Authors: Simon Brett
He continued to be cheerfully rude to Peter Lipscombe and continued to allow no notes to be given directly from the Producer to the artists. So there were more conversations in which people with a common language talked through an interpreter. But Peter Lipscombe's role, which under Scott Newton's inexperienced regime had increased, dwindled back to grinning a lot, asking everyone if everything was okay and buying drinks. Which was, after all, what he did best.
The actual recording of Episode One (or Episode Two, if you counted the pilot) of
The Strutters
did not go particularly well. This was in no way due to Bob Tomlinson's direction. There was, after all, only one way to shoot a Rod Tisdale script, and that was the way he did it. All that was wrong with the evening was that the script was slightly inferior, and after all the euphoric generalisations about new eras in comedy which had followed the pilot, anticlimax was inevitable.
After the recording, Charles overheard a conversation between the writer and Director. Rod Tisdale, in a voice that almost betrayed some emotion, asked, âHow d'you think it went?'
Bob Tomlinson shrugged. âAll right. How does any sit com go?'
Rod Tisdale shook his head. âI don't know. I reckoned there were sixty-eight jokes in that script. We only got fifty-three laughs.'
âIt'll look fine after the sound-dub.'
âYou mean you'll add the laughs?'
âYou bet I will. By the time I've finished, you won't be able to tell the difference between this and a really funny show.'
âI've always resisted having laughs dubbed on to my shows.'
âSod what you've always resisted, son. I'm directing this show and I'll do it my way.'
Which was of course the way it would be done.
Charles decided to go up to the bar in the lift. (Though no one actually mentioned it, the fire escape had been used much less since Sadie's death.) He had changed with his customary rapidity out of his top half (Reg the golf club barman's legs, after their brief airing on film, had once again retreated to proper obscurity), and reckoned only Peter Lipscombe would have beaten him to the bar. Where he could once again demonstrate his skill in buying drinks.
There was an argument going on outside the lift. A small balding man with glasses, who carried a duffle bag and wore a thin checked sports jacket and a yellow nylon shirt, was being moved on by a uniformed commissionaire.
âNo, I'm sorry, sir, show's over. I have to clear all the audience out of the building. Now come along, please.'
âBut she will see me, she will. She always does.'
âNo, I'm sorry, sir, I've got to clear the building. So, if you don't mind . . . If it's an autograph you want, you're welcome to wait outside the main door until the artists come out.'
âI don't want her autograph. I've got her autograph a thousand times over. I've got autographed programmes of every show she's ever been in. I've collected them all.'
âSorry, sir, I must â'
âNo, listen, my name's Romney Kirkstall. She knows me. Really. You just tell her I'm here and â'
âShe know you were coming tonight?'
âNo, she didn't actually, but she's always glad to see me. I come to all the
What'll the Neighbours
. . . recordings and â'
âIf the lady's not expecting you, sir, I'm afraid I must ask you to â'
âNo, really, she will want to see me!'
Before the commissionaire could produce further verbal or physical arguments, the truth of Romney Kirkstall's assertion was proved by the zephyrous arrival of Aurelia Howarth, saying, âRomney, darling, how good of you to come!'
âYou're lucky I'm still here, Dob,' said the little man. âThis . . . gentleman was doing his best to throw me out.'
âI'm sorry, Miss Howarth,' the commissionaire apologised sheepishly. âI didn't know who he was. We get a lot of types wanting to worry the stars and that. I thought he might be some kind of freak.'
The wildness of Kirkstall's appearance justified that supposition, but Aurelia cooed lightly, âNo, no, Romney's my most loyal fan.'
The lift arrived at that moment, so she continued, âCome on, darling, let's go up and have a drink. Sorry about the mix-up.'
Charles went into the lift with them and they all arrived together in the bar. Where, predictably enough, Peter Lipscombe bought them all drinks. And he did do it very well.
