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View Article  Bull by the Horns
I awoke feeling rather disgusted with myself.  Still gripped in the fist of the glooms that have plagued me these last few days, but now at least able to view the thing more objectively, and wishing to be free of it, rather than wanting only to wallow.

So, how to avoid this association between spring and feelings of loss becoming a proper neurosis to add to my collection?  How better than to dive in headfirst, and go for a walk; taking the widely-held view that exercise is supposed to be a good remedy for depression.
So, section thirteen of the Capital Ring (I'd walked section twelve a few weeks previously), between Stoke Newington and Hackney Wick.

A glorious day, full of all the things I was afraid of, all the smells and sounds, warm spring sunshine, solitude in the open air.

I won't deny, there were difficult moments. Several times I found myself longing to be able to share the experience of this beautiful day, with some nebulous significant other, but every time that familiar feeling of "if only" welled up, the regular tramp of my feet on the hard towpath seemed to knock it away.

Overshot the end of the section in the end, and carried on to Old Ford Lock, then down the Greenway (actually part of section fourteen), and then into Stratford for the train home.

Good.  Good.
View Article  I probably shouldn't have gone out
It smells of spring outside.  The smell of new beginnings, of youth, of hope.  That used to be one of my favourite smells, and this, my favourite time of year.  It evokes every hope I ever had for myself when I was younger, every happier, carefree day, every smile.

The smell of new beginnings, of youth, of hope.  The smell of everything I seem to have lost.
View Article  Darkly
I have cultivated a dead-end. A beautiful, wonderful, marvellous dead-end, but a dead-end nonetheless.

I left the main path a long time ago. It runs parallel to this, closely enough that I can glimpse it through the trees, but crossing to it would be at such a great cost that I doubt I'll ever attempt it.  Yet there it lies, and here I stand, thwarted. In glory, but thwarted.
I knew it as I chose this route. Knew it, yet drove on, regardless.

Stay, burning in the light I can never share?
Forsake the light, go back, and rejoin the path?
Plunge into the undergrowth?
Hope?
View Article  Laban and the loss of social grace
Physical interactions with strangers. The pseudo-Brownian motion of people moving about in groups.

Those of us who are people-watchers, will, of course, be familiar with the many and various different ways that people move around. Those with a bit of acting knowledge may well have spotted many, if not all, of the Laban Efforts among the milling populace - few of us can have shopped in a modern supermarket, for instance, without having encountered a "float" (light, sustained, indirect) or a "wring" (heavy, sustained, indirect), blocking an aisle or two with their trolley, while they ponder the wonders arrayed before them on the shelves.

However, it's when people approach each other closely enough to interact, that things become a little odd. 
For instance, let us suppose that:

Person A bumps into person B (either a direct barge, as with, say a "punch" or "press" in pursuit of their chosen path, or through un-coordinated blundering, as with a "float" or "wring").

There seem, these days, to be two possible reactions:

1) Person A doesn't react at all, but continues, quite unaware of any social infringement.  Most of us, I think, would describe this as simply, "rudeness".

2) Person A emits an almost automatic "sorry", usually in apparent surprise that there should be any other people in the space at all, let alone nearby.

What concerns me, is that, for a whole generation now, reaction (2) is starting to be seen as "politeness".  Whereas once, that term might have been applied to such acts as, "letting other people pass" (and thanking those that do so), or indeed, "avoiding bumping into people in the first place."
An apology is, I daresay, better than nothing, but we do seem to be becoming a society of apologisers. I remember hearing Peter Ustinov speak about visiting an airport, and how he found himself walking across a vast, empty concourse, which contained only one other soul, who, amid the acres of emptiness, proceeded to bump straight into him, with a surprised, "oh I'm sorry."

Once, people were brought up to look where they were going. Once, people were encouraged to consider their words and deeds before taking any action.

Now, it seems, our peripheral vision, both actual and metaphorical, has become so limited, so self-focussed, that consideration for others has become encapsulated in a single word, no longer meant, no longer capable of possessing any meaning.

