How I Escaped My Certain Fate (51 page)

BOOK: How I Escaped My Certain Fate
6.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He took control and directed me

A little way, to Skelpsie Bay,

Some way south-west of Rothesay.

I parked the car above the beach,

In the distance I saw Arran,

And in the rain I helped Malcy

Get all the props that we could carry

And take them to the shore.

He handed me a pint glass that he’d

Brought with him from Bangor,

And told me to keep it safe

As he would need it later.

Across the sand he dragged his bags

And set them up upon some rocks,

That stretched some way into the sea,

A small performance promontory.

And as I watched him from the beach

He got down on his knees and reached

Into his pocket and pulled out

His old harmonica.

The wind carried the notes away,

But I assume he started to play

And as he did so little heads

Began to break above the waves.

Malcy was surrounded on three sides

By dolphins bobbing on the tide,

Clicking, waiting, watching him,

Wondering when he’d begin.

‘I’ll test my theory,’ he cried,

‘On these far superior minds.’

And in-between the wind and spray

I think I heard Malcy say

The first lines of his tried and tested set.

 

 

The story of a gherkin boy who lived inside a burger,

The suicide note of a mouse or something or other,

A funny kind of lullaby sung to a sleepless child,

I knew the pay-off, but before he spat it out

Malcy called, ‘Throw the glass, throw it at me now.’

‘What?’ I answered him, appalled,

As Malcy stuck an orange wig upon his sodden hair,

And blew a last harmonica blast that cut the soggy air.

‘I’ll only go if you throw glass,’ he shouted.

I threw it towards the waiting rocks. It shattered with a crash.

The sea grew calm and duck pond still and then there was a splash.

The dolphins dived beneath the waves.

Skulls cracked smiles in ancient graves.

A shadow fell across my face.

The Super Moby Dick of Space!

But not a cloud had crossed the sun.

I looked back.

Malcy?

He was gone.

And lying there upon the rocks,

His harmonica, alone, unloved.

 

 

I hung around the beach till dusk looking for Malcolm Tracey.

If he had come back across the beach footprints would have betrayed him.

If he’d swum underwater out to sea he’d have to have swum a mile from me

Without breaking the surface.

I had to confront my fear.

Malcolm Tracey had disappeared.

I drove back to the ferry and phoned the promoters

To tell them my support act had spontaneously combusted.

But back in London they pre-empted me.

There had been a complaint.

Malcy’s poem had made a student cry.

This wasn’t what comedy was for.

Admittedly in any other form of art,

Tugging the strings of someone’s heart

Would be considered worthy.

But not in stand-up comedy.

Malcy was sacked and there would be

A new support waiting for me

When I arrived in Glasgow.

 

 

There’s nowhere to hide in the University of Strathclyde.

The venue’s on the top floor of a tower.

You’re crushed into a backstage room that doubles as an office.

And it was there that I met Malcolm Tracey’s young replacement.

A local lad, slotted in, new to the game, hungry, keen.

He was playing Jongleurs gigs up and down the country

And storming every one, he told me.

He wasn’t interested in doing the Glastonbury,

How was that gonna help his career?

But would do a couple of Edinburghs to snag

A Perrier nomination and blag a TV deal.

I felt old and irrelevant, like someone cutting peat

While dreaming of electric fires and cursing their wet feet.

I offered him a cigarette, but he didn’t smoke.

I said the rider was no use to me, and he packed it away

In his sports bag.

A pretty young girl flounced in and said it was time.

My support act stood and left the room and I went out into the hall

And watched him walk onto the stage.

 

 

The crowd applauded his entrance but his opening line,

Something about how he resembled an Australian soap star,

Hardly caught fire.

It shrivelled in the spotlight and then curled up and died.

He tried a condemnation of the students’ refusal to laugh,

And then flipped onto his belly, begging for their love.

But the tricks of the trade were just tricks of the trade.

The emperor stood naked.

The crowd were betrayed.

The boy floundered, dry-mouthed, then looked around,

And bent his head, and bit his lip and bedded in for a battle.

Something was different.

Something had changed.

I felt Malcy’s harmonica in my pocket and put it to my mouth.

It might have been seawater, or it might have been spittle,

But as I ran my tongue along the openings I could feel that it was wet.

