Authors: Alan Taylor
In the event the post turned out to be sub-editor, not deputy editor, and apprentice sub-editor at that, the lowest of the low. In keeping with my imagined status â but not my actual salary â I had booked myself in at the Central Hotel, Glasgow's grandest, which was only a stone's throw from the
Herald
office in Buchanan Street, where I presented myself at the appointed time, 6.00 p.m. on Monday. Finding the main door on Buchanan Street shut I went round to the back of the building, where there was a squalid entrance guarded by a very surly porter sitting behind a glass panel. âI am the new deputy editor, could you please show me to my office,' I said politely, only to receive a response which, although incomprehensible, so thick was the accent, did not sound in the least friendly or welcoming, let alone respectful. When eventually I found the sub-editor's room the full extent of my misunderstanding was immediately apparent. My job, as was swiftly made clear, was to make the tea for the other sub-editors. After about three months
of doing nothing much more than this, I was put in charge of sub-editing the
Radio Times
, which meant marking up the hours of the programme for the printer; the livestock prices and then, after about six months, the most humdrum news stories â fires, burglaries and so on. At first I thought there must be some mistake and that at any moment Sir William Robieson would summon me to higher things. But months and then two years went by and the summons never came. The great man would occasionally wish me a good morning, but that was all. Of writing opportunities there were none; not even really of rewriting since none of the big stories ever came my way or not until the very end of two years. What I did not know at the time, and only learned later, was that I was a guinea-pig being used in an experiment.
THE QUEST FOR WOODBINES, 1948
Mary Rose Liverani
Mary Rose Liverani grew up in Govan in the 1950s in a large but poor family which â in the days when the Clyde was as red as a field of poppies â was politically vocal and active. They emigrated to Australia when she was thirteen. âAs a kid I found everything really exciting,' she said. âPeople used to crowd into our house, everybody was talking politics and my sister and I used to sit under the table and listen.' Her book
, The Winter Sparrows
(1976), is her fond remembrance of times past, not the least of which was her mother's constant demand for Wills's Woodbine cigarettes, nicknamed âGaspers' because smokers new to the habit found them difficult to inhale
.
I longed for a country where there were no pawnshops and where tobacco companies were doomed to grind out forever and a day nothing but Wills's Woodbines. Turkish Pasha were the only cigarettes freely available in the post-war cigarette market in Scotland. My mother loathed them and refused to smoke them.
âWoodbines, I must have my Woodbines,' she would tell me, counting out the coppers into my reluctant grip. âGo and get Woodbines and don't come back without them.'
âBut where shall I find them?' I would wail despairingly. âEverybody wants them and there aren't any around. And they don't give them to wee people any way.'
âGet out, get out,' my mother would yell at me, throwing the door open and leaping at me with her right arm raised in a violent gesture,
âget out that bloody door and look for these cigarettes. If ye come back without them I'll lay ye in your own blood.'
Wills's Woodbines were advertised on every imaginable available space in Glasgow, but the little green and gold boxes themselves were never on display. Why the firm sought to stimulate demand for its product when the supply never approached being adequate was one of the seven wonders of my world. Another was why my mother didn't adapt herself to Pashas that she could have smoked night and day in perpetual motion instead of suffering long smokeless hours for a few minutes spiced with the unique savour of Wills's fretted amber. They must be wicked, that firm, I thought, to make people long for their cigarettes and then make only a few.
And so, oscillating between recognition and impotent fury, I would set off on my near-daily odyssey through Glasgow to hunt out minuscule hoards of Woodbines from newsagents, and cafes and small corner shops through Plantation and Govan and Elder Park and sometimes over the river to Anderston. My first stop was always at the papershop of the two spinsters, the Misses Alexander, Sara and Susan. âThe cinnamon sticks', I called them, because their tall, skeletal structures were generally covered by drab brown frocks, unrelieved by buttons or belts. Never once did these women sell me the Woodbines and they never would, I knew, for they believed that I smoked them myself. Still, it was part of the ritual to ask them. Then I could add them to my list of places attempted, of dangers faced in the quest for Woodbines. As usual they smiled thinly and said in a prissy duet:
âNo Woodbines today, only Pasha and Turf.'
I hesitated. Turf was sometimes acceptable to my mother depending on how desperate or amenable she was. There was no doubt today, however, that she was in a pretty bad mood. My father had lost time again this week and there would be no overtime at the weekend to make up for it. So I nodded curtly to the two miserly women and went out. What a waste. They had all these Woodbines stashed away under the counter, I was sure of it. They didn't smoke anyway. Probably had lungs like punctured bladders and couldn't draw enough breath.
In the cafes and corner shops I wasted no time.
âGot any Woodbines?'
âNo Woodbines.'
âGot any Woodbines?'
âNone.'
âGot any Woodbines by chance?'
âBy no chance.'
