Monday, October 30, 2006

The Last of the International Playwrights

Apologies again for not posting, though there hasn't exactly been a flurry of voices pleading for my return.

Anyway, Rachel and I are clever little bunnies and have secured ourselves a place in the Short and Sweet Play Festival in Sydney. Not only that, but I have secured such a place with a NEW SCRIPT, that is, they didn't just get the usual miserable rant about adoption and Catholicism.

I am without internet access at home at the moment, hence the long silence, but when a certain company (let's use the pseudonym ChatterChatter so as not to embarrass them too much) gets its arse in gear I'll be back blogging again. (Now there's a threat.)

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

St Trinian's, St Trinian's Will Never Die

They're remaking St Trinian's. Yep, you heard correctly, they are REMAKING ST TRINIAN'S. Not just remaking, either, "updating". St Trinian's will now be, apparently, a hive of drugs, prostitution and teenage pregnancies, because apparently "It is the spirit of St Trinian's to break taboos...and it should be as shocking today as it was in 1954."

Er...

Oh, and Rupert Everett is going to play Millicent Fritton, though to quote Everett: "My role as the headmistress is made difficult because of the fact that I have a very angular neck and nose."

Er, no, it's made difficult by the fact that you, Rupie, are not Alistair Sim, and he was (in my humble opinion) unmatchable when it comes to being a man in drag playing a headmistress.

They haven't dared say who they are going to have replace Joyce Grenfell. I await the news with cynical anticipation.

According to Everett, who is for reasons known only to him suddenly an expert on the subject, "However shocking it eventually proves to be, the decision to reprise the St Trinian's genre will delight fans of the original series."

I'm sorry, delight??? Do I sound in the slightest bit delighted?? I'll have you know St Trinian's is already as updated as is necessary - available on DVD, in its original form. (And sitting in my DVD rack.) You just try and "reprise" it, you little tit, and I may even come to the premiere and bash you with a hockey stick.

* * * * *
To show you that I have, contrary to popular belief, been engaged in something remotely productive in between slagging off actors and sorting out visas, here is the latest offering from Home.

