âIf you've got a problem with yourself, deal with it.' Sophie shouted that at me like a football coach who'd done a weekend counselling course. There's nothing lank about her when she's angry.
So maybe I'll go to LA for December and January. LA. As if I'm any closer to comfortable with the idea. LA and an emergency roomâhow can I be ready for that? How can I? Who knows? But the time and place to work that out is December in LA, not here and now. And if I go and I hide in my room there all my free timeâif I get free timeâNo one'll know but me. And in a couple of months, I'll be home. And maybe I'll go out of my room sometimes, and maybe it'll be good. I might meet people, do things.
Two or three shifts a week at World of Chickens between now and then should get me thereâthe airfare and some spending money. Not a lot of spending money, but some.
My mother's car glides in under the house and I hear her coming up the steps. I don't know how you go about getting a bank cheque for thirty-five US dollars, but she will. It can't be hard. I'm sure there are people braver than I am who do it all the time.
I'm going to do this. I'm going to fix the paperwork up now, I'm going to call Sophie and tell her and then, in six months, I'm going to see how things work in LA. After that, who knows? But it's as good a place to start as any.
I'm going to do this. I might be a long, long way from a lot of the cities where the big decisions are made, but I'm going to travel wherever I have to travel and do whatever I have to do. And if it doesn't work outâif I never shoot a frame and end up as a GP or a medical specialist or selling carsâit won't be because I haven't given it my best shot. So, here goes.
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
I
'm
in
the cab on the way into the city when Frank Green calls.
âPhil,' he says, âYou're back.'
âYeah, just now.'
âI was thinking of taking the boat out tonight. Get a few of us together and get out on the bay. The bream are running.'
âYeah, sounds good, but I'm in Sydney.'
âI thought you were back today.'
âYeah, in Australia. I don't get to Brisbane till tomorrow. I'm doing a film thing down here, going to a film thing. The producer I'm going to be working with? It's the premiere of her new thing. It's on now. I'm going to the after party. See who's around, you know?'
âBummer,' he says, and uses the word like he means it. âI reckon you could've hooked a beauty tonight.'
âYeah, sure.'
âSo when are you back at work?'
âTonight's work.'
âYeah, right. When are you back at the healing-the-sick work rather than the schmoozing-the-starlets work?'
âMonday.'
And with that he goes to catch fish, and for me Monday seems too close and impossibly far away, like a nearby day in a different life.
Tonight's my first after party. My first serious film event and my body feels so far from sensible. Four meals, three movies, a disrupted sitting-up sleep and however many time zones there are between Toronto and Sydney. That's how far from sensible. And I wanted to be better prepared than that. Mainly, I wanted it not to look like my first after party. These film people, they know how to have fun. Do I? Sometimes I'm still not sure.
But jet lag brings out my melancholy side. I should get all this out of my head. And some time before the age of twenty I should have worked out that extensive self-analysis isn't worth the trouble. I could, had I chosen to, have learned that from Frank Green long ago.
For Frank, all of life makes sense and Monday is probably just where it should be. Tonight he'll fish. He'll go out on the bay with a few uni friends, drink too much, use language he's never allowed to in front of his baby, piss recklessly over the side the way he likes to (thunderously autographing his name into the quiet night sea), catch something or nothing, sleep a few hours, cruise back home, continue cruising through the rest of his mid-thirties and beyond. There's something straightforward about his life that I quite admire.
And on Monday he'll be an orthopaedic surgeon again, I'll be a part-time GP again, with my film dreams eating away at me, yet to become as much as I'd like them to.
âNow this is why I went to all that bloody trouble to pass those exams,' he told me two months ago when he bought his boat and named it after the Medicare item number for an operative knee arthroscopy, since he'd figured that was what was going to pay for it.
And he dragged me round the Boat Show an entire weekend, as though I had nothing better to do with my time, and got himself so caught up in it all that he'd not only bought a four-berther by the time we left, he'd also gone up to Ron âThommo' Thomson, the host of âStoked About Boats', and got him to autograph an Evinrude engine catalogue.
