Wednesday, 24 October 2007

Morris Men on the loose in Glastonbury

































As promised, here are the rowdy bunch of Morris Men we encountered in Glastonbury (Where else would you find such curiosities?!)
















They came in swaggering, they drank cider as they danced and then departed high spirited, jangling around like court jesters.

Saturday, 20 October 2007

Town Hall Island

Met up with Phil Shepherd of the Engine Room, and coordinator of the Island Project. What a lovely, passionate man. We talked about the practicalities of the business-side of the redevelopment, his aims for the new improved Engine Room and a possible fund raising gig that is being talked about for December. All exciting stuff, can't wait to be a part of it.
Here's the impressive artist's impression of the regenerated Island Site:







Just got back from a cider making demo at the Rural Life Museum in Glastonbury - how hilarious, there was a gang of misfit Morris men and people dressed as weird animals that were going round scaring children, oh ok, maybe it was just me that was scared... (I'll post the pictures for you to judge yourselves) The smell of the apples being pressed in a cold barn was strong and autumnal. Didn't get to taste the stuff though, apparently it needs a couple of mouths to ferment.

To top off the slightly eccentric day, as we were passing through the Hamp Estate in Bridgwater, a grey cat walked across the zebra crossing right in front of the car! What a sophisticated feline...

Mothers Lost




















Last week Brigid McConville, a close friend of the family, and fellow writer, invited me to an exhibition held in London this week. Brigid is not only a writer though, she is also a film maker, international journalist and coordinator of the White Ribbon Alliance for Safer Motherhood (www.whiteribbonalliance.org). Curious to find out more about the WRA, and with the intention of writing a piece about the exhibition, I set off to London for the preview.

‘A Promise to Mothers Lost’ is a multimedia exhibit of artwork produced in response to mothers needlessly lost in pregnancy and childbirth by the communities and families left behind in developing countries such as Africa, Asia and South America. The exhibit will run until December, held at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists near Regents Park. Before I tried to find this slightly obscure venue, I had another appointment to keep at Soho House near Leicester Square.

I arrived in London on Tuesday at 2:00, thinking I’d have plenty of time to faff around before meeting Annie Gosney at 4:00. But by the time I’d got my bearings, signed up to the EveryChild charity with a persistently sprightly street haggler (he had an American STOP! sign drawn on the palm of his hand and stuck it into my face – how can you possibly say no?) and found some lunch, it was time to search for Soho House on Greek Street (v v exclusive members’ club/bar/venue for the entertainment industries lovies).

Now imagine the scene: I’m hot and sweaty from the hall-ass around London, a bit lost and a bit nervous. I find the building and start pressing the buzzer on the wall, but nothing happens. Ok. I then watch as a man breezes past me and into the building, no problems. Do I go in, or wait for the person behind the buzzer to make himself know. (Annie said I’d have to buzz!) Knowing full well I should just go in, I take a quick peep inside and decide I should just go on up.

I went up a flight of stairs and found a smart, young man behind a desk and several posh looking waiters hanging about close by. There is a list in front of the man. I lean on the desk and say, “I’m here to see Annie Gosney.” He looks at the list, strikes a pencil line through my name and tells me to go upstairs, “She’ll either be in the second floor bar or the third floor…” I’m already not really listening and instead, worry about not being able to find her in this huge building of a rabbit warren nesting thespians and countless people I kind of recognised, but couldn’t quite put names to…. very disconcerting.

Luckily, Annie has positioned herself close to the second floor doorway, so easily recognisable to me. We move into the bar, which has to-die-for wallpaper, leather sofas, an island bar in the middle and huge glass chandeliers. Feeling a tad bit out of place in my too-big-jeans, grey cardigan and crappy black plimsoles, Annie is very entertaining and makes it easy to settle into a fun gossip-led conversation. Tim McInnerny and Annie have been invited to the press night of Swimming with Sharks, staring Christian Slater. (I heard today that she got on famously with Christian at the after party and is seeing him again tonight…lucky lady!)

What a life – parties, meeting GOOD celebrities and press nights… am I jealous? Maybe a little, but it does all feel a bit fake somehow. Annie treats me to a large glass of wine, and I’m starting to wish I’d eaten my sandwich before I came in here – too late, I’m a bit tipsy! It’s fine though, I’ve got the trusty Dictaphone on, and I only had to seek some contacts from Annie to help me along with my Stage commission. Lovely. Annie had to leave at 5:30 to prepare for Christian (and the play of course!), so we said farewell and promised to keep in contact over Christmas.

Warm, a bit fuzzy, and in the dreadful rush of crazy-hour traffic, I had to gather my wits for the next leg of this mini adventure. On the tub, off at Baker Street, down the road the wrong way for about a mile, I got the feeling I was in the wrong part of town… and I was right. I re-traced my steps and just about found the Royal College of O & G before the daylight faded completely. In the courtyard stood two proud (static dancing) ten-ft willow women with small contained fired burning on the ground beneath each. What an entrance.

