Archive for the ‘Stuff’ Category

I was reminded yesterday, one way or another by a brave young kid, of a great and thoroughly enjoyable moment in my life.

It was the London 2012 Olympics.

Sporting occasions are not generally something to which I am attracted – though I’m partial to a good footy match (that’s soccer for you philistines out there) so you may not be surprised to hear that, aside from ‘Italia ’90’, the most joyous sporting occasion I can remember happened in Istanbul, Turkey, on the 25th May 2005.

It is a date that is burned into my memory like few others, 25.05.05.

Liverpool, my team, were getting badly beaten in a European Cup Final. Half time came and went and took with it the hopes of a city. We were three nil down against the best team in Europe. There was no way back.

All this way, for this?

I wasn’t there of course – in Istanbul that is, not physically at least. Physically I was in an apartment in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. It was full of Scousers, Geordie’s, Jock’s, Manc’s, and other denizens of the United Kingdom. All of us, armed with beer and crisps (but mainly beer) had come to watch the game for the greatest prize in club football, the Coupe des Clubs Champions Européens. The European Cup. Otherwise known as ‘Old Big Ears’.

Old Big Ears

Three nil down. I was distraught. Devastated.

Then a number of things happened in fairly quick succession. As the players took to the pitch for the second half the crowd sang a rendition of the Liverpool club anthem ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’. It was moving, impassioned, a call to arms, a veritable Siren. So much so that the German Uefa representative was heard to say that it sent a shiver down his spine and filled him with fear. It filled me, and thousands of others like me, with tears, and caused a fellow comedian to put his arm around me and say “Never mind, Anvil, man, look at it this way, if you pull this off it’ll go down as the greatest come-back in the history of sport”.

Within minutes of the kick-off John Arne Riise, a Liverpool fave, put in a cross. Bang! Stevie Gerrard’s head! Back of the net! A real Captains’ goal. The stadium shook with the noise. So did the apartment in Newcastle upon Tyne. Over the roar the Commentator was heard to shout the now famous words, “Hello? Hello?… Here we go!” At that moment a life-long friend turned and grabbed me by the shirt and screamed into my face, “If we win this I’m getting my fucking tits out!”

The look in her eyes was wild, incensed – this was no desperate prayer to some pervy deity, more a gauntlet smashed hard into the face of fate.

The next six minutes were immense. First Vladimir Smicer fizzed one past the Milan keeper, then Stevie ‘G’ is brought down in the box. Penalty! It’s taken, saved, then converted on the rebound by Alonso. By full time Liverpool were level, the game was going to penalties, and the greatest team in Europe had crumbled.

The rest, as they always say on these occasions, is history. Against all the odds the obvious course of the march of time had changed – within minutes of the final whistle, Milan’s Andriy Schevchenko, is handed the ball by Liverpool keeper Jerzy Dudek. If Shevchenko misses this last penalty all is lost and the greatest comeback in the history of sport has happened. Dudek looked into Schevchenko’s eyes as he gives him the ball – we all did. Dudek saw what we all saw, Shevchenko was empty, gone, a broken man, as broken as his team. Shevchenko2005In that instant we knew he couldn’t score – so did Dudek. Seconds later, his penalty saved, an English football team were running manically towards their heroic goalkeeper, and a mad woman was running around an apartment in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, screaming, a Liverpool shirt over her head. Tits out.

As you can imagine, I didn’t expect the London Olympics to come anywhere near that. In fact I wasn’t really expecting much from London at all? How could we follow the party that was Sydney, or the organisational juggernaut that was Beijing? How could post-world-economic-collapse London, with its cheap flat-pack stadia and volunteer army, compete with all this?

It couldn’t, surely? Could it?

Besides, every time it was mentioned on the TV in the run up to the opening ceremony some obnoxious British politician would be there, taking the credit, or appealing to petty nationalism or telling us ‘how we were all in this together’,  whilst they, in the very same breath, were busy drawing up plans to get the meek to pay inheritance tax.

Then there was the Sponsorship. Christ, not the sponsorship! I hate that – I’m still not drinking the ‘official beer’ of the last World Cup, by the way, and that’s official.

I really couldn’t have cared less about this Olympics.

The suspension of my cynicism began slowly. A few days before the Olympics itself, Jane, my partner, and I were sailing a yacht across Loch Ness and fortuitously ended up in Fort Augustus for the towns leg of the Olympic Torch Relay, it was great fun, a real community experience and thoroughly heart-warming.

A primer for the main event?

We made it home, thankfully, in time for the Opening Ceremony itself.

As it happened, in London, a right-wing Tory government told a city run by a right-wing Tory administration to get an organising committee led by another right-wing Tory to give a prominent left-wing Brit’ with a successful CV in the arts £29 million to spend on whatever he wanted.

That is exactly what Danny Boyle did.

Boyle showered us with his image of the making of Britain: Bo Peep’s idyllic, poetic, mythic, rural scene shattered into oblivion by the industrial revolution, and the Olympic Rings – echoing the UK’s place in the world today – forged on Empire, slavery, and the oppression of the working class.

It was quite frankly gobsmacking, and with not one mention of a sponsor to give me that ‘farmed’ feeling I normally get on these occasions.

As if that wasn’t enough, then came what he sees as Britain’s gifts to the world: Shakespeare, the NHS and the Welfare State – from the cradle to the grave – Rock Music, Punk, Film, Children’s Literature, and Comedy – a Comedy that said to the world that the British were a bit odd, a bit daft, and had a humour that was lovingly and unashamedly self-deprecating.

Rather than stirring the masses into the normal fervour of nationalism, Boyle gave us a materialist look at the development of us – of ourselves, of how we came to be. Left wing? Ha! This was positively Marxist, wasn’t it? I grew up in an era of brilliant outdoor theatre from great community theatre companies like Welfare State International – I don’t think they could have done any better than Boyle did – even with £29 million.

