On Actors, Politicians and Prostitutes

Last week I saw a truly miserable piece of theatre.

I don’t feel bad for saying that – it was a thing of sheer, mangled horror. The depth and range of godawfulness was so complete that it actually turned into a thoroughly entertaining evening.

So when, this week, I turned on the TV to see Gorgon Brown giving his usual constipated attempt at a genial grin while trying to  conduct a rally with the backing of an Elvis impersonator singing Suspicious Minds, I felt right at home.

It’s got to be said, there’s nothing quite as superb as a really REALLY bad performance. All groups mentioned in the title, take note.

Only in the Karoo

So I went to the KKNK over Easter.

“What is that unfortunately titled acronym,” I hear you cry “and talk to me about the cunning inclusion of the ‘N’.”

Ah yes. It’s the biggest arts festival in SA. It’s held up in the Karoo. It’s only in Afrikaans.

The festival tagline (translated) reads, There’s Afrikaans in us all. I thought I’d take them at their word. Turns out, if Afrikaans takes the form of violent bouts of vomit, they’d be right. Other than that, ja, it was pretty awesome.

Arriving hot on the heels of a racial outburst from a local country singer in a bar and just in time for the little incident of Eugene Terreblanche’s head being knocked in with lead piping, we thought there was no better time to lie low and watch performances in a couple of lekker town halls, indie theatres and – in one case – a municipal swimming pool. Mmmyes.

I love the Karoo. I really do. I have a dirty little fantasy about spending my 30′s there, tea in hand, sitting on my stoep watching the ostrich go by. It’s something about the heat and quiet and general desert-y goodness (I also have a deep fondness for most things Afrikitch).

It’s also – let it be said – a bloody good tonic to attend theatre (in many cases wonderful, experimental and avant garde stuff) that is completely supported – full houses everywhere. Afrikaans mense hou van ‘n bietjie kultuur, hoor jy?

But ag shame, trust an Afrikaans arts festival to rate shows:

S – Sex

V – Violence

L – Language

D – Divinity

What’s the difference between a casting agent and an estate agent?

About 300 phone calls.

Relationship Status: “It’s Complicated”

Did I mention I started a new job?

I’ve been rather quiet about it, but that’s just because the bile of everyday life has been taking precedence. Hot on the heels of my last post, you see, a rather dishy past…well, what shall we call him?…announced his engagement.

With all the prompt irony of a swift karmic kick to the head, I ran into him and The New Fiancee in a bar last week. Drawing on my reputation for smooth, witty repartee, the first thing I blurted out was ”Wow, you’re taller  than I remembered…you know, standing up”  when, clearly, what I meant to say was something more like this.

So, all in, it’s really extremely fortunate that I’ve found such a hot new thing to fill my days (and evenings. Aaaand probably weekends).

See, as of a week ago, I’m started as Mike van Graan’s project manager – a nifty title that basically covers anything and everything to do with his theatre life in the African Arts Institute, the Arterial Network and his production company, MVG Productions. I’m very excited. (It’s also theatre work which, I’m told, will result in a monthly paycheque – a pleasantly novel notion after the past 6 months).

