brain sickness. As Dick Cavett said “A depression is a dip in the road. And this thing is much, much more than a dip in the road. It’s a horror I wouldn’t wish on Joseph Goebbels.”
Everyone feels they have been depressed because everyone has been deeply sad. But sadness is not depression. Rotten circumstances can sometimes trigger a depression or make it worse, but favorable circumstances cannot make it better. The inability to experience joy or happiness is its hallmark. Nothing brings pleasure. Your favorite food? Nothing. Your perfect lover? Nothing. A trip anywhere in the world? Nothing. A long lost family member? Nothing. A role in the next Spielberg movie? Nothing.
If someone says “I’m depressed because bad things are happening in my life” you can be pretty sure they are not depressed. Sadness is the natural response to bad circumstances. If they say “I’m depressed even though wonderful things are happening in my life” it may be a real case of depression.
In my case I am depressed even though I recently worked opposite one of my idols—Frank Langella– on Broadway. I am depressed even though I have a loving and incredible wife. I am depressed even though I am playing a leading Shakespearean role at a major New York Theatre. I am depressed even though both my parents are living and I was able to take them to London last month. And I am depressed even though I have been in therapy for twenty years in an effort to fight it.
Suicide fantasies help a little, but I have to be careful—careful never to tell Paige, or my shrink, or anyone else —(enforced hospitalization is my greatest fear) and careful never to let the fantasies become so attractive that acting on them becomes easier than not acting on them. Today’s reverie is of jumping in front of the express train. If it was done at the last second no one could ever really be sure whether it was an accident or on purpose. The easiest way, of course, is with pills—I have plenty of Ambien, Tramadol, muscle relaxers, beta blockers and alcohol. But this would surely be ruled a suicide and I wouldn’t want Paige to find my body. These daydreams make the hours a little less stressful—like knowing where the fire escape is in a crowded building. But the fact is I don’t want to die. I just want to feel better. The difficulty is that I cannot imagine ever feeling well again. I don’t experience a single moment of comfort, joy or peace all day long. Every day is a battle from the time I wake up until I go, fitfully, to sleep. How to get through the day without anyone knowing I feel my sanity is slipping?
My situation this year is worse than I can remember. I have very few moments when I function well and the crying jags now come about every half hour. I have not slept more than a few hours at a time for the past month, and I know I am keeping Paige awake too. The guilt of knowing she has to put up with all this adds fuel to my fantasies of putting an end to it all. She would certainly be better off if I were gone. I also seem to be losing more weight—eating is pretty torturous and done only because I know I have to. Worst of all is the complete inability to deal with people—I frequently cross the street to avoid having to talk to a friend, and I worry about the damage I may be doing to my relationships. Finally, the feeling that I am being physically strangled and suffocated is constant and overwhelming.
I have not missed any rehearsal and I hope to be able to use the symptoms I am experiencing for the character. Claudius is a man on the verge of a nervous breakdown and so am I. Maybe that is why I am getting so many lovely and baffling compliments about my work from fellow cast members. Luckily, acting is perhaps the only profession in which you can lay in a fetal position in a corner of the room until you are called upon do your work, and then return to your corner when your scene is done. I could never make it through a full day in a “normal” job, but as an actor one’s colleagues are likely to consider your peculiarities simply a part of your “process”.
March 2—42nd Street Studios
Today is scheduled for a run-through of the first half of the show for designers and staff. The brightly lit rehearsal hall is buzzing with new energy. Normally this would be a favorite day for me. It would be exciting to have an audience for the first time. But my situation is very bad today. I will just have to get through it. Perhaps I can use this feeling to tap more deeply into Claudius’ shame and self-hatred. Before the run-through I approach Gertrude to let her know that if I act remote or distant it is because I am not feeling well. She thanks me for the courtesy. As actors we are always afraid that our partner’s moods are about us.
I get through the first scene, but it’s as if I am watching everyone else through a pane of glass. I can hear the words coming out of my mouth–as if they are coming from another room—but I have no connection to them. The need to scream and weep is pulsing inside of me—as undeniable as the need to release the bowels when one has diarrhea, or the urge to vomit when one is nauseous–but I hold it back and retreat to my corner next to my big green parka underneath the ballet bar. The next scene begins—Hamlet confesses that he wants to die, Horatio informs him of the spectre on the battlements—and I hear I high pitched wail like a police siren that then widens into something like a dog howling in pain. It takes a second or two for me to realize the sound coming from my own mouth. Instantly, I am surrounded by people looking down at me. I’m sobbing hysterically and repeating over and over “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I need a doctor. I need a doctor.”
