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    Paperweight


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      Contents

      About the Book

      Also by Stephen Fry

      Title Page

      Introduction

      Section One: Radio

      Donald Trefusis

      Rosina, Lady Madding

      Trefusis’s Christmas Quiz

      Jeremy Creep

      Trefusis Overdresses

      Sidney Gross

      Trefusis on Education

      Trefusis and Redatt

      Sir John Raving: Cricket & Golf

      Trefusis on Exams

      Trefusis is Unwell

      Trefusis on Boredom

      Trefusis on Hating Oxford

      Trefusis on Old Age

      Trefusis’s Obituary

      Trefusis Nibbles

      Trefusis and Rosina

      Trefusis Accepts an Award

      Trefusis and the Monocled Mutineer

      Trefusis Blasphemes

      Trefusis on Any Questions

      Trefusis Goes North

      Lady Madding Again

      Trefusis’s Postcard From America

      Postcard Number Two

      Postcard Number Three

      Postcard Number Four

      Section Two: Reviews & Oddments

      The Tatler and Sex

      Books Do Furnish A Room

      The Annotated Father Brown

      Arena

      The Book and the Brotherhood

      A Television Review

      Adolf Forster

      Brand X

      Don’t Knock Masturbation

      Cricket, Lovely Cricket …

      Bernard Levin

      The Satire Boo

      Child of Change

      Agony Cousin

      Lord’s: The Great Lie

      The World Service

      Section Three: The Listener

      Naked Children

      The Family Curse

      A Glimpse of The Future

      Friends of Dorothy

      Thatcher on TV

      Sock Fury

      Wimbledon Horror

      Saying Fuck

      Worse – By Design

      Christ

      Bikes, Leather and After Shave

      Your and Your Toffee

      Christmas Cheer

      Predictions for the Year 1989

      The Talker in The Listener

      Ad Break

      Absolutely Nothing At All

      The Young

      Me & A Stapler Of My Own

      Give Us Back Our Obfuscation

      Compliant Complaint

      How I Wrote This Article

      Tear Him for his Bad Verses

      The Adventure of the Laughing Jarvey

      Section Four: The Telegraph

      Extra Sensory Deception

      This Sporting Life

      A Question of Attribution

      Carefree Panty-Shields and Intimate Wipes

      The Stuff of Dreams

      Answers to The Stuff of Dreams

      Piles

      A Friendly Voice in the Polo Lounge

      Drawing up a Hate List

      Blithe & Bonny & Good & Gay

      God Bless Worcestershire

      Back on the Road

      Zoo Time

      Trefusis Returns!

      A Bang on the Head

      Dear Sid

      As Mad As Mad Can Be

      The Appearance of Reality

      What Are We Fighting For?

      Making the Right Moves

      Licked By the Mother Tongue

      Let the People Speak

      Playing the Political Game

      My Leonardo

      A Chatterer Chatters

      Game Show Heaven

      A Drug on the Market

      The Moustaches From Hell

      She Was Only the President’s Daughter

      The Sin of the Wheel

      Patriot Missive

      Oops

      Comic Belief

      The C Word

      Don’t Thank Your Lucky Stars

      Good Ole Country Boys

      Grammar’s Footsteps

      Careering All Over the Place

      Tolerance to Disease

      A Strange Man

      Fun With Dolphins

      My Sainted Aunt

      A Simple Backwardsman

      Goodbye, Fat Owl

      And the Winner is

      Taxi!

      Another Question of Attribution

      The Tracks of my Tears

      The Mouse that Purred

      A Game of Monopoly

      Education is a Wonderful Thing

      Role Credits

      The Analogizer®

      A Signing of the Times

      Good Egg

      Mad as an Actress

      Motor Literacy

      Vim and Vigour

      A Critical Condition

      Heartbreak Hotels

      Mercury, Messenger of the Gods

      Thar’s Gold In Them Thar Films

      Valete

      A Matter of Emphasis

      Section Five: Latín!