And was it just me who saw echoes of Thatcher in the tableau where J.K. Rowling’s character Lord Voldemort – the person who cannot be named – attacks the ill children in the NHS hospital ward?

Not everybody was happy with the result of course. At a time of austerity, swingeing cuts in public services and back-door privatisation of health care provision – as the rich get the poorest to pay for the failings of the richest – it was interesting to see the forced smiles of many a right wing politician following Boyles tremendous ‘Opening Ceremony’.

One, Aidan Burley, before the whip was heard to crack, called it “leftist multicultural rubbish“.

Of course they quickly jumped from the gravy-train to the bandwagon the moment the cameras swung their way, but by then both Boyle’s genius and genie were already out of the bottle.

The British had been told, reminded, by Boyle, that they were a nation who believed in fairness, justice, fair-play and generosity, and are welcoming to people who are not of these shores, to people who are different.

He had shown, reminded, the British that ‘being in this together’ actually means something, that selflessness is a greater virtue than selfishness, (nearly 300,000 people applied to volunteer to help run these games) and though ‘Lizzie’s Leap’ from that helicopter may have given the privilege of monarchy a few more years shelf-life, his lindy-hopping nurses surely must have added much needed armour to an institution that is, and should be, a beacon to a civilised world.

The whole show was wonderfully lacking in chauvinism and I delighted in seeing an incredibly diverse culture being reminded of its good points: art, literature, fairness, music, humour, and collective endeavour.

Thispiece of fluff forgotten in a couple of weeks’, as someone remarked, will remain with me for a long time to come.

Thanks to Danny Boyle I thoroughly enjoyed the London 2012 Olympics. One day I’ll buy him a large Jameson’s and tell how I laughed and cried in equal measure. I hope he is sat at home, nightly, a large whisky in hand, feeling rather smug thinking ‘go on, Rio, follow that! I would be had I produced that ceremony.

I mainly watched it on the telly, but was lucky enough to be at St James Park for the Brazil – Honduras soccer game. The match itself was ruined by overly zealous (or just plain bad) refereeing, but again, thanks to Danny Boyle, I still felt I was partaking in something, something special, something unique.

Of the Games themselves my favourite bit was Bradley Wiggins victory in the time trial – a great bloke. I also loved Piers Morgan getting his come-uppance after reportedly tweeting:

“I was very disappointed @bradwiggins didn’t sing the anthem (…) Show some respect to our Monarch please!”

The following response from a @mrcolquinn was widely re-tweeted as being from Wiggins himself:

“@piersmorgan I was disappointed when you didn’t go to jail for insider trading or phone hacking, but you know, each to his own.”

Apparently Piers Morgan was offering money to charities in return for a good lungful from gold medal winners. Brilliant. A charity would have benefited if only Wiggins had appealed, in baritone no doubt, to an invisible man to protect the health of a supremely privileged woman who has health-care coming out of her arse. Priceless! (or is that word copyrighted these days?)

Which reminds me, talking of an invisible man, the only downside I can recall was watching numerous athletes appealing to in advance, or thanking after the event, various deities, demi-gods, and hobgoblins.

The most memorable piece of ju ju was following the Women’s 5000 metres. Meseret Defar had just run the race of her life. It was truly amazing. Breathless, and in tears, she then pulled from her sports-bra a small plastic bag imprinted on which was the image of the Madonna and Child.

MeseretDefarShe fell to her knees and sucked the plastic bag to her face. She held it to the camera and screamed, then, holding it aloft, she thanked the heavens before shoving said plastic bag back into her bra. My concern aside that Meseret may get a nasty rash, I was quite upset that the Virgin Mary – undoubtedly egged-on by her bastard offspring – had conspired to make all those other runners lose.

‘What a thoroughly awful, unsporting and evil piece of work this Mary character is!’ I thought, and crossed my arms in a faux huff.

I was going to write to Ms Defar to inform her that she could have won the race on her own without invoking the magic powers of gods and goddesses. She really had no need to cheat – or indeed to then show us all how she did it.

Would Sample’s A and B have shown traces of the Lord? I wonder? A miracle either way, I’m sure.

Arms unfolded and huff quickly forgotten though, as I then watched Mo Farah cross the line.

Oh, who could forget that? Eyes wide, arms raised, then a Heart to all, to the stadium, to his wife, to his child, to the world.  ‘Yay!’ I jumped to my feet and returned the gesture. “Go Mo! Go Mo! Go Mo!” In seconds I received a text – two words, ‘Tits Out!’. Then there was the 4×100 Jamaican Relay Team. Then there was the Lad’s and Lasses at the Velodrome. Then there was Usain Bolt. Then there was a fresh faced kid diving for his Dad.

I screamed at the telly throughout it all. Every wonderful second of it.

Great to get the opportunity to revisit the memories and stick London 2012 in the same folder as Istanbul 2005. I’ve got Tom Daley to thank for that.

I’m pouring a stiff Jameson’s as we speak. Here’s to Danny Boyle, and I’ll raise a glass to Tom Daley, too. A brave young man and a true Olympian.

Here’s to them both.

Go on Rio, follow that!

Tits out!

Anvil Springstien.

Give us our Daley cred’.

File:Tom Daley London (cropped).jpgDear Tom,

Apparently, according to the British media who never seem to let the facts get in the way of a good story, you have been deluged with homophobic hate mail following your announcement on a You Tube video that you are in a relationship with a man, and in this relationship you are both very happy – I’ve seen the photos, by the way, Tom, he looks really nice. Dead sweet.