Reading that entry now, I’m amazed at the clarity of the thoughts. I certainly didn’t feel lucid. Shortly thereafter, I would be unable to communicate in any way.
Of the breakdown in the rehearsal room I remember little, except the kindness in the eyes of actor John Christopher Jones as he said to the others “I’ll take him”. Paige was called and I was put in a small room where I laid on the floor bundled in my parka until I was brought into Elma’s (my psychotherapist’s) office, and she referred me to Dr. Kent Robertshaw who began the process of finding the right medication for me. For the next several weeks I was bedridden. I wanted to return to rehearsal and performance, but I was barely able to speak or walk. It was all Paige could do to get me to my medical appointments.
For the first time in my life, I had to drop out of a show.
I had vehemently resisted medication for 20 years, convinced that it would hamper my ability to access my emotions-both on stage and in life. I knew my depressions might come– but I felt they were the price I paid for creativity. As I reached the end of my rope that grey winter in 2009 I was still refusing to take the meds Dr. Robertshaw had prescribed when I got a letter from a fellow actor who was in the room that day I lost my wits altogether. He was, and is, someone whose work I greatly admire for (among other things) his depth of emotion— so his words hit home:
Dear Patrick,
I want you to know that the illness you are struggling with is one that I am intimately acquainted with. I don’t know your history with depression but the stigma attached to illness is exactly the thing that can prevent people from seeking help. I’ve been there. Let me mention one misunderstanding I had, in case you share it. I deeply believed that anti-depressants would kill all my feelings and I would end up a zombie, in life and on-stage. A total myth. I feel appropriate emotions all the time. But I no longer weep uncontrollably because I believe I am worthless and deserve to die. And Patrick, sometime down the line, when you next tackle Leontes or MacBeth or one one of those boys – you will bring a depth of compassion and understanding to the role previously unavailable to you. That’s where the good part kicks in – we get to put everything, especially our pain, into our work. We’re the only ones who get to take our most private suffering and make something new and better with it. We defeat it by transforming it.
And so I started taking my medication–the medication that saved my life. That one letter made the difference.
I had to hear it from an actor.
I couldn’t hear it from my psychiatrist, or my therapist, or even my wife. I needed an actor to tell me that my Art would survive the meds.

It took a long time to get my medications right. I have variously been diagnosed with an anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder, depressive disorder—you name it. It takes constant vigilance to keep up with my sneaky serotonin levels. And-full disclosure– there were years of dangerous substance abuse as I attempted to self-medicate my symptoms.
Nothing happens overnight. Initially the meds Dr. Robertshaw prescribed did dull my affect, making it harder for me to feel things. Initially they made me sleepy and took away my libido. We added and subtracted meds from my mix until we came up with the right “cocktail” for me. I think it took about nine months. It took patience.
And so, spurred on by the recent and senseless death of one of our most brilliant and beloved artists, I offer these words to you, my fellow players:
If, like so many of us, you have been suffering this horror in secret and in silence, in the fear that medication will deaden your feelings, I hope these words might encourage you to avail yourself of the nearly miraculous treatment now available to you. We live in an extraordinary era-the first era in which the illness that took the lives of Virginia Woolf, Vincent Van Gogh, Sylvia Plath, Mark Rothko, Ann Sexton-and Robin Williams—among so many others–can actually be treated. I hope you will reach out, ask for help, tell your story and join us again in the light.
Maybe you needed to hear it from an actor.
I have been a fan of Paige since Trading Spaces. I remember watching their wedding on TLC. I have also shared my experience with this horrible disease. Thank-you Patrick for sharing yours. Your words can reach much farther than my Facebook page.
Thanks for sharing. I’ve watched Patrick for over 30 years on stage and screen. Never knowing his pain. This entry was so honest, real and heartfelt and everyone should read it! I’m so glad you gave us just a tiny insight to what depression is. Many good wishes sent your way!
Depression is such a sneaky bastard. This is an amazing story, thank you for sharing. Wishing you and your husband continued health!
Wow this made me cry out loud! I’ve known Patrick since Junior High and I never knew his pain. He always seemed like the golden child of a man I truly loved. I know about depression too. When I first became disabled I was bedridden for weeks and never felt well. I was so entrenched in depression that if I had a gun I certainly would have killed myself despite having a loving husband, daughter and family. Those things just don’t seem to matter when your deep in the well of depression. I got help thankfully before I acted on any of my destructive thoughts. Anti-depressants do work! Patrick tells his story and his feelings so succinctly to mirror some if my own thoughts that I cried. His story will reach out to those who need it the most and will save lives I’m sure. Thank you for sharing. I think depression affects more people than we know.