      Programme note

      Latin! or Tobacco and Boys

      Act One

      Act Two

      Copyright Page

      Paperweight

      Over the years, when not wearing his acting, television or novelist trousers, Stephen Fry has written many articles and itemries for magazines, newspapers and radio. Collected together in this excellent volume the reader will find the print debut of Professor Donald Trefusis, a previously undiscovered Sherlock Holmes mystery, discourses on the subjects of piles and critics and many more witty and incisive articles from the pages of the Listener and the Daily Telegraph.

      As the title suggests, Paperweight will make a handy desk-top accessory as well as a friendly literary guacamole into which the tired and hungry reader might happily dip the tortilla chip of his curiosity whenever the fancy takes him.

      ‘Huge, crammed, wise, hilarious and utterly captivating’ Literary Review

      ‘Moving effortlessly from odd socks and coffee granules to the meaning of life, there is punch behind every punchline . . . Engaging and witty’ Mail on Sunday

      ‘Achingly funny’ The Times

      ‘[Fry’s] particular enjoyment of the English language is what makes his writing so funny: he stretches out the syllables of a word to get at least six innuendoes across, and the glory of having seen him so often on the screen is that he comes alive in your imagination to deliver the lines he has written’ Daily Mail

      Also by Stephen Fry

      FICTION

      The Liar

      The Hippopotamus

      Making History

      The Stars’ Tennis Balls

      NON-FICTION

      Moab is My Washpot

      Rescuing the Spectacled Bear

      The Ode Less Travelled

      with Hugh Laurie

      A Bit of Fry and Laurie

      A Bit More Fry and Laurie

      Three Bits of Fry and Laurie

      Paperweight

      Stephen Fry

      Introduction

      Welcome to Paperweight. My first act must be to warn that it would be a madness in you to read this book straight through at one sitting, as though it were some gripping novel or ennobling biography. In the banquet of literature Paperweight aspires to be thought of as no more than a kind of literary guacamole into which the tired and hungry reader may from time to time wish to dip the tortilla chip of his or her curiosity. I will not be held responsible for the mental indigestion that is sure to be provoked by any attempt to bolt the thing whole. Snack books may not be the last word in style, but for those sated and blown by the truffles and quenelles of the master chefs in one kitchen, or flatulent with Whoppers and Super Supremes from the short-order cooks in the other, it may just be that Paperweight will find a place.

      Perhaps, however, it will be the other end of the
    alimentary canal that furnishes us with a clue as to how to manage this book: its natural home may well turn out to be the lavatory, alongside The Best of the Far Side, an old Harpic-stained copy of The Sloane Ranger Handbook and everyone’s cloacal favourite, The Collected Letters of Rupert Hart-Davies. It may be that each article of the book should have been flagged with a number or symbol indicating the length of time the article would take to read, that number or symbol corresponding with the health of a reader’s bowel. In this way the reader could determine which sections to read according to his or her diet and general enteric condition. The whole book could then be got through without ever impinging on the customer’s quality time. But whatever use you find for Paperweight, whether you do follow a lavatorial regime, whether you take the hint of its title and press it into service as a desk accessory, or whether you merely wish to deface the photograph of that disgusting man on the front cover, I wish you years of trouble-free, stain-resistant use.

      To collect together the swarf of six or seven years of occasional toiling in the workshops of journalism and radio (an absurd metaphor and of a kind that belle lettristes do not seem to be able to avoid … how is writing articles even remotely like toiling in a workshop? Get to the bloody point) might seem like an act of insupportable arrogance. My only answer to that is to say that the publishing atrocity you hold in your hands is, in fact, an act of supported arrogance. It exists because over the years I have received many letters from readers and listeners asking if there might be made available to them some permanent record of the articles and broadcasts which I have so pitilessly inflicted upon an incredulous public – presumably with a view to threatening their children or using the resultant book as an accessory in some satanic ritual. Paperweight is, anyway, the consequence of such entreaties, I trust those responsible will profit from the lesson.