As the story broke I had a gander at twitter and watched the tweets unfold. For over forty minutes I scrolled through tweet after tweet as my computer struggled to play catch up with the feeding frenzy. Most, as I expected, were congratulatory. Lots of young females decried the obvious opportunity lost, and a host of young males expressed jealousy at your new partner.

There were many attempts at humour, too. Did you see them? The most popular repeating ad nauseam a joke regarding the second window of their Advent Calendar, “I opened it and guess what came out?”  I’ve really no idea? Please do tell me again.

The best of the best I can only paraphrase as, mid-laugh, the phone rang and real-life beckoned, but it resembled the following from a female fan: “Don’t worry Tom, I’ll still play rubby rub with your photos, and you’ll still make me squirt like a Clowns flower!” Brilliant. Superb. Did you see it?

Okay, it’s hardly Chaucer, or even J.K., but wouldn’t you just kill to have someone write that about you? Oh, sorry, someone did just write that about you – doh! Hey, little tip here: don’t show too many of them to the new lad -sometimes the envy gets so great I could kick a small child.

Anyway, in all the time I spent perusing the tweets I never came across one that was negative or abusive. It’s not that they don’t exist, Tom, I’m sure that they do, in fact various portals rushed to post collections of them, but we all know that these are from the stupid, the ill-educated, or the simply ill – and in the moving moral zeitgeist that is the UK these are the people who, sadly, do not count.

You, Tom, and your new partner, can quite rightly, ignore these folk.

There are, of course, people who you and your new partner cannot ignore.

People who will do their utmost to ensure that your happiness is short lived and that both you and your partner are treated unequally in your dealings with the state, the medical establishment, and the law.

These people, who have efficacy and power and are in positions of the most incredible privilege and wealth, are completely, utterly, totally, barking mad. They lay their claim to the right to end your happiness on the basis of being whispered to by an invisible man who lives in the sky.

I know, Tom, I know, completely, utterly, totally, barking mad.

Get this, he doesn’t like the pee-pee thing anywhere near the poo-poo thing. Drives him insane, apparently? There are other things about how to beat women and slaves, and kill kids, and something else about wearing different types of cloth, but the real biggie is the pee-pee thing near the poo-poo thing.

Seriously! It really is hard to Adam & Eve it, innit?

How on earth these people are allowed to get away with commenting on what goes on in other peoples bedrooms is quite frankly beyond me? Anyone else would be arrested, surely? But no… all they have to do is mention that the invisible geezer who lives in the sky is going off on one about the pee-pee thing and the poo-poo thing again, and instantly governments and the police fall over themselves to allow these nutters to do and say the most evil and nasty things about people they’ve never even met?

Completely, utterly, totally, barking mad.

Anyway, mate, for the most part they’re all old so they’ll be dead soon, but I just thought I’d drop you a line to give you a heads-up on that one.

Really proud about what you achieved at the Olympics, by the way. Big cred’ there, mate. Prouder still at what you’ve done over the last couple of days. Your Dad would’ve been, too.

Good luck with the new Beau, and Rio, oh, and welcome to the fray.

Anvil Springstien.

ps: Really great teeth, there, kid, too!

 

*Reading about Tom Daley reminded me about how much I had enjoyed the London 2012 Olympics. So much so, I scribbled down some memories of this surprisingly enjoyable sporting occasion – HERE

How did you get into this business?

How did you get into this business? It’s a question that has been asked of most, if not all comedians at some point in their careers. I’ve related my own story, off the cuff mostly, over dinner, with friends, but occasionally in a radio or TV interview. I’d never written it down, nor saw the need to? Recently two photos emerged of myself and my brother busking the very first show I’d ever written. It was called ‘The Human Anvil’ and was to give me a nickname that was to stick with me for the next thirty years. Today a British comedian who is completing a Doctorate on The Cultural History of Alternative Cabaret asked me – and many others I’m sure – to complete a questionnaire. The first question was basically ‘How did you get into this business?’

I reproduce both photos, and the questionnaire, in full below.

The Human Anvil. Seeing as were on a trip down memory lane... here's how it all began - smashing concrete slabs on my chest. This is at The Free Trade Inn. Byker. Newcastle upon Tyne

The Human Anvil

  • When I first met you (at the Fish Quay Festival in North Shields, I think) you were performing The Human Anvil with Graeme Kennedy. How did that come about?

I’d been working as a driver/odd job man/stage hand for a community theatre company in Newcastle called ‘Skin & Bones’ over the summer play-schemes – remember them? It was now a few days before Xmas and I was broke and on the dole. Maisie Sharpe, an actor/administrator at ‘Skin & Bones’, rang to say that Pilgrim Street Fire Station were looking for a children’s entertainer for their kids party on Xmas Eve, “None of us can do it and I thought of you? Just borrow our stilts, face-paints, and the big parachute from The Children’s Warehouse next door. You’ve seen it done a thousand times over the summer, and it’s fifty quid, cash…”. Fifty quid? Cash? Xmas Eve? I just couldn’t say no, could I?

With two days to go, and a boot-full of stuff, I panicked and rang a guy called Nick Mumby. Nick had worked with Skin & Bones as a writer and performer but was now at a loose end. He was – and is – an immensely confident and competent character who was to become a life-long friend. I offered him twenty five quid.

Driving to the ‘gig’ – him increasingly excited, me increasingly fearful – Nick told me he knew of a great trick with a concrete slab, a child, a cream cake, and a mallet. We didn’t have a cream cake or a mallet, but I did have – for reasons best not discussed here – a rather large sledge-hammer in the back of the car. We stopped off under Byker Bridge – now a place of beauty and part of the ‘Ouseburn Valley’ development, then a repository for burnt out cars and fly-tipping. It took ten seconds to find the first pile of builders rubble and throw a concrete slab into the boot.

It was two and a half feet square by three inches thick and weighed seven and a half stone.