The Nursing Home
Kathleen O’Malley stared out of the window, perfectly content. Actually, it probably wasn’t the window she was staring out of as far as she was concerned, which was probably why gazing at a B-road and the cars that trundled down it could seemingly keep her amused for hours on end. Mind you, Catherine thought, as she came away with an empty chocolate box at the end of one of their regular visits, it was a moot point how far this was a recent innovation. Of course, the family could now put all of Kathleen’s eccentricities (and there were a lot of them) down to her deteriorating mental capacities, but in truth most had been perfectly evident before she went into St Francis’s. For it was Kathleen who had thrown the apples in the bin and made apple pie filled with the cores; it was Kathleen who had stayed up until ten o’clock one night to take something out of the oven, and when ten o’clock came she remembered it was at this point that she was due to go to bed, and went upstairs with the oven still on; it was Kathleen who thought that “that Maradonna” couldn’t sing, and when Francis explained that Maradonna was a footballer she seemed satisfied that this explained it; and it was Kathleen who had got on the coach to Bridlington knowing she’d forgotten something and only realising once she was half way there that this something was her six-year-old daughter. In that context it seemed entirely logical that Kathleen, once a care assistant herself, could only assume that her being in St Francis’s must mean she worked there, and her determination to continue this job as best she could was hindered not by the fact that she had forgotten any of her duties – which she hadn’t – but rather, in her belief that she was in her thirties, she had forgotten she could no longer walk. The nurses had tried to jog her memory by placing her zimmer frame directly in front of her chair, effectively imprisoning her there as though she was in a car on a fairground ride, in the hope that she would put two and two together on seeing it, remembering she couldn’t walk and thus by extension realising that she probably didn’t work there after all.
The O’Malley’s visited her every week, usually on a Saturday afternoon, though for some reason Kathleen was always absolutely confident it was Thursday. The nurses assured Francis that the rest of the week she had neither awareness nor interest as to what day it was, yet whenever Francis appeared in the doorway she would brighten and say “Of course! It’s Thursday!” Francis had given up trying to argue. He used to tell her what day it was and she would pat his hand gently and say “You always visit me on a Thursday,” and then, in case anyone hadn’t heard, she would announce to the assembled, “This is my son. He always visits me on a Thursday.” This created a lot of unnecessary confusion amongst the other residents, most of whom were blissfully ignorant even of what year it was. In particular, it caused not inconsiderable distress to her elderly neighbour who always had a table mat on his tray in front of him that announced “Today is SATURDAY,” which his wife had brought him so she didn’t have to tell him every time he visited. He had a whole collection, and the staff meticulously ensured that each day the right mat was produced. This gave him great satisfaction, and every now and again he would share this precious piece of information to everybody else so that they could know what day it was, too. Generally he was ignored.
His name was Mr Bentley, and Catherine felt sorry for his wife. She and her daughter visited him on occasional Saturdays, and in moments where conversation with Kathleen were either not forthcoming, or not comprehensible, Catherine’s ears would drift towards Mr Bentley’s little corner. Each week the conversation began:
“How are my parents?”
“They’re dead,” one of the women would reply shortly. Mr Bentley didn’t look very happy about this, in fact he looked considerably put out.
“Nobody ever tells me these things,” he grumbled.
“You did know. You organised the funeral.”
He brightened.
“Did I? Ah. Good.”
He looked a little more satisfied and for the next minute or so focussed his attention on the intricate detail on the top of his custard cream, before replacing it, uneaten, on the tray.
“How old am I?”
“You’re eighty-two.”
“Ah.”
He closed his eyes in deep thought as he processed this information. Eventually he said,
“Yes. Well, I suppose they must be dead. Otherwise they’d be…” he tried to do the calculation, then gave up and made do with, “well, very old.”
Kathleen was rather dismissive of Mr Bentley. On the other side of her was Marge, who had been there for a long time and was tacitly in charge. Where everybody would eventually tell Mr Bentley to be quiet, nobody would dare say that to Kathleen, what with Marge’s watchful eyes on her. Kathleen would announce to the room, “This is my son. Doesn’t he have a lovely knew coat?” And those who understood enough to forge any meaning out of her utterance nodded in concurrence that it was indeed a lovely new coat. In return, Kathleen ensured that Marge, who didn’t have any visitors of her own, was kept well stocked with Murray mints and chocolates, and the two spent many a happy hour working through a brief repertoire of well-practised conversation.
In an attempt to make the home as “normal” as possible, the staff of St Francis’s seemed to have succeeded in emphasising quite how abnormal it is to spend your final years in a lounge with ten other elderly people who think it is some time around 1947. Today they had planned a tea party and invited everybody who had ever signed the guest book to come and “join the fun”.
The “fun”, it seemed, consisted mainly of three helium balloons tied to cupboard handles on opposite sides of the room, and paper party hats which the staff carefully yet firmly placed on the heads of all the residents. This was a bad idea, as at best it caused the residents some confusion, and in other cases, uninhibited delight. Mr Bentley simply seemed intrigued, and after ten minutes of pulling the elastic that was holding it to his head as far out as possible and letting it snap back, eliciting an angry “OW!” on each occasion, they took it off him again. Too late, however, did they realise that Mrs Byrne had eaten hers (and evidently quite enjoyed it), and they noted in their evaluation later not to include hats next year.
The staff had intended to allow for a bit of conversation between the residents and guests before bringing out the food, but as conversation was not especially forthcoming they brought it forward and handed round an array of little triangular sandwiches and fairycakes whilst ensuring that everyone was kept happy with copious supplies of luke-warm, weak tea.
