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Woooo Hooo!

By Steph on 24th May 2011
Goddess for the day:Aditi (Indian: Your thoughts create reality; be conscious of what you choose)

Welcome back Rat Fans! I got bored of this blog after my novel came out but entre nous I'm really bored of no having a voice to write as I really want to write. People keep saying I should write a column but nobody seems to want an interesting column that's not one of those crummy ones about Christian Louboutin shoes that they're obviously writing in order to try and pay the mortgage off on their converted flat in Hampstead. Bitter anyone, me?

I'm supposed to be cat sitting in Essex- see my last entry a year ago- only that cat, Pixie is now dead. Maybe those weight problems and the growling all got a bit much for her. So then my mum kidnapped the next door neighbour's cat, Blackie. (Next door neighbour was already anorexic and freaking out cos my mum was feeding the skeletal cat and she reckoned she was getting obese). Then the next door neighbour had a nervous breakdown so she didn't even know she had a cat any more. The cat, Blackie is affectionate-stroke- needy but it's definitely nice to have soemthing to stroke when you;re pissed off becasue Harper's Bazaar have changed the angle they want on the Goldsmith's Saga story for the 5th time in one week...

Anyway, famous people.
Colin Firth, Laura Bailey, Tom Ford's boyfriend. Those are the people I saw last night at a book launch by Lucy Seigel about how we should be more eco about fashion. I know, not quite as exciting as my Indian PR mate's revelation that she didn't do this year's charity event in Cannes because the Russian charity woman organising it said, 'I don't give a shit about black people in Africa. I can't even touch those people.'

Colin Firth, who I know cos I interviewed him for HB, waved at me over the throng of journos crowded round him (we were in his wife Livia's shop which sells things like Coke can tops made in to keyrings  by people in Africa). There were a couple of eds from Psychologies and the Saturday Telegraph who I schmoozed with a bit. I'm trying to sell this story about this spa in East Sussex where I'm going next week to take ayahuasca (amazonian hallucinogenic drugs or 'plant medicine') but I think they thought I was a bit weird. Strange how they all get fluttery around Colin Firth whereas in fact he's not nearly as cute as his wife.
Funny how it all works out. She and Colin are having dinner with the queen today- and Obama and Michelle and soon it will be trendy to wear earings made out of Coke cans and all because Livia's husband was in a film about some English King that the Americans liked because it reminds them of the good old days when the Brits drove round in Rolls Royces and wore pin stripped suits.

Best star spotting was at the Amfar dinner in Cannes. My champagne mates from Moet (pronounced 'Mo- ette' just as I learned that Perrier Jouet is pronounced 'Joo-ette') invited me over- they're flogging this new champagne called Ice Imperial that you serve on the rocks and you can drink bucket loads of it without getting drunk, although this New York chick on the press trip kept staggering round going, 'it doesn't get you  high!'

The dinner was very glam: Karl, Gwen Stefani, Jane Fonda, Brooke Shields (my new crush), Kanye West, but mainly  I was very excited because I finally got to meet Courtney Love.


Here she is ranting to some man who is apparently the owner of a music studio in NY. the New York magazine journo chick told me his name but I'd had too much bloody Ice Imperial to remember.

Right, I have to dash. Blackie has appeared miaowing for her tea. I had a great pic of Donatella Versace looking like a tired drag queen to post (wow- meeting my two big heroines on one night!).

Oh (down Backie down, you can have your rabbit Felix in a minute)there was a funny moment at the Colin Firth thing last night when I was explaining to my ed at HB about the Courtney encounter and she thought I was saying Courtney was doing heroine with me.'She was doing HEROIN with you??!!'
It's a play on words...geddit?
yes Blackie, coming.


 

LADY DI, MARGARET THATCHER AND CORN WOMAN

By Steph on 17th May 2010
Comin atcha today from deepest Essex where I am cat sitting my mother's newly obese cat, Pixie. Poor Pixie, she's started growling too... Then there are the barking sausage dogs next door and the rats in the loft- either that or it's ghosts. But actually, it's a nice break- a bit of time out to think about what I've been doing for the past month, Namely:

The 'goddess workshop' in Wales. I went at the beginning of last month for the Sunday Times. There were about 8 of us and you had to choose a goddess and then channel her all weekend. You're supposed to resolve your issues through that. This the goddess I picked:


She's called Corn Woman and she's Native American. Corn was worshiped like gold back then She represents nourishment and I'm still working out what that might mean. I ended up my 'ritual' scattering corn meal on the lake with 8 women bowing down before me. It was intense- like being on drugs while not being on drugs. IT was kind of  an all-female Lord of the Flies meets-The Electric Cool Aid Acid Test-meets The Pink Ladies sleep-over in Grease. Kind of Meryl Street/Julie Walters/hippie dippie Mama Mia territory.  

