The Oldie June 2022 issue 414

Page 36

Addicted to books

HI-STORY / ALAMY

While on tour with his one-man show, Barry Humphries lurks in regional bookshops, desperate for rare volumes

The plaque on the door of my hotel room said ‘Superior Room’. Once inside, I searched for evidence for this rather grandiose claim. None was apparent, though there was a chocolate on the pillow. And the toilet paper had been folded into a neat point by a Polish chambermaid. If the Polish ever go home, England will collapse. I am in the middle of a tour of English towns with a modest theatrical offering, which is proving to be very successful. Most reassuring, since I was seriously thinking of auditioning for a riserrecliner commercial. The trip is taking me to some wonderful theatres. I had not realised how much I had missed all those little pink faces peering at me out of the gloom and rising to their feet at the end of the show. If only to fetch their coats from under the seats. One town is beginning to merge with another, but Shrewsbury was a great discovery and I am looking forward to Buxton and Cheltenham, where Nicky Haslam, the great flâneur and generous friend, has threatened to attend. When you are on tour, the hard bit is what I call the ‘third act’. That is, when all sorts of people from all corners of your life, past and present, mingle with the fans at the stage door – on those occasions when there is someone at the stage door. Last night, in Malvern, Julia Allen, former headmistress of the Hall School, appeared looking exactly as she did 30 years ago when she looked after my two sons. At the same time, one of my Olivers turned up at the stage door. I was in the first production of Lionel 36 The Oldie June 2022

Bart’s Dickensian musical and in numerous revivals, in which I impersonated Fagin. Ever and anon, many of the little pickpockets I have known reappear and introduce me to their wives and children. One of them was Davy Jones of the Monkees. Another was a singer called Phil Collins, who is apparently quite successful and widely liked. Last night’s Oliver, Colin Patterson, had a grey beard, which made recognition challenging after an interval of 60 years. He remembered – as do I – being embraced by Georgia Brown who played Nancy and was one of England’s finest jazz singers. Of course, there are always ratbags waiting at the stage door who haven’t been to the show. They demand my signature on multiple home-printed pictures of Bruce the Shark (an animation for which I once provided a convincing piscine voice). There are always also a few mendicants who discourage one from inscribing their programme with their name – so you know they are planning to flog it on eBay. I am told that 20 Barry Humphrieses could win you one Danny Dyer. Mostly, though, I love the cast of the third act, and I am always pleased that some of them have actually seen the show! No hotel on my itinerary has failed to recognise the decorative use of otherwise worthless literature. I have made several discoveries in hotels where old books are scattered around to lend a more classy or homely touch to otherwise nondescript accommodations.

A dazzling shelf of elaborately gilded bindings in a hotel in Penang proved, on closer examination, to be a set of Danish agricultural manuals. And my room in a ‘boutique’ hotel in Casablanca contained a vitrine filled with all but two volumes of Joseph Hocking’s hundredfold oeuvre. Most interesting are the books tourists of yesteryear left behind. In a hotel of decayed grandeur in a forest in Portugal, I ‘liberated’ a heavily foxed volume of the Monthly Review of February 1903, containing an appraisal of Machiavelli’s Dispatches from the South African Campaign – an ‘unwritten book’. The anonymous reviewer was Baron Corvo. In a nursing home for ‘thirsty people’ near Hadley Wood, voracious readers of Netta Muskett and D K Broster, long whiles agone, must have abandoned their reading of those fine authoresses and bequeathed their books to future inebriates. I have also found quite rare volumes and even paintings on film sets; wrack washed up from the literate past. Stacked books, often glued together, are sometimes to be seen, along with old leather luggage, in the window displays of gentleman’s haberdasheries, to impart an air of olde-worlde distinction. They proclaim, ‘I read, I travel.’ Sadly, second-hand bookshops are disappearing from many of the towns we visit. But when I find one, I always stand in a quiet corner and listen in the hope of hearing a thin, faint voice from some high and dusty shelf. ‘I’m here!’ it cries. ‘I’m the book you have looked for all your life – I’m up here! I have been for 78 years.’ It might be wedged behind volume two of George Moore’s A Story-Teller’s


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Articles inside

Ask Virginia Ironside

4min
pages 98-100

Taking a Walk: Redgrave and Lopham Fen, Norfolk

3min
pages 86-88

Crossword

3min
pages 89-90

Overlooked Britain Wellesbourne Bath House, Warwickshire Lucinda

5min
pages 82-84

On the Road: Matthew

3min
page 85

Hotel bugbears – and

6min
pages 80-81

Bird of the Month: Reed

2min
page 79

Drink Bill Knott

4min
page 73

Golden Oldies

4min
page 68

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 69-70

Music

3min
page 67

Film: Lancaster

4min
page 64

Television

5min
page 66

Murder Before Evensong by Reverend Richard Coles

4min
pages 61-62

British Rail: A New History by Christian Wolmar

3min
pages 59-60

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 45

Back in the Day, by Melvyn

6min
pages 57-58

Happy-Go-Lucky, by David

5min
pages 55-56

Readers’ Letters

7min
pages 46-47

Postcards from the Edge

4min
page 42

Country Mouse

4min
page 41

Town Mouse

4min
page 40

Small World

3min
pages 38-39

Addicted to books

6min
pages 36-37

My illuminated manuscript

6min
pages 32-34

History

4min
page 31

Letter from America

4min
page 35

How farmers make money

4min
page 30

Media Matters

4min
pages 28-29

The return of the hat

6min
pages 26-27

The Old Un’s Notes

10min
pages 5-8

My charming heroes

4min
page 25

Cecil Day-Lewis, the forgotten

4min
pages 22-24

Paul McCartney

11min
pages 14-18

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Watergate’s lost source

3min
pages 11-12

Hot fashion tips for oldies

4min
pages 19-21

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10
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