|  | 24K SCHMOOZING & BOOZINGwithMARC BLAKE | |
| It was over 90
        degrees, the ride was in a Cadillac heading southeast toward Vegas and
        my driver (or ride donor as I called them then) asked me to reach into
        the cooler and grab him a beer. On complying I found, packed in ice, 24
        cans of Coors, which is almost enough American beer to get you tipsy. We
        sank several of them under the hot august sun, skimming radio stations
        until the driver happened on an advert for a second hand car costing a
        thousand dollars. He asked me to open the ashtray where I found, to my
        surprise, a roll of bills easily large enough to cover it. At this point
        I ought to mention that the guy's name was Duane Johnson III and that
        when he'd picked me up from the side of the road, the first thing he
        said to me was "Know why I picked y'up?" "No" "Because
        you're on my land." I put him down as either truly rich or a liar,
        but at least not barking, which would adequately describe most of the
        other drivers I'd encountered in my mammoth hitchhiking trek across the
        States (We won't even go into Hunter S. Thomson). Anyway, he certainly
        had my attention - especially when he veered off the road and bounced
        along in the brush with the fender chewing tumbleweed. Once he was sure
        I had safely stowed away his billfold, Duane next asked me to open up
        the glove compartment. I couldn't wait. Inside was a gleaming six
        shooter revolver, the first gun I had ever handled. Duane asked. "Know
        what I use that for?" "Rabbits?" I offered weakly. He
        burst out laughing. "Sheet, no. Shooting hitchhikers." This is
        not how I became a writer, nor is it a fictionalised travel story, but
        it is an illustration of the kind of people I seem to come across with
        alarming regularity. These assorted crazies, provided I survive them
        relatively unscathed, usually end up in my books. Call it catharsis or
        strip-mining of experience but where else do you get your characters
        from - the telly? I began as a comedian on the 'alternative' comedy
        circuit and, over the years, graduated from seedy, stale rooms above
        pubs to the dizzy heights of larger seedy rooms above pubs. The
        bowel-loosening terror of doing this was mitigated by an appallingly
        paid BBC radio series, a TV Special and several of those late night
        telly slots you watched drunk and cannot remember. If you met me in
        person, you might for an instant think that you recognise me, but the
        glow would soon pass as you realise I just happen to look a little bit
        like lots of people. Comedy is like heroin. The better-than-sex rush of
        performing is addictive and anaesthetises you to the concomitant days of
        misery and self-loathing as you search for the elusive next gig/hit. All
        of this formed the basis of my second novel - Bigtime
        (Flame. 1999) in which I pointed out the paradox that the people we seek
        to entertain us are not very nice or stable people. However, the comedy
        world isn't called a circuit for nothing: Round and round you go until
        your face finally fits or you act improves enough to garner interest
        from the agencies. I put in a decade and called it quits, realising that
        I had probably peaked with that joke about the lorry driver with the one
        brown arm. Alongside this, as a kind of ersatz day job, I was writing
        for Spitting Image, Weekending, Roy Hudd and Frankie Howerd, though
        you'll be hard put to find any comedy writer who hasn't. It's your
        National Service. Six weeks with Roy and it's off to the front, or the
        back, if its Frankie. My first novel, Sunstroke
        (Flame, 1998) came about as a result of unemployment. Having finally
        snagged a literary agent by standing by the pool with some fresh meat,
        he had managed to sell two of my sitcoms and a screenplay. This led me
        to the mistaken assumption that I had mutated into a genius combo of
        Simon Nye and William Goldman and yes, the word you will be looking for
        is hubris. My fall came in the form of industry rejection method #2,
        which is the one where the producer spends six months never quite
        letting the writer know that its not going to happen. In my despondency
        I took a holiday in Andalucia where, as my body tanned to a rich nut
        brown, a rich combination of criminal characters began to gather in my
        overheated mind. Utilising the boss of a cowboy-cleaning firm where I
        had once worked as the villain, I trawled the clubs and bars of
        Fuengirola for source material, because someone has to do it. What
        fascinated me then and still does about Southern Spain is the vast
        cultural bridge which spans the indigenous dirt farmers, the service
        industry workers, the tourists, the jet set rich of Marbella/Puerto
        Banus and the UK ex-pat & criminal community. Drenched in sunlight,
        the region offers the tawdry and the thrilling and yet lies beneath a
        penumbra of violence. In that respect I see it as a simulacrum of 1950's
        Los Angeles - a stew of volatile discordant nationals liable at any
        moment to explode. I was amazed that no one had seen fit to focus on
        this before. As the project grew and grew I poured into the pot a
        budding romance, a girl searching for her dead sister, a couple of
        Spanish rogues; the thinly disguised real life mayor of Marbella and a
        mongrel mutt called Zoltan. Sunstroke took a year of isolation and
        eleven re-writes to get right and was sold to Hodder Headline inside
        three weeks. I permitted myself a sigh of relief and a small sherry. OK.