Gerald Venables had once again come to the recording and Charles met him in the bar. The actor was becoming suspicious of the solicitor's constant appearances at West End Television. Though he always claimed disingenuously he had just come to see the show, Gerald was notorious for investing in the lucrative areas of show business, and Charles wouldn't have been at all surprised to discover he had a stake in the company. He seemed to know everyone altogether too well to be a mere casual visitor. And his constant discussions with W.E.T.'s Head of Contracts suggested more than idle conversation.
But Charles never expected to have his suspicions confirmed. Gerald was masonically secretive about his investments.
âStill think we're on to a winner?' he asked ironically, after Peter Lipscombe had bought Gerald a drink too.
âOh yes,' asserted the solicitor confidently. âMinor hiccup tonight, but it'll be fine. Yes, this series is going to make the autumn schedules look very healthy. What with this and
Wragg and Bowen,
the BBC'll be knocked for six.'
Gerald was talking so exactly like Peter Lipscombe that Charles once again suspected him of complicity with the company's management. He seemed to know altogether too much.
But Gerald's interest in television was subsidiary to his interest in criminal investigation. He had helped Charles on one or two cases in the past and was evidently avid for more.
âWell? Two suspicious deaths now. What do you make of it, bud?'
âA coincidence of two accidents, I think.'
âOh, come on, you can do better than that.'
âI don't know. I've thought it through a lot, but I can't seem to get any line on it at all. Either there are two totally unrelated crimes, or only one crime and one accident, or no crimes. I can't get any consistent motivation for anyone.'
And he gave Gerald a summary of his thinking to date. âThe only person for whom I've got even a wisp of motivation,' he concluded, âis dear old Bernard Walton. If he thought the future of his own series was threatened by
The Strutters,
then he would in theory have a motive to sabotage the show. And, if you think on those lines, it becomes significant that the two people who have died have nothing to do with
What'll the Neighbours Say?
I mean, say Aurelia or George had gone, then that might jeopardise the future of the series, but as it is, there's nothing to stop it going ahead. As indeed â and here's the one fact that makes the whole theory crumble in ruins about my ears-it is going ahead. I'll have to think of something else.'
âI've got news for you, Charles,' Gerald announced portentously.
âWhat?'
âI was just talking to the Head of Contracts. The proposed series of
What'll the Neighbours Say?
has been cancelled.'
âIt can't have been. The artists' options have been taken up.'
âOh, sure. But they're all going to be paid off. Head of Contracts has been ringing round the agents today. Were you optioned for the series, by the way?'
âNo. They just did an availability check. Said it wasn't definite that Reg the golf club barman would be a regular character.'
Gerald grimaced. âIf your agent was worth his commission, he'd have got some sort of contract out of them. Who is your agent, by the way?'
âMaurice Skellern.'
âOh. Say no more.'
âBut just a minute, Gerald, they wouldn't just pay everyone off.'
âWhy not? Happens all the time.'
âBut it's a huge amount of money.'
âA huge amount of money for the actors involved, maybe. A very nice little pay-off for doing nothing. But, as a percentage of the budget of a major television production, it's peanuts, really. So long as you actually keep a show out of the studio, you're still saving money. In fact, there are producers who have built up considerable reputations by keeping shows out of studios.'
Once again Gerald was showing more than a layman's knowledge of the workings of television, but Charles didn't comment. Instead, he said. âAnyway, even if that has happened, and I still don't quite see why it has . . .'
âNigel Frisch has lost confidence in the series. And they need the studio dates for
Wragg and Bowen
.'
âOkay, but coming back to our little problem of a murder motivation, we're no further advanced. If the artists' agents were only told about the cancellation today â'
âYes, most of them were. But Bernard Walton, because he was the star, was given the honour of knowing the bad news before anyone else. Nigel Frisch, who, whatever else one may say about him, is never one to shirk responsibility, rang Bernard personally.'
âWhen?'
âLast Tuesday.'
The day before Scott Newton's death.