I've meandered around the point here rather, I'm afraid, being the "float" that I all too often am. If this has caused annoyance, then er... sorry.
View Article  Never can
Why hello!  How lovely to hear from you!
Can't remember the last time we had such weather, no, but
I expect it'll clear up soon.  How are you?  Yes I'm fine thanks, same as
Ever, you know!  What have you been up to since we last spoke? Anything you can
Tell me about?  Haha, well quite - did
Anyone ever tell you that you have an evil streak?  Haha, noooo, I don't know
What you mean!  Now then, we should get together again for
A drink shouldn't we? Oh, just a couple of pints - don't want to repeat the
Horrible experience of that hangover from last
Time! What? Oh yes we did, didn't we - I'd forgotten we did that!  Haha, well...
I'm off, I think: Great to hear your voice, as always, glad to hear you're
Having fun, see you soon I hope?
View Article  By any other name.
I would like to indulge myself in a small rant, about a particular bête noir of mine, namely, that most ubiquitous of marketing tools,

"Rebranding"

It's always been with us, of course, but lately there seems to have been something of a flurry, a near stampede to rename almost everything in sight.

Digital TV channels, have hardly been with us for the batting of an eyelid, and yet some are already on their third or fourth name.  I see that what is currently known as "UKTV History" is shortly to be called "Yesterday".  Have people learned nothing from the "One Railway" fiasco?
"Did you see the Antiques Roadshow on Yesterday on Tuesday?"  etc.

An example of more direct influence to me: I'm an archer, and archery clubs in this country are affiliated to a body called "The Grand National Archery Society", formed in the early 19th Century, and supporting member clubs dating back at least another century before that.  It's shortly to be rebranded as "Archery GB".  Why?  What actual purpose will that serve, beyond providing cars and holidays for a handful of marketing consultants?

And there, I suppose we come to the crux of my prejudice, for I freely admit it to be so:  I detest marketing people.

It offends me that there is a trade that is plied entirely by people who actually believe that passengers (sorry, "customers") care more about what their railway company is called, than how often the trains are on time.  People who feel that "Department of Justice" is somehow going to inspire the public into a greater trust and belief in the rule of law, than it had when it was merely part of the Home Office.  People who believe that "new" is automatically better, and that anything that's been around more than five minutes must automatically no longer be "relevant to today's society".

People who, God help us, are telling us that Norwich Union "has always wanted to be" Aviva.

"When you’ve been in marketing as long as I have, you'll know that before any new product can be developed it has to be properly researched. We’ve got to find out what people want from fire, how they relate to it, what sort of image it has for them."
The crowd were tense. They were expecting something wonderful from Ford.
"Stick it up your nose," he said.
"Which is precisely the sort of thing we need to know," insisted the girl, "Do people want fire that can be fitted nasally?"
View Article  At the dawn of the 50th Year
Yesterday was a good day.

It began with, wonder of wonders, my boiler springing to life after its partial electrical drowning by a heating engineer the night before.  I have proper hot water for the first time in months.

It continued with the discovery of a veritable torrent of kind messages on Facebook, that took me quite a while to reply to - I'm an inveterate replier to things - find it hard not to - not helped by the fact that messages continued to arrive as I was replying to earlier ones.  Lovely, put me in a good mood right from the outset.
There were messages from people I know well, and from friends who I barely speak to, either in person or online.  Messages from people I've always had a bit of a soft spot for, others from friends-of-friends.  Rather touching.

Then off to an audition.  Which went well.  An audition panel with an understanding of actors, and how to get the best from people.  The impression, genuine or polite, that they liked what I was doing with the character. Warm feeling.

Quick trip to Victoria to collect a friend's spare keys so I can look in on their cat briefly on Saturday morning.  Smiles.

Slow wander down through Plimlico to the river, taking the long way round, along the Thames Path, to Waterloo, stand for a while watching the cold brown water churn away below me, surrounded by a small contingent of street performers freezing their silver-painted nuts off in the bitter weather.

Beer, food and conversation in the very best of company.  The friendly surroundings of the Maple Leaf in Maiden Lane; the aromatic joy of a tea-merchant;  falafel, couscous and lamb in the cosy candlelit "Souk" near Seven Dials; more beer, additional good company, in the Yard.  Slightly saddened by finding it a pale shadow of its former self - a victim, as it were, of the smoking ban - the courtyard, from which it derives its name, always bustling and noisy, now quiet and empty.  Happily drunk enough not to let it temper my mood.  Much good company.  Amicii flores in horto vitae sunt, as I've said elsewhere before.

