Authors: Simon Brett
A few years older than Charles, blessed with extraordinarily good looks and boundless raw talent, Portie had had a charmed start to his career. Cast in a major television series before he'd even finished at RADA, he'd gone on to deliver an acclaimed Prince Hal and even more acclaimed Hamlet at the RSC. When he moved from the subsidized to the commercial sector, the success had continued. He had been one of those actors who make other actors sick. Whatever parts had come up on stage or television, every director wanted Portie to play them. As was customary in the theatre, no one considered that it might be fairer to spread the work a bit more evenly around the acting community. For many months Portie had been flavour of the month and nobody could get enough of that flavour.
He relished the celebrity lifestyle too. Once he'd moved back to London from the relative obscurity of the RSC at Stratford, his outrageous behaviour quickly made him a darling of the gossip columns. A wife, one of his contemporaries at RADA, had been quickly shed, and he had worked his way through a series of high-profile liaisons. Portie produced the mandatory illegitimate children, bar room brawls and drunken appearances at televised awards ceremonies. The tabloids, starved of characters in the mould of Richard Burton, Peter O'Toole and Richard Harris by a new generation of actors who were pretentiously âdedicated to their craft', couldn't have been happier. They gleefully took up the nickname âPortie', and a day when they couldn't report some new Portie outrage was a wasted day.
Remarkably, through all this, his talent remained undimmed. He still was a brilliant actor. Then he was cast as the lead in a big-budget television drama series opposite that year's flavour of the month actress (with whom he had the inevitable high- profile affair). The show took every award on offer and was a huge international success. It was particularly big in America, where its stars were fêted and cosseted on publicity tours. Their high profile led to many offers of work, particularly for Portie.
It was at this point, lured by the prospect of big dollar cheques and needing to escape rather complicated domestic circumstances in England, that Portie decided to up his roots and move to try his luck in the States.
What happened to him thereafter was not well documented, at least not in his home country. Reports of Portie's outrageous behaviour in Los Angeles soon dwindled away to nothing. The tabloids found new âbad boy celebrities' to puff up (and subsequently destroy). Portie was seen in supporting roles in a couple of mediocre movies, but clearly didn't crack Hollywood in a major way.
For all Charles Paris knew, he may have had a perfectly successful career in the States, starring in miniseries and Movies of the Week, but none of his work made much impact in the UK.
Looking at him in Joe Allen, Charles could see that Portie hadn't aged well. The excesses of his lifestyle had taken their toll. Now in his sixties, the famous thatch of golden hair had subsided into a horseshoe of grey above his ears. The distinctive angular face had spread sideways, its skin reddened by broken veins. And the magnificently trim body, which had encouraged so many schoolgirls to pin up photographs of Portie in their bedrooms, was slack with fat. Prince Hal had given way to Falstaff.
One thing, it was clear from that lunch at Joe Allen, hadn't changed. Portie still drank.
And, so long as nobody else wanted to take much part in the conversation, he remained a very entertaining companion. Even if he hadn't made it big there himself, he commanded an inexhaustible supply of scurrilous anecdotes about the biggest Hollywood stars.
Charles Paris was quite content in the role of listener. Though, like most actors, he could take centre stage in a social situation, he didn't crave that kind of attention. In rehearsal he sat quietly at the side of the room with
The Times
crossword. Joining in in moments of communal hilarity, but generally just listening. He eschewed big occasions. The thought of attending a Cup Final or The Last Night of the Proms was anathema to him. In a crowd he became invisible, lost the fragile hold he had on his personality. Outside work, the less people he was with the better. His ideal was one other person, preferably female. Having a meal with a woman he fancied, that was Charles Paris's idea of heaven.
