Opening the Beehive

Beyond the Beehive front cover

What a great evening at Waterstones Covent Garden on Friday night.  This was an event organised by Novel London and it was standing room only.  There were three authors, Christopher Bowden (the Purple Stain), Laxmi Hariharan (Taken) and me (Beyond the Beehive), each reading the first chapter of our latest novels.

The Covent Garden branch of Waterstones is in Garrick Street, in the middle of  busy Covent Garden.  It also has an entrance in New Row.  It is a place of nooks and crannies, layers and stairs, and shelves packed with enticing books. As I arrived, as the chairs were being arrranged and the wine glasses set out on the table, Norma Cohen who compered the show, gave the readers some last minute professional advice (only project).  Then the cameras were focussed, the mics were attached and, standing in front of a shelf with the title Smart Thinking, the evening began.

All three books were very different, mine about working-class girls in the 60s, Christopher’s about crime in Paris and London and Laxmi’s many-lives novel.  The evening was compered with enormous charm and humour by Norma Cohen.

Eizabeth Woodcraft & Norma Cohen at Waterstones Covent Garden

It was a great birthday party for me.  Several of my Christine-friends were there (people whose names are Christine) including my oldest friend Christine who is the inspiration for Sandra. Apart from arguing that she would never have worn caramel flavoured lipstick, I think she liked it (of course she hasn’t read the whole book yet) (Don’t sue me, I’m a lawyer).  There were people from my French class (merci!), writing pals, my relatives, barristerial colleagues and chums we see in Paris. I didn’t have copies of my book to sell, but I did have postcards! and there were a few copies A Sense of Occasion.  Afterwards, a few of us went to Carluccio’s across the road for a bowl of pasta and a glass of red wine and I went home with roses and gifts and cards.

So a huge vote of thanks to Waterstone’s Covent Garden and to Cameron Publicity for supporting such a great event, and of course to Novel London for setting it all up.

Beyond the Beehive front cover

The Essex Girls

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The Essex Girls, out on 23 August 2018, is a book I’ve wanted to write for most of my life, because it seems the world has not paid much attention to the lives of mod, working class girls, and I wanted to redress the balance.  When I was about 10 I started to write a book about a girl who didn’t go to boarding school.  Somehow, apart from the Secret Seven books by Enid Blyton, there weren’t that many books around about children who went to day school.  All those boarding school kids had to have their adventures in the long hot summer holidays, whereas in my world we were having adventures on weekdays and weekends. I say adventures – I mean writing the local newspaper, cooking ourselves little restaurant meals, putting on plays for the other kids in the street, and following someone on the estate we were convinced was a spy and noting his movements down in our notebooks (a spy with a very dull life, it turned out).

The problem grew more acute as I got older and became a mod.  There were limitations with being a mod – if you weren’t interested in clothes and music and possibly scooters and if your mum and dad would not have let you go to Clacton or Margate on a Bank holiday, even if you’d wanted to, then there wasn’t  much going on – but there was still a life, and one with a lot of action.  The film Quadrophenia demonstrated that people were interested in mods, but the girls don’t get much of a look in, in the story.

So, out came the notebook and over the pages flew my pen, and then my word processor and then one computer after another.

I hope I’ve captured some of the essence of the excitement of Saturday nights, walking into a dance hall in time to the rhythm of Green Onions, or the smell of Wishing perfume by Avon, or seeing people you knew wearing parkas and leather coats, swooping along the road to park outside the mods’ coffee bar.  It was a great time.

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The Essex Girls is published by Bonnier Zaffre and is available to pre-order here

Thinking about what a friend had said

A 45 record

I was looking at Twitter this morning (part of my 24 hour a week habit) and noticed a tweet by @thomhickey55 talking about the recordings of the song Sea of Love by Phil Phillips, Tom Waits and Del Shannon.  My heart always flutters a little at the name Del Shannon, famed for Runaway, Hats Off to Larry and Little Town Flirt, songs that accompanied my first steps into love and romance and also songs to hear, with breathlessness and expectation, at the fair, because of the organ music and the echoing sound, and the prospect of what might happen next.