Good day.  Very good day.
View Article  Chuffchuff
As a welcome change from all the gloom and navel-gazing that occurs on this blog, here's a happy post.

Astute readers may already know about the A1 Peppercorn Class 60163 "Tornado", the first main line steam locomotive built in this country since 1960 - not a preserved original (no examples of the A1 Peppercorn class exist, all having been scrapped in the late 60s) but a brand-new locomotive, built from scratch, from the original drawings, but to the standards required by a modern railway.

Today was her first trip to London, pulling the A1 Trust's "Talisman" rail tour train into Kings Cross, and, thanks to a reminder from a friend, I was there.  I'm not, by nature, much of a trainspotter, but I do have a very soft spot for steam locos, and the Tornado is such a remarkable achievement, that I found myself quite moved by the huge crowds that had turned out to greet her.




More photos on Ian's page here.
View Article  Pieces of my youth are floating away
For me, the tune that conjures my recollections of his influence on my childhood is this one
For you, it might be this or perhaps, for a different generation again, maybe this (though not with those pictures!).

Goodbye, Tony.

Glad to note that Pat Keysell, who co-hosted "Vision On" with him, is still alive, and apparently happily retired in Italy.
View Article  The youth of today
I'm not, as I regularly annoy those around me by saying, much of a fan of children.  Much respect owed to those who do have the patience and stamina to raise them, and raise them well (and much internal shouting at those who raise them to be bastards, naturally).

But there are moments.  Such as today, when an audience of small tykes, unprompted and unrehearsed, began to sing the show's main theme song, "Hooray for Mr. Fox", as the opening music for Act 2 was playing.  Nobody was on stage.  None of the cast were singing.  The house lights went down, the music played, and the children sang.  They'd only heard the song once, at the top of the show.  It's not the first time, either.
We've also had children get to their feet during the finale medley, and try to copy our dance moves - tricky for the little blighters, in my case, as I'm not always certain what I'm doing, so copying must be quite a challenge... but they do it, bless 'em.

Still no interest in children of my own, and put me alone in a room with one, and I'd panic... but in large, audience-shaped groups, yes, yes, I think I can admit to liking them. 
View Article  Here we go then
Rehearsals complete, time to start inflicting this upon the children of Essex.  First performance tomorrow morning, 9.45am, and by happy coincidence, our first audience is my old primary school.

We've managed a few full runs of the thing in the last day or so, including two full dress runs today.  Really beginning to enjoy it now (will enjoy it even more when I finally get those last few dance steps to be second nature, so I don't furkle them up!)  Good reactions from all those who saw it - although Millie, the daughter of our choreographer, after watching it through once, wanted to see it again, "but without the farmers" - it seems we scared her, and made her cry.  Hope that's not too universal a reaction!

Forty-odd shows to do. Daunting, but also a great feeling, having that run of performances stretching out in ahead of us.  Well aware that I may not feel quite that positive at all points during the run...!

It's going to be a fun show to do - and, I think, a fun show to watch.  I should plug it I daresay, so er...  here's the necessary information.  Let me know if you come along, so I can come and share a drinkie or two in the theatre bar afterwards!
View Article  Obligatory Midpoint Paranoias and Expressions of Enjoyment
Funny how there's always a point about halfway through rehearsals, usually the first weekend, when the traditional self-doubt asserts itself.  When I'm being swept along in the rolling enthusiasm of rehearsals, in that wonderful supportive, convivial atmosphere, without much chance to take a breath, then it's fine.  But time off provides too much opportunity to think.  Will I ever actually get that harmony right? Is my voice going to be the one that sticks out like a sore thumb? Am I over-acting appallingly? Or worse, am I not doing enough? Am I the weakest link?

Of course, this is healthy:  It's just such fears that make me work to make sure these things don't happen... but it's a bit of a bugger all the same.

Ah, but it's such fun though.  Really, really nice bunch of people I'm working with, and (appropriately) a fantastic atmosphere.  No prima donnas - at least not so far - nobody who's awkward or difficult to work with - and everybody seems to like everybody else.  Amazing.
There. That's the kiss of death suitably placed on that then!  Doubt it though - everybody really does get on, which is very refreshing.