But he could still enjoy being in the company of a born entertainer. And Portie was certainly that. He had just finished a hilarious defamatory story about Dustin Hoffman's monomania when for a moment he waxed philosophical. âBut why shouldn't we draw attention to ourselves during our brief spell on earth? Human beings are by their nature ephemeral, and surely actors are the most ephemeral of all. What do we leave behind? Performances on stage that are forgotten within weeks. Performances on film and television that will soon look dated and whose technologies will soon be superseded. Lovers' memories of ourselves that die when they die. Children? The product of a few randomly scattered but tenacious sperm. Children who grow away from us and forget us.' He refilled his glass and raised it. âEnjoy the moment â it's the only bloody thing we can be sure of.'
Tibor and Charles raised their glasses too, to toast the thought.
âStill, enough about me,' roared Portie, laughing, knowing it was a joke, knowing that there was never going to be enough about him. âWhat about you, Charles? You still getting work?'
âOccasionally. You actually catch me in one of those rare moments when I've got a job.'
âGood for you!'
âI'm doingâ'
But he knew the interest in his career would be short-lived. âWhy is it,' Portie cut through his words, âthat all directors are full of shit?'
âThank you,' said Tibor Pincus, not really offended.
âI don't mean you, Tibor. You were bloody good. You recognized actors' talent and let them display that talent. Let me rephrase my question. Why is it that all directors
nowadays
are full of shit? They all think they know your job better than you do. Some of them have the nerve to give you bloody acting lessons. Particularly in the States, particularly in television. Yes, all right, television's a technical medium, but it's not rocket science. All the director has to do is point the bloody camera at that actor and
let the actor bloody act
!' He looked across at Charles. âWho's directing the show you're doing?'
âBloke called Ned English.'
âOh, bloody hell! I remember him. One of those poncey poseurs who thought, because he'd been to Cambridge and studied Shakespeare, he knew more about the theatre than people who'd learned how to act by bloody acting. Is he still staging plays in fatuous settings? What are you doing?
As You Like It
set in a bloody launderette?'
âNo, actually Iâ'
âI don't know, how is it some of these wankers survive in the business? Ned English â you could tell from day one he was full of shit. It's scandalous that he's still making a living. He should have been recognized long ago for the pile of crap that he is.'
âDid you ever work with him, Portie?'
âDid I? Bloody tried to. When he was the hottest thing in the West End, he cast me in “The Scottish Play”.' Portie looked around anxiously, then realized he wasn't in a theatre and said, âBloody
Macbeth
. I'd just done my Hamlet at the RSC, Macbeth was a part I'd always wanted to play, so I signed up. But I didn't sign up to play Macbeth in a bloody Chinese restaurant! Kurosawa got away with relocating the play to medieval Japan, but Ned English's attempt to make it about the dynastic ambitions of Chinese waiters just didn't cut the mustard. Thank God it was a short run and out of town. Hardly anyone saw it. Where's he setting the thing you're doing?'
âInside Hamlet's skull.'
âOh. Hamlet â¦?' For a moment Portie seemed taken aback, as if he was about to ask something, but he moved on. âBloody typical! No, I'm afraid Ned English and me was not a marriage made in heaven.' He waved at a passing waiter. âAnother bottle of the Cab Sauv, please. No, I hated the bastard. All smooth and smarmy on the outside, but he was up to some pretty devious stuff.'
âOh?' said Charles Paris.
âHad an eye for the girls. Well, nothing wrong with that. All been guilty of that in our time.' Portie roared a roguish laugh, implying a thousand seductions. âAt least I bloody hope we have. But Ned English had a rather nasty way with the old casting couch.'
âHow do you mean?' asked Charles. Tibor Pincus seemed long since to have given up participation in the conversation, content just to drink and listen.
âNed was screwing some young actress in the
Macbeth
company who was playing a Court Lady â well, for “Court Lady” read “Posh Customer in Chinese Restaurant”. Damn pretty girl, can't remember her name, lovely tits though. I'd had a couple of nights with her in the first week of rehearsal and I think she was all upset when I moved on, and Ned picked her up on the rebound. Anyway, she was an ambitious little minx and she got to thinking, “I'm screwing the director of this play, surely I ought to be able to take advantage of that?”'
âIn what way?'