      (What’s all this ‘there might be made available to them some permanent record’ and ‘the consequence of such entreaties’? Why do you have to descend to this greasy style traditional in Forewords? And where do you get off with all this mock humility? ‘this publishing atrocity … I have so pitilessly inflicted’. Repulsive.)

      My first forays into the kind of writing represented in this book (Forays? forays? What kind of word is that? Get a grip.) began in 1985 when Ian Gardhouse, a BBC radio producer of previously unspotted character, asked me to contribute to a programme of his called Colour Supplement. One or two of the broadcasts I made for this short-lived venture are contained in the ‘Radio’ section of this book.

      Colour Supplement gave way to Loose Ends, on the first programme of which I introduced a character called Professor Trefusis. It was Ian Gardhouse’s idea. The week before our first transmission, a real-life academic, it seems, had been appointed by the government to inquire into sex and violence on television. Gardhouse thought it would be appropriate for me to broadcast as that academic, delivering opinions on a medium with which a cloistered don would be completely unfamiliar. I came up with an ageing Cambridge philologist of amiable but sometimes vituperative character called Donald Trefusis.

      I liked Trefusis. His advanced years and further advanced eccentricity allowed me to get away with spiked comments and straight rudery that would have been unthinkable if uttered in the normal voice of an aspiring comic in his twenties. Over the next two or three years I continued to perform Trefusis and his ‘wireless essays’, on Loose Ends. A generous, some might say over-generous (cloying mock humility again … though you’d call it fausse humilité, I bet), selection is included here. I also dragged up from time to time in the guise of Rosina Lady Madding, faded Society Beauty, until pressure of work forced me to retrench on so giddy an expenditure of time. (oh, give it a rest, will you?)

      Apart from anything else, such spare hours as I had when not prancing about on stages or in TV studios were being taken up with writing a weekly column for the now defunct Listener magazine. Its new editor, the peerless Alan Coren (well, ‘peerless’ is all right I suppose … at least you didn’t say ‘that consummate good egg, Alan Coren’) had hoicked me over from the books pages where I had been contributing occasional reviews for the literary editor, Lynne Truss. Some of those book reviews and a selection from the column itself are here reproduced in the section marked ‘The Listener’. For the Christmas issue of 1987 I contributed a Sherlock Holmes story which I have taken the liberty of including too (what do you mean ‘taken the liberty’? It’s your bleeding book isn’t it? Where’s the liberty? Really). A brace of articles (you mean ‘two’) written for Arena magazine are collected in a Reviews and Oddments section, together with a couple of pieces I wrote for the Tatler under the editorship of that supreme figure, since sadly gathered, Mark Boxer. I have also included a few articles I wrote as television critic of the Literary Review.

      The Listener changed publishers in 1989 and Alan Coren left, as did I. A little later the magazine folded entirely. (We’re supposed to make a connection there, are we?)

      A few months after this, Max Hastings, the amiable and modest editor of the Daily Telegraph (you like simply everyone don’t you?) sent me a note one afternoon, care of the stage door of the Aldwych Theatre, where I was performing in one of the most significant flops of the season, a play called Look Look. He asked if I would consider a column for his newspaper. It so happens that a few months earlier I had changed, as a reader, from the Independent to the Telegraph. Although no Conservative, I found and continue to find myself more at home in the pages of that newspaper than in any other, so I agreed readily and happily (ooh, this is exciting).

      For two years I wrote a column under the heading ‘Fry on Friday’, relinquishing the post in late 1991, under pressure of filming and writing work. It was an immensely enjoyable discipline, that of having to find the weekly topic, although there were times when I was writing ten times as many words a week, answering the huge number of letters that were flooding in from Telegraph readers, than it took to write the articles themselves. I dare say the great columnists of our age, the Waterhouses, Levins and Waughs would find my post-bag laughably thin, but for me the challenging, intelligent, friendly and sometimes not so friendly letters from readers proved one of the great surprises and delights of that period of my life. I may say that towards the end, my time crisis having grown to such frightening proportions, I found myself unable to answer a great many of the letters and take this opportunity to apologise for the perfunctory nature of any replies with which correspondents were forced to be content (what a creep).