(Anna Ziman, by the way, who is the New Zealand chief goddess, is running another course at the end of this month. I'd totally recommend the experience: www.goddessworkshop.co.uk)

Aspirational spirituality is SO going to go mainsteam soon. Check out '2012' on the internet- soon to be a new dinner party topic of conversation near you (and it's nothing to do with the World Cup...).
Talking of dinner parties, I attended the birthday party of Alan Dolan (my Transformational Breathing friend, see post below), a couple of weeks ago, which turned into a meeting of all the VIP mumbo jumbo-ists in the UK . It was excellent. All the top kooks were there- a man with a deep, slithery voice like Donald Sinden called Stuart Pierce who used to do psychic consultations with Lady Di (mind you, I've never met a psychic who didn't claim to have worked with Lady Di) and who taught Margaret Thatcher to speak lower, a Harley Street hypnotist who channeled Jesus Christ through Alan the other week (and also edited The God Of Small Things by Arundhati Roy in his spare time), a young lad who does 'Theta Healing' (he said that you could spot a modern New Age person because they sign all their birthday cards with "Love and Light"), and a Willow The Wisp blonde woman who speaks with Angels. She agreed with me that the trouble with a lot of the Goddess cards or Angel cards (very fashionable now) is the visuals. "Very Disney. Very Californian". Ie too much light and not enough dark. I won't have a word said against Corn Woman though...

Meanwhile, I seem to be attracting a lot of high end hippie dips at the moment. A shaman - an ex Sony exec- came to my house the other day with a computer to 'do' me). I'm  trying to think of a word to sum up this new demographic cos then I can make some cash out of it- Los Iluminados, the Spanish call them, but that doesn't really work in English...

And whenever the Love and Light thing starts doing my head in, I head off for a little dose of celebrity shallowness. I did this recently- went to the Sanderson hotel which was celebrating it's 10th anniversary. One) it made me feel old because I was there when the place opened, and two) it made me remember how awful the 90s looked: coloured lighting, pillars draped in white, sterile bar areas. Florence (from The Machine) was singing- wonder how much she got for that- and there was, as usual, champagne on tap and Sodom and Gomorrah-style nibbles, including mini Eggs Benedict that people were raving about.

Not Tom Parker Bowles though. He stopped me and started ranting (he was pretty drunk) about how Sarah (his wife and former colleague of mine at Harper's Bazaar) was a bloody dissgrace for bringing him to this dull party and had I seen her and: 'She owes me ten blow jobs for bringing me here..."
Here is the shot of the love birds, pictured in more sober times:



I gently extricated myself from his sweaty grip, saying I'd try and find her. I thought it was a bit rum though. The grannies I visit in Blackfriars on Sundays to give reminiscence classes to would have loved the Sanderson party . Although actually, they're getting a bit picky too. At Christmas, we have a nice chicken roast (not too much gravy though or there are complaints). And if you bring biscuits in these days, they often ask if they're 'Weight Watchers' ones...
Here's a picture of lovely Ann from the Walworth Road. I can't remember if she's 80 or 90. She's draped in a mink her son's wife brought her back from Poland and a pair of nylons her sister got her from a Yank in 1943:


She told me, ' My sister got a kiss and cuddle from a Yank and I got the stockings. That was the Black Market, I suppose.'

Below, are lines from Ann's favourite war time song, Put Your Worries Through The Mangle.' The sentiments might be food for thought for young Tom Parker Bowles:

'Put your worries through the mangle like mother does on washing day,
And if you're in an awful tangle, wash the blues away...'


BIG BEEFY STRAIGHT BOY

By Steph on 23rd March 2010
I was at some party last night in the new China White off Oxford Street with Kevin Spacey and Kate Moss and Tracey Emin a few of the other names. It was funded by a hotel called W which comes from Qatar whose owners have decided not to sink all their money into pork belly or potato futures but to put some of it into the Old Vic instead because that way they can be linked with the arts and get to meet famous people and have stories in the Daily Mirror about Kate Moss looking spotty (see today's paper)  to publicise their hotels. Get how it works?
Normally, the celebs are really bored at these things but this evening, they came down from dinner in a good mood. Tracey was in red heels (you always know you're in for a good night when she swaps from trainers to heels) and was dancing away with Kevin S for much of the night under the influence of mucho vino blanco (she doesn't drink spirits any more).
Here they are during a brief breather:


When Kevin gave his speech to thank the money people from W Hotels, there was a slurred, Margate-accented cry from the back of the room, 'He IS heterosexual!' followed by many hushed and flustered 'shhhhh!!' es.  It was funny. Kevin deffo does have something smoldering about his 'regard' as the French would say, but it seemed that the male show biz ed from Now had more luck on the seduction front than Tracey. The show biz ed from Now is called Sam and this I know because he kept staggering up to me and going, in a really loud voice, 'Hi, I'm Sam- the show biz ed from Now!' as if he was the ed of Vanity Fair (in the days when it was good) followed by loud guffaws and weird whirling of his eyes. In fact I suspect he was on that plant food drug that is supposed to be banned by now.
He was being really obnoxious to everyone and yet, strangely enough, Kevin didn't waft him away as he stood talking to him for a good 20 minutes about white wine, fruit pastils, Barbara Windsor and other fascinating things you talk about when you're off your head...