I pursed my lips and filled my cheeks and blew the liquid out. 

VIII: Did Tony Blair Plagiarise Stewart Lee?
 
 

When
How I Escaped My Certain Fate
first appeared, the comedy writer Tom Neenan published the following on his
Too Much Culture
blog (http://tneenan.wordpress.com)
.

 

 

Tony Blair’s memoirs were recently published to a wave of press attention and controversy. A great deal of this criticism has come from Stewart Lee, who believes the ex- premier copied his idea of annotating his stand-up routines. But are the two publications actually that similar? Take a look at this extract from
A Journey
and make your own mind up …

In other words, they disagreed then and disagree
*
now fundamentally with the characterisation of the threat. We were saying this is urgent; we have to act; the
opponents
of war thought it wasn’t. And I accept,
incidentally
, that however abhorrent and foul

the regime and however relevant that was for the reasons I set out before the war, for example in Glasgow in February 2003

, regime change alone could not be and was not our
justification
for war. Our primary purpose was to enforce UN resolutions over Iraq and WMD.

*
I would normally repeat the word ‘disagree’ nine or ten times. I used to use this as a gauge for the audience, if they were willing to go with it I could make this part last about two or three
minutes
. I remember on this date there was a slight atmosphere in the room, so I cut it short. It can be really difficult to judge this kind of thing, ultimately you just have to trust your own instincts.


I used to change the two adjectives every night as a way of keeping the material fresh to make sure I didn’t get bored with the routine. They were always improvisations around the strict theme of two adjectives describing something undesirable. One night I referred to the regime as heinous and horrendous. That night it provoked a positive response but only because of the audience’s Pavlovian appreciation of alliteration, which is not the point of this section. I remember during my brief spell of popularity in the nineties, when I was out on the road, I used to work in a lot more sections with room for improvisation, but I’m older now so I only leave in a few to keep my mind focussed.


Glasgow was a rough one. There was this one bloke at the back who just wouldn’t be quiet. He kept calling me a warmongerer and saying I should be tried for war crimes. There are some Prime Ministers who really enjoy this aspect of the job and would spend the whole speech laying into the guy, but at the time I was playing a contrite sensitive character, so to be too aggressive would jar with the content of the speech.

 

 Of course the opponents are boosted by the fact that though we know Saddam had WMD; [sic] we haven’t found the physical evidence of them in the 11 months since the war. But in fact, everyone thought he had them.That was the basis of UN Resolution 1441.

The characterisation of the threat is where the
difference
lies
*
. Here is where I feel so passionately that we are in mortal danger of mistaking the nature of the new world in which we live.

*
I spent a lot of time working on the characterisation of the threat, the whole thing wasn’t really working. It wasn’t until my old political partner James Gordon Brown saw me do this bit, he pointed out I was underplaying the ‘mortal danger’ part. Once I started putting the emphasis on that aspect it [sic], the section got consistently good responses.

 
 
Relevant Discography
 
 

Stewart Lee – Stand-Up Comedian
(2005), 2entertain – VCD7210 (DVD)

Jerry Springer: The Opera
(2005), Pathe! – P-DGB P917701000 (DVD)

Stewart Lee – ’90s Comedian
(2005), Go Faster Stripe – GFS-01 (DVD)

Pea Green Boat
(2006), Go Faster Stripe – GFS-04 – (CD/10" vinyl)

What Would Judas Do?
(2007), Go Faster Stripe – GFS-16 (3 × CD)

Stewart Lee – 41st Best Stand-Up Ever
(2008), Real Talent – RTDVD002 (DVD/CD)

Stewart Lee’s Comedy Vehicle
(2009), BBC/2entertain – BBCDVD3010 (DVD)

If You Prefer a Milder Comedian, Please Ask for One
(2010), Real Talent/Comedy Central – COMEDY01 (DVD)

 

 

 

RELEVANT WEBSITES

www.stewartlee.co.uk

www.myspace.com/stewlee

www.gofasterstripe.com

Acknowledgements
 
 