I am, of course, around twice the age of most of the rest of the cast.  Doesn't feel like it though - except in my knees!
View Article  Symbiosis
I remember sitting at my old house, empty bottle on the hearth, my head propped on my hand, elbow on the arm of the sofa.  Watching nothing.  Despair in control of my every thought.  Catching, out of the corner of my eye, the artery in my wrist gently pulsing away in soft, peripheral-vision focus. So many nights, year in, year out.

There seemed to be nothing whatever for me then, no future of any kind.  Surrounded by the detritus of my life, permanently installed into that one seat as though I'd been surgically grafted to it.

I've come a long, long way since then.  My life has changed for the better in more ways than I can count.
And yet the despair, and the reasons for it, remain.  So long it's been my companion, it has almost become my identity, in and of itself, defining me.  In the (increasingly unlikely) event that the original cause should ever be resolved, I've a nasty feeling the despair will remain anyway, as much a part of me as I was of that old sofa.
View Article  Buzzing
Sometimes, like, I imagine, most people just starting in this business, I find myself very despondent and begin to question whether this is really the right path for me.

Evenings like yesterday do much to restore my sense of direction.  I went to see Humble Boy at the Artsdepot in Finchley.

Two things marked this out as a bloody good evening:

1) It's really really good.  A lovely, charming, surprising play, which I previously knew nothing about at all, beautifully produced and acted.  Especially nice to see a good friend in the lead role, and bringing it off with great aplomb.  Thoroughly enjoyable evening's theatre - heartily recommended - go and see it.

2) Met the aforementioned friend afterwards for a quick drink.  We'd spent quite a bit of the summer working together on the Edinburgh Fringe show, and there was a fantastic bond built up between all of us in the cast and crew - and meeting up briefly again yesterday rekindled that.  There's a kind of joy involved in meeting up with people you've had that "shared experience" with, something I've never encountered in any of the other assorted jobs I've done over the years.  This is, indeed, what I should be doing with my life.
View Article  On balance

Should I go? (or try to - there are two kinds, they say)
It seems like sense, to end the unendurable,
But such "ending" is illusory -
I'd simply gift-wrap my grief, and give it, whole,
To those I love.
So I'll stay.
View Article  This and that.
I am not, by nature, a masochist.  I don't intentionally court pain or distress.  Yet I habitually throw myself into situations which, though enjoyable in their own right, come at a high price - they're followed by long periods of self-obsessed gloom.  What's more, I engage in these things knowing full well what the outcome is likely to be.
The alternative, of course, is probably worse.  Disengagement from anything remotely stimulating. Cocooning myself, hands-on-ears, lalalalalala.

Funny old thing, life.
View Article  Some bits of pocket fluff
Idly browsing on Wikipedia, I found myself with an old favourite poem, John Donne's Meditation XVII, replete with delicious quotations and phrases. Skipped from there to Valediction: Forbidding Mourning with its rather, ahem, specific compasses metaphor.  Smiled, and browsed on.  A scant twenty minutes later, a link on another site altogether mentioned that Stephen Fry had a morning slot about language on Radio 4, and posted a listen again link.  I duly listened.  It was about metaphor.  Not really all that special as a programme, so I got on with other things.  While making a cup of tea, drifting from the living room I heard Mr. Fry's silken voice intoning,
If they be two, they are two so
As stiff twin compasses are two;
Thy soul, the fix'd foot, makes no show
To move, but doth, if th' other do.

And though it in the centre sit,
Yet, when the other far doth roam,
It leans, and hearkens after it,
And grows erect, as that comes home.

Don't know where I'd be without such happy synchronicities.

I've been having quite vivid dreams lately, and remembering them quite clearly, due, I've no doubt, to sleeping with the window open at this time of year, and the streets of Romford being extra-specially noisy.  An interrupted sleep tends to be a dream-rich sleep, after all.
Last night was no exception. The subject matter however, mystified me.  Regular readers will know I have a tendency to emotional victimhood, bewailing ad nauseam my solitude and inability to acquire any sort of love life.  For a host of reasons, that's been my prevailing mood over the last few weeks, and in particular this long weekend; last night producing a sort of decision, if no actual solutions.  I went to bed with a mind more than usually full of wild and emotional thought, fully expecting some powerful dreams. I was not disappointed, but I did not dream of love, nor of its lack.
Instead I had two quite distinct and separate dreams, each in their own way dealing with creativity, and its abuse by those who know the price of everything and the value of nothing.  A thing about which I have strong feelings, certainly, but not something that's been much on my mind recently, so goodness knows where it came from.
View Article  What a shame
How wonderful to find that Keeper of Traken has a commentary by Anthony Ainley, recorded just before his sad demise a few years ago.