Anyway, so I leaped straight into the arms of my new job and, at the end of my first fortnight, it’s already presenting all the characteristics of a generic serious relationship: There’s a flexible approach to “me-time”, I’m always accessible on cell if things go wrong, I’m obliged to attend the kinds of events where you’re nervous of everybody and know nobody, there are awkward conversations with ex-employees when you need to get back the key to your partner’s spare storage room….you know, the usual.
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I’ve also had quite a shock in stepping behind the curtain, so to speak. What looked rather rosy from the auditorium floor is quite different behind the scenes. In an entirely unrelated anecdote, I am reminded of my very fabulous UK cousin, who recently quit her job in theatre to work in education (a cunning reversal of family employment history). She now teaches 4 year olds and says that she loves her new job, as she finds year olds infinitely more mature, interesting and thoughtful than most actors she knows (she says this, by the way, in the matter-of-fact manner of one not at all given to the kinds of showy “I’m saying this for its online quotability ranking” manner other members of the family may or may not  occasionally indulge in).
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I like to think, then, that this job might work on a few latent maternal instincts in me. I’ll let you know.
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So, what have I been doing? Well, last week I was a “Production Manager” for a mini-performance given for the Dutch Embassy’s FIFA draw party. Awesome title, right? But what does it actually mean?
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Here, then, for the benefit of plain speak, is what I have learned being a “‘Production Manager” may entail:
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Things I Had to ‘Produce’
  • Black shirt for actor (day of performance)
  • Black T-shirt for actor (1.5 hours before performance, to replace black shirt, bought in error when letter ‘T’ omitted from phone call)
  • Mixed CD of Rasta version of national anthem faded in from regular version (not used at last minute)
  • Food and drink for the actor (stolen).
  • Lift home for actor.
Things I Had to ‘Manage’
  • Backstage arguments with sound crew about why they couldn’t attach the radio mike to my black actor’s face with a band aid plaster. Sample conversation: “Yes I know it says ‘skin colour’ on the box, but, really, let’s think about this one.” (4 minutes before performance).
  • Light-yet-soothing backstage banter with increasingly nervous actor between soundcheck and the performance (4 hours)
  • The fact that, during writing this, I realised I forgot to get the director’s CD back from the sound crew and it has now been disposed of.
(For the record, Joanne Strauss? Only just taller than me in stilettos).
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I also had a bit of an excursion to our prop storage depot, the location of which was a mystery (for the record, I, too, would be forgetful about a place’s exact location if it turned out to be in Nyanga). Aside from the uncomfortable thought that, judging on olfactory evidence, a neighbouring garage might be harbouring a corpse, it was quite a diverting expedition. Here, for the record, are some of the items on my inventory list:
  • length rope (1)
  • ripped orange panties (1)
  • stage guns (2)
  • canister explosive stage gas (1)
  • lighters (2)
  • box matches (1)
  • suicide note (1)
Perhaps now would be a good time to remind you of my extended job/relationship metaphor?
Anyway, to round off, here is a screen capture of my inbox in the bustling UK days before meeting my new job (take a guess what my parents’ names are)
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Here is a screen capture of my inbox, 9am the first Saturday morning of my new job.
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Hello, new job! What a lot of quality time we’re going to be spending with each other!

Shameless Punt

I don’t usually do this…but if you’re in Cape Town and are in any way interested in theatre, please go and check out “…miskien.”

Two best friends. Two dead-end lives. One hell of a lot of unspoken words.

Starring two of my favourite people and – coincidentally –  favourite actors: Albert Pretorius (ex student!) and Gideon Lombard, this is a story about friendship…and love…miskien.

It’s got a smattering of Afrikaans, but my mother did fine and her grasp of die taal amounts to 3 words;  dankie, ja and wortels.  Seeing as they don’t mention wortels once, I don’t think language should be a barrier to anyone.

It is, quite simply, the most beautiful piece of theatre I saw last year. I cannot wait for the re-run.

24 Nov – 5 Dec.  8:30 pm

Intimate theatre (37 Orange Street)

Bookings: 072 569 8287

Tickets:  R60 (R40 for students)

Back to the Future: Underground Art

Last night I took myself off to find a converted warehouse somewhere in the maze of Frankfurt. This was not just for kicks, no, there was some Japanese performance art/dance thing happening and, bar the ubiquitous “erotik shows,” it appeared to be the only form of entertainment on a Saturday night not requiring a solid grasp of German.

The trip involved my first interaction with the U Bahn (subway system). Up till now, all my transport needs had been amply served by the fabulous S Bahn (overground train network) and, taking a look at the 3 level deep escalators down, I was glad of it. When I went down to the tracks, though, I changed my mind. This place was frozen in the 70′s. Nothing had been changed – there was still the retro tiling on the station walls and the tube, when it came, was the most delightful little teal wagon with big square windows and a wooden interior that made it resemble nothing quite so much as a giant sauna.

S-Bahn station at Merianplatz

S-Bahn station at Merianplatz

I took my place on the nearest worn velour seat and resisted the urge to strike up a chorus of ‘Night Fever.’ Unbelievably, the next 2 people to get on were

  • A slim black man with an afro, round black framed glassers, green flares and an oversize collar.
  • A large white man dressed entirely in 2 tone brown corduroy.