Two hours later I was standing under a huge green parachute, arms above my head – a human centre pole surrounded by a circus tent of twenty or so smiling, and quite badly painted, creatures of the jungle. I was an hour and a half into my first ever performance. The kids were loving it. The parents were loving it. I was loving it, too. Everything had gone perfectly. My fears had evaporated almost instantly. What could possibly go wrong? Nick bounced up from amongst the circle of creatures to replace my tiring arms with his own, “Go and get that slab out of the boot of the car” he whispered.

We quickly learned that seven and a half stone of concrete cannot be supported by the ribcage of a five year old. Still, Nick’s experience shone through, “Ha Ha! Only Joking! Tell you what kids… let’s get one of the Grown-Ups under the slab!”

We quickly learned that seven and a half stone of concrete cannot be supported by the ribcage of a seventy five year old retired Fireman with emphysema. Nick’s experience waned. “Nick? Nick?” I hissed. Nick’s eyes looked slightly glazed. So did the eyes of the retired Fireman with emphysema.

I’d never seen Nick stumped before? I took charge for the first time that afternoon, “Ha Ha! Only Joking! Tell you what kids… let’s get Nick under the slab!” The crowd went wild. Looking back, they really did think this was a seamless and seasoned performance – all the while building to Nick lying under the concrete slab, a housebrick standing upright in the centre of it in lieu of a cream cake, me towering over him, sledge-hammer in hand, both kids and parents chanting and clapping a count-down from ten.

I bottled out from hitting him at ‘two’.

“Hold on, kids, it wouldn’t be fun if I hit him, would it?” “No!” screamed the kids, “So… let’s get one of your Dads to hit him!”. To this day I’ve no idea what made me say that?

My jaw dropped as Thor went into action. The sledgehammer a blur as it moved through a perfect arc on its way to make contact with the exact centre of the end of the brick. He’d asked, as a casual aside as the chant reached ‘five’, how hard he could hit Nick. I’d said he could hit him as hard as he liked as long as he hit the exact centre of the housebrick standing upended on the slab. I honestly thought ‘give the punter a precision instruction, he won’t be able to get a good swing at it’.  More fool me – I’d forgotten he was a Fireman.

Bang. The housebrick transformed itself into a cloud of red dust as the slab, initially moving downwards, exploded into the air in a myriad of pieces only to fall back to earth – back to Nick.

Nick lay motionless amid the rubble. From this cacophony of noise – silence. Deafening endless silence. A woman holding a baby to her breast whispered almost to herself, but was heard as a booming, pointing finger of accusation, “My God… in front of children.” I pictured the headline in the following days papers, ‘Children’s Entertainer Dies as Horrific Stunt Goes Horribly Wrong’. My career in the performing arts ended almost before it had begun. A noise? Was that a noise? The rubble moved… Nick moved. Nick moved again, then spat out a large piece of concrete from his mouth. I looked to the shocked silent audience, smiled, and screamed “Tadaah!”

All the way home I kept asking if he would do it again. His ribcage was badly bruised and scratched. He was bleeding from both hip bones and had burst a blood vessel in his left eye. Yes, but would he do it again if I was under the slab and he was swinging the sledgehammer? He said he might. I stayed awake all night and wrote a forty minute show where the hammer represents the cultural and industrial might of the masses which, when given the correct leadership and momentum, would smash through the stranglehold of international finance capital, as represented by the brick… Eight hours later I shuffled the handwritten A4 pages together and, after putting a staple in the top left hand corner, penned the title ‘The Human Anvil’.

Twelve months later I was performing it under the Eiffel Tower – with Graeme Kennedy as Hammer Man – for British television.

Funny how things turn out?

  • Did you have any performance experience prior to The Human Anvil?

No.

  • What was your first impression of Cabaret A Go Go* (be honest)? [*’Cabaret a Go Go’ – an eclectic group of people who first brought ‘alternative’ comedy to the North East of England. A.S.]

In all honesty I was in awe of anybody that was doing anything like this. I hope it didn’t show? I hope I looked cool – I was certainly trying to look cool?

  • Were you at all influenced by punk or new wave/post-punk?

Yes. I thought that this, us, we, I, were part of that. We were the ‘new wave’ – that was us, ‘post punk’, exciting, dangerous, revolutionary, cool…

  • How would you describe the counterculture?

Those last four words of the sentence above.

  • Did the counterculture have any effect on you?

You have to understand that I’d come off a very large post industrial estate dominated both by unemployment and catholicism in equal measure. This was my Renaissance, my Enlightenment, my world turned upside down. There were battles to be fought – Thatcher was in power. Did I look cool? I’m sure I looked cool?

  • What was your first gig like?

Awful. Died on my arse in front of four hundred drunken men. Got paid five pounds – two pounds fifty each. It cost fifteen quid in petrol to get to the gig which was in a dance hall on Tynemouth Beach. It burnt down shortly afterwards.

  • What are your thoughts on the terms “alternative cabaret” and “alternative comedy”? Are they useful?

Maybe not now, but they were then. They provided us with a tag, a label that positioned us away from ‘them’ – the boring racist, misogynist shite that had gone before us.

  • What kind of things inspired you?

At the time I just thought it was a mixture of anger and Marxism? I think, initially at least, we each inspired one another? After confidence overtook the anger I started to appreciate and be affected/inspired by individuals who had succeeded despite swimming in a sea of the mundane, Dave Allen, Les Dawson, Billy Connolly and all the other folk circuit comics/story tellers who laid the groundwork for our comedy to get some purchase on.

  • Who are your favourite historical comedians/people?

Heh, think I just answered that. I suppose you could add anyone who brings us to a closer approximation of the truth, Galileo, Newton, Hooke, Darwin, Vladimir McTavish et al.