Outside the newspaper shops, however, I always hung around till two or three people had gone inside and then while they were waiting or absorbing the newsagent's attention, I could quickly scan the latest editions of the comics.
âHere you, are ye wanting tae buy these comics?'
âNo, I was wondering if you had any Woodbines?'
âFine well, ye know I havenae any, you cheeky thing. You asked me yesterday. Next time I catch ye going through these comics I'll make ye pay for them.'
A small packet of Woodbines was always worth a pat on the head and other fleeting expressions of gratitude from my mother. I never took any lasting delight in these, however, for circumstances forced upon her two roles: she was the grateful princess who acclaimed the hero returning with tokens of mighty deeds but she was also the villainous king, the princess's father, who insisted on still more and more quests and combats. The endless peregrinations around the city, prompted by the need for either cigarettes or money, fell to me as the eldest because my mother was continually immobolised by pregnancies that she rushed into to avoid cancer of the breast in old age. A Catholic doctor, observing that my mother had successfully practised birth control for three years after her first two pregnancies, warned her that she might thereby bring damage upon her breasts, such as they were, and so for the next six years her womb laboured almost without rest. This relentless procreating ceased only after a Presbyterian doctor hinted at disastrous consequences for the womb, should the routine continue undisturbed. From then on, contraception became the order of the night.
HORSING AROUND,
c
. 1948
Jack House
Who but the Tollcross-born journalist Jack House (1906â91) would have as his lifelong ambition to play the hind legs of a horse in a pantomime? The Queen's Theatre was to pantomime what Lords is to cricket. Situated near Glasgow Green, the Queen's was known in an earlier incarnation as the People's Palace, where folk from the east end went to let off steam. Its performances were described as ânot for the faint-hearted'. Many scripts were written by Frank Droy, husband of the below-mentioned Doris, in broad, and bawdy, Glaswegian, which audiences lapped up. The Queen's was destroyed by fire in 1952
.
I had a great affection for the Queen's Theatre, for it was there that I achieved one of my great ambitions. I appeared as the hind legs of a horse in the pantomime. I can't for the life of me remember the name of the pantomime, but it was the one in which Doris Droy appeared as a woman carter who had taken over her husband's job during the war. Naturally, she had to have a horse with her. The horse was played by a married couple named Carr and Vonnie (Vonnie was Mrs Carr). They appeared on Scottish music-hall stages for many years, but now Vonnie is dead and Jimmy Carr has retired.
The management of the Queen's agreed that I should appear as the hind legs (Vonnie's part) for one performance only. So I went along to the Gallowgate to rehearse. You may not realise it, but pantomime horses are customarily performed by either acrobats or tap-dancers. Carr and Vonnie were tap-dancers, and the whole routine was built on tap-dancing. I am neither an acrobat nor a tap-dancer, and the routine had to be simplified extremely for me. Fortunately, when you are appearing as the hind legs of a pantomime horse, you can see the front legs through a sort of window in the soft under-belly of the horse. The theory is that whatever the front legs are doing you will do the same.
We rehearsed for a whole afternoon. I found that the front legs wore a heavy belt so that, as the hind legs, I bent over and grasped this belt. That kept us in cohesion. Mr Carr said to me: âSee that bit where we fall down on the stage? For heaven's sake don't get the body of the horse twisted. If you do, you won't be able to get up on your feet again, and I'll have to drag you off.'
I promised to do my best, but I can tell you that I felt very worried and excited as I got into the horse's costume in the wings. The entire cast of the Queen's Theatre pantomime were there to see me make my debut. Came the cue, and on we trotted. All went well. We fell down but the body wasn't twisted. We got up again and finished by carrying Doris Droy off on my back. Then we took off the top part of the costume and went on to the stage to take our bow and show that we were really men all the time.
THE CITIZENS' THEATRE, 1948
James Bridie
Based in the heart of the Gorbals, the Citizens' Theatre â the âCitz' as it is familiarly known â was established in 1945. After its initial success it
lost its way for a while. Directors came and went like football managers and audiences evaporated. This all changed in 1969 when Giles Havergal rode from Edinburgh to its rescue. Ably abetted by designer Philip Price, Havergal staged as his first production an all-male
Hamlet.
Later he was joined as director by Philip Prowse and Robert David Macdonald and the Citz's reputation burgeoned both nationally and internationally. Here playwright James Bridie (1888â1951), the pen-name of O.H. Mavor, whose original idea it was, recalls its formative years
.
After Artemus Ward's hero had languished in prison for several years, a happy thought struck him. He opened the window and got out. Starting a theatre is as easy as that.
For years and years those of us who wanted a resident theatre in Glasgow had dug tunnels with rusty screwnails, had tamed mice and taught them to carry messages, had tried to saw through iron bars with dog-biscuits, had written our biographies on our shirts with blood, had implored the immortal gods â all to little or no purpose. Then six of us suddenly sat round a table and found it was quite easy. We asked a few other people for a little money and began.