But the main reason my interest was piqued was because it reminded me about the 1989 film Sea of Love starring Al Pacino and Ellen Barkin. I love that film.  Ellen Barkin is such an interesting actress, husky voice, lopsided smile, good with one-liners.  The film is funny, clever, romantic, erotic and it’s a thriller.  What more could you ask? It even has John Goodman.

It made me think about the films I love.  There’s the Big Easy (1986) another Ellen Barkin movie, this time with Dennis Quaid.  Another thriller, with atmosphere and romance and some great Cajun music.  When I first saw it I wasn’t that impressed.  Perhaps it was the cinema seats – not comfortable, people talking, no good snacks.  I don’t know, but when I watched it again and again, I really enjoyed it.  Dennis Quaid is the laid back cop in down town New Orleans and Ellen Barkin is the out of town big shot who comes in to shake up the team and root out corruption.  Sparks fly.  What do you expect?

And last weekend I was talking to my niece about films everyone should see.  My immediate response was Klute (1971) (I’d just been to see The Trial of Jane Fonda at the Park Theatre – worth a visit, catch it before it closes).  Klute is the story of a man from a small town who goes missing in New York, and small town cop Klute (Donald Sutherland) comes to look for him and meets the wannabe actor but for the time being call girl Bree Daniel, who is being followed. Another thriller. I loved it then for the story and for the look of Jane Fonda, her life, living in New York in an odd, pretty apartment, reading books in bed at night, buying flowers, and Donald Sutherland, tall and loping, easy going but yearning, and a beautiful couple.

And Cabaret (1972) because of the story – Germany in the 30s – and the way the politics are explained and described.  It’s so neatly done.  The wonderful Liza Minnelli really is extraordinary.  It was the first time I had really enjoyed watching a musical – Oklahoma, South Pacific and the like had never done it for me – because in Cabaret, the songs add something, they highlight and enrich the dialogue.

Then rushing through to the 21st Century The Connection (2014) – a French film, La French, this is the French reply to the French Connection.  It’s a great film with Jean Dujardin (known for the 2011 black and white movie the Artist), as the local magistrate who has been dealing with family cases but who is given the task of breaking up a successful drug ring. It’s fast, pretty and tense, based on a true story.

They say the weather this weekend will be good, but if it rains – it’s one to watch.

 

 

Big Brother

NewspapersToday I have been reading the Daily Mirror (the paper that cares) and the Daily Telegraph today, as well as the Guardian, to be on top of all the news that’s fit to talk about on Monday, since I shall once again be gracing the airwaves with views and reviews of what is in the newspapers on BBC Radio Essex at 6.15 am and 6.45 am.

There are a couple of points to make.  First of all, the usual presenter of the 6-9 slot is James Whale.  But on Monday, it will not be he – because he is currently appearing on Channel 5 as a resident of the Big Brother house.  I have also watched a few clips of the programme in case the issue comes up.

Celebrity Big Brother Channel 5

I wonder what it would be like to stay there.  I don’t think you could do it, unless you were absolutely clear that it was a game and that any decisions you made were just as part of the game and meant nothing outside of those four walls.  The inmates are required to do such unpleasant, mean things, divisions are made, people have to choose to betray people, they have to do things or the others will suffer.  Decisions are made in secret, but everybody knows.

So how would you get by? No books, no pens, no paper, no films, no telly.  Just the other inmates. I suppose, once inside the house, you would need to spend time just getting to know people, being interested them, hearing their stories.  Because of course that is the wonderful thing, that everyone has a story, an interest, a hobby.  And you can always find it.

But, no, I wouldn’t do it – not for all the tea in China.  And I like tea.  And I like China.  Hen hao.

Just as a small side note – in the Daily Mirror was a story about Elton John relaxing in the millionaire’s playground of Sardinia.  And only last week we were in Corsica. We were so close!  Corsica may be 170km south-east of France, and it may be 90km west of Italy, but it is a mere 11k north of Sardinia.  So close!

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Birthday stories – Peggy Perry 1924-2016

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Readers of this blog will have gathered that my aged mother who was living with me, died in January this year.  Last week it was her birthday, she would have been 92.

IMG_0004 2 (2)On the day, my sister, my brother and I with various partners and off-spring all met to remember mum on a day that for her and for us was always very important.