  • How would you describe your act?

Probably not in the way that others would describe it? I was in Fremantle the other night, or was it Perth? – regardless, the pre-show blurb had me down as ‘jovial’. ‘Jovial’? This has to be a consequence of the performers perennial dilemma – I want to be loved, I want to be accepted – I want to rock the boat, I want to rebel. But seriously ‘Jovial’? Fuck off!

  • How do/did you go about writing material?

An idea, then one word tends to follow the other, just get it down, don’t think about quality, just flow – don’t stop. Then the hard part – re-write, re-write, and re-write again. Then the harder part, re-write, re-write, and… well, you get the idea. Don’t be precious – you will always write more. Your imagination really is bottomless. Starting from the premise you will throw away 98% of everything you write is a very good place to start. Oh, and it’s a good idea to learn some rules as it’s only by knowing the rules which allows you to break them. One last tip is that you are always a better writer than you are a performer. Look back over old stuff every now and again – your performance skills will have improved since you stopped doing it, so try doing it again.

  • Tell me about the audiences, how did they respond to you?

Well, for the most part, wonderfully so – it would be strange to have done this for coming up to thirty years if they hadn’t? That said, I’ve died on my arse enough times over those thirty years, and expect I will do so again. It’s the fear of that which still fills me full of adrenalin whilst waiting in the wings – waiting, waiting for your name to be called, waiting to be called to account, waiting to be found wanting, waiting to be found out.

  • Did you ever come across audiences who held questionable views?  I know The Tunnel’s* punters could be really challenging, were there any others that you can remember? [*The Tunnel Club – an infamous London Club opened in 1984 by the equally infamous Malcolm Hardee. A.S.]

I remember standing at the side of the stage at ‘Up the Creek’ being introduced by Malcolm Hardee. The crowd were baying. He had his cock out. He said “Can’t remember this next fuckers name? Some piece of shit from up North?” I handed my pint to the guy standing next to me, “Hold this for me, mate – I won’t be long”. It was Jools Holland. I wasn’t long.

Closer to home I recall organising a benefit for striking Ambulance Workers and their families in Newcastle upon Tyne – they’d brought along their children, too. I was MC and had just introduced an act called Buddy Hell. His real name was Ray Campbell. He wore a beret and had an American accent. He was black. As I walked off the stage one of the striking Ambulance workers, his daughter on his knee, said to me, “Fuckin’ hell, who booked the fuckin’ Darkie?” I went back on stage and called them all a bunch of cunts. That’s what they were, a bunch of fucking cunts. Do you remember that, Ray?

  • Were there any gigs you really hated?

Yes, ‘Up the Creek’, being introduced by Malcolm.

  •  Were there any gigs you really enjoyed doing?

Yes, ‘Up the Creek’, being introduced by Malcolm.

  • (If you are no longer performing) When did you stop performing and why? Do you miss performing?  OR (If you are still performing) What changes have you witnessed since you began performing? Have things changed for the better or worse?

I couldn’t stop performing. Ever. I need to do it now. It controls my emotions, the way I feel. Without performing I’d quickly descend into depression. If the backside fell out of the comedy industry I’d still do it, for nothing, in an upstairs room in a pub. As for changes, well, money changes everything. The need to pay a mortgage and bills – or feed kids – transforms the performers dilemma. ‘I want to be loved, I want to be accepted – I want to rock the boat, I want to rebel’ gets the following added to it: ‘I really need to get booked at this club again’. We need to find ways to ameliorate the last sentence. Maybe the only way that happens is that the arse falls out of the comedy industry and we all start doing it for nothing, again, in an upstairs room in a pub?

  • Is there anything else you would like to add?

I need to be braver, both in my writing and in my performance – but I still want to look cool.

Anvil Springstien.

August 2013

Links to previous: Pom De Terre IPom De Terre II

‘The Phyla Laff’

We’ve been in this wonderful country for just over three months now, and we’re settling in fine. Jane has started her job at the University, and I’ve a few gigs under my belt – in Perth and Fremantle to the north, and Mandurah to the south – and, in tandem with the ebbing chaos of the move, I’m getting the time to do a little more writing. It’s all a bit Pleasant Valley Sunday here in Safety Bay – suburbia forever, with very little going-out culture. No wonder Aussies like their Barbeques.

There is a type of ‘club’ culture but, quite frankly, not the one I’m used to? There’s the Swimming Club, the Tennis, Club, the Bowls Club, the Watercolour Painting club, the Jewellery Making club, the Motor Mower Appreciation club, the Crystal Healing club, the Psychic club, the Barbie club, the Catholic Church…

Basically there is nothing to do.

As well as discovering what there isn’t to do, we’ve been trying to get a handle on the local fauna and flora, so last week we signed up for an evening Frog Walk – organised by the local Environmental Centre – around the historic, and brackish, Lake Richmond. Apart from being a nature reserve and home to numerous species of birds, as well as five species of frog – including tree frogs – Lake Richmond is world famous for its community of Thrombolites.

Thrombolites may sound like a lost tribe with clogged arteries due to overdoing the barbies, but no, they’re far more interesting than that. Thrombolites are clumps of accreted matter thrombolite formed in shallow waters by the photosynthetic actions of early life-forms – specifically Cyanobacteria – and we’ve a lot to thank them for – everything, in fact – even the very air that we breathe. They are probably our oldest common ancestors and they, along with their close cousins, Stromatolites, oxygenated the planet and provided food for the more complex carbon-shifting life-forms which came after them.

So, no Thrombolites, no Frogs. No Frogs, no Environmental Centre. No Environmental Centre, no Frog Walk.

We turned up at the Centre next to the Lake at 7:00pm armed with a torch, stout footware, and clothing suitable for inclement weather. What we had forgotten, apparently, were children. We were the only adults there without any.

