Halfway To Hollywood: Diaries 1980-1988 (Volume Two) (41 page)

BOOK: Halfway To Hollywood: Diaries 1980-1988 (Volume Two)
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I realise, with a momentary mixture of fear and embarrassment, that I am indeed in a ‘Blacks Only’ world. There is no hostility, though – the blacks are just busy talking, meeting, napping, lolling – they’re in their own world. What I object to most of all is that I should have been made to feel some guilt about being amongst these people.
It’s this feeling of a shadow nation of blacks, which just isn’t acknowledged, which is the most disturbing impression of SA.
Monday, January 10th: Johannesburg-Perth
In the First Class cabin is a family who are emigrating from SA to Australia. The father is a solicitor and avocado farmer – parents English, he was born and bred in SA. But now he’s taking his family out. He points to them. ‘There’s no way I shall let them die fighting for an indefensible cause.’
He talks bitterly of the arrogance and inflexibility of the Afrikaans National Party. The English are treated almost as badly as the blacks by them, he said. Although he had a prosperous farm, he had no clout in politics at all. The Afrikaners are a small, self-perpetuating elite –
repressive, intolerant and dogmatic – and it’s they who have driven him away.
Arrive at Perth at 2.30 a.m. Met by Doug O’Brien of GUO Film Distributors, a big, friendly, gentle man, to whom I take an immediate liking. Into Perth to the Hilton Parmelia – a big, new hotel, one class up from the President Holiday Inn, Jo’burg. Now I’m a film star and I have a suite on the eighth floor. All I can see outside are swirling freeways and lights on hills.
I’ve never been further from home.
Tuesday, January 11th: Perth, Western Australia
To lunch at a restaurant with a fine, indeed stunning, view over the waterfront. Arthur, the owner of an 18-cinema chain in Perth and area, and Norman, GUO’s theatre owner in the city, were dining with us.
Arthur has a fine line in Aussie swearing, specially effective because the phrases come out quite naturally and without affectation from this fairly elderly gentleman. Describing a local millionaire called Bond – ‘Of course, he stuck his cock in a cash register’ (i.e. he married into money). A Sydney Indian restaurant is recommended with the warning that it used to be known as ‘The Blazing Arsehole’.
Back to the hotel afterwards. Not welcome in the restaurant as I have no jacket. The receptionist immediately takes the side of the restaurant. ‘One of the waiters had a heart attack tonight, so they may be a little tense in there’ – pure Fawlty.
Friday, January 14th: Adelaide and Sydney
To ABC Adelaide for two very pleasant and easy BBC-style chats with programme hosts who were both very complimentary about ‘
The Mish
’. Another station at which a man called Carl phones in and goes into a swingeing attack on me for being sacrilegious, etc. At one point he throws in Pamela Stephenson’s name, blaming me even for her – and calling her a ‘wicked Jezebel’.
At Sydney we are met by John Hartman, Managing Director of GUO.
To my room at the Regent – a 30-storey brand new hotel, from one of whose 19th-floor rooms I have a breathtakingly impressive panoramic view of the harbour, the bridge, the Opera House and the shores of North Sydney.
A surprise phone call from Basil Pao, who is in Sydney after three years’ ‘exile’ in Hong Kong. He says he has just received a call from John Goldstone asking if he will design a
Meaning of Life
poster.
No sooner have I put the phone down than Goldstone himself rings to confirm a rumour I heard that Universal want the
Meaning of Life
to open in America at Easter.
Saturday, January 15th: Sydney
Meet Basil in North Bondi. He’s at the home of a small, pretty, quite tough lady called Lydia, who is the agent of Jim Sherman [a playwright] and Philip Noyce, the director of
Newsfront
.
We drink champagne looking out over North Bondi Beach, and the scene reminds me, again with great poignancy, of my holidays at Southwold – brown, barefoot people coming home to little bungalows for supper, the toilets and bus shelters at the edge of the cliff, the sun and salt-tarnished paintwork and, above all, the feeling of lazy days. Quite, quite different from Africa
and
America. It’s all so terribly … terribly English.