“Would you like a fairy cake, Kathy?” a nurse was saying in sing-songy tones at Francis’s shoulder, leaning, he felt rather too close to the old lady so their faces were almost touching. “I think you would,” she continued, dangling one in the air as though Kathleen was a puppy and was being encouraged to bite it out of her hand. “There you go. Isn’t that nice? We like fairycakes, don’t we, Kathy?”
“So do we,” Francis said shortly, whipping two off her tray before she had a chance to try such a routine on him. It upset him that, even with the best of intentions, this woman would yap on at his gentle mother like she was an imbecile, while she sat docile, smiling encouragingly and never complaining. He watched as the staff member went through the same custom with the woman in front. He wondered if it was worth her bothering since, to all intents and purposes, the woman appeared to be dead. Her eyes were almost closed and her head lolled to one side. The fingers of her right hand seemed to be loosening their grip around the handle of her plastic teacup, which was lolling perilously towards her lap and threatening to spill its contents there at any moment.
“We like fairycakes, don’t we, Doris?” the staff member was saying, despite it being clear to everyone else that her charge didn’t have an opinion on the subject.
“Now,” another member of staff with exactly the same tone of voice chanted, once the food had been handed out and the residents were in various stages of trying to decide what one should do with it, “We’re very lucky today, because we’re going to have some music! Yes, we are! We’re very lucky to be able to welcome Father Peter, who it turns out is a bit of a dab hand on the piano. Aren’t you, Father?” she intoned encouragingly, evidently mistaking the priest for one of her charges. “So, let’s all give father Peter a big clap to welcome him to St Francis’s!”
Clapping proved difficult with tea and party food, and the young staff member who would have to clean the floor afterwards looked annoyed.
Father Peter didn’t feel he really needed a welcome, since he went to St Francis’s every couple of days to give the residents one sacrament or another, but he smiled and nodded to his audience in thanks and sat down at the piano.
As he prepared with all the passion of a concert pianist to rest his fingers on the dusty keys, Mr Bentley caught sight of the sign in front of him and decided to share the ecstatic news with those around him that today was Saturday. Father Peter briefly closed his eyes and tried again.
“You’re not paid to sit around!” an old woman shouted, apparently at him. Her daughter implored her to be quite, but she was having none of it, shouting, “No wonder the post never gets delivered, with you just sitting around like this all day!”
Father Peter looked down at his dog collar, frowning slightly. Her daughter, all too aware she now had an audience herself, explained as quietly as she could who father Peter was, and her mother replied, triumphantly, “So, he’s been sacked, has he? No wonder he was sacked, sitting around like that!” She turned and addressed the room at large. “Four days I waited for a first class letter from Coventry!” she cried. “Four days!”
Father Peter decided that if he waited for silence he would never play, so he launched into “Danny Boy”. The piano was wildly off key, but his choice of song seemed to calm his largely Irish audience, and the fact that it was out of tune soon didn’t matter as residents and guests joined in each in their own keys. Relieved and somewhat buoyed up by their response, he tried a bit of Mozart on them. At this they were less enthusiastic but still fairly passive. In an attempt to brighten everyone’s spirits a little, he followed this up with a rousing chorus of “The Sun Has Got His Hat On”, encouraging them to sing along.
A fairycake hit him in the back of the head, leaving icing on his bald patch and taking him quite by surprise.
“Hey!” Marge shrieked at the woman who had thrown it, who turned out to be the same resident who had accused Father Peter of being a postman. She picked up a sausage roll and threw it back.
“Now there’s no need for that!” Her daughter was irate, leaping up and not looking half so mouse-like now she was at her full height.
The staff, unfortunately, chose to appeal for calm by employing what they thought to be soothing tones, stating “Now, that wasn’t very nice, now, Margey, was it? We don’t throw things, do we?”
Marge, who had been in the home three years because of a heart condition and not, like many of her contemporaries, because of senility, snapped.
“You might not,” she retorted, “but I rather enjoyed it.”
She tossed half a scone in the woman’s direction, but unfortunately she ducked and it hit Mr Bentley in the face instead, who announced as a sort of reflex that it was Tuesday before responding with a cucumber sandwich. Those who had been asleep were now very much awake and evidently thought this looked like fun, particularly Annie Donnelly, who had been at boarding school in the 1920s and, waking to find a food fight in full swing, assumed she must still be there and joined in enthusiastically.
Catherine was aware that this was funny as she watched her mother-in-law’s face break into a delighted smile as she started to unwrap and eat the cherry-topped cake that had landed on her lap, but nevertheless she sought cover behind a chair with an older gentleman who had been visiting his mother.
“This is certainly better than last year,” he said by way of introduction.
“I didn’t come last year,” Catherine said.
“Oh. Well, it wasn’t like this last year.”
“No. I don’t expect it was.”
Like a true professional, Father Peter played on very deliberately until “The Sun Had Got His Hat On” reached its natural conclusion. He then wiped the jam and cream off the keys with his pocket handkerchief, replaced the lid, and quietly retreated.
When the residents (and those guests that had surreptitiously joined in) had run out of food to hurl at one another things gradually calmed down and most residents, exhausted by their efforts, went back to sleep, with the exception of Doris, who appeared not to have woken up and to have missed the whole thing, except for the half of cucumber sandwich on her shoulder and jam on her forehead, which had the odd effect of making her look as though she was wearing a bindi.
Now the visitors were either complaining or making their excuses and leaving. The daughter who was largely responsible for the whole thing was brushing her mother down briskly and saying in slightly overly upbeat tones, “Well, it’s been lovely to see you, Mother. I’ll bring the kids down next week.”
Catherine and Francis, having reassured themselves that Kathleen was not only unharmed, but having the time of her life, rose to leave too.
As they reached the door Doris, who still appeared to be asleep, gave a slight flick of her wrist so that her cup was momentarily horizontal. A wave of tea shot several feet across the room and hit Mr Bentley on the cheek.
“It’s Thursday!” he shrieked in angry retaliation. Goodness, if they only listened to him he wouldn’t have to keep repeating it!