LESBIAN LEATHER BAGS

By Steph on 28th February 2010

Ah, the charm of a French accent. I was at the launch of the new Givenchy perfume at Harrods last week- linked in with the launch of the new Veuve Cliquot rose (that should, naturally, be accent acute but you can't do accents on this blog thing I use..).  The Champagne woman was talking about the grapes growing on 'the slops' but it was the older French woman (in really cool high waisted- one would presume- Givenchy trousers) who described the aromas of the new perfumes- there are four of them: Ange ou Demon (orange), Very Irresistible (Rose) Amarige (Mimosa) and Organza (Jasmine).
The orange one was my favourite as it smelled of having your head stuck in a bourgeoise semi-alcoholic housewife's crepe-y cleavage. (It's supposed to smell clean and fresh, like early-picked Egyptian flowers ('if you peak zem up at moon time zey will be too fool and voluptuous...).I think the flowers in my whiff of the perfume must have been picked very late at night. There was deffo a demon in that bottle..
The rose one was supposed smell like 'If you open a Moroccan lezza bag'.
In fact, the whole effect was supposed to be 'spicy, naughty, lezzary and 'uny-type of sensation.'
Those early morning perfume launches are a funny business. You're sitting there at 9 in the morning in a corner of Harrods lit like a police station, drinking pink Champagne, eating those mini croissants that don't taste like proper French ones and worrying if you're smartly-enough dressed. It feels sort of extra terrestrial. It reminded me of going to a Jill Sander show in Milan a few years ago at 9 in the morning and all the journos sat there with stone faces wearing sunglasses. It was very bright with loud music and models coming out of the curtain like weird-looking creatures emerging from Dr Jeckyll and Mr Hyde pods...
We got two bottles of the perfume to take home and a bottle of the pink rose which money wise, if I cashed it all in on Ebay, amounts pretty much to what I'm being paid next week (£150) to give a talk at City University novel writing MA class about the 'Systematic Derangement of the Senses" ie how to write druggy stuff well.  Any takers?

LEE MCQUEEN: BEAUTIFUL ROTTEN FRUIT

By Steph on 17th February 2010

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00683/Alexander-McQueen_7_683833a.jpg

So, the report is out and he really did hang himself.  The morning of his mother's funeral. From a wardrobe at his house in Flat 1, 7 Green Street W1K. We're not told what with. A tie? A belt? And there was a suicide note although '... the beauty that lies under the rotten fruit!!!!!!!!!!!!' that he howled in Twitter despair 3 days before he died made sense to me.
I met and interviewed McQueen many times but, given the current circumstance, my chat with him at a party at Maxim's in Paris in October 2004 make the most beautiful rotten fruit sense. It was during my early days doing the party watch for Harper's Bazaar and I used to go round getting all the celebs stoned and asking silly questions. This one was: 'What do you think happens when we die?'
When I asked  Dita Von Teese, she gave a visible jolt of horror before replying 'I'd like to believe we all go up to heaven and play dress-up all day, but I think that life on earth is...pretty much it.'
I then asked McQueen who was chatting to a couple of black dyke mates he'd flown over from London. Now McQueen, as people will tell you, could be gruff and snarly at the best of times but the what-happens-when-we-die question seemed to please him. He straightened up and his face lit up in a beam. 'I'll go to purgatory,' he said. 'And then I'll probably go up.'
A cute thoughts. Always the poor-boy-done-good, always striving for a better life and even after death assuming that he would be cutting God's coat...
I did a long interview with him in 2003 for Harper's where he was 3 days late for the interview (a bender, the PR confessed) and when he turned up he started out snarly and gruff and touchingly inarticulate. That was his way, he'd stammer out a few jerky, stacatto lines of cursing and muttering and then he'd come out with something incredibly heart-felt. When I asked him about his dark vision he snapped, 'of course my work's edgy. I grew up seeing 3 sisters in abusive relationships. One of them was nearly strangled to death. I haven't watched it on TV; I've been there. All women are warriors and I've got compassion for that.'
As an after thought, he added:
'You can't be a rebel all your life or you end up like James Dean- dead.'
Right, I have to go now and write a story about dykey cycling clothes for 10 magazine. I just have to say that all those fashion people who've come out of the woodwork now to say how shocked and saddened they are by the death of their friend kind of pisses me off. Everyone's good friends with everyone when they're dead. To state the obvious- where were they in his tormented final week? And what's with the whole Twitter thing? All those 'followers'  but no friends. Like the case of the Johnson and Johnson heiress, Casey Johnson whose over-dosed body was left to rot for 3 days in January before she was found by her twitter-obsessed girlfriend, Tila Tequila. Hey ho. Now that McQueen and Isabella Blow are dead, it seems as if the (fashion) world is destined to become more and more boring and homogenised. Lady Gaga has a lot on her shoulders...