Inside I found Brigid’s oldest son, Arthur and one of my housemates, Dean on the decks, playing some welcoming reggae. I met Brigid’s daughter, (one of my oldest friends), Maeve on the stairs. Maeve has been heavily involved in the press side of the event, as well as being a general runner for her mother. We went up stairs and grabbed a free wine and some tasty, worldly nibbles. Actress Diana Quick introduced the exhibition, followed by the coordinators of the WBA, RCOG, United Nations Population Fund and speakers to tell the stories of some of the women lost to maternal mortality. To lighten the tone, celebrate the cause and the news that the Bill & Melinda Gates trust will donate $1 million for the exhibition to tour the world, Tanzanian pop star Stara Thomas performed “Play your Part” with her live band.

There was laughter, dancing and a general feeling of hope in the vast room, which was very well attended by a diverse cross-section of humanity. I took some time to take pictures of the varied and often stunningly beautiful art works with more friends involved in the exhibition. By this point I was feeling pretty exhausted, but enjoying the atmosphere none-the-less. In the information pack I collected at the end of the evening, I noticed a range of post cards with paintings of ‘mothers lost’ on the front. I was horrified to see a girl the same age as me staring back. Rita Egwe died in July this year because the poverty she faced on a day-to-day basis in her homeland prevented her from receiving the treatment she deserved to deliver her baby.

My best friend, also Rita’s age, had her first baby four weeks ago. Oscar was born four weeks premature. Although the conditions at our local hospital are considered to be sub-standard (over-crowded and under-staffed), Oscar is now fit, well and the normal size for his age. Rita didn’t even have the basic right to transport to take her to a health centre or hospital – even the terrain of her surroundings prevented her from living. This is wrong, so wrong. Why is it that even now, steadfast traditions, lack of support, training and medical provisions in developing counties leads to a woman a minute dying needlessly. I hope the exhibition stirs the hearts of as many influential people as possible from across the globe – giving life should not equate with death.

The following day, I offered my services to help with setting up an adjacent exhibition at the Excel centre, along with Maeve, Arthur, Dean, Harry, and another friend of the family, Julian. First, we set to work erecting the willow women from the previous night. It took about eight of us to hoist them upright, but they looked just as magnificent inside the aircraft hanger style room of the centre as they had outside. Then we had to decide what artwork to put on the exhibit spaces, erect two comment boards, and a cinema. That’s when everything seemed to go wrong.

Brigid and John left to go back to the college and then pick up some materials to help us hang the pieces. Julian was kind of in charge, but this didn’t seem to make complete sense. Lovely man, but god – some people are just useless organisers! Maeve should have been in charge, girls are generally better at such things. So, we got the comment boards up ok, taped this weird sticky material on to them then later found out we had to take them down for ‘health and safety’ issues! The Excel people were worse than useless: they wouldn’t lend us any bit and pieces for the displays, watched out every move as if we were complete armatures (not far wrong, but still!), and set us back by at least a couple of hours due to the comment board disassemble. Everything was taking too long, the only thing that was going right was the cinema, but that was nearly a disaster due to the screen stand being too tall – we had to hang the screen off the beams of the makeshift tent instead.

I had to leave just before five, and all we’d really done was assemble and take apart a few boards, place some art work against the panels ready for hanging and, and that’s it! Apart from six fabric panels on one wall, which probably also had to be taken down for some kind of H&S reason... I haven’t even dared to ask Maeve how it panned out yet… she’s probably feeling a bit bitter about it. Considering we started at noon and only had a fifteen-minute break, we didn’t have much to show… I hope they got it sorted without too much hassle.

When I returned home, I found an email from Christina. It was my (unofficial) MA result. I passed! With 64%! Lets hope it doesn’t change before the official verdict next month… I love you tutors!

Monday, 8 October 2007

Continued...

I’m continuing on from the last blog which I had to stop abruptly because I clocked Julien Temple (late by half an hour, but very apologetic) striding towards the Engine Room cafĂ© as I was inside, writing. I guess I should count myself lucky he remembered our meeting at all. He is working on three films, and championing the Town Hall Island project at the moment, and I am made to feel increasingly nervous as I realise a very famous film director is standing in front of me with his trademark shades still masking his eyes. He keeps them on for the duration of the interview, and I soon realise that the shades are not there to make him look cool, they are there to mask the fact that he is just as nervous as me, if not more so…

Not what I was expecting at all, and when my Dictaphone decided to use up all its memory ten minutes into our interview, I’m really worried the hour we had to talk would be dramatically cut short…but miraculously, I controlled the situation by giving him a copy of Stranger magazine to browse whilst I fiddled with the damn thing, erasing items willy-nilly. Interviewing Julien was very different to interviewing Tim McInnerny, and I guess I wasn’t expecting to have to work harder to make Julien feel comfortable. Tim was a naturally entertaining, talkative, exuberant person to interview and probably could have talked about himself for hours more. But Julien, although passionate about the project, wasn’t overly forthcoming and took longer to settle into the interview.