Monday, October 16, 2006

I'll Never Be Anybody's Hero Now

Well, I'm sure my view on the film version of The History Boys is going to be contentious because... I loved it! I don't possess that potentially snobby attitude that it can't possibly be as good on the screen because, darling, it was such a marvellous film, because apart from anything else there's no point in comparing two entirely different media. Perhaps I would have been disappointed if the script and setting had been lifted wholesale with the odd bit stripped away (I was worried about that since the film lasts less than two hours) but in fact the best lines are still there ("I'm a Jew. I'm small. I'm a homosexual and I live in Sheffield. I'm fucked.") and Alan Bennett has actually rewritten huge swathes of the script, often to great effect. This allows Rudge (the boy for whom the National audience cheered when he got one over on the headmaster by getting a place at Oxford) a brief monologue about how actually it's all bollocks and he doesn't want to go there anyway (I'm inclined to agree, though possibly out of bitterness), and, even more movingly, Lockwood (who is a more minor character in the play) goes into the army after Cambridge, and is killed by "friendly fire" in the Gulf War. To my surprise. Georgia Taylor's character was actually pretty good, and (I won't spoil it for you) the new slant she gave to the end was much more satisfying!

Other changes are, in my view, a pity, though this is largely down to personal opinion. They cut out Irwin's wonderful TV historian scene ("If you want to learn about Stalin, study Henry VIII; if you want to learn about Thatcher study Henry VIII), which means they cut out his becoming a TV historian altogether. Actually, Irwin is an altogether more likeable character in the film, which was quite refreshing, but perhaps less fun.

Still, I can't imagine why the Guardian was quite so scathing. Amongst other things they accused the language of being often unrealistic as Bennett was using stage language onscreen. 1.) Who cares? and 2.) I thought that was the whole point? Often the kids are trying to be smart arses (and largely succeeding) or actively living a sort of game (indeed, applying to Oxbridge is actually referred to as a kind of game, and having tried it myself and failed, I would say they're spot-on) and their language - I felt - reflected the sheer ridiculousness of it all. Anyway, I would highly recommend it, despite having paid £8.50 (sob - I am no longer a student) for the priviledge.

* * * *

Life is getting rather less enjoyable by the minute at the moment, and I feel as though I'm sinking into some sort of pit I can't clamber out of again. This i probably because on Saturday I had the worst migraine of my life. At least, I'm hoping that's all it was. Hypochondriac that I am, in my half-sleep state on Saturday night I was absolutely convinced that I was going to die, and dreamed about what I might put in my will. That in itself was entirely depressing as I don't have much to give away in the first place. As well as a pain in one side of my head the right-hand side of my face around my ear went numb, and I had a shooting pain all down my right arm. My head hurt so much I couldn't physically life it off the pillow. Add to this that (as I view it at the moment, anyway) my only offering to the world is a book full of typos that looks like it's been produced for Year 2 students, plus I'm living with someone who listens to Mahler and is constantly telling me I haven't put enough washing up liquid in the washing up bowl, and I am inclined to think, in the words of Kenneth Williams (yeah, classy, I know!) "What's the bloody point?"

