Monthly Archives: March 2013

You Heard It Here First

So I have been to see my very good friend Carlton Edwards’ workshop show The Five Labours of Harvey Fish.  The book was written brilliantly by Brian Jordan (a friend from a time when I did a corporate for Macdonalds in Birmingham and famously thought that I was meant to outspeak the auto-cue.  The operator, who was working it manually, was trying to keep up with me and thus was winding it at the a speed that almost produced smoke from the hinge.  I little knew that they, like an accompanist, will keep up with you and not vice versa.  I have not been near an auto-cue since.

This was the same corporate conference that invited a very young David Beckham to stand in the wings with us and kick a football into the audience.  We tried very hard to make him chat with us, but his agent had instructed him not to speak, so Mr Beckham smiled, frequently, and still disarmed us with his charm.

The music of The Five Labours of Harvey Fish was exquisitely written by the dear mate, Carlton Edwards, who had offered so kindly to play the piano at my wedding at the Actor’s Church in Covent Garden, a scary eleven years ago.  I arrived to the venue, which was in the middle of a labyrinth in Pimlico.  I should have known it would be difficult to find, because at every corner, there were numerous elegant ladies wandering about muttering, “Where is the bloody place?  The terrible c**t won’t answer his phone!”  The only elegant ladies I know who use the c-word with such gay abandon are actresses, so I was not alone in my search.

As I walked through the entrance, I felt a little like Norm in Cheers.  What felt like a large number of disparate voices shouted out Kate Terence!  My dear old mate, Matthew Rixon, was playing Zeus/Luigi and Hero, impeccably and with his effusive warmth.  He and I were in the play where I first met the Captain, called The Contrast at the Cochrane Theatre.  It was pitched as America’s first play and been found in a museum.  It should really have remained there, but then, I would not have met the love of my life.  We worked and played hard throughout it, all at ages where love played its essential role, and thus the bond between Matt and me will always remain.

Another dear mate, Robert Hands, who played Apollo/Roberto/ Hero/Leo Neame was splendid and seamless as always.  He and I met in the Epicurean bar of Bristol University, where I was studying Psychology and he was at the Old Vic Theatre school.  We became firm, if tempestuous buddies, and ended up in a play together called Have Faith Alice and Enjoy in Edinburgh, written and directed by Simon Beresford, who is now the agent within Dalzell Beresford.  Interestingly Huw Kennair Jones, was also in it, and he is now the Commissioning Editor for Drama with Sky.  I scratch my head to think whether I have missed some sort of boat, but hey ho.  When I greeted Robert, the casting director of Mamma Mia Stephen Crockett approached us.  Robert could not resist introducing me, saying that I would make a good Tanya in Mamma Mia.  He jocularly asked if I was interested, at which point I thought it wise to mention that while I sang very well at parties after a few drinks, singing in long running musicals might be a skill that had evaded me so far.

 Another great mate, and supreme performance came from Felicity Duncan, playing Helen Beaufemme, with whom I was at drama school and with whom I have recently become much more in touch. This was a show where I sat there and wished I had the guts to sell my house and produce the whole play.  It had HIT written all over it, so anyone who has a wish to invest in something that, if well- marketed, could make the sort of money Mamma Mia made, should look up Carlton Edwards and Brian Jordan immediately.  You heard it here first.

I have joined a gym, and on the whole am delighted with the result.  For £45 per month I swim, yoga and gym it for at least three times per week, and because the money is leaving my account automatically, I feel I absolutely have to make use of it.  It is a mere ten minutes walk up the road, and every moment after I have done the exercise, I feel more vibrant and happy.

I knew it long ago when an inspired G.P. at university refused to put me on anti-depressants, which I had been prescribed at boarding school.  He took me through a cognitive behavioural therapy based programme, which included doing at least one hour of exercise per day.  While I am not in any way belittling anyone who suffers clinically from depression or bipolar disorder, I would say the milder cases should have a go.  It certainly works for me.