Mum was born Peggy Maxwell King, the daughter of Edwin Horace Alexander King, a tailor to the working man, and Elsie King.  There were twelve children – Peggy was born after Gladys, Jack, Sid, Honor, Iris, Don, Alec, and Vera, and before Sheila, Rita, and Beryl.

DSC00982They lived in a terraced house in Leytonstone – 5 Ranelagh Road, where Peggy shared a room with Vera at the back of the house.  They were not easy times, they were not well off. Their dad made their school uniforms out of off-cuts of material from his work, Peggy had a black and white pin-striped tunic.  She was sure everyone could tell they were made of cloth for gentlemen’s trousers.

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She went to Cann Hall Infants School and then Tom Hood.  She was very sporty – she had badges for netball and athletics. Unlike the rest of her family, she was a regular attender at her local church, and she was strict TT – alcohol did not pass her lips.  She was also an ardent member of the Girls Life Brigade.

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She was an autograph collector – George Formby, Nosmo King, and Henry Hall were all in her book – but her great favourite was the Street Singer, Arthur Tracy.  An American who came to England to play in the music halls she loved him.  Once she walked all the way from Leytonstone to Stratford Empire to queue for an hour to get a front row seat to see him perform.

Peggy and her sisters had had a pretty hard childhood (except for sister Iris who lived with Aunt Eva and wanted – so the others thought – for nothing).  There was not a lot of money and not a lot of love.  They had to save up for their bicycles, but then they were free to ride where they wanted.  Peggy often flew in late for meals, from a day’s cycling in Epping Forest, her face all red and glowing, to be chastised by her mother.

Her love of Walton on the Naze lasted her whole life.  When she was a child the family would go there every year for their holidays – their dad would drive down on the Friday and pitch the tent and then come back for the kids who would drive down with him on the Saturday.

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Kings of Walton

In 1939, when they were in Walton on holiday, the war started.

The younger children were evacuated from the bombing, for a time to Shenfield & Peggy had to leave school to look after the younger children.  Then they came home but the air raids were taking a toll on the family, and their Aunt Eva – with whom sister Iris lived – said, ‘Come to us for a good night’s sleep.  Bombs don’t drop on Woodford.’

So on the night of 28 September 1940 – Vera and Rita cycled over to Woodford and the others came with their mum and dad in the car which was full of blankets and pillows.  After some discussion as to who was to sleep where – my Aunt Honor and mum swopping places in the living room – they went to bed and a bomb fell onto the house.  Their mum and dad, sister Honor and Aunt Eva, were all killed.  The other sisters were pulled out of the rubble by the A&R men, without a scratch.

After that the girls were separated for a time.  Eventually they all went to live in a bungalow in Chatham Green and mum’s life in Chelmsford began.  They lived in Chatham Green until the end of the war then moved into a flat in Duke Street in Chelmsford opposite the bus station (from where in later years we used to watch the carnival procession).

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Mum worked at Cromptons and it was there she first set eyes on our dad – Alf Woodcraft, the union rep of the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU).

In 1947 they married, honeymooned in Walton, and moved to Ockelford Avenue, a small crescent off North Avenue, on the Boarded Barns estate in Chelmsford.  Teresa was born and then me.  We moved to the Woodhall Estate

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and a few years later, Edward was born.

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By now Alf was the District Secretary of the AEU – a full time job, with an office in London Road in Chelmsford.  Peggy didn’t work – Alf was pretty traditional and didn’t want his wife working.  But she went potato picking, fruit picking, even stone picking.  Gradually attitudes changed and she got a permanent job as a clerk in Chelmsford prison and later  at County Hall as a coder.

One of my best memories of my childhood is coming home from school on a rainy afternoon, the light would be on in the living room and there would be a fire in the grate, mum would be ironing and Mrs Dale’s Diary would be on the wireless.  Tess and I both remember times when we were ill and were home in bed mum always bought us a comic.  For herself she liked chocolate – Cadbury’s  Fruit and Nut.  Alf would buy her a bar every evening on his way home from work, with a copy of the Evening News.

In the 50s we only had a BBC TV at home, mum disagreed with advertising on TV, and Edward remembers her being appalled one day seeing a young neighbour walking down the road singing ‘Murray Mints, Murray Mints, Too good to hurry mints.’ She soon got over it.