How sad that Johnny Byrne, Matthew Waterhouse and Sarah Sutton, are so busy talking about their own participation, that Anthony barely gets two words in.  Would have loved to hear a commentary with Tom and Anthony, but sadly it was never to be.
View Article  It's all about me
So what is it? Hmm?  What is it about me?  It's clearly something major, but something so fundamental, that I can't see it myself.

What is it about me, that every person, every single person, I've ever felt a genuine attraction to, has plonked me firmly in "not boyfriend material" box?  Always, I've been the friend, never the lover.  I freely admit I'm hardly an Adonis, but people do, occasionally, tell me they find me attractive.  Which is lovely, but they're never, ever, people that I find attractive. 
Am I, as I've sometimes feared, simply terminally dull?  Do I subconsciously twist the heads off chickens while I talk?  Do I have, unbeknownst to me, the shifty, drooling look of the vaudeville lech? What?

In eighteen months time, I shall be fifty.  Am I really to reach that landmark having never once shared a moment of intimacy with anybody I cared about?
View Article  A tiny inspiration
While I was in Edinburgh, I had a kind of half-dream, which I remembered only dimly at the time, and don't remember at all now.
When I awoke from it, though the dream itself faded, it set me off musing, as I dozed and drifted towards full consciousness. I found I was imagining a possible scene for an as-yet-unwritten play.  Just the scene though - no story, no context, not even anything like a character. It seemed a nice scene though.
In due course I got up, and promptly forgot all about it.

Just came back to me, over a week later, so I wrote it down - purely as stage directions, no dialogue (since there was none in the scene I imagined).  I picked a character name out of the air, just to have a handle for the person whose actions I was describing - it could always be changed later.

Then I saved it, and, in naming the file, suddenly found that, entirely by accident, by randomly naming the character, I had also given the play a title, and what's more, a suggestion of a plot.

Rather chuffed.  I've no idea if I'll ever add any more to it, but it's genuinely the first time I've had a proper idea for a play that didn't immediately make me cringe.  Intriguing experience.
View Article  Auld Reekie
So.  Been here in Edinburgh for a few days now - we came up on the 23rd by train - Virgin's West Coast Route, as luck would have it, on the day when the East Coast Route was virtually dead, due to a derailment. Very easy journey as it turned out.
We're staying in a really lovely apartment in Coates Place, just five minutes from Haymarket station. The place is simply enormous - there are nine of us staying here, most of us in moderate comfort (one person on an airbed).  It's all high ceilings and deep plaster mouldings, offset with very very modern fittings and appliances. I get the impression we're among the first people to stay here since a major refurbishment and redecoration:  There's still a smell of paint in the air, and everything's remarkably clean.  The living room is big enough for a full-sized rehearsal space, while still allowing the director and stage manager to recline on a comfy leather sofa whilst watching us.

I've always loved Edinburgh, though my visits have been few and sporadic, and I can see already, after only three days, that I'm going to be leaving the place even more in love with it. Just the most wonderful atmosphere - and the festival itself is still nearly a week away!
View Article  A space where ..something.. used to be
I've lost something.  In the last few days.  Something intangible.  I don't even know for certain what it is, but it's gone.
I'm not who I was at the beginning of the week.

Very well, yes I do have an idea what it might be, but that's based entirely on a neurosis.  Time will tell, one way or the other.
And if it's not that, what then?  If the neurosis proves false, as neuroses should, will this sensation of something missing vanish too?
View Article  Anthem for Lost Love and Innocence
By a happy accident, I was reminded recently of Jeff Wayne's iconic War of the Worlds album, and realised with some amusement that it had probably been something like twenty years since I'd heard it in its entirety.  So I bought it, and refreshed my memory.  Wonderful - I was back in the workshop at the Queen's in 1980, building scenery.  A nostalgic sniffle, as is my wont.  Lovely.

