Eric Idle OnlineMy Life

Chapter Seven Needy Bastard Diary

By , February 22, 2016 2:19 pm

    It’s dawn in the rain forest and all is clear and still except for the echoey calls of large birds, in the woodwind range, who natter and chatter around the still damp woods It’s not yet steaming hot. Screened windows open to the morning freshness.

It rained in the night. Huge gushing drops shredded through the leaves of the trees and ran down the tin roves into the gutters which collect the fresh rainwater and pour it into the cement water vats and the metal overflow vats.

I’m hiding in the hills. Sorry, holidaying, which for me is the same thing. I’m staying with my son who lives up here and it’s a dream escape into the hinterland hills inland from the Coast, away from the crowding mad. He has built a wonderful guest house in the bush and I get all manner of birds and calls and cries. I have named one The Buildabird because it sounds exactly like a near-by power drill, and I am very disappointed when my son tells me it is indeed a near-by power drill.

I have a few days off before the tour.

Yesterday’s we went hunting for opals at Opals Downunda off the Bruce Highway. The nice lady there asked me if I was Richard Attenborough. I thought it impolite to say poor Dickie has been dead a couple of years, and in any case I think she had me confused for Michael Palin and she had him confused for David Attenborough. That’s the best explanation I can offer I’m afraid.

One of the worst approaches to celebrities is “Are you who I think you are?”

I mean that’s just impossible to answer isn’t it. One can waste a lot of time coyly sorting that one out.

Usually I say “No I am not Kylie Minogue” which slows them down a little as they wonder how I could possibly imagine they had mistaken me for the plucky Aussie chanteuse.

If they say “Are you Eric Idle?” I usually say “occasionally” in the hope of delaying the inevitable selfie. John is brilliant at this. “Can I have selfie” they ask. “No,” he says “I don’t know you.”

 I usually pretend I have to hurry up to be with him and that of course normally I would stop for hours while they fumble with their I Things but just today I have to run and join John.

My son has been an assiduous guide taking me to a host of small places with improbable names. We passed a road sign outside Brisbane which said “Nudgee, Nudgee Beach”. We have been to a variety of Nambours and Mooloolabas and Caloundras. I am perpetually lost but my son dashes us around to unlikely places, where we meet very nice people.

We visited the Eumundi Saturday market, where a large lady all in pink was selling hula hoops. Elsewhere were hand made items and gems and rocks. I was tempted but I am rather overstocked with tie-died crocheted bikinis. It’s not a flattering look for me in the first place because sagging is a problem, and that’s just me. Once the crochet gets wet, well it’ll look like the last surviving oldie at a Burning Man festival.

There were however some nice comedy flags for sale, however, one of which is definitely worth nicking:

    “The trouble with political jokes is occasionally they get elected…”

I shall definitely ad lib that answer to any Donald Trump question on the tour.

There is an excellent bookshop too in Eumundi called Berkelows with plenty of lovely second hand books too heavy to haul on tour, but there in the window was Gilliamesque Terry Gilliam’s autobiographical attempt to turn himself into an abstract noun. It’s a nicely designed book with lots of his drawings and I couldn’t resist autographing it with my name and replacing it on the shelf. Was this an act of pure comedy vandalism or does it increase the value of the book? We shall see. I have a very rare copy of an unsigned Michael Palin book somewhere, but I doubt Terry G. will be down here to sign his. So I think I have done him a favour.

Then we visited Chinresig, a large Buddhist retreat (for large Buddhists) where the Dali Lama came to visit a couple of years ago. For that occasion my son and his pals built a shrubbery in our family name, complete with a plaque.

 I hope his holiness appreciated the joke.

 When John Cleese came face to face with the Dali Lama they both laughed heartily at each other for five minutes.

You can’t go very far in Australia without some example of humour. One ducks crossing we saw said “Slow down for ducks sake.” And a Church we passed said “Early Service 8. Not that early really..”

We leave this paradise Wednesday for the Gold Coast tomorrow and the real start of our tour. But this has been a sweet retreat, and a delight to see my lad. We have played guitar loudly till late at night, when one of the neighbors asked us to turn it up! They couldn’t hear properly they complained… We even make more noise than the flying foxes who are surprisingly vocal. I am assured they are bats but they don’t seem to have bat attitude, since they make a lot of noise communicating and go to roost at night. The very opposite of a good battitude. Perhaps David Attenborough will enlighten me.