They sat, prominantly, in the spare teal seats in my wood panelled car . I was about to suggest that, gee, we should all quit this nonsense and have a cheese fondu, when my stop came and I was forced to leave the twilight zone for another, unsuspecting commuter to discover.

Two hours after I set off, I was there, having conveniantly stopped along the way to get lost and found myself in a backstreet Mexican joint ordering a sustaining glass of apfelwyn. My only previous run in with a backstreet Mexican food joint resulted in a bout of food poisoning so severe I got a first hand experience of the even crappier American health system (which I don’t wish on anyone but Anne Coulter), so I had extra incentive to find my way to the warehouse.

It turned out to be not so much the arty disused, condemned building I was rather hoping for. Instead, it was what can only be described as a slick, chrome art factory in the middle of the kind of arty neigbourhood rich 40-somethings buy into because it looks like it should be bustling with Exceedingly Creative People, without the nuisance of it actually being bustling with Exceedingly Creative People (which would lower the tone of the place considerably). I rather liked it.

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Filled with 40-something bankers, I'll warrant.

The show was a sort of hybrid between beautiful movement work and insane technological innovation. In the manner of those who really have oodles of dough, they had done up the space on the sides to look like a construction site, only each piece of metal rigging probably cost the equivilent of the Chrysler. They had a truly ridiculous circular rig, with 23 multicolour lights that were almost certainly smarter than my ex-students, though I resisted the urge to test them on the finer points of the posessive apostrophe. Most particularly, I liked the moment where these lights were flashed around in a circle, turning the performer’s shadows 360 degrees while they moved. This looked like one of those desert time-lapse videos, where a whole day passes in a few seconds and time is measured by shadow movement. Hugely cool.

'True' at the Mousonturm

'True' at the Mousonturm

Afterwards, I wandered downtown and ended up on the happily familiar Kaiserstrasse, my weekday home. The seediness had certainly been kicked up a notch, though you could tell from the steeled look in most of the women’s eyes that 11pm was mere peanuts compared with when they expected most of their business. As I past by the famously alluring Dolly Buster Centre, a philosophical Madonna informed me that the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

Not here, Madge I thought, before turning heel and heading back into the bowels of the Frankfurt rail system.

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Long London Weekend

Tori Amos at the Apollo Hammersmith

Tori Amos at the Apollo Hammersmith

 
The Tate Modern during the night Thames River Festival

The Tate Modern during the night Thames River Festival

  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
                
Great Balls of Fire...and St Paul's

Great Balls of Fire

Burning Words at the Tate

Burning Words at the Tate

 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
Pots of Fire!

Pots of Fire!

 
Fire...Escape?

Fire...Escape?

 

Troilus & Cressida at the Globe

Troilus & Cressida at the Globe

'Warhorse' on the West End

'Warhorse' on the West End

Acting Out: Men Your Mother Warned You About

I like theatre. I like actors. So I knew I was going to love ‘Internal’ – the controversial play by the Belgian company Ontroerend Goed that everyone was talking about at the Fringe.

Tickets were like gold: they only let 5 people into each performance. But I managed to get one. (Just one. Sorry Jon).

Concept: 5 audience members each get assigned an actor and are speed dated for 15 minutes, followed by a group feedback session. Anything goes. Everything is pushed. In short (as the ticket seller proclaimed): “you don’t know what you’re in for, girl.”

[Clearly I should have checked out the trailer which, though only 3 of the actors were the same, would have given me a pretty good idea of just what exactly I WAS in for].

Four of the cast, primping prior to their dates.

Four of the cast, primping prior to their dates.

The programme read like an invite:

Dear Spectator,

We are five performers in search for a partner. We’d like to invite you to the next performance of ‘Internal’, our individual playground, where you can get to know us in a cosy and spontaneous atmosphere.

We guarantee you an intimate and highly personal treatment. Please, inform us in time if you are unable to control your feelings. We will provide an elegant and discrete solution.

Yours sincerely,

The Actors

 

Well Hello.

We’re told to meet at a hotel. Already, it feels rather thrilling. I anxiously line up with my other 4 audience members in a dark curtained box, each of us standing on a little white cross on the ground. Marked out. The lights dim.

And then – bam! – there goes the fourth wall (literally), as the curtain is cranked up to reveal…well, us. Eye to eye, we uncomfortably stare out our selected actor…until they break the tension and lead us each to a romantic, secluded booth.  I got Kristof – a 6”5 Belgian with hair out to here and very kind eyes.