Then I tried to remember some of the other music we used to play at the time, while putting together the set for The Last Enemy...  Oh yes, that's right, there was a copy of Best of Vangelis - so I grabbed a copy of that from the iTunes store...  and got a shock.

"To The Unknown Man"
I don't think I've ever played a piece of music that's proved quite so evocative of such a specific moment in my life.  I was transported back 28 years, probably the last time I heard it. I could smell the size boiling in its bucket, the sawdust, the latex glue, the disinfectant in the loo.  I could taste the lunchtime sandwich from the Queen's café bar.
I was just 20. I was inhabiting a whole new wonderful world I'd never imagined I could be a part of. I had friends, I had purpose.
I was in love. I had my whole life before me in all its glittering possibilities.

All those wonderful, naive, hopeful, wide-eyed possibilities.  Such a long time ago. So thoroughly forgotten.

I carry some fairly bulky baggage.  No surprise, that, everybody does; but I had no idea I was still carrying anything so old, so utterly unresolved, still so raw after all this time.  I'd just put it all away in a drawer in some dusty room in my head, and simply stopped going there.  Today, all unsuspecting, I peeked inside, and quite literally collapsed under the flood of old emotions that came pouring out.  I thought, in my foolishness, that I'd dealt with all that - I could comfortably talk about it, examine what I thought I felt about those years, convince myself that my cynicism was all that was left of such thoughts.  Confronted unexpectedly with a glimpse of the actual feelings and experiences of the time however, it's clear quite what monstrous arrogance that attitude was.

Cathartic, I guess.  I'll keep it on loop until the shaking stops.
View Article  Grumble grumble whinge
So, I'm currently in rehearsals for Tapestry of Fear, at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, 2nd-9th August (previews 31st & 1st) at Underbelly's Baby Belly 2.
Ok, that's the plug done with.

Hooray, of course. Work is always good, it's a fun play, a great cast, it's all going to be a fantastic experience, and it effectively translates into a three week working holiday in lovely Edinburgh, a good part of it during the Fringe.

But Lachesis always had a nasty sense of humour.  In the months between Counterfeit Skin and my being cast for Tapestry of Fear, there seemed to be a major paucity of jobs about that I could realistically apply for.  Yes, "apply for everything" of course, but I don't think even my towering characterization skills quite run to convincing portrayals of teenagers, nor would it be a terribly sensible thing to put myself up for the part of a Bangladeshi grandmother.  And so on.

The moment I was cast, however, the floodgates opened, and the casting sites and publications seemed filled with parts for slightly overweight, middle-aged bald men.  Many were even offering attractive, realistic pay.  Woo.  And every one of these parts has been either auditioning or performing or filming during the exact weeks that I'll be in Edinburgh.  Every single one.
It's always going to be like that of course, and it does make me laugh rather than cry, but it really is quite impressive!
View Article  Big Things don't happen
Really, they don't happen, Big Things, no matter how much we want them to.

For example, there's the Big Thing that I've been hoping for ever since The Great Hormone Revolution of 1972. That's never happened. Came close-ish a few times, perhaps, and maybe even very close once, I like to tell myself, but it's remained stubbornly elusive. The effects of long-term hope are of course deeply damaging, and easily spotted by even the most casual observer.

So I should take that as a cautionary tale, and learn from it. There's stuff in my life now that contains vague, tantalising possibilities of Big Things. I must not fixate on those possibilities, must not hope too hard. Dream, by all means, but I mustn't rely on the Big Things coming - concentrate on the here and now, enjoy the things that come my way, and expect nothing.   Otherwise my finances are likely to end up as distressed as the emotional bankruptcy caused by the Other Big Thing.
View Article  Fool.
Why do I do that?  Why is it that, when somebody I work with compliments me on what I'm doing, my first, automatic, almost unthinking reaction, is to inwardly assume that they're being sarcastic?  I behave as I should, of course: I smile, I thank them, I do the modesty thing, but all the time I'm thinking, "are they actually taking the piss? Is this their way of telling me I'm rubbish?" 
Why can't I, instead, allow myself to take their words at face value?

