Green Room Gossip
(Sir) C.E.S.S. Poole
Your honorary knighted Thespian.
From Pool to
All the world's a stage, and I've certainly strutted
in finery across many a board. It has also been noted and reported in numerous
theatrical gossip magazines that I have, throughout my illustrious career
spanning the last fifty-two years, been found lying prostrate on many a board.
Deserted by party-going friends and foes alike, I have been discovered, more
times than I care to remember, on a park bench clutching my beloved "Toddie" in gloved hand mumbling, "Oh for a muse
of fire," to the star-lit sky.
These gloriously entertaining events have occurred with an
almost curtain-up regularity from my early days in the theatre capital
of the world
A jobbing actor! Now that's descriptive term that is these days not mentioned
very often. I find the lack of use of this, - what I consider to be very
complementary terminology, - a great injustice. Think of all those actor's
faces that you've seen in one B-grade movie after another or on one TV soapie in 1973 and playing the same character in another soapie in a different county in 1998. Well that's me. I'm a
jobbing actor. I am privileged to belong to this rather large and often unsung
group of fine talented Thespians who manage to continue to earn a rather
limited living and keep their noses just above the water line.
My "Toddie" and my name were given to me at
a very early age. My mother, Gladys found herself in the family way just after
the end of the Second World War. She was a large buxomed
fan dancer entertaining the remaining American troops and returning British
soldiers at the Opera House in the home of music hall comedy Blackpool
The journey to the barracks at Kirkham should've
taken three quarters of an hour but if an obliging driver and the accompanying
M.P. could be bribed, then a short detour would be made via my mother's
hostelry which offered an after hours service. The landlord was a jovial,
well-mannered and refined local country gent and in spite of his name, Robert
Ulrich Smelley, was extremely well groomed. It was in
Mr. Smelly's attic room that my mother used to engage
in her extracurricular fan dancing activities.
A good time was had by all and R. U. Smelly was able to buy more deodorant than
he needed and acquire some rather expensive French perfume using his extra bar
takings and ration tickets my mother stole from her client's trousers.
One such night was the August Bank holiday of 1946 and on a foggy
At the airport the next day he gave my mother a beautifully engraved pewter hip
flask as a momento of his passage. Toddie hasn't left my lips since Mr. Stardust boarded his
flight to
I was only christened five years later. The tardiness of this event was due to
my mother's hectic schedule and the high demand for nubile fan dancers across
the length and breadth of the
However in 1952 she was faced with the problem of my schooling and in order to
register me with a local authority she had to catch up on her paperwork. She
managed to convince a friendly registrar in
The only hiccup in the registration came when the registrar asked my mother the
name of my father. She giggled sweetly at him and said, "Oh my darling, it
was such a long time ago, I can't possibly remember. It could've been Cecil, or
was it Eddie.....no, I think Steven or, yes, yes dear Simon." The
registrar smiled, his arm gently encircling my mother's waist. "They were
all such lovely boys at the Old Trout Pool." A brain wave filtered down
through the registrar's right hand as he neatly wrote C.E.S.S. Poole on the
certificate. The added "e" occurred as my mother guided his left hand
further towards her bra strap.
In honour of my mother's giving ways on my graduation from the
Till we meet again, don't know where, don't know when...........
(Sir) Cecil Edward Steven Simon Poole signing off till next
month.
Ron Smerczak
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|
Name |
Comment |
Date |
|
Erna |
I was entertained. More, please! |
2007-09-16 |
|
Mandy Lebides |
Loved the 'nubile fan dancers'-
your humour is superbly entertaining. Next month again please!
|
2007-09-25 |
|
Louis |
I enjoyed this thoroughly.
The names drew me. Toddy, Cecil Pool Cesspool, etc. Wodehouse
watchout! Mr. Smerczak is
in the house. |
2007-09-26 |