Thursday, March 18, 2010

Keep it simple stupid!

"I've lost my inner dude!"


Hi folks,
Late afternoon here and finally some rays of sunshine have blessed our shores. Plus for a fracking change it's not raining. Foul weather has continued through the last two months and Gib has been soaked with powerful storms running across our little peninsula on their way across the globe. I almost went out on the street at three in the morning the other night just because it was not raining. That's how water logged with cabin fever I've been getting.

Otherwise, I'm doing well and have been slaving over a hot script, trying to get this damned piece out of my head. What started as a simple idea to learn an already existing script has morphed into my creating a new cut of Quentin's words. You know me since when did I like the easy road which had been explored before? So, at this point of the process I'm a man possessed. My body trapped in front of the computer screen's light. A moth drawn back again and again by the words flying around me. My fingers dancing across the keyboard trying to keep step with their rhythm. When I was a much younger man I used to imagine that when the muses took me. I was like a romantic figure, you know a painter in a Parisian garret room with a beautiful model draped at rest in the moody light. My frock covered in myriad splashes of paints.

But my ex-wife Lois would attest to my being more like a demented Dr. Frankenstein in a castle laboratory hunkered down over the body of the creature. Plenty of blood smears on the white coat from the rush of words seeking to be put down. So, as to clothe the idea in flesh and finish the deed. So, close...so close. Now, if I only had a brain!


As delirious and obsessive as the ride has become. It shows no signs of slowing down. I have ahead of me the task of putting all these lines in my head in about 10 weeks. No, pressure! So I'll keep this one short and just say that I am arriving on May the 27th and will be in the states until June 13th. So, please make a note because I'd like to see as many of you as I can. I'll be more forthcoming in my next missive.

Friday, January 22, 2010

We have left space dock:

The Raven and the Blues.

The turn into the new decade has been completed and I find myself like everyone else in the unexplored future ahead of us. This old set of bones feel rather good after a couple of hard months dealing with Mom's health and facing the sobering responsibility I now have. Mom is well but I can see some deterioration in her energy and she tires quickly. I'm no longer just coming home to eat Mom's food. It's only in the last couple of weeks that it's hit me! Grown up stuff!!!

Crossing the Pond.

But do not despair kind reader for I am well. As always at these times it is the theatre which has been the healing balm. It has kept me going and given me somewhere to place the dark emotion and energy. Healing my moods inside by creating something on the outside with other people. Our show has just gone up as I write and our first flight was not too bad with only the normal bumps and scrapes of an opening night. It does look wonderful with delightful costumes and some fabulous props made for the stage. Production was busy with the various calamities that rear their head at every show as you prepare to get the 'Turkey' to fly. I have always loved the excitement of this last bit and the magic which happens as you and the other techs grow closer with the challenge and find new resources and ideas to fix what seem like unbeatable odds with the clock ticking.

His soul goes marching on.

The other thing which has come back and helped tremendously is that the Muses have been dancing in my eyes and I have begun painting again. It's been about two years since I have felt so drawn to work in this form and the release is just wonderful. This art comes from a side of my brain quite different from the theatre. This is less thought out ... more of a mystery. I do not know where I am going when I begin a new painting. There is no goal in sight. No story already laid out. Just the pull of the image and what it calls up in you. And this is what I leave you with these four new pieces. It's best to download and look at them full screen. Let me know what you think. Love and peace Andrew.

The Bride.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

"It's going to be a bumpy night!"

My Dear Friends,

Rejoice, for at last the end is in sight. We have survived the 'Holly Juggernaut' of Xmas and now merely have to cross the drunken meridian of New Year's eve to be through the time barrier to...another unit of measure? As always at these moments the whole of Western Media is in meltdown mode as we leave the 00's and fall into the next. An endless barrage of analysis and remembrance has splashed across our eyes and ears. Gets to where I wonder did I live through the same piece of the time stream as these guys? And don't get me started on the lists of things which have spewed out to account for our first ten steps into the 21st century. Best movies, Best music, Best Person, Best Butt! If only these experts of history could just recall some of it during the rest of the fracking decade. At this juncture, I must reveal my fondness for the 'Best Butt' as it was a cracking bit of reportage, full of insight and great buns.