SIENNA MILLER ROCKS BUT BILL NIGHY DOESN'T

By Steph on 5th February 2010


'Times are hard" as someone said to me this morning and that made me feel a bit better about the nightmare of last night at the Louis Vuitton party for Chris Ofili at the Tate Britain when I nearly got thrown for daring to ask Bill Nighy which country in the world he'd like to visit before it got destroyed.
http://www.emmacarlson.com/emmablog/images/bill%20nighy.jpg
This isn't the actual pic of Bill from last night because I was soon marched away from him. But this is pretty much what he looked like, minus the bow tie. His ex wife, Diana Quick, the one from Brideshead is nothing but nice.
Meanwhile,  was a bit of a weird do (at the Tate Britain- the nice Tate not the nasty children-ridden Tate Modern) because the invite was one of the biggest stiffies - all in black -that I'd recieved for ages but there were no paps outside  even though inside there was Jude Law and Sienna Miller and Bill Bloody Nighy. Actually, I got there at the same time as Jude Law who'd just been delivered by a limo tout seul and not a single flash light in sight. The figure of 500 euros was flashing in front of my eyes- I do this celebrity page for a new Euro eco  mag called Above (billed by them as 'the green Vanity Fair') and I've found this flash button on my birthday camera that makes everyone look really glamorous, so I take pics and write up the quotes for Above and i's a bit of a nightmare but most celebs know how to play the game. Anyway, first I went up to Sienna Miller who had also arrived toute seule but then, strangely enough, had linked up with Jude inside.
http://bluebloodblog.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/sienna_miller.gif

I said hi to Sienna and reminded her that we'd met (in Venice for the film festival in 2005, as a matter of fact, when she was really cool and sat around with a group of strangers smoking spliff). Her face was slightly tanned last night and she looked very cute and young and freckly (and in love- even though they'd been delivered in seperate cars it was obvious they were TOTALLY back together- very sexy actually, pretending not to be with  someone when you're desperately in love with them. Make the most of it, Sienna cos you'll soon get bored of him).I wished I'd had that superpower that Babs Windsor has in Carry On Spying to take a pic of them together just through blinking my eyes - hopefully now they've come up with the ipad they'll invent that now. There was an in-house photographer but nobody else was allowed to take pics- as you will see later.
Anyway, Sienna said she remembered me, but then, as I came out with the blurb about how I was working for this new 'green Vanity Fair' thing and could I ask her a question about which country she'd like to visit before it got destroyed, I realised this was going to be a no-go. I was being way too long in my explanation and I could see the boredom creeping up in her eyes as I told her about how the world was soon going to be destroyed as my editor had briefed me...
Poor thing, me nobbling her big secret date with Jude.  She was very polite and said could she answer me later. Jude gave me a pissed off look as they walked off to see the Ofili exhibit. I guess because I hadn't said 'Hey Jude , nice Sherlock Holmes film - you were amazing.' Still, he did look good too. When I accidentally bumped into him post-limo on the darkly lit front steps of the Tate, I thought he was some trendy 20-something Hoxton type in his black jeans and boots and Dior Homme jacket. That must be secret love for you..
Anyway, so they wandered off to see the exhibit  and I spotted a skinny guy in thick rimmed specs- it was Bill Nighy from that flop movie, The Boat That Rocked. He looked quite flirtatiously at me as I went up to him, thinking maybe I'd come for a chat but then when I came out with the Save The World stuff he did the equivalent of punching me in hte face by starting to say, 'Actually no' (he was also in Love Actually), 'actually no I don't want to talk to you.' The glossy blonde next to him ('marinated' is a word Marc Quinn used earlier this week to me about Pamela Anderson's vibe) started to - what- fulminate? Just looked that word up in the dictionary and yes, it means 'to explode violently or flash like lightning'. Thats what she did. And then, a few minutes later another marinated blonde comes up and told me (very politely, as it goes' that these Louis Vuitton events are not for press and theat is how come they get all the celebs to come. Fair enough. After all, the Chris Ofili expo is only there becasue of all the money Louis Vuitton earns making handbags and stilettos (they're sponsoring it all). It's clever really and good for business: hook up with a  bunch of scrubby East End poets for the night and even though you actually just make frocks and handbags, you will be linked to immortality.
Still, having been told off felt kind of  crap as I went into a big gallery to listen to Chris Ofili introduce a bunch of 'street poets' who were about to perform. There I was drinking a coupe of Dom Perignon and it could have been Cava (mind you, drinking champagne when you've still got gum in your mouth is not ideal). I sat there amongst a bunch of what used to be called 'ladies who lunch' ie glossy hair, size 6, Christian Louboutin stiletto boots looking at the fine knitting on my jumper. It was given to me by my friend in Paris, the brilliantly talented Adam Jones (www.adamjones.fr). He trained in knitwear and was the number one man at Dior when John Galliano was going through a.. tricky partying period- and all the collections turned out as knitwear).
Anyway I was looking at the intricate weave of it, thinking that some lady in some factory had spent hours making this, thinking that some nice society lady would be wearing it out for her big night at the ball (Adam Jones doesn't come cheap) and yet here I was at the big ball and I was feeling terrible becasue I'd been told of by the PR woman for trying to take a pic of Bill Nighy to pay my mortgage (in a flat above a welfare tennant who's turned his flat into a marijuana farm, buy the way) and now I was forcing down Dom Perignon aware that I should spit out my gum yet chewing it kind of made me feel safe and having to listen to a bunch of 'street' rap poet friends of Chris Ofili who the lunching ladies were giggling nervously at.

