all-working-towards-the-same-end company, âis to create an original show. I mean, entertainment is variety. Your husband wouldnât think much of you if you produced the same meal for him every night â however good it was.â
His middle-class half-joke produced the right middle-class half-laugh and Charles was once again impressed with Christopher Miltonâs ability to adapt to any audience and say the right things. It was not an intellectual gift; he probably did not have the intelligence or knowledge to argue the merits of the piece on a literary level; it was just an instinct that never failed.
Miss Thompson, the secretary, next introduced a question from: âMr Henry Oxenford, one of our keenest members, whoâs interested in all things theatrical.â Mr Oxenford, one of the bow-tied types who hang about amateur dramatic societies, content to be precious rather than queer, stood up and put his well-rehearsed enquiry, âI would like to know whether you, as a performer, be it as Tony Lumpkin or Lionel Wilkins, find the danger that a part tends to take over your private life and you become like that person?â
Christopher Milton laughed boyishly. âYou mean when Iâm working on the television series, do I go around trying to con money off everyone I meet?â
âWell, not exactly.â
âOh, I beg yours.â The Lionel Wilkins line was, as ever, perfectly delivered and got its laugh. Charles watched Christopher Miltonâs eyes and saw him decide to continue in the Wilkins voice and prolong the misunderstanding. âOh, I see what you mean â do I go up to people in the street and say, Look âere, Iâve got this great project. Wouldnât you like to buy shares in the first motel on the moon? Not only do you get the normal dividends, but you also get a free weekend every year once the motel is completed. Now the shares arenât yet officially on the market, but I can let you have some at a price which . . .â And he was away, re-creating the plot of a recent episode of Straight Up, Guv . The Friends of the Palace Theatre loved it.
As he drew to the end of his routine, before Miss Thompson could introduce Mrs Horton who had been waving her arm like a schoolgirl know-all between each question, he glanced at his watch. âOh, look at the time. Iâm afraid weâve gone on much longer than we intended. Weâve still got a lot of work to do on this show â oh, you may have liked it, but there are a good few things to he altered yet â so we must draw it to a close there.â
The Friends of the Palace Theatre started to leave through the stalls. An autograph cluster gathered round the star. The other members of the cast, who hadnât got much of a look-in on the discussion, trickled back through the curtains. Mark Spelthorne dawdled, seeing if there were any fans of The Fighter Pilots on the autograph trail. When it became apparent there werenât, he vanished smartly.
Christopher Milton finished the signings and waved cheerily from the stage until the last Friend had gone out of the doors at the back of the stalls. When he turned his face was instantly twisted with rage. âCows! Stupid, bloody cows!â He pushed through the curtains, shouting imperiously, âWally! Dickie! Come on, weâve got to get this script altered, even if we have to work all bloody night.â
As Charles waited to hear the inevitable news that there would be a rehearsal call at ten the following morning, he began to understand the personality-splitting pressure of a public image.
Gerald Venables was sitting waiting in his car, a Mercedes 280 SL, with the lights doused, by the stage door. He had the collar of his raincoat turned up and was slumped against the window in an attitude cribbed from some B-movie. He was trying so hard to be inconspicuous that Charles saw him instantly. âHello.â
âSsh. Get in.â The
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