It used to happen when I worked behind a desk, and it still happens now that I'm pursuing my new path.  Of course, there have been jobs I've done in the past, that I genuinely was rubbish at. I knew it, my employers knew it.  Maybe that's where it springs from...  although generally in those jobs, the folks in charge left me in little doubt as to my lack of ability!

View Article  Part of who I am, really.
A few years back, while I was still living in the house of filth, I stumbled across a series (or rather a "miniseries", as such things are called across the Atlantic, for all that its twelve solid episodes) called "From The Earth To The Moon" - made by Ron Howard and Tom Hanks, on the back of the Apollo 13 film.  At the time, I thought it very well made. And promptly forgot about it. Spotted the DVD set on Amazon recently, and bought it.

Granted it's a bit "gung-ho America saving the world from communism" in places, but curiously I've found it rather beautiful. I remember well the last years of the 1960s, and the attention we, as awestruck kids, paid to the Apollo program. For us, of course, it wasn't Walter Cronkite and Jules Bergman, but Patrick Moore and James Burke, but the excitement, the tension, the wonder, the wonder, are the same. What's more, the series puts a far more human face on to the clean-cut American jocks that rode the biggest firework the world has ever seen. With only a moderate amount of starstripey cliché and mawkishness, too, which is impressive.

Thus far, I've only reached Apollo 9, first Earth-orbit rendezvous with the LEM, and the first two-man spacewalk. I find myself feeling odd sadness for people like Rusty Sweickhart, who never flew in space again (his own words in the episode suggesting it was his bout of space-sickness that would ground him).  And I find myself very aware of those people who maintain that the moon landings were faked...  and, in a most peculiar (and vaguely inappropriate) way, I want to say, "of course man landed on the moon - I was there".  Well.  I was there watching the telly, anyway.  They went.  Of course they went. Of course they went.  I watched them do it.  It was the defining moment of my generation.

I remember, as I'm sure millions of others do also, my father taking me outside, around 9pm on the night of 20th July 1969, and standing there with me in silence, gazing up at the moon. Still gives me a most extraordinary thrill up my spine to think of it.  To have been alive at the point in time when mankind first stepped on to another heavenly body, and to have watched it happen. To have lived in times of wonder and glory.

"Homo sapiens. What an inventive, invincible species. It's only a few million years since they crawled up out of the mud and learned to walk. Puny, defenseless bipeds. They've survived flood, famine, and plague. ...  And now, here they are, out among the stars"

Yes, I'm a corny, sentimental old sod. Yes.
View Article  So long, and thanks for all the nectar...
Davros:   Rather nicely done, I thought, yes.
Unexpected regeneration cliffhanger:  Yes indeed, liked that very much.
Torchwood, Martha (who's forgotten how to act again), Sarah Jane (yay):  Yes, ok, I'll buy that, made me smile.
Stolen planets in perfect balance (one of them Callufrax Minorr, a nice touch): Nod to the past, reasonably subtly done, yes.
but
Harriet Jones, former prime minister: A weak joke the first time, weaker still now, worse with the Dalek providing the punchline.
Harriet Jones, technical genius behind the subnet?  What? WHAT?
The Dalek "message" being just "Exterminate" over and over...  really, Russell, you can do better.

View Article  As sure as the sun comes up...
Here we go.  A week into rehearsals and, in traditional fashion, I've hit my usual paranoia, doubting myself, certain I've tried the patience of my fellow cast members, and so on and so forth.  The regularity with which this always afflicts me would be quite funny, if it wasn't so annoying and debilitating.

What is it about the human psyche, that makes it so much easier to latch on to your own solitary low self-opinion, than all the nice things other people have ever said about you?
View Article  Panorama
Screen. Green pencil sharpener, tupperware box, old phone. Diary. Journal.
Keyboard
Edge of desk.
Me.
Chair.

Bookcase, side-desk.
Paints, evidence of lack of artistic ability (relief, actually). Newspaper, desk light, wigblock, phone.
Laptop.
Me.
Chair.

Scanner, router, wifithingy.
Printer.
Turntable.
Pot of paperclips, broken camera.
Mug, highlighters.
Mouse, keyboard.
Edge of desk.
Me.
Chair.

Nothing.
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