Still, some good things did come out of the night. The last chick performance poet was brilliant. Called Kate Tempest, she has loads of cockiness and confidence and put some surprising thoughts and words together as opposed to the regular street poetry subjects of gangs and shagging.
Rebecca Warren the brilliant Turner nominated sculptress was there looking very foxy all in black, looking for a fag smoking partner to go outside with. I had a chat with Tim Noble about how I'd like to kill a pig- not just the killing bit but the preparing it properly for sausages etc.

The caviar was good too - Osetra- the so-called elite of caviar- a firmer texture than the mroe delicate Beluga. You're supposed to have it on blinis with sour cream and boiled eggs but I held off on the boiled eggs. The young East End poets just looked at the caviar bar nervously and excitedly and glugged the Dom Perignon instead. But who knows what they'll make of this night later on. Remember that quote from Chekov's The Seagull:

It is as dangerous for society to attract and indulge authors as it is for grain-dealers to raise rats in their granaries.’

TAKE A DEEP BREATH...

By Steph on 5th January 2010
Morning all, just a small post to remind you that I've not disappeared altogether. I wasn't sure you'd be interested in hearing from me if I hadn't had any close encounters  with any famous people- and a haven't of late (big sigh of relief).
Actually, no, I tell a lie. I did recently go to Veuve Cliquot's Hennessy Gold cup (that's a horse race in Berkshire). The waitresses were very cute -the French maid look is always a winner:

 Champagne wasn't allowed because Hennessy is cognac and they have to promote that.  This was a bit of a bore, but they did have this red coloured cocktail with ginger and apple in that hid the taste. Funnily enough, the only celeb who had enough push to get bubbly was Cilla Black who said she'd leave unless she had some so they sneaked a bottle up from under the counter like a butcher passing over best end of neck to the brassy blonde on rationning day. I don't have any pics of Cilla (she bet on a horse called Barber's Shop, 'Cos, like I lived over a barber's shop when I was a kid') but here is one of that Henry bloke- the Tory's son who was being paid by his dad to put on parties.


Conway, that's the name. He's the one on the left and describes himself as 'blonde, bouncy and one for the boys'. We had a nice chat about wearing fur and how the races was one of the few times you could wear it in Britian without fearing for your life. I have a black fur hat I bought in Moscow - possibly made of cat- and I've always fancied a bucket load of green paint over it- think it'd look good. The bloke on the right is his friend who works as a lawyer in the city.
But back to the breathing thing- that's where I spent my Xmas- eating beetroot salad on this beathing holiday in Lanzarote (www.breathguru.com). You imagine there's a balloon in your belly and take in massive lots of oxygen very quickly and it makes you feel like you're in drugs only without the paranoia. It's amazing, man. I was cynical too to start with but you can do it for free yourself once you've learned the method. It's called Transformational Breathing. Here's me going down hill on a bike after one of the sessions. I'm still working on the turban look...





I HATES THEM MEESES TO PIECES...

By Steph on 3rd October 2009
It's not so much that I hate them, it's more that there seem to be mice all over the shop at the moment.  Take the invite for Stephen Webster's 50th birthday party designed by his friend Tracey Emin:


While everyone else at the party was going on about 'punk poet' John Cooper Clarke who also contributed to the birthday boy's proceedings at Tyringham Hall by doing a stand-up rant (I can't remember what he said as I'd just had a spliff in the garden next to the 'largest reflecting pool in Europe') but I do remember admiring Tracey's little banquetting mice invite. They reminded me of a cute little drawing of a couple of elephant trunks snuggled up to each other that she sold off at a Terence Higgins Trust auction a couple of years ago which, when I went to have a closer look, turned out not to to be elephants at all but something called 'Arse Fucking'.
When I later interviewed her about this, she smiled and said, "Yes, it does look a bit elephant trunks". I don't think the above mice have anything to do with gayboy sodomy but I could be wrong. 