âThe most old-fashioned way of all, Charles. Little tart wanted a bigger part and starts putting pressure on our Ned. No way she's going to get Lady Macbeth, but she reckons she could easily be bumped up to Lady Macduff â you know, have all her “
pretty chickens killed in one fell swoop
”. I mean, of course, what I'm talking about was just company gossip but, knowing Ned English, I wouldn't have put it past him.'
âPut what past him?'
âBide your time, Charles. You should know better than to interrupt a legendary anecdotist in the middle of telling of one of his anecdotes.'
âI feel appropriately reprimanded, Portie.'
âBloody hope so too. Anyway, what happens is, interval of the Dress Rehearsal poor cow who's playing Lady Macduff falls down the stairs from her dressing room. After that, what else can happen? Ned's bit of stuff, who he's moved up to understudy, has to go on, doesn't she? All right, could have been an accident, but good old backstage gossip says that maybe Ned English helped the original Lady Macduff on her way, to ensure his continuing access inside the girlfriend's knickers. Huh.
âAnyway, dear boys, must tell you about a rather interesting evening I once spent with Nicole Kidman ⦠Well, I say
evening
, but it might be more accurate were I to describe it as a
night
,
and let me tell you â¦'
But Charles Paris's mind was too full to concentrate on more tales from Hollywood.
A
t Paddington it somehow seemed natural to buy a half-bottle of Bell's for the journey back. And, bizarrely, there didn't seem to be any of it left by the time the train drew into Swindon. Charles didn't have much recollection of the cab ride from there to Marlborough.
Possibly as a result of this â though Charles Paris thought it was more because his brain was too full â that evening's performances of the Ghost of Hamlet's Father and the First Gravedigger were not the best they had ever been. So much so that Ned English, who happened to be watching out front for the show, left a message saying he wanted to have a word with Charles afterwards.
Which was actually very convenient.
A pint in the pub nearest to the theatre did make Charles feel more together as he listened to the reprimand from his director. No point in arguing or defending himself. His behaviour had been unprofessional and out of order.
Apparently â though Charles hadn't been aware of the lapse â he'd even mangled Shakespeare's words. Rather than the Ghost saying, â
O wicked wit and gifts
,' as demanded by the text, he had said, â
O wicked git and wifts
,' which, though it hadn't got a laugh from the audience, had very nearly made Sam Newton-Reid's Hamlet corpse.
His apology was appropriately contrite, not to say abject. But, having got that out of the way, Charles Paris was not going to miss his opportunity to interrogate Ned English about Katrina Selsey's death.
âYou still with that
StarHunt
contestant?' he asked with apparent casualness. âBillie-Louise?'
Ned's eyes, behind the circular tortoiseshell glasses, looked puzzled for a moment. Then, reckoning he must have let slip the girl's name to Charles in an unguarded moment, he replied, âYes.'
âYou lucky dog.'
âShe is rather beautiful, you're right.'
âThe older man being rejuvenated by the blood of young virgins?'
âBillie-Louise is hardly a virgin.'
âNo, but you know what I mean.'
âYes.' But something in Ned's tone suggested that being with Billie-Louise was not an unmixed blessing. âYou should try it one day, Charles.'
âThe younger woman? Believe me, I have. Fine, I've found, till you get on to their taste in music and movies.' He paused, uncertain for a moment how much finesse to use in his investigating, before deciding to plunge straight in. Not feeling very original, he fell back on the approach he'd used with Bazza in The Pessimist's Arms. âYou know how backstage gossip spreads, don't you, Ned?'
He snorted. âTell me about it.'
âWell, I heard something about you and Billie-Louise â¦'
âWho from?'
Charles shook his head. âNever reveal your sources. The rumour was that Billie-Louise was putting pressure on you to get her into the show as Ophelia.'
Maybe it was the booze uninhibiting him sufficiently to be that blunt. His words certainly had an effect on Ned. For a moment the director just mouthed at him, without any sound coming out. Finally, he got himself together sufficiently to say, âDid you hear that from Geraldine?'
âI said I wouldn't reveal my sources.'
âI bet it was her. She's a devious cow.'