We’d paid our eight dollars, however, and were not to be deterred so, after eating our Sizzler (a type of Aussie hotdog) and collecting our Bag of Sweets, both included in the price, we switched on our torches and set off into the darkness taking up the rear of the giggling screaming group of children, for all the world like some child-snatching paedophile couple hoping to catch a healthy looking straggler, or at least failing that, the one with the taped glasses and the limp.

We went home via a Bottle Shop and laughed our way into drunkenness.

Yes, basically there is nothing to do.

That said, I walk Molly, our Collie, every day along beautiful, and deserted, Indian Ocean beaches with Dolphins frolicking a few metres away (do Dolphins frolick?). At the end of our road (Penguin Road – check it out on street-view) is Penguin Island – no cigar for guessing what lives on that. If there was a competition for the best place in the world in which to have nothing to do then this would win first prize for the place to not to do it in.

There are three small (and very good) restaurants, but we’ve used them extensively already and have realised that to stay sane in suburbia you either drink, copiously, or use the facilities – to wit, the beach and the ocean. So, in order to achieve perfect mental health, we’ve just bought a little sailing dinghy called a ‘Mirror’, and three months’ supply of ‘Coopers Pale Ale’.

Our Flagship, as yet unnamed, was built in 1968/9 and I’ve been working on getting her ready for sea all week. tubby 3Jib and mainsail have been repaired, and I’ve finished re-rigging her in between the occasional tea-break to catch up on ‘Sailing For Dummies’ – it’s an old book that advises tying cassette tape to the mast stays (they’re called ‘Shrouds’, don’t ya know) to alert you as to wind direction. ‘Course, we download all our wind direction these days…

Provisional launch date is this Sunday, but sadly the Queen had already said she’d babysit and now can’t get out of it – you can choose your friends but you can’t choose your family, eh, Liz. Still, Eric – Jane’s father – will do as honoured guest, along with her elder brother David, and his family. As for naming, we were going to call her ‘The Free Trade’, or ‘The Cumby’, or ‘The Broken Doll’, in honour of three great watering holes from our own, sadly missed, going-out culture back in Blighty, but we’re now thinking of keeping it in the family and calling her ‘The Phyla Laff’, after my Mother.  She’d love to be known as ‘The Face that Launched a Dinghy and a Case of Pale Ale’.

We’ll see. It really depends on how drunk we get? Not that I’m condoning ‘Drink-Sailing’ or anything like that – but it is Sunday, so there won’t be much traffic? Probably take the neighbours kids out for a spin.

It’s in our blood, see, sailing. I served on an aircraft carrier during the Cod War – yeah, the ‘forgotten war’. Even to this day the British government fail to recognise Cod War Syndrome yet after all these years I still can’t walk past a chip shop without breaking into a cold sweat. Jane, on the other hand, was brought up racing sailing dinghies in Anglesey, crewing, with her brother at the helm. She tells a great tale of him screaming at her for not bringing the jib in fast enough after a particular tack across the wind, and with their boat only just in the lead. She bailed and swam directly back to shore ensuring that David and boat were disqualified.

Jane reckons that the good ship ‘The Phyla Laff’ will need some TLC on the water and, due to her age, will probably need some running repairs. I’m not that worried. Jane, her brother Dave, and her father Eric, are from North Wales where they have a tradition of make-do-and-mend.

I’d love to give you an example of a nautical bent in order to keep with the theme, but the one that instantly comes to mind is this: During one of those rare total solar eclipses that wasn’t bedevilled by British cloud (Jane recalls this as 1983, when she was fourteen, I think?) teachers at Jane’s school asked parents to purchase one of the many proprietary viewing appliances available for this once in a life-time school yard spectacle.

Whilst all Jane’s classmates were provided with such appropriate eyewear, Jane was deposited at school, by Eric, welders maskreplete with a welders mask.

I can’t wait for Sunday. I’m going to be Captain and Jane will be Crew – there will be heavy sanctions for abandoning ship.

Anvil Springstien.

tubby 1

Links to previous: Pom De Terre IPom De Terre II

‘Can I have my photograph taken with you?’ – Attempt #1

I’ve had cause, recently, to take stock. This has, for the most part, taken the form of perusing shoe-boxes full of old tat. Some of it to do with my career as a stand-up comic (more of that here) such as the rotor arm from my much loved Ford Granada 2.8 V6 injection – the roadside repair that got me to a gig at Cardiff Jongleurs, fashioned with an AA man’s soldering iron, still plainly evident.

rotor arm

It’s rather belated, I know, almost fourteen years in fact, but a big thank you to the Automobile Association. Especially to the technician who refused all attempts at financial reparation, instead producing a camera from his toolbox and insisting we have our photograph taken together – in the rain, on the hard shoulder of a Welsh motorway.

 Thanks for getting me there, mate. I simply couldn’t have died on my arse that night without you.

Another relic from the same box is in the shape of a rather heavy, but very cheap, chrome bracelet with a curved nameplate. On the visible side, the name of a young love, Corinne – on the reverse, my own. I believe this was one of a pair – the other worn, for an equally short time, by her.  

bracelet

My abiding memory of Corinne was standing in a telephone box in Plymouth, soaking wet from the Atlantic storm raging outside.

We steamed as we shared the earpiece and listened to the cries of my fiancé, in Liverpool, as I broke off our engagement. Her name was Cecilia. We lost our virginity together, in my mother’s bed, never to find it again.

I loved Cecilia dearly, but she was seven hours away by train and I was desperate to get into any bed whatsoever, with anybody whomsoever, and Corinne was standing next to me – soaking wet, and steaming.