I saw Tracey last Sunday at fellow artist Sue Webster's birthday party (no relation to rock and roll jeweller Stephen) in Soho at Mark Hix's new fish restaurant. Among stars such as Kate Moss, Bella Freud and Nick Cave, Tracey was almost mouse-like in her low-key-ness. She talked  to me about her cat, Docket and how she was loving her new house in Le Lavendou in the South of France. She had brought a couple of cuddly  friends along to the party with her - her neighbours from Le Lavendou. A bashful French man called Michel wore a Guernsey jumper and had rosy cheeks and was pleasingly hamster-ish.

The second mouse incident this week was in Soho on Thursday night at an art opening for which I received this invite:


The artist is called Charlotte Cory and she takes lots of old Victorian photographs and sticks animal heads on them. I'm not convinced about it as art although it did remind me of that Monty Python mouse sketch:

Man: Well... I was about seventeen and some mates and me went to a party, and, er... we had quite a lot to drink... and then some of the fellows there ... started handing ... cheese around ... and well just out of curiosity I tried a bit ... and well that was that.
Interviewer:    And what else did these fellows do?
Man:    Well some of them started dressing up as mice a bit ...
Interviewer:    And what was your reaction to this?
Man    Well I was shocked. But gradually I come to feel that I was more at ease ... with other mice.

The other good thing about the mouse suits art show was that I bumped into David Hoyle AKA the fantastic Divine David. Turns out he's doing a show at the Chelsea Theatre all about Freud from October 21. Apparently he has Freud's actual couch which will be the centre piece of the show. I like his quote in the Independent: "I'm happy to say I'm multifaceted," admits Hoyle. "Some of my facets are blinding bright and others are coal-black. It all depends on where the light is."

Here Hoyle is at the mouse art show (in front of a couple of rabbits having a drink):


Anyway, enough of the mice thing. My point is that Pixie and Dixie are back. Let's give them a big hand:


Of Bears and Brand Ambasadors

By Steph on 25th September 2009

So, I have two more psychics’ phone numbers in my address book which means that London Fashion Week must just have ended. The first one I got from Daisy Bates (whose dad was Ralph Warleggan in Poldark and whose hair is all falling out from dying it blonde for an appearance in Lost)  at the Harper’s Bazaar party at the Natural History Museum on Monday night. Daisy once hooked me up with Lady Di's psychic. I’ve just looked the new one's name up and I have her down as ‘Helen Psychic’. You have to send her a photo- she can even ‘read’ J-pegs apparently- and then she tells you all about what the person is doing now. I think the people in the photos have to be already dead though...
I got the second psychic info later that night from PR Supremo Miss Meena Khera going up in the lift to the Paul Smith party (to celebrate him having designed a limited edition Evian bottle – its got lots of coloured squiggles around the outside). Actually, I know this psychic- she’s called Miraid and she does an interesting thing that is like reiki with a big of contact your dead relatives thrown in. She also doubles as a jewellery designer. Meena said Miraid had given her a necklace that turned her neck red for a week but that also brought out a load of bad stuff from her life. This is a typical kind of fashion week conversation and it is why I like fashion people so much better than product design dullards. I was at the V &A last night for the Wallpaper party (part of London Design Week) and I asked Alasdhair Willis (Stella McCartney’s husband) what he’d been doing lately that was a bit eco. He said, ‘Oh , well, I’ve been building an arboritum, actually,’ then  he looked at his friend and chuckled as if I wouldn’t have the slightest idea what an arboritum was, let alone know how to spell it.  Ok, so actually you spell it ‘Arboretum’ but I did at least know it was some kind of mini forest thing. It reminded me of the time I asked Ben Fogle what his favourite dinosaur was and he turned and chuckled, ‘Pterodactyl, actually, although you probably won’t know how to spell it.’ I nearly told him that there is a character in my second novel, Sucking Shrimp, who is known as the Pterodactyl - actually.
Here is a picture of Alasdhair Willis that I took. His comment was actually pretty interesting for a design person (he's got a furniture design company). After  I took it he said, ‘erase it because I’m much too close to the lens’. But I kind of like it. He does actually look very healthy in the flesh, like he spends his life outdoors planting trees.