We eat at a nearby restaurant – really good food, not posh or pretentious, just very well cooked. Meet Bruce Chatwin there – he is rather sneery about things in a slightly aggressive, camp way which I don’t awfully take to. There’s almost an edge of cruelty somewhere there. Anyway, we bravely persevere in eating out in a force 5 gale, whilst being visited every now and then by drunken naval officers who recognise me and bring us complimentary glasses of port.
Then into the Rocks area again, where we go to see a group Basil knows. As they finish playing the room empties, leaving a lot of men without women and a crush of empty Fosters cans just dropped on the floor. ‘This is the fall of Australian heterosexuality,’ says Lydia.
Sunday, January 16th: Sydney
Wake about 10.30 with a cracking headache. Am extremely delicate for the rest of the morning. Bathe gingerly. Walk up to the corner of George Street to meet John Hartman, who is taking me for a drive up the coast to – I hardly dare contemplate the word – lunch.
It’s a hot day – about 25 Celsius – and I’m picked up in the white Mercedes by a chauffeur complete with grey suit and peaked cap. I’m
driven north along suburban roads that eventually blend into a déjà-vu Essex. I have to avoid sharp movements of the head, so when John Hartman in the back faithfully points out the (very few) objects of interest, I move like a man in an invisible neck brace.
I must be acting the interested passenger quite convincingly, as he appears determined to show me the local beaches. We stop at one and Vince, the chauffeur, parks our white Merc right up by the sand dunes and we have to pile out and walk around like a brace of property developers. How much I would rather be just lying out in the sun like everyone else. ‘You’ve got a lot of clothes on for the beach,’ comments a passing girl bather.
I’m mistaken for Eric Idle – only this time by someone who met Eric only last week, an Englishman who manages four of the England cricket team, who are now losing one-day games with the same consistency that they lost the Test Matches. He says they’ll be in Sydney on Wednesday, so I promise I’ll arrange seats for them at Wednesday’s ‘
Mish
’ preview.
Sunday, January 23rd: Delhi
Very quickly through the airport. I’m in the queue behind a Yorkshireman from Keighley who’s just come in from Taiwan. I push my luggage trolley up a short, drab, ill-lit passageway and out – into India.
Huddled shapes spring towards me out of the darkness – men with scarves tied round their heads, as used in comic strips to denote sufferers from toothache. ‘Taxi, sir?’ I look vainly round for some sort of ‘authorised’ sign, determined to avoid falling into the clutches of the unlicensed, but I have made the fatal mistake – momentary hesitation – and within seconds my cases have been wrested from me and bundled into the back of a taxi.
There are six Indians already in the cab. The owner turns them out with much arguing and shouting and ushers me into the back. We start the engine, we stop, we argue, the boot is opened, more shadows appear from the dark, and suddenly my cabbie is gone, replaced in the driving seat by a young, unshaven desperado with an oily cloth tied bandanna-fashion round his head. He is joined in the passenger seat by another wild and mad-eyed individual. They look like archetypally dangerous men, but they drive off and out of the airport and strangely I feel quite safe and reasonably confident.
Eventually (though they miss the entrance once) we find the Imperial
Hotel in Janpath. Not impressive, but at least familiar – there are even American Express signs about. A message from TG in my cubby-hole, welcoming me to India. My bags are carried up to my room.
A succession of Indians in white cotton uniforms appear, elaborately bowing and scraping, turning the bed back, turning lights on and generally doing lots of things I don’t really want them to do. Then the chief bed-turner waits and asks me if there is anything I want. Because he is there, I ask for a beer, and he arrives many minutes later with a bottle of something by the name of Jasmine Parrot, which tastes sweet and is quite undrinkable.
At eight I am in the breakfast room, which is full of waiters, but not of guests. TG arrives about five minutes later. The rendezvous has worked. It had seemed quite unlikely when we parted four weeks ago, agreeing to ‘See you for breakfast in Delhi’.
TG and I take an auto-rickshaw and our lives into our hands, and head towards Old Delhi.
We are dropped near the entrance to the Old City. The street is full of people, animals and every kind of activity – men being shaved on little wooden platforms, dogs with awful sores lying peacefully beneath huge cauldrons of some steaming dal, children, cows, cyclists, an old man turning a makeshift Ferris wheel made of biscuit tins or petrol cans. It’s Gilliam’s world completely – just what he tried to recreate in
Jabberwocky
.