As for me ? Like Shirley Bassey when you get to my age you don't include decades in your calender. Anyway, here on the bridge of the good ship Cocteau we're ready for the time shift. Many years doing this crossing have trained me to strap down all the important things. So, the booze and Mom are good to go.

As you can tell I've been in quite a good groove the last couple of weeks. We're busy building and painting the set for the panto and as you know the smallest of distractions into the world of make-believe help to keep my soul afloat. Also, my Quentin Crisp project is coming along well. He's turned out to be a truly fascinating person. What I thought would be a simple process of learning his lines has become so much more. Also and best of all! The good old itch to write has returned. Art is in the house! Well kids, the minutes are floating by and soon the 00's will be gone. So, I wish you all the very best for the next measure of units and send my love as always.

I leave with a few words of wisdom... 'Never turn your back on a monkey'.And yes Bill and Chris those are the very same cute guys I work with!


Thursday, November 12, 2009

Have fun storming the castle!


As I orbit this 'Forbidden planet' Layla Zoe is pouring some acoustic bourbon in my ears with her powerful, smoky voice which cuts through the cobwebs like a warp engine and the memories come flooding through.


Firstly, Up-state New York: The last month brought our 'autumn'. I tried calling it 'Fall' and got that quizzical look from someone which lets you know their failing to understand? You see we don't have any trees here which lose their leaves and so the phrase is a non sequitur. Shame, I did miss the riot of colors and the scrunch of leaves. Which told you Halloween was coming and magic was near.

But, each place has it's way and here our temperature has remained mostly in the 70's with bright sunshine and just a few showers of rain. These drops of moisture have brought forth a carpet of beautiful flowers on the Rock. One a small delicate purple flower reminds me of my sweet Jean-Marie and our time here together. Lovers trying to escape their dead line by dancing in bed. I miss her sharp mind and lovely legs.

Next a memory of the workshop at Elmwood floats through. Especially a fracking table saw!!! Last week my new theatrical partner in crime 'George' and I were starting to build the set for the panto. The smell of sawdust, splinters in fingers and the fun as Mike Gnazzo used to say as you 'dope out a solution to a problem'. As much as George is a fine fellow. I still miss my hulking great friend Mike with whom no project seemed beyond us. Both of us working till we were exhausted, filthy and doing things we would normally only do for money and at the end proud and exhilarated by our efforts.

My preparations for playing the ' Grand old powdered man' are going well. The dramaturgy that one can do in the age of the Internet is astounding. I've watched clips of video him and literally peeked into his New York apartment. I've gathered information from all over the world. While ordering many of the books from the cottage industry which has set itself up to promote this stately homo. I've read the 'Naked cival servant' and found it just a blast. He is so easy to take in and makes you chuckle along no matter how dark the time of his life. I've also read a play by Tim Fountain using Q's words. He was trying to create a piece by which other actors could play him. So, I was interested and... it was bad! Really, bad!!! Good news though, I now have three gigs, two state side and one here in Gib before I go. Things are not good for gays here. Their too much under cover and homo-phobia is all about. So, I've offered to do the piece for our local gay and lesbians chapter and they've accepted. Stand by for moi to be called 'Queer' all over again! Won't be the first time and nothing like Mr. Crisp put up with.

In the last couple of weeks we've had a bunch of art things come through our little Rock. One was a show in the very grand Governor's house. We Gibraltarians still have someone sent over from England to preside over us and he gets to live in a truly beautiful building called the Covent. It was here that a play called 'It's not about heroes' was put on. It concern's two World war one poets and how they met. The play was sweet and full of poetry. But in the end the room it was done in was more interesting than the performance of the piece. These two 'guns for hire' though having good voices blunted the poetry with uninspired renditions. Otherwise the room was spectacular!

