Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Singin’ hey lolly, lolly

October 8, 2009

Ah – ring tones. Love ’em or hate ’em, fact is – they’re here to stay.

Question is – is it better just to go with the standard ring tones that come with the phone, or should one go to the trouble of downloading a polyphonic that wittily expresses one’s personality?

I must say, back in the day when hardly anyone had a mobile I thought it rather clever that Bobby Helpmann had programmed his to play “Country Garden”, but the other day when Nic Roeg’s iPhone burst to life in the middle of a script meeting with the theme from Dr Zhivago people shook their heads sadly and the meeting finished rather early.

So, dear readers; what are your thoughts? Heard a good one lately that particularly suited its owner? Have one on your own phone of which you are justifyably proud?

Oh – and there’s a special prize for guessing what mine is…

Through a (stout) glass, darkly.

July 13, 2009

Jenny again I’m afraid.

Perhaps the only benefit, ceruminiferous and arachibutyrophobic reader, of holding the keys to Olly’s blog is that one can bag him out in public to the few sad souls who might consider themselves his friends.

Not that there is anything particularly satisfying about bagging him – finding fault with Olly is just about as challenging as the point blank harpooning of a beached whale. And a fair bit has been done already by the readerdinghy (Ah– do you remember when dear Olly started that one going?). Yes, much has been proposed by the reader Poohstick (Oh, it still makes me laugh): Some say that Olly has deserted us to wander the streets of Stirling looking in craft shops, that Olly is making warm soup and sitting by the fire holding hands with his lady friend, that Olly is planting beans against the coming season and weaving dream catchers to hang in the window of his love nest, or even that Olly has been busy removing the nutrients from the lunches of his friends. All of these are true, and sadly these activities leave Olly no time to post.

But what are we to do? Olly will not declare himself dead. From time to time his ghostly presence is felt in the form of a comment by Bobby H, or Olly will take an occasional break from his thriving legal practice to put about rumours that he is working on another post; a post mind, that he has been shaping lovingly for seven months – SEVEN MONTHS.

And so we go on; returning to the blog as to an old vice, greedy for any fleeting pleasure we might find there, but too aware that we will leave soon enough, disappointed again that we have not seen the hand of Olly.

Well, the violinists played on as the bogey sank:

Q: After “My Mother the Car” which are the next best TV theme song lyrics?

Looking at the Stars

June 2, 2009

Jenny Agutter here, and about bloody time I hear you say.

Well, the Norsca bimbo has shot back into space, and I for one am not sorry to see her go.

I don’t know what was worse; her faux poor English (you knew she moved to the States at age three, right?) or her pseudo gender-confused soft porn romps in the shower with Angela Cartwright. Give me strength!

I mean, my early work in Railway Children had enough trains rushing through tunnels and young girls out of breath for anyone. And if not, well I totally buffed up for Walkabout (see above). Peeling off the school uniform (yes, school uniform for Christ’s sake), my bush in the bush, the waterhole scene; what more could anyone want? (YouTube it boys, and take a hanky) But Hey – that was ART, right Mr Roeg?

Then Logan’s Run – need I say more?

OK so, Olly’s gone and does not like coming back any time soon. Last posted five months ago. Get over it.

My topic for the readership? Simple:-

Best boobs on telly. Whose, and when?

Ashes to Ashes

April 3, 2009

Hi Hi Hi! Yes, I am Marta and I am from Norway.

No calling me the Judy please – that was an actor and a long time ago. As you can see my English is sometimes causing me trouble. On the L.I.S. we had a speaking coach and my English is very good, but now I am happy that I am just Marta so no questions please. And no questions like “How big was Major Don West’s johnson?” because I will not answer. (Q: How big? A: very small.)

So sitting on Olly Santa’s knee for a long time he is always, “Hey Marta – can you feel that? I’ve got a dick like a baby’s forearm.” And I say, “Yes Olly – just like the baby’s forearm; it is perfectly formed and it is tiny.” And he says “fuck off.” And then I say, “Oh yes, now I feel it. I am the princess with the pea, no?” And he says “fuck off.” and we laugh ha ha. He is a funny man. But really I am very happy that he has gone – to where? Well, I don’t know. On L.I.S. we used to say he’s frotting the Gloop when sometimes Mark and Billy would have a funny look and go to the trailer together. Maybe Olly is doing the same? But they were the happy times. Many times in the shower I would touch Angela but that was just because she missed her family a long way away.

So – to make the post for Olly I need the funny word. Here is the word. I am thinking of this verb that you use the verb – to dust? What does it mean? You dust your houses, but you also have the crop dusters for your fields. So this is very difficult for me. Does it mean putting the dust off or taking the dust on?

1: You dust the cake with icing sugar (put dust on).
2: You dust the furniture (put dust off)

You see this? Perhaps some times in English the word has two meanings, but these are the opposite! So what is it? I hope you will help me please.

Takk!

Send ‘em In

July 1, 2008

I saw a delightful article about clowns the other day.  I have always been fascinated by their long traditions and was charmed to learn that one of these is that no two clowns wear the same makeup. 

 

It seems that at the start of his (or her) career, each clown designs a look that he (or she) thinks will do them for the rest of his (or her) life.  They then paint it on an egg and send it to a registry which keeps them for comparison purposes.

 

I call that a lovely tradition.  Of course, I don’t know how they police the “one clown one face” rule.  For example, say that a performer who generally appears as “Bezzo” is getting ready for his evening’s work when he finds that the last stub of lip black has fallen into his jug of industrial strength sherry, dissolving it immediately.