I’ve thanked the AA, so perhaps, too, an apology is longer still overdue – I’m sorry, Cecilia. I really am. In mitigation I was three weeks away from being seventeen years old.

Phew

Anyway, most of the space in these boxes, once taken up by shoes, is occupied by photographs. None of Corinne or Cecilia as it happens – I know this as two months ago, in another hemisphere entirely, I ploughed through each one, mentally documenting their contents before packing them away, ready for transit. It’s why I’ve searched through packing crates to find them, and I’m again ploughing through pictures of people long dead with names long forgotten, family shots mixed in amongst old forces photographs, and pictures of literally hundreds of comedians in innumerable green-rooms in unmentionable clubs.

Right now I’m looking for one photograph in particular, one that I saw two months ago? I’m sure it was in this particular box?

It’s not that it has relevance to the piece, which was meant to be loosely based around the theme: ‘Can I have my photograph taken with you?’, (Sorry, I’ll do that later, now) it’s just that I thought of it – the photo, that is – and now I have to find it? It’s a childhood photo taken when I was seven, possibly eight. In it I’m holding a Jam Jar and in the Jam Jar, a goldfish, both recently acquired at a local fairground utilising a – until then unknown – talent for throwing three darts into a barn door.

The reason my interest has been piqued is that it must be the last shot of a goldfish in a Jam Jar before the great paradigm shift occurred and the iconic Jam Jar was consigned to history, replaced forever by the onset of modernity and the introduction of the Clear Sealed Plastic Bag. How this must have blighted the Jam Jar manufacturing industry is anyone’s guess. How many workers, families of workers, generations of families of workers, were to be torn apart within the space of one summer to another?

None, perhaps, but its effects on Goldfish rights were to be immense: gone were the pressures to carefully return your Goldfish home, unsullied and unspilled, to sit on the kitchen window to be studied and stirred with a spoon before death by overfeeding. Now, in this new commoditised, throw-away world, your golden fair-ground winnings could be cast into a Nike sports-utility-back-pack and, after accompanying you on numerous fair-ground rides, be thence transferred to a bedroom cupboard or drawer were said goldfish would wait, caterpillar like, to be magically transformed, over a period of weeks, or occasionally months, into a bag of milk.

I preferred the Jam Jars, and I’m sure the Goldfish did, too.

At one summer fair – it was the year before the lost photo was taken, I believe – I watched helpless as three darts flew through the air as if in slow motion. I knew almost before they left my hand that they were heading in a direction other than the intended target. The fact that I’d thrown all three in one go did nothing to allay the suspicion that they were intentionally aimed at the Copper standing on the far side of the stall. To avoid any such confusion I grabbed my little brother by the arm and ran like hell.

We returned later to try again only to find the stall owner in great fettle and overjoyed to see me. So much so he presented both myself and my little brother with a free Goldfish each.

His died first. I knew it was his as mine had a small black dot on the edge of its fin – not fin-rot, you understand, more of a fishy birth-mark. I’d noticed it early on and said so, out loud, and in front of adults, “Mine is this one with the little black dot on its fin!” We’d agreed and shook on it.

So his was dead, and mine was alive. I had the unenviable task of waking him and telling him that his Goldfish – definitely his Goldfish – was dead. Floating on the surface of the water. Dead as a Jimmy Nail. It was without doubt the greatest moment of my life. His was dead. Mine was alive! It was better than losing my virginity – it really was, sorry Cecilia, that was brilliant, really, honestly, truly brilliant, and beautiful… truly beautiful – and thank you – but this was better. His was dead. Mine was alive!

Strangely, the following morning, my goldfish, obviously pining for its overfed companion, committed suicide. It had, quite bizarrely, leapt out of the Jam Jar, soaring a full three feet before impaling itself squarely onto a kitchen fork. I wouldn’t have believed it had my little brother not seen it with his very own eyes.

A fleeting moment of joy at the misfortune of others, dashed onto the rocks of sadness. Sometimes we get what we deserve. I got Corinne and a bracelet – I hope Cecilia got the money back on the ring?

Anvil Springstien.

Ps: This post went somewhere else other than where it was supposed to go? It was meant to explore the background to the upcoming Photo Album shot from the Cassini Space Probe to take place on the 19th July 2013, recreating Sagan’s famous Pale Blue Dot shot from Voyager 1.

Yes, yes, I know, doh! Sometimes you just have to go where the words take you – they took me here. I was searching, initially, for the rotor arm remembering the AA man had taken our photo – then found the bracelet in the same shoe-box and…

I’ll post the shots of both in a short while.

And I’ll revisit the original idea over the next week or so.

Sorry.

Link to previous: Pom De Terre I

Pom de Terre II

We’ve been in Western Australia for a couple of months now, and we’re still very much enamoured both with the place and the people. The beautiful weather seems to instil a smile that fronts a relaxed and easy attitude in most of its citizens – though I’m left wondering if such attitudes will survive the recent onset of winter here, or, like in the UK, move its populace into the sunless misery of Seasonally Acquired Depression. A pallid nation of sixty million smack-heads, desperate for the methadone of spring?

I hope not.

Regardless, as we have edged into the cold season my daily walks along the Indian Ocean with our Border Collie, Molly, have shifted into the appropriate mode for such an inclement time of the year. Gone is the ‘Factor 30’, relegated to deep hibernation at the rear of the bathroom cupboard, replaced in its stead by something altogether more appropriate for these wintry climes – it’s called ‘Factor 29.9’, and it works a treat.

Winter, eh. Don’t you just love it? I’ve also swapped the Speedo’s for Bermuda shorts – just to retain a bit of heat.