Two nice moments of humour. I got a surprise Twitter note from Mark Gattis who said:

“You really suit that beard, maestro! X”

To which I replied: “it’s beginning to grow on me.”

And I was happy at the airport the other day to see that the very attractive young woman from the Telegraph had put in a gag I’d ad libbed which I’d forgotten.

“I’m having my dick cryogenically frozen, in case someone can revive it in a future life.”

The Needy Bastard Diary. 6

By , February 18, 2016 1:42 pm

Sydney Thursday February 18th

A glorious Sunset is casting golden light across the most famous harbour in the world, darkening the arc of the famous old bridge, and silhouetting the improbable clam shells of the most famous building in the world, the unlikely Sydney Opera House. Across the bay in which we are skimming at great speed in a big yellow water taxi, the sun is making fiery orange oblongs in the windows of a clutch of bungalows on a headland. We are heading to dinner at Catalina in Watsons Bay in the classic Sydney Harbour. The old city has changed a lot since I first came here 40 years ago, high rises everywhere and hardly a patch of waterfront with no new construction, dwarfing the older and more elegant waterside homes. North Sydney is a tall stand of highly coloured neon lit buildings clustered on a steep hill across the bridge. And there tucked in its armpit it is good to see the slightly menacing clown face of Luna Park, which with its current manifestation of neon white light rays has survived the many threats to tear it down. Its wide slightly menacing open mouthed clown has survived many incarnations. When I first came it was by Martin Sharp one of the first people I met here.

John is fairly silent. We have been talking all day to the Press and TV and Radio. But the warm wind is blowing away the cobwebs and we are looking forward to our dinner.
“Are you the suckling pig?” asks the waitress
“Please don’t call him pig “ I say.
The mood is good, the food excellent and our hosts, our Promoter Adrian and his son Sebastian, are kindly and considerate. We dine on a terrace facing the darkling bay, but there is no wind and it is perfectly lovely.
“Ah there’s Jupiter” I say, watching a bright light in the sky above the city.
“Actually that’s Quantas AF 34 to Melbourne” says our Promoter pointing his I phone at it. Imagine an App which identifies every plane in the sky!
Later on the way home we do see Jupiter rising and it is magnificent and huge.
“There’s that Qantas flight again” says Sebastian gently mocking me.
I’m happy to be mocked, full of fine food and finer wine.

The day started at dawn as I looked Eastwards across the bay to the heads of the harbour.. From my high eyrie perch on the 33rd floor I can the blackened silhouette of the Opera House, which looks like a clutch of nuns from this direction. I played there two nights in 2007 in Not The Messiah. This time we’ll be playing at the lovely old State Theatre, but not for almost a month.

It’s 7 a.m. and the unmistakable tall figure of the now white haired John enters the lobby. He is looking fit and well after ten weeks in Mustique, though he has just come in from bone freezing Minnesota from a speech and then via Dallas to Sydney on what is billed as the longest flight in the world, sixteen hours.

He gives me a big kiss and a hug and envelopes Diane O’Neill our inexhaustible publicist with a a big bear hug and we head off to Channel 7. He will rib her mercilessly all day. They have worked together before and she tolerates his abuse with a wry smile and a nudge in the direction she wants us to go next.

We are on Sunrise first. Live on the breakfast show with Kochie and Samantha. Kochie a tall man who will later perform a surprisingly effective silly walk, says afterwards it’s the best interview he’s ever done. We behave suitably inappropriately. It’s surprisingly easy to be funny next to John and we’ve had some experience to say the least. They are all happy, and then three quick breakfast radio interviews, one live to Melbourne and we are heading back to the hotel where various camera crews have taken over the Executive Club and are setting up. Even radio interviews these days have cameras, which pop up on their web sites.

We speak to the Daily Telegraph, ABC late night TV, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Australian, ABC Radio, Radio National…, every fifteen minutes we are shuttled to a new set up and a new questioner.

Quite good discussions break out, perhaps the best being a radio show which is a music show which discusses the music of Python. It’s intelligent and fresh and I don’t remember discussing this before. It is enjoyable and fascinating, and some of the other journalist cluster round to listen in. It’s almost a shame to stop. Radio is still the best for talk.

John demands people ask us ruder questions in the shows. He’s tired of the boring old ones, and indeed we do chuck away all those that ask how we got the name Monty Python. He wants more and nastier ones….