Chelmsford - Back Garden

Alf left home in 1971 and Peggy was quite lonely and sad for a time – divorce was not a common occurrence on our estate.  Edward was still living at home then and remembers their Friday night TV viewing.  Take Your Pick, followed by Burke’s Law.  And whenever possible, Morecambe and Wise or The Two Ronnies.  An orange would be cut into quarters with the bread knife by way of refreshment, and the peel put by the fire to dry  to serve as a fire lighter the next day, along with twisted pages of the Guardian and kindling and coal.  The skill of making a fire stood him in good stead as a student.

Peggy had very recently become a social work assistant in Braintree, working with the elderly and the job gave her great satisfaction.  One of her proudest achievements was helping two women who had been incarcerated in a mental institution since their youth – for small misdemeanours, I think for getting pregnant.  Mum got them into a small flat of their own.  She often visited them and they were gloriously happy.

And then along came the grandchildren.  What enormous joy they gave her.

IMG_0016 (2)     Grandma and Alex    Walton - Jack, Ed, Robert, PeggyBillie remembers going to stay with grandma and having a very structured day around food, including elevenses – always a long iced bun, and later, after tea, supper – a salad sandwich with salad cream.  Every morning they would study the TV guide and plan what programmes they would watch later.  They watched all the soaps together, and when Billie went home they would ring each other up to discuss the goings on in EastEnders or Coronation Street.

Jack remembers staying and evening baths being timed round the advert breaks in their favourite TV shows.  He also had a memory of finding a bird with a broken wing in the garden.  Gently they gathered it up and put it in a cardboard shoe box filled with cotton wool.  They kept it in the shed for three days, feeding it, watching it, but then it died.

In 1994 her life changed dramatically again.  She renewed her friendship with Roy Perry.  His late wife had been a friend of hers from school days in Leytonstone, and Roy had been in the same class as her brother Don.  They married in North Avenue church and mum moved to West Mersea, a small island just outside Colchester.  Roy gave her the happiness and companionship that she had been missing for so long.  Sadly Roy died two years later.

Mum moved back to Chelmsford to live for a short while with her sister Vera but then moved into a flat in Squirrels Court – back onto the Boarded Barns estate where she had started her married life and where she had been so involved with North Avenue church.

There were so many sides to her personality.  Sister Vera once said to me that she thought of Peggy as a Romantic Rebel and I think that is a fitting description of her.  Caroline remembers visiting the house and apart from all of us just sitting reading the newspapers, remembers discussions, about politicians, the issues of the day, TV programmes.  She was very supportive of Channel 4 and regularly watched the very difficult (for some of us) documentaries that formed the Eleventh Hour slot, from Alan’s department.

Billy Graham, an American evangelist who was very popular in the 50s, was a person who featured large in our childhood.  But Peggy’s chosen church was Congregationalist (later the United Reformed Church) – almost as simple and austere as you can get in a religion, except perhaps for the Quakers.  She put her religious beliefs into practice.  She was a popular and dedicated Sunday School teacher – so the space under our stairs was always filled with pieces of paper and crayons and glue and the cardboard centres of toilet rolls.  We all went to Sunday School, and once a year in June we all got onto buses and coaches and went to Walton-on-the-Naze for the Sunday School outing.

North Avenue                              Walton - Sunday School teachers

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When I was sorting out her flat after she moved to London, I found little bundles of card, cut from Shredded Wheat boxes, Rennies packets, the back of birthday cards, tightly wrapped with an elastic band.  She went regularly every year collecting for NSPCC.  As children we sat round the coffee table (we had a coffee table!) counting the money, making piles of the coins.

Everyone in the 50s was aware of the A bomb and H bomb.  Peggy was a member of Chelmsford CND and would chair meetings at the Friends’ Meeting House.  In 1958 she went on the first ever Aldermaston march. She wouldn’t let us go on the marches until we were 12 for fear people would think we were being indoctrinated.

She was a staunch member of the Labour Party and at election times, delivered leaflets, canvassed and went knocking up in support of local candidates (of whom Alf was occasionally one).  She espoused feminism, and caused some consternation in North Avenue church when she would change patriarchal words in hymns and prayers to include women.  She became a member of Braintree Women’s Aid.  She went to Greenham Common peace camp, where she had her first cup of herb tea, sitting round a camp fire.  She was also one of the Braintree Five when cuts were proposed in Braintree Social Services.