Anyway, the point is that you might as well be at an accountant’s party as a product designer’s party. I was drinking some rhubarb gin martini  but the high point was the pink Champagne and sushi I had before hand with my friend Gen from Veuve Cliquot and her boss. I was telling them about my summer in Sitges and the subject of Bears on the beach came up and they had no idea what a ‘Bear’ was. Weird, no? I have to say, I was late in coming to the Bear concept myself –some lezza told me when I had a temporary job at Rapido TV about 10 years ago.  I said to Gen and the Veuve Cliquot boss that it’s clever of gay men to come up with a flattering term for someone who is fat old and hairy. Women who are fat, old and hairy just get depressed and think nobody will ever fancy them. But then the boss said that ‘cougars’ is now a new term to describe funky older women like Madonna, so maybe change is afoot. Oh, the other fun thing about the V &A do was bumping into the Guardian interiors columnist Caroline Roux. I haven’t seen her for years. The last time was when Biche had just come out and she came up to me in a club, took the bit of chewing gum out of her mouth and said, here, put this in your mouth and chew it- I know you like that sort of thing because I’ve read Biche’. I think I might well have taken the gum in an attempt to try and  live up to my reputation. I asked her how journalism was going and she said fine, although mostly she was doing ‘consultancy’ and indeed, I keep hearing this from friends of my age. Everyone is a consultant or a ‘brand ambassador’ (heaven forefend that they use the word ‘PR’). The thing with ‘Brand Ambassadors’ is that you normally have to drag up and wear high heels all the time, which I’m not prepared to do. I bumped into my friend Simon Gauge at the V &A who runs www.me-me-me.tv. He said that the Burberry party on Tuesday night wasn’t that great even though lots of famous people were there, because the music was so loud you couldn’t hear what anyone was saying. So I felt not too bad about not even knowing there was going to be a big Burberry party.
My favourite memory of the week is of bumping in to Pam Hogg outside the Paul Smith show in Millbank . She was very pissed and was trying to get a bus to her boyfriend’s house on the Southbank. She said that her memory of her recent fashion show was of ranting and raging at everyone. ‘I didn’t have enough shoes and this one bloody model wouldn’t take her shoes off and give them to Liberty Ross. She was going, “But they fit me perfectly.” And I’m going, “But they fit bloody Liberty Ross too and she’s just  flown in from New Fucking York to do the show for me!”’

Good things to look forward to this weekend:

1. The Lindt Mousse Au Chocolat chocolate bar from the Harper’s Bazaar goody bag. (There was also Chloe perfume and Clarins Creme Jeunesse des Pieds but I swapped them this morning for a free treatment with my physio)
2. Barry Manilow on Desert Island Disks on Sunday
3. Sue Webster and Nick Cave’s birthday party on Sunday night in Soho even though, in an ideal world, I’d rather stay in and eat aother Lindt Mousse Au Chocolat bar.

Do you think Lindt would have me as their Brand Ambassador…???