We’ve been in forced isolation for nearly six weeks now. Inoculated from the ills and misfortunes of the world. No phone, no mobile, no internet this side of the local library. Not even a radio or TV. Mind, it’s surprising how easy one adjusts to the absence of the constant bombardment of data, and, let’s be honest, it’s hardly a tribulation being incognito on a sunlit tropical beach, waves lapping gently at your feet.  More ‘Enterprise Hologram Suite’ than ‘Sensory Deprivation Tank’.

All that, though, has (somewhat sadly?) come to an end.

From the shores of our (admittedly rather large) desert island we spied a ship on the horizon. On its deck was our shipping container from the UK – in our excitement we waved and jumped up and down and built fires to try and get their attention. It worked. Our belongings finally arrived in Perth ten days ago. We are now officially ‘Cardboard Rich’. We’ve got a phone line, too, and an internet connection. The computers, TV’s, and Dab radio’s are out of their packing crates and the last lead has been plugged into the final socket… Ah, it’s good to be back in the loop.

Expect some sparks to be flying off the keyboard anytime soon. For the moment though, I’m immersed, submerged, drowning in wonderful, glorious data; TV’s of various dimensions are on in two separate rooms, radios blah loudly all around whilst Microsoft Office downloads its own container full of emails with an almost imperceptible movement of its progress bar.

I’m trying to make sense of it all but can’t yet quite focus, happy to be hit by the zeros & ones whilst staring blindly, unsure, drunk with it all – a picture reminiscent of the bar scene in ‘Ice Cold in Alex’.

An hour later I’ve settled somewhat and begin filtering information that’s relevant – to me at least; The G8 beginning in Northern Ireland; Chaos at Knowlsley Safari Park in the English North West; Syria continues to burn, and Luis Suarez’s teeth are still offside, allegedly.

Here, on the Far Side of the World, apparently all is not quite as rosy as I’ve been painting it, either – though there is still that slight glitch in the matrix:

The W.A. Terrorism Alert Status was increased two whole levels this week, jumping from ‘No Worries’ to ‘Bit of a Furby, Mate’, before dropping back to ‘No Drama’s’ following an incident with an alleged non-halal kebab in the Fremantle area.

All joking aside, the Perth regional crime-wave gathers apace according to last night’s TV News, with a Hit & Run in Subiaco, a man entering a curry-house in Collingwood with an axe, and the confiscation of a home-made sub-machine gun – replete with three rounds, in the Mandurah area… the Police narrowly avoiding a very rapid shoot-out, there.

All in all, this is rather more than half a world away from Liverpool, or Manchester, or London, were the Rice Krispies are now more likely to go ‘Crack, Smack, & Bang’ than ‘Snap, Crackle, & Pop’, and where Pensioners Hearing-Aids have long been attuned to the difference between an M16 and an AK47:

“The ‘Akky’  ‘avin’ a distinctive clackin’ sound ‘cos of its slow rate of fire, d’yer know worra’ mean, Son, innit, sorted, wicked… like. I remember when this was all trees an’ yer could leave yer doors open… Eh, was that a fuckin’Baboon? Eh, don’t go, d’yer wanna’ buy some Blow?”

It might be my age, but I’m appreciating much more than just the weather in W.A. D’yer know worra’ mean… like?

It has its downsides, of course. Real downsides that’ll drive you mad. I’ve already mentioned that mobile phone coverage is abysmal, and the internet was – until we instantly upgraded to the cutting edge that is ‘ADSL’ (remember that?), equally pathetic. Also, pseudoscience is everywhere, with Chiropractors, Homeopaths, Naturopaths and Acupuncturists on every street corner alongside other peddlers of nonsense. My local Sunday morning market regularly has stalls selling a cream or ointment that claims to cure baldness, teenage spots, lower back pain, and cancer – as well as a proven and effective aid to stopping smoking.

Yes, you heard me right… a proven and effective aid to stopping smoking!

Nonsense of course, but now I’m back in the news loop I’m thinking of getting Julia Gillard to send a crate of this shit to the G8 Conference in Northern Ireland, as even a placebo effect may be useful when the ‘Big Hitters’ get round to discussing Syria in the morning.

They’re all big puffers, too, and the last people we want experiencing nicotine withdrawal at this crucial moment in time.

Obama’s been caught more than once having a sly fag at the back of the Oval Office, and whilst Merkel is supposed to have given up, she’s in a bit of a state, isn’t she? Just look at the kip of her nails, and she’s obviously been hitting the fridge.

Thankfully Hollande is there instead of Sarkozy, who always stank of Gaulois whilst denying he ever smoked at all, and then there’s Putin, of course, who wouldn’t be a real Russian male without ploughing through his full quota of Duty Free fags – lung cancer being a sign of masculinity and heterosexuality in the former Soviet state.

Cameron, who doesn’t count (he’s only allowed there as the UK is paying for the food and accommodation), probably had a fag at Eton, but it’s the cigarette variety we’re talking about, here, and his family probably had working class folk to smoke their cigarettes for them, anyway.

Hold on, more data coming through? Wow, look at the state of the British economy? Surely Mindless Austerity was going to work, wasn’t it? And look what’s happening in Greece?  Oh, no, even here in Paradise there’s this fool called Cory Bernardi who thinks he’s proved that legalising same sex marriage will lead to bestiality… hold on, he may be right? Look, more data from the UK: ‘Man Shags Baboon’? No, sorry, I heard that wrong, it should say ‘Man Shoots Baboon’. Ah, well, Cory, another imbecilic theory bites the dust. Shit! Look… there’s a new Pope!

STOP!

ENOUGH!

Phew, sorry… I’ve had it up to here with data. I’m switching everything off and taking the dog for a winters walk along the beach. This zeros & ones thing is so stressful? I may have to visit a Naturopath on the way back – maybe stop off at the market, buy some cream.

No. It’s good to be back.

Really.

Anvil Springstien.

 

Link to next: Pom De Terre III