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She enjoyed and advocated paying tax because it was for the good of everyone in society.

And now a question:

Why do bees hum?  When I was clearing out Peggy’s flat I also found numerous little piles of cracker jokes.  She loved them.

This last picture is very typical of Peggy.  She has just finished her Shredded Wheat – she ate it every day, almost till the day she died.  Beside her is a jar of Shredless Marmalade and a slice of toast.  She is doing the Guardian crossword, while on the table is a copy of the Daily Mirror, ‘the paper that cares’, waiting to be read.  Contentment.

IMG_9337 (3)And why do bees hum?

Because they don’t know the words.

That Film Quiz

Last night, the 26 May 2016, in a friendly pub in North London, friends and family gathered to test their strength in the world of Film and Television, raising money for the Eave Alan Fountain Scholarship Fund, to support documentary film makers in South America – a cause close to Alan’s heart.

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So how did team Straight to Video get on?  Well, it was a disappointing result in that we didn’t win.  But it was a glamorous, not to say glittering event.

IMG_3164 (3)Straight to Video began the evening by opening a Fortune Cookie to raise morale and with any luck give last minute advice – mine suggested that ‘Wisdom goes not always by years’ and Maureen Who Likes Frasier had ‘A smile is the distance between two people’.  After that we felt it best to rely on our own knowledge and experience, possibly a foolish move.

There were a nice lot of TV questions (Alan did after all work in television) so our combined knowledge of Coronation Street and Brookside, with a glance to Countdown (the first ever C4 programme – loved by my mum) was put to excellent use.

We didn’t win – but because the organisers were lovely young people, they only announced the first two winning teams.  So we were quietly confident that if there had been another system of marking (possibly the Pointless way – ie the fewer the points the greater the chance of success) we could have been contenders.

A full room in a lovely pub (the Clissold Arms in Fortis Green, North London), good questions, a constant supply of snacks and water, an excellent mistress of ceremonies and a lot of dosh raised.

A lovely tribute to a lovely man.

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Movie News

Mk2 Odeon

We have been to the cinema.  Mustang is a sweet film – five sisters living in a small Turkish village at the start of the summer holidays.  Their uncle and grandmother with whom they live, have plans for their future.  The girls get on well together and have a loving, sisterly relationship.  The futures planned for them are not so bright.

See the trailer here

This is the first film of Turkish French director Deniz Gamze Ergüven.  She tells a harrowing story with a light touch.  I read a review that said this was a feel good movie, a comment with which I can’t totally agree, but there are some lovely pieces and it is beautifully acted.

I have written elsewhere about Miles Ahead – directed by and starring the wonderful Don Cheadle.  Criticised by some for creating a story it is a wonderful evocation of the time, the man and the music.  He didn’t want to make the film at first, but there was an agreement that he could from a straightforward retelling of Davis’s life to a jazzier, more dream-like film. Cheadle did not want to make a straight bio-pic, he wanted ‘a jazzier, dream-like’ film.  He wanted the film ‘to be hot. It has to be creative, insane, improvisational’ (Guardian April 2016). Ewan McGregor is the wannabe journalist who befriends the magic trumpeter.  A great film which you should catch if you can.

We have also seen Our Kind of Traitor.  Ewan McGregor is everywhere!  In this John le Carre story he is a University professor of Poetry and his wife (Naomie Harris) is a Barrister (area of law not divulged).  The couple become enmeshed in the travails of a Russian mafia man, as you do on a night out at your favourite restaurant.  The professor gets into fights with a lot of severe punching, and walks away, relatively unscathed.  His wife is crisp, cool and calm, like no barrister I know, but is often the way women barristers are portrayed.  Damien Lewis is good as the uncontrolled spy-master.  The plot became unbelievable and frustrating, as the couple become more and more involved, so that you don’t care.  I even went for a comfort break towards the end, which I never do (and indeed I regard it as cinematic bad form).  That’s how disappointed I was.

