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How my son’s terminal cancer inspired me to convert to Judaism

Kit Vincent’s film ‘Red Herring’ tracks his family’s devastation after they were told he was terminally ill. His father tells our writer about how life has moved on since

May 3, 2024 10:24
Red Herring (Bulldog Film Distribution) (06)
Close bond: Lawrence and Kit Vincent in Red Herring
5 min read

When Lawrence Vincent first watched his son Kit’s highly moving documentary Red Herring, it was more than he could take. “It was overwhelming. That’s the word – it was completely overwhelming. I felt traumatised by it,” says Lawrence when we speak over Zoom. “I couldn’t believe what he’d made.”

This is hardly a surprise. Intimate and personal, Red Herring chronicles what happens when Kit, then 24, receives the diagnosis that he has a brain tumour, and it’s terminal. When Kit’s father first heard the news, alongside his son, he had a heart attack on the spot. Thankfully, he survived, but the road since has been anything but easy.

The documentary, which won Best UK Feature at the Raindance Film Festival last year, not only deals with Kit’s illness, but how Lawrence and Kit’s mother Julie cope with the news. In Lawrence’s case, he turned to Judaism, finding comfort in its teachings, a spiritual journey that shows just how vital faith can be in times of trouble.

A “private, shy person” by his very nature, Lawrence was “resistant initially” when his son – who has been “messing around” with cameras since he was young – decided to start filming intimate exchanges. “When I realised how much it meant to him, and he was going to turn it into a proper project, I kind of submitted to it,” he says. “And if you completely give yourself over to something, it’s easier in a sense, isn’t it? Stop resisting. So that’s what I did.”

Topics:

film