From this morning’s hilarious Sunrise Show he has already been attacked by The Daily Fail for touching a blonde woman. Why do they bother? I ask him why he doesn’t just ignore them. He quotes Mark Twain which is impressive and then adds “Besides I rather enjoy it. They are such dicks they always make mistakes.” Today they have identified his daughter as his ex- wife (deceased these two years) etc etc. He suggests the writer had had too much whiskey, a tipple he is apparently over fond of.

Our schedule promises we’ll be done by 12.25 but it’s an hour later before we finish the last of them and head downstairs for a lunch. I’m starving. It’s a couple of glasses of white wine before I calm down. I’m heading for a nap as we have one more show to do at five thirty, an as-live interview down the line to Melbourne for The Project, which has a panel of four and is hilarious.

The main question of the day has been political correctness and its limitations on comedy.
I’m reminded of a couplet from Spamalot which didn’t make the final lyric but of which I was fond.

Your political correction
May give Lenin an erection
But I’m sad to bring you this sad news
You won’t succeed on Broadway, you just don’t succeed on Broadway
If you don’t have any Jews.

I think it was David Hyde Pierce who came up with the delightful alternative
There’s a very small percentile
Who enjoy a dancing gentile…..

Nobody remembers that Political Correctness is Marxist thinking. What on earth is incorrect thinking anyway?
John skirts the lurking dangers of this loaded question, while managing to gently stick the boot in.

As we are leaving lunch the tall unmistakeable figure of Camilla Cleese comes across. Sadly she won’t be joining us for dinner as she has two stand up gigs tomorrow.

An email from our Promoter proves the value of all this. We sold 1500 tickets yesterday and now only the second house at Brisbane next week still has a ton of tickets to sell.
I suggest we announce a special attraction to entice the Brisvegans from their homes on a Sunday night.
John suggests a stripper.
I suggest a semi naked roller skating model……

We’ll see.
Over to you Brisvegans….

The Needy Bastard Diary

By , February 15, 2016 7:53 am

Chapter Five: B Day.

 

A sweet Valentine’s Day spent saying goodbye to the wife and daughter. This is the hard bit, saying farewell and leaving home.  Tania and I wept copiously through the last episode of War and Peace.  Lily went off to see a strange group which had Tickling in the title.

Now it’s D Day. Or Bidet as the French call it.   For the next three days I shall be in the air.   I take off Monday night and I arrive Wednesday morning.   What happens to Tuesday?  I cross the International Date Line (named after Jerry Hall) and magically Tuesday disappears.

It all seems so unfair.   I am told I shall get it back on my return, but will I have to apply for it?  Or will I have to fill in some government form to claim it?   And if I do get it back, will it still be a Tuesday or just some other random day, like a wet Wednesday or a soggy Saturday?   These things worry me.  I will have to write to Deepak.  I’m sure he’ll have some advice about the Quantum of Qantas.

While I’m gone what will you all do? Wait anxiously by the phone for news?  Lovingly search Twittergram for snaps taken by fellow passengers?   Binge watch something nasty and violent on TV, like the Republican debates?  Well, you’re just going to have to man up, or woman up, or, alright transgender up, and face this absence on your own.  I can’t do everything for you.  Although I have prepared a little something for you.   Think of it as a light repast or late supper in case you are starved of news from the Tour.

January was a rotten month when I lost another friend.   I have been thinking a lot about David Bowie.   We shared a very unlikely friendship in the eighties and nineties, with many great times on holiday.  People don’t know that he had the greatest sense of humour.  He loved to laugh.  And he laughed loudly and often.

In 1991 he was kind enough to loan me his beautiful Balinese home on the island of Mustique for six weeks while I wrote a movie. (Splitting Heirs.) I can’t begin to describe the beauties of this house, or the amazing views, perched high on a hillside overlooking the Caribbean.  But this is the cheeky letter I wrote to thank him for our delicious stay…..

 

Britannia Bay House,

Mustique,

West Indies.

April 10th 1991

Dear David,

Just leaving the house.  One or two things.  The fire is nearly out.   I think the hillside looks better all bare and black, and Arne agrees.   It’s a sort of Japanesey look, but post-Hiroshima.    About twenty minutes post, but at least it’s not radioactive, unless there was something toxic in the Octagonal Room, which is still blazing nicely. It’s almost a shame to put it out.