        I was drunk as a skunk for a month. It was a best seller, but then
        frankly these days what book isn't if you believe all the blurb on the
        back? For my 'difficult' second novel I decided to keep the small-time
        criminals but this time relocate to England: Birmingham in fact, on
        Valentine's day. The majority of Bigtime takes place at high speed on
        our nations beloved motorway system. There is Doug, a wily
        Anglo-Irishman, Danny, an 18 stone steroid-fuelled Filipino and Jason, a
        twat. The trio holds up a cashpoint machine at Corley services, which
        was the most pathetic example of the traditional heist-gone-wrong
        scenario I could come up with. It's less Dog Day Afternoon, more Dog Day
        coffee-morning. I think I favour the activities of the small time
        criminal for two reasons; one, you rarely hear about successful
        criminals (as they're the ones getting away with it) and two, I'm
        English and therefore have a genetic predisposition toward failure.
        Their hijacking activities coincide with the return home of two
        diametrically opposed comedians, both gigging in Birmingham. Andy Crowe,
        is a gentler type of comic; Rob Gillen is a foul-mouthed venal, arrogant
        tosser and is based directly on four famous comics I briefly knew in
        those days. No, I'm not going to name them. Yes, I was a mixture of the
        two types. No, comedians don't get groupies. Stop it with the questions.
        In both books I also tackled the frustrations of love &
        relationships; In Sunstroke, Mike spent two weeks trying to get inside
        Sarah's pants, in Bigtime, Andy made the biiiiig mistake of choosing his
        career over his girlfriend Michelle on Valentine's night. Both were
        broadly comic with intricate plotting and were fast, easy reads. I'll
        confess that during the editing process I think I lost some
        characterisation, and it is this I have attempted to remedy in my third
        and latest novel 24-Karat Schmooze
        (Flame). Schmooze is the story of Rox Matheson, a northerner with a
        busted heart who comes to London in search of the scammer who ripped off
        her mate. There she meets Reece, taciturn minicab driver and love
        interest, and Davey Kayman, the silver-tongued schmoozer of the title
        bent on ripping off the BBC. There's also Charlie Ribbons, his junkie
        Trustafarian girlfriend and Archie and Steve, comedy car clampers and
        part-time arsonists: also, the Peterson's - a southeast London crime
        family - finally make an appearance hinted at in Sunstroke. Although
        these elements have, at first glance, the same ring as the previous
        books, this one favours character over event every time. My intention
        has been to deliver the same uproar, but with the jokes singing from the
        people rather than big comedy set pieces - although there is a
        dwarf-bowling session in Amsterdam. Meantime, I spent most of last year
        writing a two-part ITV drama called "The Swap" which will be
        on in November 2001, also a short story for this summer's charity
        offering 'Girls Night Out/Boy's night in. Sunstroke was optioned for two
        years by Company pictures, but if I may refer you to industry rejection
        method #2 again, you'll know it didn't happen. The next producer is
        lined up and hopefully this time I'll get to work on the script. I'm
        between publishers at present, but have plenty more tales of murder 'n'
        mayhem cooking up in my cranium: either that or its some kind of
        bi-polar disorder. Within this genre, it is my first desire to
        entertain, secondly to get under the skin of the characters and bring
        them to you to the best of my ability. I feel the work taking a darker
        turn at times and, as I notice the blood count diminishing, I note the
        menace keeps going up a few notches. I don't, and won't, write about
        Serial killers - How much fetishised mutilation and versions of the same
         sociopathic bogeyman can we take? Nor do I seek to belittle the serious
        effect crime has on people, but I have a lot to say and right now humour
        is the most effective vehicle to get my message across. I hope you enjoy
        the books and all unalloyed praise is welcome. PS. By the way, Duane Johnson did not shoot me, but took me to Las Vegas with the money where well, you'll hear about it sometime. |  BUY Bigtime | |
|  BUY Sunstroke | ||
|  BUY 24 Karat Schmooze | ||