And I can remember Ron âThommo' Thomson, demonstrating more sensitivity than I'd expected, giving us the once over and asking if he should make it out to both of us (as though we had some permanent catalogue-sharing thing going). And Frank saying, âNah, just to me, he doesn't know shit about boats.'
So Frank is living the life he'd always planned to, back in our poverty-stricken uni days in the early eighties. âI'm not afraid of debt, mate,' he said even then, as he ticked off the boat and the car and the house on his fingers. âThe second I've got any kind of earning capacity I'm going to live it to the max.'
I always thought he was kidding, right up until he leased the BMW a year ago. âFive series,' he said breathily, as though it was sexual. And I think he used the word
plush.
I've never had those kinds of plans. I wandered into part-time general practice, wandered into film-making, almost turned thirty before I'd done anything that I liked. And now I've made six shorts and had a couple of turns as assistant director on something bigger. Which is how I met Jacqui Lynnot at the time when she was looking for a new project, and how I come to have spent a week with her in LA before the short-film festival in Toronto.
And even though we didn't achieve too much in LA and my film played in Toronto to a mostly empty room, Jacqui says this is too good a project not to get up, and that I'll be directing my first feature by mid-next year. And though I've never been much given to optimism, she's a good enough producer that I almost believe her.
So we decided I'd overnight in Sydney for the after party before going home. Check out the talent, get a feel for things. Even though I'd like nothing more than to be in my own bed right now.
Of course, that's not my alternative. My alternative is a night on the bay, catching no fish, drinking too much and falling asleep to the noise of Frank driving his urine stream into the sea like a drill bit while singing the classic hits of the eighties.
I check in at the hotel, dump my bag in my room, shower and try to convince myself that changing into my bottle-green shirtâmy last clean garmentâwill make me feel more up to this. I go to the rooftop. And I can hear the party from two floors down in the stairwell. Music, plenty of people well settled in to a good time. I wish I'd got here earlier. I wish we'd all started the good time at the same time. I wish, as I have had cause to wish more than once or twice, that my comfort zone wasn't quite this slender. The thickness of the bottle-green shirt and not far beyond it.
I pick up a glass of wine from the bar and decide I'll leave the getting a feel for things, and any schmoozing of starlets, for a little later. No hurry. I walk towards the edge and away from the crowd, tuck myself next to a dense, manicured shrub.
I gaze out at the skyline, in case I can look as though I'm genuinely interested in it and am, for a moment only, painlessly between conversations. I wonder if I could go to my room now, tell Jacqui in the morning that I had a great time, and where was she all night, and that I talked to plenty of people before the jet lag got the better of me.
I'd even rather be on Frank's boat than this. Hating the predictable, reasonable things to hate about boating and fishing. Slumped on one of the four berths wishing I was somewhere else as Frank spouts rod 'n' reel jargon and spins some bullshit about his bait preferences and tells joke number one thousand that begins, âThe Pope, Bill Gates and Monica Lewinsky go fishing and . . .' Frank is someone who should never have been given Internet access.
But my night's not working out to be that good. For the next half hour the only conversation I have is with an actor who lurches up to me and says, âEric. Eric. Hey, you're not Eric,' and then goes.
I'm floundering here. I'm aware I'm not Eric. I don't need it pointed out to me. I'm pretty much nobody. I shouldn't be here. Why didn't I pick some socially less intense career, like lighthouse keeping? Damn them for automating lighthouses. I can't face conversation tonight. I can't even remember how any of those Pope/Bill Gates/Monica Lewinsky jokes end, and Frank never stops telling them. I concentrate on my next sip of wine, the horizon, and flounder with as much quiet dignity as I can manage.
My mother calls. So no quiet dignity now, either.
âDid they like your film in Toronto then, Philby?' she says.
âYeah, it seemed to go down all right.'