And The Nice Guys.  Dear oh dear.  We walked through the doors of Mk2 on Boulevard Saint Germain (as you do) with such high hopes.  Russell Crowe and Kim Basinger, what could go wrong?  Who can forget their roles in the wonderful LA Confidential?  Well, the writers of this film obviously.  LA Confidential was slick, clever, funny and moving.  The Nice Guys, co-starring Ryan Gosling, was not.  It has a somewhat illogical story.  Both men, one a private detective (Gosling), the other an enforcer (Crowe) are involved in investigations around a porn star – one looking for her, the other trying to conceal her.  They start as opponents (cue much punching) and become colleagues, elsewhere colleagues become opponents without so much as a word of explanation, many long unnecessary fight scenes ensue, an irritating thirteen year old daughter acts cute, and there is some very unfunny drunken slapstick.  I see Wikipedia says it has received critical acclaim.  There you are then.

So films – we love them, sitting in a dark room on a velvet covered seat with a cup of tea and possibly a ginger biscuit, forgetting the world outside and melding with the lives of the people on the screen (except Russell Crowe).

Which is why we have a date tomorrow night in North London for a Film Quiz.  It is for an excellent cause – the EAVE Alan Fountain international scholarship fund, to assist South American film-makers (Alan Fountain, my brother-in-law, who died in March, was very involved with supporting independent film).

However.  Ardent readers of this blog will know that on the last two occasions that a Movie Quiz has been attempted by the writer, success has not come easy.  That is, it has not come at all.  In the first quiz our team came last, and in the next one we came second to last – progress yes, but not a positive omen.

Our team – aptly named ‘Straight to Video’ – consists of Maureen Who Likes Frasier, C, Kate (who has suggested her strengths lie in ordering drinks at the bar), myself and possibly J if she is not ministering to the sick.  I am hoping that my new glasses and new perfume (something pink by Yves Rocher) (it’s not called Something Pink, it is pink) will act as the perfect disguise in the event of a humiliating result.

IMG_3086But let it not be thought that we are inviting failure.  We have watched the Barry Norman Film Quiz DVD (2006) – although the results weren’t promising.  And we have of course been to the cinema, and taken notes.  Hopes are high.

Sunday morning at Alexandra Palace

IMG_2316 (5) Picture the scene – a sunny Sunday morning and an offer of coffee from Maureen Who Likes Frasier.  Where to go?  M suggests Ally Pally, the sumptuous surroundings of the Palm Court. 

Alexandra Palace was originally opened in North London, between Muswell Hill and Wood Green, in 1873 but after a fire it reopened in 1875.  It was described as The People’s Palace and intended as a public centre of recreation and entertainment.  In 1936 it became the home of the world’s first regular public “high-definition” television service, operated by the BBC. The original Victorian theatre survives. Alexandra Palace became a listed building in 1996, at the instigation of the Hornsey Historical Society.

Sunday was May Day

Cg-f4bmWkAAMeq9.jpg large and there was an antiques fair on so the place was busy, but the high airy palm filled space was still awe-inspiring.

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M had arrived by the W3 bus and had saved a table.  We glanced at the leaflets for forthcoming events (we have already been to a Drive-In in one of the car parks – the Martian – good movie)

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and then with a last look at the wonderful architecture it was time to go.

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We walked round to the front of the building and went down the steps

IMG_2302 (2)crossing the road we heard a honking car – it was favourite niece B, looking lovely, leaning on the window frame!  We had a quick shouted conversation till the lights changed and then we walked down through the park.  How lucky we are to have this wonderful place so close by.

At the foot of the hill was the Farmer’s Market where we bought stinging nettles (C has a yen to make ravioli with a nettle filling), spring greens,  golden beetroot and an enormous chicken. 

IMG_2338  IMG_2342   IMG_2329And who should be serving behind a coffee stall but L – one of my first ever clerks in Wellington Street chambers!  We chatted and compared our grey hair (she has recently stopped dying hers). 

And then home for lunch in the garden.  A couple of dunnocks pottered around while we ate in the sunshine.

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Oh and by the way, I’ve finished Beyond the Beehive!  More on that later.