Everyone who encouraged with me during the period described deserves great thanks. So thanks to The
Managements
– Avalon and Debi Allen Associates; The Promoters and venues – Brett Vincent for Underbelly, David Johnson and John Mackay, Tommy Sheppard and The Stand; The Bookers – Charlie Briggs and Dave Mauchline; The
Opening
Acts – Josie Long, Stephen Carlin, Henning Wehn, Greg Fleet, Simon Munnery and Kevin Eldon; James Hingley for the website; the DVD and audio teams at Avalon, and
especially
Chris Evans at Go Faster Stripe and Colin Dench at Real Talent; The Public Relations – Daniel Bee at Avalon, Mel Brown at Impressive, and the guiding hands of Sally Homer; and to Richard Thomas and the hundreds of talents that shaped
Jerry Springer: The Opera
; and at Faber, thanks to Stephen Page, Julian Loose, Ian Bahrami and every one who worked on this book. Special thanks to my publisher Hannah Griffiths for her enthusiasm and support; and to Adrienne Connors at the
Sunday Times
Culture, Christine Gettins and the Manchester International Festival, the Bush Theatre, and Tom Morris and Battersea Arts Centre; and to Richard Herring, for the unused introduction and for the superb book-launch stage invasion. And thanks for their patience and advice to the wife, Bridget Christie, and the editor, Andy Miller, who is a Mod.

Index
 
 

Abbott, Diane,
1

Abu Ghraib,
1
,
2

Adamsdale, Will,
1

adoption,
1

Aherne, Caroline,
1

Airport
1
,
2

al-Qaeda,
1
;
see also
9/11; 7/7; war against terror

Allen, Dave,
1
,
2

Allen, Tony,
1
,
2
,
3

Alternative Comedy: beginning

of the end,
1
,
2
;

contrasted with mainstream,
1
;

death,
1
;

development,
1
;

origins of term,
1

Ames, Jonathan,
1

Amos, Stephen K.,
1

And Then I Got Off the Bus (joke type),
1

Anderson, Janei,
1

apartheid,
1

Arctic Boosh
(show),
1

Aristocrats, The
(documentary),
1
,
2
,
3
,
4

art: great vs utilitarian,
1
;

roles,
1

Aspen Comedy Festival,
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5

atheism,
1

Atkinson, Ron,
1

Attenborough, Richard,
1

Attention Scum
(TV series),
1

Auckland: Classic, The,
1
,
2

audiences,
1
;

giving them permission to laugh,
1
;

handling audience exits,
1
;

hecklers,
1
,
2
,
3

Australia,
1
,
2

Ayler, Albert,
1

Bad Film Club,
1

Baddiel, David: gags about,
1
;

Heresy
,
1
,
2
,
3
;

SL on,
1
,
2
;

and sport,
1
,
2
;

Wembley Arena Newman and Baddiel show,
1

Bailey, Derek,
1
,
2
,
3

balaclavas,
1

Balls, Ed,
1

Bangor University,
1
,
2

Barker, Sally,
1

Barratt, Julian,
1
,
2

Barron, Carl,
1

Barrymore, Michael,
1

Bashir, Martin,
1

Battersea Arts Centre (BAC)

Scratch Nights,
1
,
2

Baynham, Peter,
1
,
2

BBC: cons of working for radio comedy,
1
;

offer of show to SL withdrawn,
1
,
2
,
3
;

Radio
1
,
2
;

SL show commissioned after all,
1
;

ways of discovering new writers,
1

Beans on Toast,
1

Beckett, Samuel,
1
,
2

Bennett, Steve,
1

Bhatti, Gurpreet Kaur,
1

Big Brother
(TV series),
1
,
2

Big Brother’s Little Brother
(TV series),
1
,
2

Binns, Tom,
1

Bird, Simon,
1

Birmingham: Glee Club, The,
1

Blair, Cherie,
1

Blair, Tony,
1
,
2
,
3

Blake, William,
1

blasphemy: routine playing with concept,
1
;

SL on,
1
;