Something which was a lot of fun was the John Lennon drawings which we had on display. As some of you will know John and Yoko got married here in Gibraltar. Check out the 'Ballard of John and Yoko'. It was a lovely collection of his drawings and some hand written lyrics. Fab! Took me back in time and reminded me that today's artists have much to learn in style and purpose.

Lastly, we had an evening of remembrance at the Garrison library in which music and poems were performed for Veterans. I was asked to read and foolishly sent in a Bio of myself to get the Chairman off my back who insisted he needed something to introduce me. I performed my bit and all went well. It was nice to be in front of a crowd and hear my voice working again. Then when all the other people were done we had an intermission and I became a source of interest. Two women approached me (not that kind of approach! I wish it were.) to see if I could hook them up with people in 'Hollywood'. One was seeking funding for a "fabulous film project (a Costume period piece)". For which she had sold the option for to some far away agent in the land of the free. The other was seeking resources for 'her daughter to make a film here when she came to the rock'. To both I was polite and then when they'd left I laughed. Lastly on the dangers of letting your resume get out is that the woman who'd put on that play in the Governors house? Now wanted my opinion because I had been a professional actor and had a career. She insisted! I was truthful. I'm sure she'll steer clear of me now. Anyway, write and let me know how YOU are and I miss and love you all. Andrew

Saturday, September 5, 2009

“Death by misadventure? Yeah, I've had a few birthdays like that!"



USS Cocteau: NCC -1957. Captain Andrew Dark
(There are plenty of links to click. Enjoy and I miss you all!)

It's been some fast times here in 2009. The Months shredding away from the calender like toilet paper. Since we last spoke a hot humid August has rolled on by leaving in it's wake the first days of September and my 52nd birthday, Sunday the sixth. So, have a tipple on me.

I'm sitting at my desk 'chillin', feeling peaceful. Drinking down some liquid smoke. It's around midnight and Dinah Washington's sultry voice croons in my headphones. The sassy, sexy horns remind me of dancing (all those years ago) with my beautiful Lois in a New Orleans funeral. Our Creole excursion full of all the southern comforts of Bourbon, Voodoo and love. Outside my bedroom window a lush moon is spilling it's light across the Bay and a sweet senorita of a breeze blows in from Spain. Her cooling breath gently sways the plants and blows across my naked shoulders. A little shudder of things to come perhaps? I'll cast some runes.

I'm on vacation for a few days relaxing, catching up with art and working on some words to send back to you. As always I wonder what to write? After all, a lot goes on in a month but most of it unworthy of posting. I'm not one to change my status on Facebook just because the wind has. What a break through? A technology which allows us to share the minutia of moments which a few years ago we would have been happy to go through alone. But, I'd better be careful it's late and we're getting close to that scary hour when 'ideas become concept's.

On the Art side:

I'm designing a Pantomime (kid's show) and it's 'Alice in Wonderland.' So, I spent a lovely hour today rooting around in our theatre workshop. Smelling the sawdust and looking over the bits and pieces. It was fun to see all the previous shows laying around as props or flats. As my mind was spinning out some new ways to use old stuff my buddy Bob Olsen came to mind. He was the Master. A bit of fresh paint here and a little nip and tuck there! And we have it!” Of course, it was never that simple! The panto will help to jump start my mind. I need it, since any ideas of acting this year went out the window. Ho-hum!!!

To combat those blues and to celebrate the old curmudgeon! I am looking to perform 'An evening with Quintin Crisp' next year in the USA when I come and visit. It is a fun one man show and I think Mr. Olsen would have appreciated it. So, watch this space for updates. You all have a great month and we'll speak soon. Love and peace Andrew Dark

Friday, July 3, 2009

Burying a rock!


(This ones full of songs and vids so take the time to click and enjoy!)