      The final part of Paperweight is the complete text of a play of mine called Latin! or Tobacco and Boys. I have included the programme note for its performance at the New End Theatre, Hampstead, which should explain the background to the piece. Latin! is I suppose the reason for my doing what I do. I wrote it during my second year at Cambridge. As a result, Hugh Laurie, who saw it at Edinburgh, asked Emma Thompson to introduce me to him in the hope that I might write with him for a Footlights revue. I have been writing with him, on and off, for the last eleven years and I hope to do so for many more yet.

      I should like to record my thanks therefore to him, to Emma Thompson, to Alan Coren, Max Hastings, Ian Gardhouse, Ned Sherrin, Lynne Truss, Nick Logan of Arena, Emma Soames (quondam editrix of the Literary Review) and the late Mark Boxer. Thanks too to Lisa Glass of Mandarin Books for her patience and to Jo Foster for helping me to track down the disjecta membra of so many years. (You had to do it, didn’t you? You had to end with a bloody Latin tag. What a git. And where do you get off with ‘quondam editrix’? Jesus.)

      Stephen Fry

      Norfolk, 1992

      Section One

      Radio

      Donald Trefusis

      This is the first Trefusis broadcast, from Loose Ends. As explained in the introduction, it makes reference to a governmental decision to invite an academic to view a year’s television and pronounce on whether or not the violence shown on our screens was harmful to the public and most especially, of course, the dear children of thi
    s country.

      VOICE: Dr Donald Trefusis, Senior Tutor of St Matthew’s College, Cambridge, and Carnegie Professor of Philology, was asked by the government last year to monitor a large part of the BBC’s television output, paying particular attention to scenes of violence that might disturb or influence young children. Here, he reports on his findings.

      My brief, to inspect the rediffusion of violence in the BBC’s television programming, was on the one hand appalling to an inveterate lover of the wireless, and on the other appealing to an avid student and chronicler of modern society, and on the other flattering to one who is – oh dear, I seem to have three hands here, never mind, suffice it to say that I approached the task with a glad, if palpitating, heart.

      My predecessor on the Queen Anne Chair of Applied Moral Sciences1 here always held that television, already an etymological hybrid compounded, as it is, of the Greek ‘tele’ and the Latin ‘vision’, was also a social hybrid, a chimera that awaited some modern crusading Bellerophon, athwart a twentieth-century Pegasus, to slay it before it devoured our culture whole in its filthy, putrescent, purulent maw.

      I, however, essentially a man of the people, a man with his alert and keen young fingers very much on the thrusting, vibrant pulse of our times, incline to no such intemperate view. For me television represents a challenge, a hope, an opportunity – or, in the words of T.E. Hulme, ‘a concrete flux of interpenetrating intensities’. And it was with this high heart that I approached the duty my government had called me to do. In fact, when young Peter from the Home Office approached me for the task in the smoking library of the Oxford and Cambridge Club, I had to confess to him that I hadn’t actually ever watched any television before. One is so busy. But Peter, whom I am proud to say I taught for the Classical Tripos in 1947, took the view that a fresh mind was what the problem needed: it was, therefore, with the confidence of ignorance and the blithe cheer of inexperience that I sat down to my brand new Sony Trinitron to sample the broadcast offerings of the corporation.

      Violence, I need hardly remind a wireless audience, derives from the Latin word vis and its cognates, meaning strength. The violence I was briefed to hunt down, however, was a horse of a very different kidney. I shall keep you guessing no longer and reveal that what I saw shocked me to the very core of my being and disturbed me in a fashion that it is beyond my power to describe. Programme after programme violent, harrowing and potentially ruinous to the soft, impressionable minds of the young.

     


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