The week started off well enough, I suppose. I visited Mrs
Carr, who runs the local laundary. Wonderful woman with an outlook on the world
which is refreshing and candid, albeit peppered with more swearwords than one
can comfortably entertain.
That is the modus operandi of the actor; the devour those
salient features of a personality one might find useful later. For instance, I
may, on occasion, meet a drunkard in a bus depot. Unlike those other people I
should approach said intoxicant and engage him in conversation. Snippets of
these peoples’ lives adds a tapestry and realism to ones’ work, stories,
emotions, mannerisms. And if anyone wants me to do a role which requires
reaction to a punch in the face, I am a prime candidate.
Many other actors have used those who they know or who they
have worked with between jobs to gather such valuable material. For example
Derek Guyler : Got his whimsical
wide eyed look for Play School by watching Stockport fans during a thrashing by
Chelsea.
Anthony Hopkins: He mastered the
brooding menace and threatening tone of Hannibal Lector by trying to return a
jacket to a dry cleaner
Charles Dance : discovered he
could swivel in a chair like all his comrades during a temporary position with
British Gas (although he has yet to use it in a role)
Helena Bonham-Carter : perfected
that look of shock from a mechanic after she tried to get a 1982 Datsun Sunny
through it’s MOT without extra charge
Jude Law : I don’t know where he
gets his material from.
Johnny Depp : Presumably drugs.
One thing young actors always ask me is ‘how do you start
with a character?’. It is quite difficult, and every actor is different. Some
will say it’s the voice, others the walk, others still will pish pish all that
and say it’s the ears. With me, I always start by deciding what socks they
would wear. From there, I work up to the knees, then the thigh, then the
naughty bits and finally the torso and head. It may sound presumptuous, but my
system is the best and all the others are rubbish.
One thing that proves you have done your job well, is when
people fail to recognise you. I can walk down my road in Camden and no one says
‘hi’, no one bothers me. As an actor it is tremendously liberating to
experience the highs of success and the joy of freedom. In fact, such high
esteem I am held in, so serious my work is taken by the denizens of my
district, some ignore me all together, nudging into me, crossing the road or in
one instance, recently, shouting incoherently from a balcony (are you
listening, Jamie Theakston?).
So anyway, from Mrs Carrs’ tender mercies I proceed to the
market, where, as I say, I am free to wander around unfettered by the great
unwashed.
And there, on the table at Donald Knotts’ Emporium of
Flapdoodle, like the beacon of the Grail to a holy man, I saw it.
A genuine Georgian Toilet Roll holder.
I’d read about it online and exchanged several emails with
sellers but their ridiculous greed had made me pull out of any prospective
sale. But there it was, unmistakeable, irreplaceable, beautiful. Next to the
gonks.
Don’t be deceived by Don’s cheerful cockney way, his almost
cheeky chappy demeanour or his two hefty bouncers. And don’t let the presence
of the plain clothes police officers meandering about his stall bother you either.
Don is a salt of the earth fellow. And so what if he has done time? He served
his sentence, that money was recovered and who knows? Maybe that Post Office
Clerk wanted surgery to have his ears reduced anyway. It was a shame they were
lost in the post though, all the same.
Don is one of those people I mentioned earlier. An
invaluable source of mannerisms, traits and foibles so intrinsic to my art,
although he doesn’t like having his picture taken. Ordinarily I would put a
picture of Don here but my camera is sadly broken at present.
So this toilet roll holder. What stories it could tell if it
could talk. Made from what I perceived to be China, and written clearly “if
found please return to George III”. They’d have a job!
I am returning today after my initial enquiry, the response to which I think I can best
describe as somewhere between ‘frosty’ and ‘threatening’, to negotiate a full
and satisfying transaction.
It can sit in my cabinet of treasures, along with the Alfred
the Great Hot Cross Bun mould. Conversation will never again be short in my
flat.
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