I asked him questions about his involvement in the regeneration project, about his connection to the town and the next steps of the project. He was most happy talking about his segment of the project, the Black Lamp Cinema, which will (if the project gets the funding it deserves), show independent films from across the globe to a broad spectrum of audiences both old and young. I’m personally very excited about this idea, and think it’s exactly what the town has been screaming out for years, if not hundreds of years…

I’ve just written up the transcript and written a 750-word feature based on the interview for Stranger. (Check out the stranger website for full article next week: www.stranger-mag.com) I think this piece will act as a base for an extended feature I want to write once I’ve got more impetus to tantalize a national publication. By impetus, I mean more names. Alan Yentob is the patron of the project, so I really want to try and get hold of him – it should be pretty easy considering he lives just outside of town. A close friend of my parents who is a VERY close friend of Julien’s is trying to set me up a meeting with Lucinda, (Joe Strummer’s wife) which would be great because she’s chief organiser of the Strummerville music charity.

Damien Hurst is putting his name to the gallery that will feature in the project, but I’ve been told that that’s pretty much all he’s prepared to do, which means it’ll be near impossible for me to contact him…never mind, I hear he’s a bit up himself any way… There are also a few council members I need to talk to about the practicalities with, funding etc, and the coordinator of the whole shebang, and head of the Engine Room media centre, Phil Shepherd. I also will have to do a certain amount of research on the town, its traditions, history and modern economical shifts. All of which I will enjoy immensely, as the town is full of curious secrets.

I know that I am making a name for myself with the movers and shakers of the project, I was even told by Jill that they (project coordinators) had been talking about me in their board meeting, which I was a bit worried about at first – maybe I’m jumping the gun, getting excited before anything is confirmed.

But then I’m essentially acting as a publicity machine for them, writing about the project before anyone else realises there’s a damn good story here…at least I think that if I don’t do it now, I’ll miss out. And whilst I’ve got the time, I couldn’t think of anything I’d like to be dong more than boosting my home town’s cultural profile as well as meeting a host of interesting people and hopefully producing some good writing?

I’ve also got three other projects on the go – a green light on the sixixis profile, a green light on the Backstage piece and a review for a journalist friend for an exhibition she’s putting on in London next week. Brigid McConville is a close family friend and provided me with my first inspiration as a writer. She’s involved in an international organisation called The White Ribbon Alliance – helping to liberate women in developing countries, by giving them the chance to get their voices heard by the rest of the world.

This exhibition is a collection of materials handmade by women in Africa, depicting messages with “a promise to mothers lost” as the theme. Brigid will be touring the exhibition internationally and she has been invited to 10 Downing Street to show some of the exhibits. Brigid has asked me to review the exhibition and have a think about where I would like to place it. I was thinking about Mslexia or Red Pepper, but I will ask Brigid's opinion before I pitch, in case one of her freelance friends has already pitched to them.

After the exhibition on the 16th, I will be returning with Brigid’s youngest son Rory to look after him for the rest of the week in their beautiful family home in Enmore. It will be the perfect opportunity for me to finish off all my projects and get the true solitary writer vibe in this huge house in the middle of nowhere…I secretly can’t wait, it’ll be amazing.

At the time of writing I have also just finished filling in an application form for a digital shorts competition, and a rough draft of the Stranger feature. I’ve got a million phone calls to make tomorrow, but I don’t want to think about that right know. Bed is calling, but not before I’ve had a brief glimpse at Style mag…

Wednesday, 3 October 2007

Backstage

So, I've got another commission with The Stage, this time writing a smaller article for the Backstage section of the magazine. I pitched the idea as another profile, this time writing about Tim McInnerny's partner, Annie Gosney. She started off as a theatre designer and stage manager, then made the transition to producer. She's got some fantastic stories about her trade, and a wealth of advise for aspiring backstagers. Unfortunately, Ken (Freelance editor of Backstage) didn't think a profile was appropriate, so we agreed to change the angle to a more generalized piece about the transition some designers make into the producing side of the business.

I don't have a fixed deadline for this commission, but I wanted to make a start on some research. I found a number of women who had made a similar leap into producing, and wondered if it might be more appropriate to concentrate on the diversity of women's roles in theatre production. I have emailed Ken with this suggestion and await his opinion. I have no idea if this is common practice to chop and change, but I can't imagine it'll be too much of a problem, as this one seems to be a bit more of a relaxed interaction.

I am waiting to hear back from Matilda at the Ecologist about the pitch I sent to her three weeks ago. It's a piece about my friend's bespoke furniture company, sixixis. He makes beautiful sustainable steam-bent wooden furniture in Cornwall, to the very high end of the contemporary design scene. I know Matilda is interested, but I guess she must be caught up with going to press or something.

Another exciting project I'm working on is a kind of publicity mission for the Bridgwater Town Hall rejuvenation project, which is why I'm anxiously writing this in the Engine Room cafe, waiting for my interviewee to arrive...