Where Did It All Go Right? (44 page)

Read Where Did It All Go Right? Online

Authors: Andrew Collins

6
.
The sweet Liverpudlian who cut hair, liked Japan and imagined she was ‘obese’ (she wasn’t). As we have established I went out with her for a whole month in 1982. It’s like a soap opera.

7
.
‘Small’ meant large in our sarcastic world. Do you follow?

8
.
As in, how like the androgynous trend-setters who went to clubs such as the Blitz in London would I dress? The answer, on the night, was not very. I wore one of Mum’s scarves as a neckerchief but under a large coat. I slipped the neckerchief off.

9
.
‘Sound of the Crowd’. It was pretty damn good.

10
.
The Philips 2000 system (with two-sided tapes): first casualty in the VCR wars, and Dad had bought rather than rented it. We eventually replaced it with … a BetaMax.

11
.
Replay: Spurs v Man City, 3–2.

12
.
The Lings leisure centre with the little cinema attached also had an athletics track.

13
.
More sarcasm.

14
.
I did much of my formative drinking at the Merton Hotel. Because our parents always knew where we were, they turned a blind eye.

15
.
The deputy manager at Sainsbury’s was the pantomime villain Mr Eccleston (he even had a moustache). We all hated him, but then he was the boss, and when you’re a worker (like I was pretending to be for the 18 weeks I was employed by Sainsbury’s), you hate the boss.

16
.
As in the film star Jacqueline Bisset, whom I fancied.

17
.
A Charles Bronson thriller directed by Don Siegel in 1977. You see, it was an event if I
didn’t
watch a film.

18
.
My final total for 1981 would be 121 films seen. In 1982 it was 144, and 1983 a storming 175. I have never stopped being proud of myself for this intense self-education.

19
.
The Poseidon Adventure
‘premiered’ on TV as we know in 1979, but it was on again on Christmas Eve this year – the third time I had seen it.

20
.
These boots were all the rage during the New Romantic years: black and sort of velvety, you tucked your pleated trousers into them (and then had to keep re-tucking them all night). Commendably effeminate though for a provincial lad.

21
.
Actually
The Illustrated Directory of Film Stars
by David Quinlan.

22
.
The second
Not the Nine O’Clock News
LP.

23
.
I had by now started to experiment with tints and dyes supplied by Carol. The sort other people can only detect if you stand under a bright light. (One such tint coincided with night-time carol singing so I was able to impress the others by shining a torch onto my hair all evening.)

24
.
In time-honoured sixth-form fashion, we discovered irony round about now and watched certain kids’ shows religiously, like
Rainbow
– every lunch hour – and this,
Ad-Lib
, a suitably ropey ITV teatime magazine show with Duncan Goodhew among its gang of upbeat presenters (also actors Tilly Vosborough, Dave Nunn and Oona Kirsch). These were the
Supermarket Sweep
and
Neighbours
of our day.

fifteen

Alan’s Flat

Just because you’re gay
,

I won’t turn you away

If you stick around
,

I’m sure that we can find some common ground

Billy Bragg, ‘Sexuality’ (1991)

THE FLASHPOINT CAME
in the summer of ’82 and had it not been for all that dyed New Romantic hair in my eyes I would have seen it a mile off. My relationship with Mum and Dad was coming to a head. The honeymoon was almost up.

I was, in the immortal words of Viv Savage,
1
having a good time
all the time
: gigging, writing, rehearsing and enjoying the first modicum of local fame with Absolute Heroes, making highly wrought birthday cards and tapes for all my mates, and notching up seemingly endless parties at the Willowtree function room; Mum and Dad were understandably concerned that I had taken my eye off the academic ball. I had actually kicked it over a fence.

My bloodless O-level grades were enough to clinch me a place in the sixth form, but – as I found out in term one – A-levels seem
timed
not just to run counter to your galloping hormones, but also to coincide with the age of the provisional driving licence, almost-legal drinking and Saturday jobs. Indeed, merely
being
in the sixth form with all its perks (common room, kettle, tuck shop, study periods, ‘distinctive blazer’) creates precisely the wrong environment for work. It did for me anyway.