The open air dining area will be much more pleasant too, as soon as we clear the rubble from the remains of the roof.  Fortunately we had concreted over those smelly old fish ponds to give you a nice cement patio area, for disco dancing or barbecue, and we were able to get some real artificial straw umbrellas in red and yellow, so there is a nice Spanish “feel” about the whole entrance place now.  And the little straw donkeys are very welcoming instead of all that Balinese Buddhist bullshit, if you’ll pardon my French.  As a special gift we’re going to get your name on a bullfight poster – don’t ask us how, it’s our treat.

We made one or two other slight “alterations” while we were here.  No need to thank us, it’s been our pleasure modernising the place and making it look a bit more like it belongs.   Tan and I had just visited the Ideal Home Exhibition so we are “up” on the latest developments in home improvements.     First of all, all that old wood had to go.    It had little holes in it, probably made by woodworm. It looked like it had come from Thailand or some other unfortunate third world place where they can’t get decent hardboard.

“Thighland, more like,” laughed Doreen, who has been helping us with the decor. Anyway, we made a nice big bonfire of that and have replaced it all with top grade washable white Formica.   It looks as clean and nice as Lionel Blair. And about as useful Doreen wanted me to add.

The rest of the woodwork we have painted a cheery orange, and there really is an Ibiza-during-German-Week feeling to the place.

“David’s going to like this” said Doreen, “it has all the warmth of a Berlin detox ward, with none of the company.”

Fritz, the new Butler, is very friendly and knows some quite good marching songs from the War, where he served with distinction in the S.S.   I’m afraid we had to let Joel go, it wasn’t fair to keep him on. He just couldn’t “dig” the improvements.  Tragic really, but if you can’t “go with the flow man, you’re history babe” as Doreen said when she told Mr. Webb to leave.  He refused to serve fish fingers or baked beans.   Imagine!   So we’ve stocked up the freezer with Big Macs and the microwave’s been burning overtime.

After we finished the redecoration (and the Rangoon room looks stunning now we chucked out all that heavy furniture and livened it up with scatter cushions and bean bags, very Sixties…!) the floors looked kind of bare so we put down some nice Cyril Lord, with maroon flecks, that will “wear” well even though the basic violet takes a little getting used to.  But as Doreen says, if you’re gonna stay ahead in style you’re gonna have to take a few risks.  Personally I think the diamante dogs on the ceiling are a bit much, but Doreen said anybody who can appear in front of the British public wearing only carrot hair and a jock strap is not going to baulk at a few fey gestures on the ceiling.

Oh, curtains.  All that sliding screen business just felt too foreign for Doreen, so she’s run up some lovely fabric she had sent in from Beatty’s in Birmingham.    It’s called “Our Queen”, and I think you’ll be very happy with it.   The corgis too should remind you of the dogs, the last of whom, even now is burning in the Octagonal Room.   How we shall miss his yelping.  But as Doreen said, “I’m not risking these shoes just to save a dying animal.”

The rest of the staff have run away, but Chlorine and Mrs Reid are coming, and as Doreen said, they may not be any good, but they did work for Princess Margaret.

The plastic tiling will be here any day to replace the weedy “flowers” that had grown up everywhere.  “You could hardly move for bloody plants” said Doreen, and she ripped away for days,  and her with her back too.  But she’s a martyr to it when she’s got the bit between her teeth.

“And don’t ask which bit” she just cackled.   She does have a marvelous sense of humour for someone from near Birmingham.

Well must dash.  I have to leave before Basil and the Mustique company find out we’re going.   Our little joke on them:   we’re leaving without paying!   How they’ll laugh eh?   Naughty us.  But what with all the champagne and lobsters it was getting a bit too much…..!   If they come running to you just you tell them it was nothing to do with you.  They’ll only get spoiled if people pay all the time.   And I bet you that Basil has a bob or two tucked away.  If only that jellabiya could talk.  I said to Doreen, “I bet that’s seen some action.”

“Served under the Royals” she said curtly, and I think we knew what she meant. She was cheeky enough to ask him if anything was worn under the jellabiya, and he said “No, everything’s in perfect working order!”

Laugh?   We almost wet ourselves.

Oh the other night a Kitty Kelly was over for dinner and she wanted to know all the poop on you, “just for a giggle.”  It was just harmless gossip and she promised it wouldn’t go any further, so we let go a few ripe anecdotes.    Were your ears red?   Anyway, we tended to exaggerate, especially the bits about you and the llama, and she seemed very impressed and wrote everything down, but still, no harm done eh?