The only disadvantage is that occasionally one has to interact with a lunatic.  I will cite a particular example.  I chose on one occasion to take the medium lane, as it avoided the large Russian looking man/woman who was thrashing through the fast lane.  The board on the lane indicated very clearly that it was anti-clockwise that we should swim.  As a new member and a seasoned swimmer, I obeyed, to find a spiky, bony, toothy, posh woman standing in the lane walking towards me, so that I had to stop.

“If you had bothered to ask me, I would have told you which lane I was swimming in and you could have picked the other.”  she said, as she tried to manage the unnecessary amounts of teeth that were fixed in her mouth.

I stood up, took my goggles off, and no, I did not punch her in the face.  That was my fantasy version.  I said,” I’m sorry, I am a new member here and thought it best that I follow the rules, the board indicated anti-clockwise whereas it seems, you are swimming in one lane, up and down.”

“Yes”, she retorted,”We don’t bother with those signs around here.  You only needed the courtesy to ask me.”

I answered, “I am so sorry.  I had no idea that you owned the club and swimming pool.  May I add, Madam, that you have a very bad manner.”  I swam off, realising that saying she had a bad manner, made me sound like I was a continental who had not yet learnt that it is more acceptable to refer to manners in the plural.  I was irritated and upset for a whole day.  In the dressing room, I heard women referring to manners, and rudeness and became paranoid that they were referring to me, in a Fulham clan sort of a way.

It struck me, when I had calmed down, how very easily I break when I am bullied, and so I have made a resolution not to tolerate it any more.  You have been  warned. Bully me at your peril. (not that I believe any readers of this would be in the market to bully me or anyone else for that matter.)  But, shall we all make a stand against psycho-bullies? Let’s do it.  You heard it here first.

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Ah, Blighty, how I love ya, how I love ya, my dear old Blighty

Well, I am back, and thanks to the sunshine and change of Los Angeles, I am in a much better mood. Seeing the Captain in his temporary lodgings in Santa Monica was just the injection I needed.  He has rented with Archstone again, but instead of right in the centre of Broadway, which was a little like having a flat in the middle of Piccadilly Circus, he picked a top floor flat in Main Street, which is the uber-cool, mung bean and salad section of Santa Monica, a little like Crouch End in its feel.  It is possible to get a view of the Pacific in all its blueness from the balcony, taking five minutes to walk there for regular jaunts to our favourite cafe, Back on the Beach.

The overall temperament of the Captain has been different from last year, however.  Our initial three month dabble in the shallow waters of Hollywood last year during pilot season was regarded by him as an adventure and by me as a terrifying step into the unknown.  My confidence was low, having undergone yet another operation, and all I really wanted at the time was to be at home in safe territory.  Looking back, I am glad we did it, because we saw and experienced such colour and texture at the exact point of ten years into our marriage.  This second time round was different.  In the first place, I was not there for the first six weeks, which meant that the Captain had to go through all the difficulties of negotiating his way through Hollywood alone and with little, if any, support.  He only had me on Skype most days, but the time difference and my work schedules often proved tricky.

It has become clear that William Goldman’s book, Which Lie Did I Tell? is way more accurate than I would care to believe.  For instance, while some claim it is absolutely necessary to have a work visa, others claim that as most filming is done abroad, outside the USA, a visa is not a priority.  Last year, it was all that the agents and personal managers asked.  This year, it has become less poignant.  What appears to be plaguing personal managers in the US now, is who their UK agent is, who do they represent and would it be possible to hook up with them.  There is a hunger to develop relationships with their British counterparts.  I suspect that it is ever since Downton(or Downtown, as they refer to it) Abbey and Mr Selfridge, which has generated a belief that US actors can be placed in these prestigious British projects, while as an act of trade they try to place a few British actors (less important on their agenda).  The more I learn from the industry the more I realise that there are simply no rules.  It is like an insane game of Snakes and Ladders only no one is instructed as to when they can start.  It makes me wonder whether Lewis Carroll ever came to Hollywood in a previous life, since Alice in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass depicts exactly the experience the Captain and I have endured.