Hi guys,
Sorry for not writing more often but even though it's been quite a while since my run in with my 'Appendicitis'. It has taken much longer to re-coup my mojo. This stems from the fact that the show I was going to perform has now been permanently shelved'. It must seem silly to civilians but I found myself deeply depressed. Those who know me are familiar with my Jim Kirk fixation at not believing in the 'Kobayashi Maru' but the more I tried to put this 'Turkey' on the more it went to hell! It had been three months following in the foot steps of Sisyphus pushing his boulder up and down those freaking hills in the Greek Underworld. Every time I thought I had it sorted out and was approaching the summit. The freaking rock would get away from me and roll to the bottom again. So, I buried the boulder in the cat pan and have been licking my wounds ever since.
Anyway, I'm feeling much better and am sitting on a lovely old leather couch in my newly decorated bedroom. The walls are starting to look like mine as the sci-fi posters begin to cover up the plain ivory white paint. It's hard to give up your own apartment full of stuff and travel back home with only a suitcase of possessions into a single room. But with time you gather new pieces and start again. The sun is streaming in and we are in the midst of a hot, sticky summer day. It took a while for the temperature to stabilize but now we've settled into a bake cycle of humid high 80's and 90's.
I've just taken my aunt and Mom out to eat at one of my favorite spots. It's called 'Cheers' after the TV show but there the comparisons stop. There are no eccentric regular drunks or humorous bar tenders. Instead it's owned by locals and the food is mostly Spanish fare served quickly and hot. While Mom and auntie swapped gossip about various members of the family. I read our local newspaper 'The Gibraltar Chronicle'. It's not much to peruse and everyone says so, but buy one and those same people borrow yours and have a peek . The city around us was humming with activity as Gibraltar settles into it's summer routine of tourists washing up upon our shores from the cruise ships and coaches. Whom then rush around attempting to soak in the magic of Gib in just a few short hours. Locals in their shorts and summer dresses take this influx of people in their stride and use the side streets to avoid the crush of humanity on our Main ave. While cars and motorcycles clog the roads due to Government's insistence on scheduling major roadworks at exactly the wrong time. I smile at the proof that bureaucracy like everything else is international! As I'm paying up the sounds of Micheal Jackson's 'Billie Jean' pump out from a passing car and once again for a few more moments the Black Orpheus lives. We in Gibraltar have been affected by his death though running a few notches shy of Australia who've been (according to Internet sources) literally killing themselves to join him walking on the moon. Speaking of which I'm looking up at my brand new poster of Buzz Aldrin on the lunar surface and remembering that wonderful moment when America meant something good to us all. Have a wonderful fourth and much love. Miss you all Andrew Dark

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Bob has left the building.



Since the sad news of Bob's exit I have of course thought much of him. He would have loved the panoramic view from my cable car as it goes up and down over the lush vegetation of the Rock of Gibraltar. From here you can see the rugged coast line of Africa a mere 15 miles away across the blue, blue waters of the Straits and the majestic Moroccan mountains peaking up above the icing of white clouds. Of course, he would've rearranged the clouds, re-drawn the coast line as it suited him and had to fudge the perspective a little to get it to work on the back wall of Elmwood. But, I would have loved the chance to work one last earth bound project with him. Before he moved onto exclusively celestial designs and beyond my ability to turn up for construction. And that's how I have remembered Bob 'working on projects' and the many friends I met doing so.


The loyal family of workers who came and went through the years helping our very own Don Quixote tilt the wind mills and chase his dreams. Of all his works 'Man de la Mancha' was the one most quoted
and it's where I leave you now. Miss you Bob.

Your little Brother Andrew Dark.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YGzqbEeVWhs&feature=related

To dream the impossible dream,
To fight the unbeatable foe,
To bear with unbearable sorrow
To run where the brave dare not go;
To right the unrightable wrong.

To love, pure and chaste, from afar,
To try, when your arms are too weary,
To reach the unreachable star!

This is my Quest to follow that star,
No matter how hopeless, no matter how far,
To fight for the right
Without question or pause,
To be willing to march into hell
For a heavenly cause!

And I know, if I'll only be true
To this glorious Quest,
That my heart will lie peaceful and calm
When I'm laid to my rest.

And the world will be better for this,
That one man, scorned and covered with scars,
Still strove, with his last ounce of courage,
To reach the unreachable stars!