Well chuck, it’s been a pleasure, and we’ve certainly had some laughs.   The fire’s almost out now, and the whole place looks lovely, all orange against the blackened hillside.

Let’s hope we can come back again soon and really finish the job,

lots of love from Eric, Tania, Lily (and

 

 

 


The Needy Bastard Diary

By , February 12, 2016 2:41 pm

Chapter Four: Still here. 

The fourth day of this damn Tour diary and I still haven’t left home.

Yes, I’m still here.

Pathetic isn’t it?

Apparently it doesn’t actually start until the 25th of February on the Gold Coast, and I’ve obviously been preparing to leave for too long. But at least my wife has noticed that I am leaving. She’s started saying things like “I’m going in to Beverly Hills. I’m really going to miss you.”

“But you’re only going to Beverly Hills.”

“No you idiot. When you’re gone.”

I really leave on Monday. Grammy night. Mercifully I shall miss the Academy Awards. There’s nothing I like more than missing Award Shows. I find them tedious. And of no value. In fact the only Awards of any value are the ones they give me. Although I do like the Grammys. At least they perform. They should make some of those bearded repeat Oscar winners (“This is his 32 Oscar for sound effects editing and he still hasn’t shaved…”) they should make them sing or something. Anyway for me this year it’s just an honour not to be nominated, although after 39 years I feel I might qualify for a wifetime achievement award.

What has left is my guitar, in its brand new custom-made shipping case, which I had specially made. . It looks like this:
  

 Beautiful isn’t it? 
I wish they could make one for me to be shipped in.

I shan’t meet up with this lovely Taylor until the appropriately named Gold Coast.

I was given my first Taylor guitar by Clint Black after he recorded The Galaxy Song. He didn’t like singing “Whenever life gets you down Mrs. Brown” and he asked me to write him a new Intro. I wrote him a kind of cowboy opening and we recorded it together in his home studio in his marbled palace in LA.

When you’re feeling inside out and insecure

And life keeps getting you down

When all life’s daily worries

Hurry through your head

You don’t wanna even get up

You just lie around in bed

When you feel you just can’t take it anymore

And you wonder what on earth it is all for

Your love life’s like a war zone

Your TV’s on the blink

It’s enough to drive a drinking man

To stop and take a think.

    

Recorded with Clint Black for Delectrified in 1999

I think we even sang it together at a Grammy event on a tennis court for Music Cares. Later he flew me down to the Taylor factory, in a tiny private plane, where we were shown around the factory and then taken to the board room to meet Bob. Here they broke out the guitars and we played. It was the nicest corporate experience. We got to try a variety of their latest instruments.

Taylor have always kindly looked after me on the road, and they supplied two very nice guitars for JCAEITAALFTVFT which is the handy little acronym I have invented to remember our tour title: John Cleese and Eric Idle Together Again At Last for The Very First Time.

It has been nominated for longest title in an old farts on the road tour.

In case you are having trouble with the acronym here’s an easy way to remember it.

Julius Caesar always eyes Italian totty and adores lovely females to very frequently touch.

That will help you remember JCAEITAALFTVFT and then it’s a simple matter of substituting letters.

As well as the guitar I have shipped shipping three outfits for the stage and a Tour travel bag filled with Teas*, Tea making devices, make up and two outback corky hats, because of course we shall be doing the Bruces for the very first time in Australia.

*Lapsang Sou Chong, Buddha’s Cup, Genghis Khan and another first flush Darjeeling.

We may have to censor ourselves a little as I think Rule 4 “No Pooftah’s” is probably incorrect. I certainly cut it from my 2003 tour. Yes I know it’s satire on the then (70’s) over blokish culture of the drinking Australian male, but things have come a very long way since then, and thank heaven for it.

King Lear to Jester: Shut up that’s incorrect.

Which reminds me that once Prince Charles asked me to become his jester. He really did. He was choking with laughter at Billy Connolly’s Scottish house over dinner, with Robin Williams and Steve Martin so I must have got off a good one.

“Eric” he said with tears in his eyes “You should become my jester.”

“Now why would I want a fucking awful job like that?” I said, which set him off even more.

I actually think it was a perfect jester’s response. Reminding the Prince of how unenviable his position really is. Even the fucking jester doesn’t want the job….