We visit a Jain temple. Off with our shoes and socks. Rich smell of incense mingled with sweaty feet. The strict Jains believe that all life is sacred, even bugs and flies. On our way to the temple we passed an elderly, quite chubby, entirely naked man being led through the streets. In any other country, I suppose, the little group around him would probably be police ushering him into the nearest paddy-wagon. Here in India he’s a holy man.
Continually seeing things which nothing, except fiction, has ever prepared me for. For instance, outside the Red Fort is a man selling false beards – and TG has a picture to prove it.
Monday, January 24th: Delhi and Agra
Alarm goes at six. Pack in the sepulchral gloom of my room and set off with TG into the mist of a slowly-emerging Delhi dawn. A shadowy world of hooded, cloaked shapes.
Onto the Taj Express bound for Agra. We are in First Class Air-Conditioned.
We pull out on time, through this strange, atmospheric, blanketing morning mist which gradually clears to reveal the much read-about sight of Indians crouching in waste ground by the railway line and donating their night-soil. Little botties catching the morning light.
We are offered breakfast by a waiter in white cotton denims – stained and dirty. We order omelette. It arrives, accompanied by a banana, two pieces of toast and a battered Thermos of tea. The omelette is cold, thin and pinched.
For me one of the great beauties of the Taj Mahal is its setting. Not so much the well-known line of fountains which approaches from the front, but the Jumna river which flows along the back of the Taj. I sit out on the marble terrace with the shimmering iceberg-like bulk of the Taj Mahal on one side, and look out over the wide river bed, mostly dry, with its two or three bridges and, in the haze a mile away, the impressive long line of the battlements of the Agra Fort.
At the Mughal Room Restaurant. Not very good curry served whilst an impassive Indian quartet played ‘My Way’.
Tuesday, January 25th: Agra-Jaipur
Refreshed and ready for the fray again. Book a taxi to Fatehpur Sikri and back.
Our taxi driver leaves us at the gates to the great palace, built during our Elizabethan period by the Emperor Akbar as the capital of the Moghul Empire, and then for some reason abandoned in favour of Agra. Towers and cupolas and columns all please the eye and lead from one to the other both literally and visually. And it’s on a ridge, so there are views from the pretty turrets across the quiet landscape of green fields.
TG and I cannot believe that tourist groups are given one hour only to visit this wonderful complex. We even found a complete ‘bath-house wing’ which no-one else was being shown. Cool vaulted chambers, a hypocaust and several rooms all linked – presumably for the various temperatures.
We are taken then to Agra Fort Station. No ‘Air-Conditioned Firsts’ for us this time. We are in Hard Plastic First. An Indian gentleman, whom we come to know as our guardian angel, warns us, before he alights at the first stop, to bolt the door after him or else ‘the students will try to
get in’. He doesn’t elaborate on this, but we follow his advice.
After a few minutes of pleasant rattling along through the outskirts of Agra the door handle rattles, then the door is banged, then the handle is wrenched more persistently. It is ‘the students’.
At the next stop faces appear outside the window. ‘Why will you not open the door?’ TG holds them at bay through the bars, trying to explain the First Class ticket system. ‘You are not right-thinking!’ they shout back. Then the train starts off again and they resort to more heavy banging, laughter and jeers and then, rather more disconcertingly, leaning out of the window next to our compartment and staring in. It all helps to pass the time and after an hour or so they get bored.
We arrive in Jaipur at a quarter to eleven. Outside the station the rush of rickshaw and auto-rickshaw drivers is broken up and dispersed by bearded men with batons and sticks. There seem to be 30 or 40 auto-rickshaws lined up and no trade, so TG has little trouble in beating some poor local down from ten to four Rupees (about 75p to 20p). Our driver hurtles us through the streets of Jaipur like a man demented, his cloak billowing out in the cool night breeze.
We are staying at our first Palace hotel – Maharajahs’ homes so enormous that they have been recycled as hotels. This one is called the Rambagh Palace. A long drive approach and impressively sizeable floodlit walls. TG is very rude about it and blames me for wanting such First Class travel!
To bring us even more rudely back to civilisation, there is a film crew here. They’re shooting
The Far Pavilions
and have just had a party on the front lawn of the hotel. TG is recognised by the props man, who worked on
Time Bandits
with him.

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