Very brave of you to tell your story, Patrick. I, too, have suffered from depression, although it has been many years, thankfully. I hope your story is able to reach many of those who need help and are resistant to ask for it. Thank you.
Thank you, Patrick and Paige, for shedding light on this insidious disease. Your bravery in coming forward shows the depth of your compassion. It is sad that Robin Williams and so many others like him were never able to find that right combination of medicine to get their lives back under control. Hopefully, talking about this disease will make a difference for many people who are suffering.
I have suffered with this bastard of a disease for the last 20 years. I was also afraid to admit I was weak; that I couldn’t handle life; that I was defective. I resisted medication.
Then my wonderful husband asked me, “If I told you that I was going to stop taking my heart medication, what would you do?”
Without a thought I said, “I’d kick your butt!”
“Why is this any different?” Was his glorious reply.
Since then I have been very open about my depression and my decision to take medication. Over the years many people have thanked me for my honesty and willingness to be open about it. One if my closest friends credits me with saving her life (I think she saved her own life…I just nudged her a little).
Now my son is struggling and has decided to go off his medication. He’s young and doesn’t realize how sneaky this damn disease can be. He’s a theatre tech major in college and has also performed in stage.
Perhaps he needs to hear it from an actor.
Thank you Patrick and Paige. From the bottom of my mothe’s heart…thank you.
Sherry
It worked.
Just seeing your comments posted here. Thank you for sharing. Your second post “It worked” made me cry tears of joy.
Paige,
Thank you for having the courage to put this wonderful article out for all to see. Amazing courage you and your husband Patrick have. I have battled depression for over 30 years and only started taking meds for the last 12 years. Like Patrick said, it was nothing short of miraculous. I am now wanting to help women battling the disease to let them know there is hope.
God bless you both,
Deb
Through the years, I have been on and off medication for panic disorder and depression. As a comedy person, actor/voiceover/writer, I thought the same thing: that my emotions would be flatter somehow. Absolutely not the case. I can now belly laugh as opposed to laughing on the surface. When I decided it was time to stop the fertility treatments, after five years of trying, unsuccessfully, I had a bout of panic that I had never experienced before. I couldn’t talk it away, exercise it away, nothing. Panic came in waves and awful thoughts and sleeplessness. OCD was thrown into the mix. Lovely. I had been able to go on and off the medication quite successfully over the years. This time, I went back on the meds and haven’t looked back. I haven’t been terribly open about it. I don’t want people to know that as a part of me or cloud their perception of me. But maybe it’s time to change that. I did write and perform a comedy about my fertility experiences. Well, it’s not all funny. That episode was a big part of the whole experience. But it’s better to laugh than to cry, isn’t it? Feel free to look it up on YouTube. Journey to the Center of the Uterus: Adventures Infertility!
Kathleen Your sharing will help others. Gid bless. Debra
I just watched your highlight reel for Journey to the Center of the Uterus: Adventures Infertility!
Too funny. Even the title cracked me up!
Love, Paige
I’m so glad! I put it up there to help relieve some of the stress of infertility for those who are going through it right now. There’s a part in there and it describes of the panic and depression I had started to feel after I was done with the whole thing. It was probably the worst experience I’ve ever had. I’m glad I respond to medication though! Thanks again for watching it and feel free to pass it along! I don’t make any money from it. It’s purely to help others to laugh a little.
Such a beautiful article from Paige and an expressive, honest letter by Patrick. Its hard to admit that you suffer from depression and suicidal thoughts. For me, I have only told one person. (I want to hit the backspace and delete right now.)
The world is full of humans who feel such heart-wrenching, inner pain. We simply can’t forget the details of our personal tragedies and they haunt our thoughts daily. I don’t like being dependent on anyone and I certainly don’t want anyone’s pity. I’m happy that this issue is taking center stage. It’s high time this illness be placed in the light where it belongs…
I loved Robin and watched every episode of Mork and Mindy as a kid. Of course I watched a few more when he passed on. I loved the “Calling Orson” messages at the end. Some of the best lessons about life and our beloved Earth.
So needed to put the correct information out there about depression. It is an illness not a feeling you can wish away. I have started a blog aimed at helping women suffering and know there is victory to be had. The blog is http://www.debrakeller.blogspot.com. May God guide each of you through this wonderful life. Debra
Keep going Patrick. Sometimes its not easy, I know. I have been diagnosed with bipolar 1, severe depression, severe anxiety disorder and PTSD. But right now I’m on the right meds. I had to go to the hospital to the behavioral health unit, but after 7 days I got better. I have been institutionalized 5 times, 3 this year. Sometimes that happens. Don’t discredit that. Just keep going. We all love you and are behind you. <3