SL’s documentary,
1
;

see
also Jerry Springer: The Opera

Bogosian, Eric,
1
,
2

Book Club nights,
1

Boom Boom Out Go the Lights
(TV series),
1

bothies,
1

Bouffinades en Circulades,
1
,
2

Bourke, John G.,
1

Bowen, Jim,
1

Boyce, Max,
1

Boyle, Susan,
1

Boyzone,
1

Bradbury, Ray,
1

Brain Donor,
1

Brand, Katy,
1

Brand, Russell,
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5

Braveheart
(film),
1

Briggs, Charlie,
1
,
2

Brigstocke, Marcus,
1

Bristol: Comedy Box, The,
1

British people, and new experiences,
1

Brown, Arnold,
1

Brown, Dan,
1

Brown, Gordon,
1

Brown, Roy ‘Chubby’,
1
,
2

Bruce, Lenny,
1
,
2

Bruno, Frank,
1

Brydon, Rob,
1

Builth Wells,
1

bullfights,
1

Burns, Nica,
1

Bush, George,
1
,
2
,
3

Byrne, Ed,
1

cab drivers,
1

Cage, John,
1
,
2

Cambridge Footlights,
1
,
2

Campbell, James,
1

Camus, Albert,
1

Cardiff: Splott,
1

Carey, Drew,
1

Carlin, George,
1
,
2

Carlin, Steve,
1

Carphone Warehouse,
1

Carr, Jimmy,
1
,
2

Carrott, Jasper,
1

Carthy, Eliza,
1

CAST organisation,
1

Catholicism,
1

Cat’s-Feet Towel,
1
,
2

Caulfield, Jo,
1

Cave, Nick,
1

Celebrity Big Brother
(TV series),
1

Celebrity Mastermind
(TV series),
1

Chalk and Cheese
,
1

Channel
1
,
2
,
3

Charles, Prince of Wales,
1

Chiles, Adrian,
1

Chippington, Ted,
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
,
8
,
9

Christian, Terry,
1

Christian Voice,
1
,
2

Christie, Bridget (SL’s wife): as comedian,
1
,
2
,
3
;

gags by,
1
;

honeymoon,
1
;

son born,
1
,
2

Clarke, Giles,
1
,
2

Clarke, John Cooper,
1

Clarke, Oz,
1

Cleese, John,
1

Cleveland, Carol,
1

clip shows,
1
,
2

clothes,
1

Cluub Zarathustra,
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5

Clune, Jackie,
1

Coates, Louise,
1

Cobain, Kurt,
1

Coldplay,
1

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor,
1

colonoscopy,
1
,
2

Colquhoun, Ithell,
1

Comedians, The
(TV series),
1
,
2

comedy: as art,
1
,
2
;

callbacks,
1
;

comedians as outsiders,
1
;

documentary about stand-up,
1
,
2
;

in the eighties,
1
;

important facets of stand-up,
1
;

mainstream vs alternative comedians,
1
;

as ‘new rock and roll’,
1
;

in the nineties,
1
,
2
;

noughties circuit,
1
;

observational,
1
,
2
,
3
;

Pull Back and Reveal mechanism,
1
;

in the seventies,
1
;

shock tactics,
1
;

stand-up
reviewers
,
1
;

surprise tactics,
1
,
2
;

techniques for finishing shows,
1
;

timing,
1
;
see
also
Alternative Comedy; Lee, Stewart: stand-up style

Comedy for Kids gigs,
1

Comedy Store, The,
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
,
8
,
9
,
10
,
11

comics,
1
,
2

Conflict,
1

Connolly, Billy,
1
,
2
,
3
,
4

Connor, John,
1

Conservative Party,
1

Coogan, Steve,
1
,
2
,
3

Cook, Peter,
1

Cope, Julian,
1
,
2

Corbett, Ronnie,
1

Corbières (France),
1
,
2

Corden, James,
1

Cornwall,
1

Cornwall, Camilla, Duchess of,
1

Cosgrave, Michael,
1

Cresswell, Addison,
1

Crisis Twins, The,
1

crisps,
1

Crouch, Julian,
1
,
2

Crow, Sheryl,
1

CUNT Ray,
1

curry,
1
,
2

Currys (electrical shop),
1

‘Cutting Edge’ (Comedy Store show),
1

Other books

Good Hope Road: A Novel by Sarita Mandanna
The Prisoner by Carlos J. Cortes
A Carlin Home Companion by Kelly Carlin
The Better Man by Hebert, Cerian
Los ríos de color púrpura by Jean-Christophe Grangé
Calibre by Bruen, Ken
Light Before Day by Christopher Rice