 

He panics. His nerveless fingers grope for the stick of red which he usually uses to put a couple of fairly subtle accents over his eyes.  There is just enough red to give him a frowny mouth and, being a whiteface clown, cover his ears. 

 

“That’ll have to do.” he thinks.

 

What he doesn’t know is that he is infringing the ancient rights of Zarlo the Magnificent who retired a century and a half ago.

 

Worse, there is a member of the Clown Police in the audience that night. 

 

What happens from there?  Bezzo will be backstage with his makeup off, mingling with his comrades before the Clown Police could ever get there. Without his makeup on, how will they know who he is?  It would be a case of the miscreant being undetectable unless he is wearing his disguise.  How ironic or something.

 

My other concern about the registry is what if you make a mistake of some sort with your original egg?  If you send the wrong one in by accident, are you doomed to play out your career as Corkorico in just a plain white face with the words “South Australian Egg Board” printed in a circle of purple letters on your cheek? 

 

I don’t suppose it matters all that much really.  Clowning is not for the fainthearted.  I remember seeing a childrens’ series made here in Australia about a young boy who yearned to be a clown.  In an incredible twist, the French bloke who peeled the spuds at the local fish and chip shop, the one with the terrible limp, was a former clown who had trained in the a great European academy.  It seems that he had injured his leg in some sort of dangerous stunt that he pulled in the course of saving a golden haired child from falling into the lion’s cage or something.

 

Anyway, the young boy (who, just between us was a rather melancholy lad) trained hard and eventually mastered such hilarious skills as juggling and wearing a wig. 

 

I think he got into a grand European clown school and there were similarly happy endings for most of the other characters.  What was noticeable however was the almost complete lack of any sort of laughs in the clowning itself.   There was plenty of prancing around with an umbrella and some juggling, but nothing actually funny.

 

It makes me think of other portrayals of the clown in popular culture.  There was “Circus Boy” who seemed to get about on an elephant and lived in the circus.  The clowns with whom he interacted seemed to downplay the long term alcoholism and concentrate more on a sort of avuncular wisdom.  Of course, if they were so wise, one was driven to ask oneself, what were they doing prancing around in a fright wig and heavy makeup in order to put a little bread on the table?

 

I suppose I am drawn more to the maudlin and tedious clownish stylings of the late, great Jerry Lewis.

 

Allow me to indulge myself.  In “3 Ring Circus” or something, Jerry (along with Dean Martin) is working in a circus, mainly manning those sideshows with maximum hilarious potential for going messily wrong.  Jerry falls foul of the traditional drunken, angry clown Puffo who is, for some reason, sacked.  On that basis Jerry steps in as “Jericho” the clown and is an instant hit.

 

The poignant height of his career is when, performing for a group of handicapped children, Jericho realises that his antics have failed to touch one little girl (conveniently seated in the front row).  He goes over to her and speaks to her in what I think is a breach of one of the fundamental rules of clowing.  He says something along the lines of

“Come on honey.  I know you don’t think I’m funny, but won’t you laugh for me?”

 

Now I have seen lame begging for laughs at many levels of comedy but that must be the worst.  When it predictably fails, Jericho starts to weep, which strikes the child as the funniest thing she has seen in a ‘coon’s age and she laughs up a storm.

 

I mean to say.  Funny or maudlin?  I leave the decision to you.  Actually, no I don’t.  It is maudlin and appalling.

 

I now turn to “Patch Adams” by Robin Williams.  I may have told this story before and if so I bet the readerscow to show the forbearance for which it is justly famed. 

 

I was once flying from Adelaide to Perth (I think it was, anyway, one of the domestic flights that is long enough to show a film).  I saw that the film was “Patch Adams” and so folded my headset up and was about to put it away, when the fellow next to me asked if I had already seen the film.  I told him I had not.  He said that he guaranteed a lot of laughs and strongly recommended that I watch it.

 

On that basis I took my headphones out again and sat through the film.  It wasn’t to my taste but whenever I took a surreptitious sideways glance my companion was looking at me eagerly and smiling.  The film finally ended and I took off the headphones.

 

“Well, what did you think?” he asked.

 

“I would have to say I didn’t think it was particularly good” I said, a trifle embarrassed.

 

“Nah, it was shithouse, wasn’t it?” he said.  “Still, I thought that if I had to watch it on the way over, there is no reason you shouldn’t on the way back.”

 

So there you go.  Laughs aplenty, but all for him.

 

The reason that this is relevant is that the title character is a doctor whose heart belongs to clowning and who combines his medical skills with his weakness for purple hair and outlandish makeup.

 

Terrible and maudlin. Again.

 

The strange connexion that I seek to make here is that tedious, maudlin clown lover Lewis had planned to make a movie called “The Day the Clown Cried”.  It covered the unlikely sounding story of a fellow who tried to cheer up the final few moments of the children in a concentration camp by doing clown stuff for them (I shudder to think what).

 

I think that the film was started but never completed.  I don’t know why, but I am sure my old travelling companion would have been able to come up with a reason.

 

In a stunning twist, maudlin, tedious clown lover Robin Williams tried to do a remake of this dire sounding film a few years ago.

 

Why?  Why oh why?

 

Even when they are trying to be funny they are not and most sensible children find them menacing and frightening.  Can’t clowns just be banned?  Do I have to do this myself?