The problem underlying all this was easy to see. I’d decided by now that I really could do art for a living (despite the stingy C they gave me for my O-level – a sign that I was misunderstood, obviously). My naïve childhood jotter fantasy had found a precedent: there were art colleges, I’d discovered. While my peers were thinking about university places in Bath and Bristol, I pinned my hopes on studying art. (I know what you’re thinking: studying art = oxymoron. And, as someone who spent four years doing it, I can’t really argue.) Of course, you can’t just do art A-level and spend the rest of the time eating Aeros from the tuck shop and organising the revue. So I took English, because I liked writing, and – to make up the numbers – biology, one of my few Bs, which did at least involve a bit of drawing (aorta and xylems and mitochondria mostly).

My whole attitude was wrong from the day I first donned the maroon blazer: I was doing one subject I truly cared about – but thought I was so good at already I didn’t need to put any further effort in; a second subject I liked but was only taking as a fall-back (‘At least get English, then you can always be a journalist if the art career falls through,’ said my parents, clearly out of their minds); and a third subject which was the equivalent of the
Guinness Book of Names
, the sort of tome I took out of the library simply because you were allowed four and there were no others about vampire films or Tony Hancock.

Mr Chennells was bang on when he wrote at the end of my first year, ‘He seems to think that by some good stroke of fortune he is bound to land on his feet.’ I did think that: I
lived
by that rule. My first 17 years on earth had seemed like one long ‘good stroke of fortune’ (I wonder if he meant to type ‘stroke of good fortune’?). I blame my parents for this sense of enormous well-being. They were the ones who had brought me up in an atmosphere of fun, freedom, farmhouses and fish fingers. I figured this was what life
was
going to be like for the foreseeable future: drawing cartoons, putting triangles in my diary and playing a drum kit which I hadn’t even paid for. Apart from the wobbly start at Weston Favell, the U in history, and perhaps my ingrown toenail, life had been pretty sweet for Andy Collins. (FANS … AUTOGRAPHS LATER!) Where was the evidence that I couldn’t surf through the next few years?

On 4 March 1982, my 17th birthday (whereupon I erroneously wrote ‘I am a man!’ in my diary), I was a massively confident, energetic and happy human being. My horoscope from the paper that day was telling: ‘Your solar chart looks positively divine. There is little that I can guard you against, except maybe a bit of waste and extravagance. Apart from that you are the life and soul of the party, and the year ahead of you looks delicious.’

Nothing about biology essays, you’ll notice, but then horoscopes are a load of shit. Nevertheless I believed that the stars had aligned for me that day: I
was
the life and soul of the party, the year ahead
did
look delicious. Let me through, I’m a Pisces!

I had packed in my soul-destroying Sainsbury’s job before Christmas – with Mum and Dad’s blessing, I might add, as I’d protested it was interfering with my A-levels. (Well it was, but so would the Saturday activities I replaced it with: drinking, sleeping, and hanging around the Grosvenor Centre.) They bought me a Hitachi SDT-1000 faux-stack hi-fi for my birthday and I thanked them kindly, put it in my new bedroom and played my new Bauhaus and Gina X
2
albums on it. And what’s more, the day after my birthday, Vaughan passed his driving test, a hugely significant pivot, as it freed him up to become my willing chauffeur in his second-hand red Viva aka the ‘Bossmobile’ (I called him the Boss, not because he looked anything like Bruce Springsteen, or indeed because he was the boss at the printers where he worked, but because I hero-worshipped him). Positively divine.

What could possibly go wrong?

* * *

Thus began a new period of my life where I no longer needed my dad, or anyone else’s, to come and pick me up from parties. I was, thanks to Vaughan and the Test Centre at Gladstone Road, independent for the first time. Well, dependent on him but he didn’t mind. He was only a year older than me (and still lived at home) but seemed about five years older with his car and his job, and this was where the floodgates opened.