Ikons

Janet Mendelsohn - The street (c1968)

When my mum was living at home with us, we made a list of things we would do when she had moved to live with my sister. It was the 6 months with us, 6 months with my sister arrangement. Mum was 91 and bed-ridden, so it was full time care – we snatched a few days away when my sister and her husband stepped in but on the whole we were confined to the house.  We stuck the list on the fridge and added to it when we thought of things – Go for a Turkish Breakfast, visit Poland,  to Outing to Walton-on-the-Naze… Another thing we added was Day-trip to the Ikon Gallery in Birmingham.

Janet Mendelsohn - Kathleen and her newborn son L (c 1968))

I lived in Birmingham from 1968-1971, moving as one did in those days from University halls of residence to flat-share to bed-sits and on to house-share, in different parts of the city.  In those days Birmingham was still recovering from the war but was still full of Victorian slum dwellings which had survived.  One weekend a Sunday newspaper colour supplement carried a long article about the appalling housing conditions that many people were living in, in Balsall Heath.  I wanted to get involved with those who were trying to do something about it and for the last term of my first? second? year at the University I went once a week to the poorest areas of Balsall Heath.  I’m not sure I did much more than visit people and play with their children.  I remember standing with one of the full time workers when a mum came past, pushing a pram with a couple of kids inside, and told him proudly that he should be pleased because she’d taken his advice and they were having salad tonight.  Not being a great lover of salad, that didn’t seem to me an uplifting suggestion.

In my final year I shared a house with four other women in the heart of Balsall Heath.  Things were starting to improve – it was a vibrant area, with great restaurants and the nearby Cannon Hill Park Arts Centre, but we were all at one time or another propositioned by men looking for prostitutes, as we walked home, or stepped out to use the phone in the call box at the end of the street.

Roll forward a few decades and I read an article in the Guardian describing an exhibition called Varna Road running at the Ikon Gallery – photographs of Balsall Heath taken by Janet Mendelsohn, who was a student at the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies from 1967-69.  It sounded like part of my history.  Onto the list it went, and a promise to myself that we would go.

In the event, a month before my mum was due to move to my sister’s, she died.  And then tragically and shockingly, my brother-in-law died.

So it was only this week that we were able to properly study the yellowing piece of paper, curling at the edges, that was still stuck on the fridge.  I found the Ikon gallery on the internet – and woe – the exhibition ends tomorrow.  It’s just not possible to go.  I sent for the postcards which arrived promptly.  If you’re in the Birmingham area, go – it sounds wonderful.

Janet Mendelsohn - Kathleen Hanging Out (c1968)

And read this piece from the girl in the picture at the top, here.  The story comes full circle.

The Jungle – Calais

the Jungle 1

My friend the actor Leila Crerar and her friend Nicky have been volunteering at ‘Good Chance Theatre‘, a temporary theatre space which has been set up in the Jungle, the refugee camp in Calais. Globe to Globe recently put on Hamlet.
As they were going anyway, they thought why waste the journey? Why not try and take with them what was most needed? There are many kitchens being run by volunteers in the camp, which are providing 2500 hot meals everyday. They thought about all the people they knew who have felt angry at the lack of support by the authorities who are turning a blind eye to the suffering of thousands of people across Europe. In Calais alone – only 100 miles from London – there are 6000 people living in terrible conditions. Their thinking was that there are a lot of people who feel passionately about helping, so why not all get together and do something?

Leila set up a crowd funding page asking people to donate money towards the cost of hiring a van, and filling it with food.

Leila Asda - loading (2)

They raised over £2000 very quickly, they found a van, and bought food.  Here is Leila at Asda being assisted to load produce into the van.

Asda loading (3)

The van loaded they set off – and here is the first letter that Leila sent back.

Letter number 1
Mission Accomplished!!

We all did it, we made it happen! Thank you so much for making this possible!