Answers on a postcard, please :-)

Monday, October 09, 2006

We Three Singhs of Manningham Are

Strange weekend, helped along (I think, though I can't quite remember) by vast quantities of alcohol. Indeed it was in the pub that Lisa (my colleague and Fantasy Football partner) and I heard this bizarre conversation, between two women in next-door toilet cubicles:

Woman 1: "So, Andrew isn't coming then?"
Woman 2: "No." Pause. Musingly: "Well, I suppose if you've just had blue dye injected into your testicles you probably don't feel like a night out, do you?"

I suppose you wouldn't, really. What was even funnier was that she spoke as though this was what Andrew generally got up to on a Friday afternoon.

Excessively hungover after aforementioned night out I am proud to say I was on a train by 8.30 next morning cruising my way up to Bradford to watch the weekend's sporting highlight: Bradford City v the Mighty Huddersfield. What a match. It really does take a special skill to miss quite as many open goals as we did. What's more, when the Mighty H scored (a few minutes into the first half) the ball sort of pootled almost accidentally into the goal, right in front of our goalie and two seemingly uninterested defenders who watched it with Eeyore-like cynicism as if to say "Ah, well. There It Is. What did you expect?" Things were brightened up considerably when a streaker appeared on the pitch and three huge security staff leapt on him all at once (and slightly unnecessarily in my view.) It was the only decent tackle of the whole game. I did learn as a result of this match, however, that the Three Singhs (no, I don't know either) are "proud sponsors" of Dean Windass - yes, that's Dean Windass who kneed a guy in the bollocks a few weeks back, only for the other guy to be sent off for punching him back. I'd be proud to sponsor him, too...

All this, incidentally, was in aid of my dad's birthday, and not just some desire to watch a second-rate team thrash a third-rate one, and we all went out for fish and chips afterwards. If I could figure out how to put pictures on this thing I would share with you the image of my dad's "birthday cake", a jumbo haddock with two candles stuck in it, surrounded by chips and mushy peas.

The book looks good, (though there's a certain School Reading Scheme look about it) and I'm pleasantly surprised that I'm able to report I've even sold some (thanks to whichever ten of you that was...) I hope someone will post a review up at some point. In the meantime, can anyone think of any great marketing ploys?

Back to the visa extension forms... have a good week!

Px

Friday, October 06, 2006

I don't know if I radiate an air of unholiness, but religious nutters (for want of a better word) seem to be targeting me even moew than usual at the moment. First the boring bloke on Oxford Street (the socially inept one who replaced the Liverpudian - give the guy an ASBO, for heaven's sake!) homed in on my shopping bag, which is apparently a sure sign I'm doomed to an eternity with Satan himself; then some woman on Victoria Street handed me a flier with the words "Do you know where you're going when you die?" emblazoned on it. And I wasn't going to be let off the hook that easily, not least, I presume, because I was probably one of the very few who had both taken a flier and not yet verbally abused her.

"Can I talk to you about Jesus?"
"I'm in rather a hurry."
"It'll only take two minutes."
"I'm sorry."

As I walked off she yelled after me "Are you going to Heaven or Hell?"
"No, I'm going to Victoria Station."

I was rather proud of that.


The book looks good, though I don't think this has encouraged anybody to buy it as yet. The blurb is finally up, and if anyone who has read it fancies posting up a nice review there will be a beer in it for you. (Does that amount to bribery?)

I am finally going on holiday! I am going to Lille for three days (not sure what one does in Lille for three days, in fact I'm not sure what one does in France for three days when one can't have red wine or anything with dairy in it, but we shall see...) I am there on a Sunday, so My Catholic has generously offered me her French Missal so I can go to Mass in French. (I should have known that she would have a handy French Missal floating about for emergencies. You know, just in case.)