I cannot claim that it is any easier in Blighty, but at least it does not feel like the absolute beginning.  To be made to feel like a complete novice when we have been in the business for twenty-five years is quite a lesson, but one that I do not regret, as I believe this stuff will be the making of the Captain and of me.  I suspect that even if we fail at the task we are currently attempting that we will have won in terms of personal development.  In the words of Bob Dylan, “There’s No Success Like Failure, and Failure No Success At All.”  Between you and me, I think we are going to win, but every boxer says that before going into the ring.  We are not saying, “I could have been a contender.”  like Marlon Brando’s Terry in Elia Kazan’s On the Waterfront.  We are contenders!  You can only win the lottery if you buy a ticket.

On the fun side, we went to Palm Springs, where the sensation of sun on the skin with a mild breeze was nothing short of heaven.  We stayed at the Colony Palms Hotel, a boutique venue, which used to belong to a gang-leader and operate as a brothel back in the day, but has since been bought and renovated.  The decor has a delicate feel of Cuban bordello, Mexican hacienda and Moroccan riad, with a nod to the rat pack days as well as an homage to naughtier times demonstrated by the bedroom bar also offering an intimacy box containing lubricants among other sexy ingredients.  Music plays over the system in a funky way, feeling appropriately bohemian, and switches on sunday to a live band of cool Ella Fitzgerald inspired jazz, who sing under an umbrella by the pool.  I “kicked back” from the minute I arrived, ordering a Marguerita which I drank lying on a comfy couch that nestled conveniently between some trees and the rays of the sun. We also tasted hot dogs which come as Farmer John, or Hebrew National served with all the trimmings including saurkraut at a fabulous and cheap place called Atomic Dog in La Plaza.  The Caifornian phrase, Oh My God, right? Right? Right? Totally amazing, right? does not do those hot dogs enough credit.

I also enjoyed a stunning deep tissue massage as a Valentines gift from the Captain before we left, with a spa called Alchemie, in Main Street, Santa Monica, which set the tone beautifully.  At some point in the two weeks there I also had a chance to drink a Manhattan at the Tavern (George Clooney and Barack Obama have both hired it out recently).  It had a low-key vibe, which I enjoyed, as much as I did the Manhattan.  Good cocktails plus you can actually hear what you and your partner are saying to each other, what’s not to like? As part of living some of the Captains life, I went to his Pilates class at Santa Monica Yoga, and met women who had not had face lifts (a rare sight in Los Angeles) who were all my age and older with figures of twenty and thirty year olds.

Overall, I watched many films on the flights there and back and I would stress that Django Unchained is a masterpiece as well as unquestionably inspired by Mel Brooks’ Blazing Saddles.  The indie film, The Late Quartet is also a gem.  I thoroughly enjoyed Zero Dark 30, but found Argo at best, watchable.  Cloud Atlas and The Master lost some direction, but I enjoyed them.  Seven Psychopaths did not cut it, for my money.  The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, it seems, was a chance for a whole load of my favourite actors to go and have a holiday in India, while passing the time uttering non-descript sentences to each other in front of a camera for a few hours a day.

I leave the US with thanks to its sunny, if a little relentless weather, and a gratitude to Blighty for its non-yakkety dwellers. From a person who I know is not short of a word to say, I have never known such a chatty bunch.  They talk while walking, jogging, trekking.  They talk while driving, cooking, working.  And they talk loudly and fast, with no indication when they will stop or draw breath.  Even I know when time for quiet exists, so that you can actually hear yourself think.  But then, I am not sure if thinking is something  that has enterend the Los Angeleans’ culture.  That would be, like, too deep, right?  Right?

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