Yesterday we dropped a van loaded with £2000 worth of dried fruit, tins, oil, pulses, fresh fruit and veg, and much more. It took quite a bit to unload. There were loads of volunteers helping us at the warehouse in Calais. They had a small hand operated fork lift, which broke as we carried the stuff in. An Irish women, volunteering with her elderly mother, turned round, smiled and said, “everything is broken here.” But the sun was shinning and the volunteers were hiving inside the warehouse, stacking, peeling, carrying, and greeting. A stereo blasted out the little Mermaid ‘I Wanna Be Where The People Are’, it felt surreal. Some of these volunteers have been here for over six-months.

the Van 1

unloading 1

The Saturday before we arrived we got an email from Good Chance Theatre, informing us about the new developments in the camp. The French authorities are evicting the theatre, along with everyone in the south side of the camp. They have a week to move before they will bulldoze the area. This part of the camp is he the cultural hub. The Theatre, the Library, the Women and Children’s Centre, and the Youth Centre will all be destroyed. Yesterday a long time volunteer told us, “It is no coincidence they are choosing this part of the camp, they want to make it unbearable for people to live in the Jungle.” Good Chance emailed us to say that tensions were rising in the camp and that sadly they would have to cancel us coming and doing workshops for safety reasons.

But we are here, so after the food drop we offered our services to the awesome Hattie in the warehouse. She sent us out to litter pick, which certainly felt more humbling than doing anything else. Walking inside the camp felt even more surreal, the sun was shining and a muddy Glastonbury would have come to mind, if it weren’t for the 20-foot barbed wire fences. The first thing that struck us was how everyone living in the camp had adapted to these dire circumstances. Shops, restaurants, and wooden shacks lined a main drag way. Lots of people greeted us and wanted to talk. We spend the afternoon with an 17year old called Fahad from Kuwait. He showed us to one of the make shift restaurants inside the camp. We bought him Lunch, and always with a smile on his face, he told us his story. We felt a bit guilty when we returned with our jiffy bags empty of rubbish, but some how meeting Jarah felt more important.

The van will prove very useful here, we are just back from the Supermarket where we bought a fresh supply of fruit and veg for the morning.
With the money raised:
£2000 Van full of food.
£500 Van and Travel
£630 Still to spend on fruit and veg runs. With the remainder we have decided to wait and see where we think this money should go. It may well be the fruit and veg runs, but once we have been here longer hopefully we will see where this money is most needed.

Thank you so much everyone for making this happen. We will be keeping the funding open. We will stop bothering you with our long emails now. When I get a chance I (Leila) will write a blog, which you can read if you like, or not. Either way you are awesome.

xxxxLeila and Nicky.

Love 1* some details have been changed to protect identities
Letter number 2

Hello All

I know we said we would give you a rest from our emails, but there is an emergency, and we could really do with all your help. Not more money this time, just a signature!

The last two days in the Calais Camp we have spent helping, among others, Liz Glegg in the ‘Jungle’ Children’s Centre, an incredible women who has made a safe warm environment for the 400 children in the camp. 200 of these are unaccompanied minors. With the rest of the money you raised we bought cooking gas, and drove around the camp, making sure the canisters were delivered straight to these children’s tents. The ‘Lost Boys’ from Peter Pan is what stuck in my mind. They were cheeky naughty hilarious little kids. When they weren’t giggling and causing mischief, you caught a glimpse of unspeakable horror in their eyes. No child should know such an expression of loss. When we returned to our hostel that night, “haunted” is what we both said we felt.

The Children’s Centre is going to be bulldozed by the French authorities this Monday 22nd, unless we all show our government, that they must take action. Some of these unaccompanied children could disappear. Liz has linked some of the lone children, up with Lawyers but they have little English, and the only contact she has with them is a phone number, if they lose their phones there would be no way of finding them again. And the only place they know to go as a safe haven will have been destroyed.

Please help by signing this partition calling on our government to take action.

Some major celebrities have got behind the cause, and Natalie Bennett was in the camp yesterday, but this is also about numbers.

SIGN AND SHARE: http://www.refugees-welcome.org.uk/childrenofcalais/

xxxxLeila and Nicky.

P.S
We are still getting people donating, and asking about our fundraising page, we are keeping our funding open, so we can return and keep finding ways to directly help people like Liz. So keep sharing you wonderful folks!!

http://gogetfunding.com/fill-a-van-full-of-food-for-calais…/
JUDE LAW LETTER: http://www.theguardian.com/…/british-writers-actors-david-c…

LIZ CLEGG:

About 450 unaccompanied children are to have their temporary homes demolished in the next stage of the Calais refugee camp clearance – amid growing concerns…
www.independent.co.uk