Vaughan (or Vorno as we called him) introduced me to Alan Martin, another senior chap who was also in gainful employment. Better than that, he worked at Our Price records in town, which seemed to be just about the coolest job anyone could have aside from being Barry Norman or Jacqueline Bisset’s ballet-dancing husband. (Alan owned a full-size cardboard cut-out Gary Numan and everything.) An occasional DJ, he was part of the local rock scene: although Our Price was a chainstore, individual branches still had character in those days, and Alan’s was a noted hangout. As a result he seemed to know everybody. A gregarious bear of a man with Seventies hair and a Toyah fixation, he was interested in Absolute Heroes and came to see us rehearse in the school hall with a view to becoming our manager (this was before our first gig). We initially called him Mr R Price, for a joke, but were secretly flattered that a man who worked in a record shop was interested in us. He was also an inveterate giggler and hard not to like.

He stopped giggling briefly a month later when his parents effectively threw him out of the house. I was unlucky enough to be a spectator at this cathartic moment in Alan’s life (Vorno had driven us round there). I guess the row had been brewing for some time, but on this particular balmy evening, Alan and his equally bearlike Mum had such a steaming head-to-head he ended up storming out, with both parents screaming obscenities at him as the Bossmobile pulled out of Poppyfield Court
3
at high speed. I must admit I was quite shocked at the expletives they came out
with
, which just shows what a sheltered home life I must have led. But then Alan did live in Lings.

At least he used to. The next thing we knew – and I think you may be ahead of me here – Alan had moved into a flat in nearby Blackthorn. He was officially the first friend I’d ever had who didn’t live with his mum and dad. So now, right in the middle of my A-levels, I had one mate with a car and another with a flat. It was a recipe for the best of times and the worst of times.

Alan’s flat became mythic almost immediately. He shared it with a bloke called Nigel, and it became a magnet for a whole host of us who lived with our parents. Don’t start thinking Jonathan King at the Walton Hop – we were most of us aged around 17 and 18, and Alan and Nigel were only 19 going on 20. No luring went on. We loved it there, and Alan and Nigel had to clear up the cups when the rest of us had driven off into the night (or been driven off, by guess who). Alan’s flat was a place where you could open a tin of Birds Devonshire custard and eat it all with a spoon. The place also acted like a miniature singles bar, serving instant coffee, Marmite, Rice Krispies and mushy peas at all hours, and playing musical selections from the collection of, well, a man who worked in a record shop. And cardboard Gary Numan was there to watch over us.

When the flat started to become a scene, Alan wrote a message to me in my diary: ‘Why, you young fool, you’ll end up like me and Nigel if you come up much more … BLOODY PERVERTED!!!’ He didn’t mean it literally, although if Mum had happened to glance at my journal she’d have seen from my little cartoons that a typical Saturday night round Alan’s might involve Nigel administering a home-made tattoo to someone called Phil with a sewing needle and some ink, or Nigel shaving off all his body hair. To make matters more suspect – for Mum anyway – I slept over a few times. Eek.

Slap bang in the middle of all this sleaze, Mum and Dad went to a school parents’ evening (I think we can see where this is heading) … the kind that culminates in a serious ‘chat’ on their return. ‘They made me admit I’m a lazy sod,’ says my diary for 21 April, and you should read the next bit in an over-sincere American accent: ‘Admitting it to them was admitting it to
me
.’ I vowed to pull my socks up. The next day I stayed in and caught up on my
English
essays and copied up a backlog of biology notes and did some life drawing and went to bed at 9.45 p.m.

And the day after that I went back to Alan’s flat.

Actually, there were two Alan’s flats, just like there were two Miss Ellies on
Dallas
. The Blackthorn one, over in the eastern wilds of Northampton, lasted for about six weeks. Then, tragically, Alan moved back in with his parents, which was seen by all as a moral defeat, mainly because we’d have nowhere to go and eat tinned food and do silly stuff on beanbags. In July, he did the decent thing and moved into a second flat, much closer to the town centre and thus even more of a refuge for passing waifs and strays. (‘This flat will be full of me for a long time,’ I wrote on the day he moved in, just in case Mum was reading and feared that she might have wrested me from Alan’s sinister clutches.)

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