THE ATMOSPHERE at the Paddington Jewish Boys' Club Hall for the read-through the following morning was distinctly subdued. Partly, this was because the previous night's recording had been less than successful, but there was also a communal consciousness that they were now all into a weekly turnaround of shows; they would have to work harder and there would be less time for anything else. And there were some sore heads. The very human tendency to have a few drinks and go out for a meal after a recording that finishes at ten rarely takes account of a ten-thirty call the next morning.
George Birkitt was the only one who seemed cheerful. His agent had come to the recording and told him about the
What'll the Neighbours Say?
pay-off. Not only did this give him financial encouragement, because the contracted fees for thirteen programmes came to a very considerable amount, it also seemed a promising augury for
The Strutters
series. The company was clearly backing the new show at the expense of the old one. And, though he didn't quite say it, he reckoned that meant they thought George Birkitt was now a more bankable star than Bernard Walton. âThe other thing is,' he confided to Charles, âit means I'll be able to take some other work. My agent keeps having calls from casting directors offering quite nice stuff, but always has to turn it down, saying, no, sorry, love, he's under contract to W.E.T.. Exclusive contracts have their advantages, but they do restrict your movement.'
Charles Paris, whose experience of exclusive contracts was small, nodded wisely.
But George was the only one in a sunny mood. Even Aurelia, whose diaphanous charm rarely varied, seemed distracted. Apparently it was something to do with Cocky, who had been sick during the night and had to have the vet summoned. The lack of sleep this disturbance had caused made the actress look slightly less ageless than usual. Charles was more aware of the strains a television series must impose on a woman in her seventies.
And she was obviously worried about the dog. Throughout the read-through, she kept going across to his little basket to check on his welfare. âIf anything happened to Cocky,' she said, âI don't know what I'd do.'
Janie Lewis was also less than her beaming efficient self. Dark circles under her eyes suggested she hadn't had any sleep the night before and a strained atmosphere between her and one of the regular cast, Nick Coxhill, suggested why. Charles once again thought he might continue his desultory pursuit of her, but his first overture was met with the sharp retort that she was henceforth to be known as Jay, and that she was busy.
Tilly Lake emoted round the rehearsal room, implying enough sighing heartaches to keep a romantic novelist in business for a decade. Charles, rather cheekily, asked her whether she'd heard from Trevor Howard or Laurence Olivier about playing the part of Colonel Strutter's friend in Episode Five.
âBoth got other commitments,' she said elegiacally. âOtherwise, of course . . . Still, I'm not downhearted. Going to continue to aim high. Such a smashing script, after all, lovely part. I've been rereading it and I think the character might be rather younger than I first thought. So I think I might try for an Alan Bates, or a Michael York maybe . . . or a Derek Jacobi. Keep away from the obvious, anyway, the Toby Roots of this life. Nothing against him, but you know what I mean.'
Charles mumbled some ambivalent response.
âCasting so easily becomes predictable, so one always admires the people in television who don't do the obvious. I mean, have you heard, on this programme for the elderly, they haven't gone for the boring competent sort of presenter like Robert Carton. They've chosen Ian Reynolds, who's nearly eighty.'
âYes, I heard that.'
âWell, isn't that inventive? And people sometimes say casting isn't a creative business.' She laughed tragically, setting up a ripple through the feathers of her hat.
âWhat does Bob Tomlinson think about your ideas of casting?'
âOh, he doesn't care. He just told me to get on with it.'
That was Bob Tomlinson's great quality, the ability to get on with it and to delegate. But he wasn't slapdash. He had his own standards, as was apparent when he clapped his hands for attention.
âBefore we start this read-through, got another filming date for your diaries. This Friday, the 15th. We're meant to be rehearsing here, but if we get our skates on, we can miss a day.'
âWhere's the location?' asked Debbi Hartley.
âBack at Bernard Walton's place.'
âBut I thought we'd done all that.'
âGot to do it again.'