Cream Teas and Guys With Tits and Dicks

By Steph on 20th September 2009

So, I’m still recovering from my experience on BBC 5 Live’s Richard Bacon show last Thursday (available to listen to for four more days on http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007lb08)  Supposedly, it was to debate the issue ‘We’re all bisexual- yes or no’. I should have had alarm bells ringing when the producer called beforehand to ask me ‘what percentage’ of people I thought were bisexual. I told his I didn’t go for such a simplistic line and that I was more into Dr Kinsey’s famous Kinsey Scale, invented in the 1940s with 0 being ‘exclusively heterosexual’ and 6 being ‘exclusively homosexual’.
‘Yes but what percentage of people would you say are bisexual!’ the producer’s hysterical Northern Irish toned screeched down the line as if he hadn’t heard what I’d just said.
I should have told him then to bog off and go get a job with The Sun but the appearance fee was £75.00 and seeing as I haven’t paid anything into my bank since May I thought I’d better do it. This, by the way, illustrates the funny old rocky terrain in the life of a writer. Two years ago I was complaining about having to report on Karl Lagerfeld’s party at Nobu for Harper’s Bazaar for £750.00. It was a cushy gig I had going for a whole year- I’d sit in Sitges writing my novel and then once a month I’d call up Frances, the editor’s secretary who used to be sent off to do the party reporting and I’d ask her something like, ‘So Frances, I’m assuming it was the usual dullness. Did Mickey Rourke say anything good?’ Then I’d write the party up as if I’d been to it (take it from me: once you’ve been to one party you’ve been to them all.)
Anyway, that journo gig, like all good journo gigs, came to an end and now here I was with the choice of A) going on the dole (they pay £60 a week AND your rent and my musician friend, Belle, says that once you get over the psychological thing it’s fine. And Britain is so namby pamby that you don’t even have to get a job).
B) going on some lame BBC radio call-in show that starts at midnight and anyone knows that most blokes who call up late-night radio shows about bisexuality are just after seedy lesbo info. 
But still, I went for B because I thought I might be able to contact that elusive 13-year old girl in the middle of Wales who is worrying that she doesn’t find boys attractive (bisexuality is a bollocks subject to talk about because all anyone is interested in is the pussy-munching side of the concept) and she might be comforted to hear that she’s not a freak. And I also did it because it’s always a big ego trip to be on national radio. 
So there you go. I was really asking for it. It turned out to be even worse than I’d expected. The presenter, Richard Bacon was apparently too full of his suburban pretty-boy looks to even greet me as I entered the studio which also contained a ‘bubbly’ female vicar, a sour-faced, lank-haired blonde – Richard’s side-kick who was obviously fiercely ambitious (but why would people be ambitious in radio? Do they hope one day to read news about Swine Flu to 1 million listeners, as opposed to 20- as appeared to be the audience of this show?) Then there were 2 other bisexual experts down the lines. When I arrived at the BBC studios in Shepherd’s Bush, the Northern Irish producer bloke said there’d been a mix up with the taxis and so the other guests hadn’t been able to make it (number two alarm bell which should have gone off…). One of the down-the-phone bisexual experts was some worthy type from the Bisexual League or something who kept talking about help lines you could contact. He sounded like a right Walter The Softee. I thought maybe he was a gay bisexual ie a fag who’s teamed up with a chick just because he wants to have babies. The other speaker was some chick who reckoned everyone was bisexual – even though she herself had never had a lesbian relationship. This, I said to Bacon, was like those T-Total restaurant critics. Ie you can’t do the job properly unless you go the whole way…
At one point I did manage to get in the fact that the first time I thought I might not be exclusively lesbian was the night I went to the Way Out club in east London and saw a cute guy in a red dress with massive cleavage and I thought, ‘How sexy – a man with tits and a dick’. Suburban Richard Bacon looked like his eyes were about to pop out of his head and just for the benefit of the Northern Irish man who’d said as he led me to the studio, ‘no swearing, now’, I added again, ‘Yeah, a man with tits and a dick, very sexy’. Bacon then regained his senses and started to sound angry whereupon I sounded even angrier and said, the show was lame because how come they got shocked by sexuality stuff when nobody got shocked by that war drivel they’re always going on about on the radio, TV and in every paper you read.
What a bunch of cowardly, mortgage-paying media types they were, I thought as I got the train down the Essex this weekend to go visit my mother for her 70th birthday. But more horrible hypocrisy and antediluvian gender politics were in store for me last night when we watched Strictly Come Dancing. I have only ever watched clips of this show before but as I watched the parade of glittering male and female dancers last night, it became clear that the biggest crime (from the judges’ point of view- especially that old bloke called Len) was for women not to be ‘feminine’ and the biggest crime for men was not to be ‘masculine’ - even though most of the male dancers on this show are big batty boys and how must it feel to have to swallow that kind of shit all the time? Not that I want to stick up too much for the gayboys- at least there were 2 of them on the panel. Naturally,  no woman on the show was over 30 whereas two of the main men on the show were 60 and 70 plus.
Sometimes I wish I didn’t notice things like this. That I could think something like, ‘oh well, it’s only a TV show.’ Actually, I've noticed people are saying bland things like this more and more- especially my formerly political friends from Cambridge who have now got kids and proper jobs and are too knackered to be angry any more.
On a plus point, my mum’s 70th birthday was really cute. It was a surprise visit to Essex that I made. I hid behind a table and then popped up when my mum came into the house and she cried and I cried and we hugged each other and I felt that intense closeness that I haven't felt since I was a child and I felt hugely lucky that we were both around to do this. So it was worth doing the crummy Richard Bacon show to get the train fare to come. That’s the thing I’ve learned about life. People like my mum and Dad will watch Strictly Come Dancing and take in all that horrific gender politics and yet they’re still nice people. Even people like Bernard Manning, I still have good memories of ie the day he came into my Dad’s fish and chip shop on my 12th birthday for double cod, chips and peas and left me and 87 pence tip. When I was at Cambridge as an undergraduate and i told someone this story, they frowned as if I shouldn’t dare mention such an occurrence- but on some levels I got on well with Bernard Manning. I mean, if you were falling into a burning chip fryer, he’d definitely try and pull you out, even though you wouldn’t necessarily want to get stuck with him at home of a Saturday night. (This same Cambridge person also told me off once for waving at Shirley Williams  when she was doing the rounds on an open-top bus when the – what were they called? The Social Democrat party? Late 80s…Well, those ones- when they’d just been formed.  I waved because I thought she looked lonely up there and none of that miserable Socialist Worker’s Party lot was waving at her at all).  
I thought the Socialist Workers Party lot were lame. They were the ones who blocked Prince Edward’s way when he was trying to get into the halls of residence on his first day at my college- Jesus - and had placards saying things like ‘Down with Prince Edward.’ Lame. I ended up having a room above his in the modern block – North Court- which was so badly designed that if you went onto the balcony you could see the people in the rooms below you having showers. That’s when I first realised he was seriously balding, poor bloke, and he was only in his early 20s. Naturally, I couldn’t  tell anyone that I felt sorry for him.

Here’s a pic of ma in the upper gallery at a 15th century hotel in Lavenham in Suffolk called The Swan.

We had a cream tea here at The Swan which was good but why oh why do hotels skimp on things like jam when it’s not that expensive to give the punters a bit more. Ma said it was the best birthday she ever had. Her favourite birthday cake as a kid in the 1940s was when her mother used to divide the mixture into 3 bowls and then add colouring to each bowl and then you’d mix it all together for a marble effect cake. There’s also some game where her mother made a tower of flour with a fruit pastel on top and each kid had to take a spoonful of four  away from the tower until the pastel fell off and then kid who did that had to pick it up with their mouth…
Sounds like a good game for London fashion week which starts tonight although, ha, ha,  they probably wouldn’t use flour…





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