âNice people, Canadians. What's all that noise?'
âI'm at a party, remember? The film party in Sydney, the one I told you about.'
âThe one Christopher Reeve might be going to?'
âKeanu Reeves, yes.'
âSo have you signed anyone up yet? For your film?'
âIt's not quite like that.'
âOh come on, Philby. I know the way these things work. All the big deals are done in someone's jacuzzi. Everything starts at parties. These people, film people, they swing, Philby.'
âYes. Um, I've got to go. And I suspect I'm interrupting you in the middle of something very Jackie Collins anyway.'
âNow Philby, that's not nice. I just wanted to make sure you're being sensible.'
âI'm always sensible. I've sent a sample of the jacuzzi water off for analysis and I won't be getting in till they can confirm there's no Legionella. Now, I've got to go. I've got Nicole Kidman here to talk through a couple of contract clauses with me. And she'll catch her death of cold if she's not back in the water soon.'
âNicole Kidman? Can I say hello to her?'
âNo, you can't.'
âOh. Well, will you tell her I liked her in
To Die For?
'
âI'll tell her you liked her in everything since
BMX Bandits
. Now, I've got to go. She's a very busy person.'
âYes, of course. Don't spend the whole night bothering her, though. She might be very nice but make sure you work the room.'
I thank her and hang up, and it's just me and the shrub again. A situation I'm beginning to quite like, and I'm wondering how long I can spin out this glass of wine. Before Nicole hassles me about a contract clause, or something.
âPhil,' someone says behind me. And, surprisingly, it's not Nicole Kidman. âLaura, from Jacqui's office,' she says, just as I'm working out she's Laura from Jacqui's office. âWe should introduce you to a few people.'
âNo, it's fine, really. I'm a bit tired.'
âNo, come on,' she says, probably figuring she's outnumbered me by referring to herself in the plural. âI'm sure there are plenty of people here who'd like to meet you.'
âI don't know that I'm really up to sensible conversation. I just got back in.'
And, of course, I don't mention it, but these people swing. I'm way better off out of it.
âI was only thinking, like, soap star, you know? We're not talking brain surgeon.'
âBrain surgeon would be fine.'
âHere, come and meet Chloe.'
Chloe is at the bar getting herself a mineral water. I know who she is, and Laura doesn't need to point. Chloe in her burgundy dress, the kind of girl I used to stand near at Med Balls, just in case she'd decide to talk to me. The kind of girl I practised conversation for, but never got to meet. But several degrees worse, of course, since Chloe's also on TV.
And why is it that people think brain surgeons make problematic partners in conversation? I've met several who are pretty personable, and happy to talk about anything. It's the Chloes I'm not so sure about.
But it's not that I'd lack material. I've never seen her show, but I know her well from
TV Week
covers and endless promos and my reading of crappy waiting-room mags (which is, to say the least, extensive). I know she loves horses and everyone she's worked with says she's really nice. I know she's got the traditional soap-star soft spot for Ethiopian kiddies. I know the battles she used to have doing her homework on set. But, shit, I also know Gwyneth Paltrow better than Blythe Danner does by now, and it doesn't make me ready to talk to her.
Laura calls out to Chloe to pin her down before she escapes, hands me a glass, does the intro and leaves, casting a kind of blind-date aura behind her in a well-meaning way that makes us both uncomfortable.
So I tell Chloe I like her work, in case that helps. Fifty things I could have said, and what I actually tell her is, âI like what you do,' with a bit of a nod, and I downplay it just enough that I think she believes me.
And I always thought she looked attractive in the ads, Chloe with her famous big eyes and her wide mouth, and she still does in person, but much younger. Well, not much. I seem to be drawing some line between nineteen and seventeen, as though it's reasonable to find her attractive if she's slightly more than half my age, rather than slightly less. Chloe, I realise now as she sucks at her mineral water, is a child. And that, I tell myself, is the reason I lied to her about liking what she does.