Dinner music comes on cue. We sit down. We start talking. 

Yes, I would like a drink, please.

Yes, I would like a drink, please.

It’s all rather surreal. Apparently it drives some people to confess affairs, commit affairs (want to snog your actor? You can!), fall in love with their performers and burst into tears. People get asked everything from stating their sexual preferences to choosing their favourite from a selection of naked pictures of their chosen date (surprise!). The guy in the booth behind me had a really rough deal: his partner refused to say one word for the whole 15 minutes (she later made it up to him by taking off her dress, murmuring – great line! – “so, have you got any words for this?”). One guy resisted playing along so strongly – “but you’re just acting!” – that his ‘date’ upped and left him, all alone, for the duration of the piece as punishment. 

My time was really rather tame in comparison. We talked about what I’m looking for in a partner (“not a dickhead” for me, chiefly), compared Afrikaans and Flemish words for “dickhead” and drank whiskey.  It didn’t matter, though, because Kristof told me everything I said was fascinating. He held my hand. He made me close my eyes and asked me if I’d kiss him if he tried…oh, but it was time for the group feedback.

Here, we all sat in a circle and were made to listen to our dates’ assessment of us. What was good about us, what was bad. Unlike everyone else, Kristof made me stand away in a corner while he talked about me – but I wasn’t scared, I already knew he was only going to be complimentary. He could feel it too. We had a…connection! This was obvious when, at the end of the piece, he asked for my address. Oh, and I had no hesitation in giving it to him. Then, we were led back to our little X’s on the ground and the curtain fell. Bye Kristof! Write!

It was great: a performance where the ‘audience’ performed – where the idea of how we all perform for other people all the time was explored, where you got to question what was real, whether intimacy itself is a performance, whether it can be stage managed. Where you got to see how many bad actors there are out there in real life (and haven’t we all had some pretty awful dates?). So yes, all well and good. Until I realised that I’d essentially paid £16 for a 25 minute date. Then, I felt a little dirty.

Still, I pondered, as I cheerfully made my way back to find Jon (who’d availed himself of his freedom from me by pursuing the manful delights of a theatrical Alice in Wonderland), life can’t be all microwave meals for one. Better an expensively staged date than a cheap life of singledom. And, besides, it had been rather fun. In fact, yes, there had been chemistry. Now that I thought about it, it had clearly gone very well indeed. I mean, he obviously wasn’t acting with me. (All the others, now obviously they were playing the game, but Kristof would never do that to me). Hadn’t he asked for my address at the end? Hadn’t he seemed slightly, charmingly taken aback by our chemistry? Yes, yes, it was all becoming clear to me now. Whilst other people less intelligent than myself might be fooled by mere parameter pushing, I was smart enough to see the bounds of the show…and still see that we’d broken them. Though how would it work, him being in Belgium most of the time…. 

So when I got a letter from him last week, it was merely confirmation. A couple of people – small minded people – suggested to me that it was a cunning extension of the performance, but they’re wrong. I mean, the fact that one critic wrote about her and her friend being asked for their addresses too, the fact that the company are described as “mischievous,” has nothing to do with Kristof and I. What we’ve got is pure, man. Pure.

 So ja. My letter’s already in the post.

What a perceptive man.

What a perceptive man.

Images From the Fringe

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10FOR MORE OF THESE…..CLICK HERE

Big up to Jon Keevy, our photographer -in-residence. You can hire him HERE

*Link now fixed – huzzah!*

The Scottish Plays

So I’m back from the wee festival, folks.

After 4 hours in a theatre, this actually seemed like a fine idea for a pose.

After 4 hours in a theatre, this actually seemed like a fine idea for a pose.

Well, festivals, actually. There’s the Main Festival (heavyweight opera, theatre and ballet performances sold out months in advance). There’s the Book Festival; basically a month of workshops and talks led by authors who happen to be pottering about. You know, folk like Neil Gaiman (missed him by an hour) and Margaret Atwood (missed her by 2 days). There’s the International Festival, the Crafts Festival, the Scottish Heritage Festival, the…I forget. But, there’s also the glorious Fringe Festival: quite simply the biggest celebration of theatre, comedy and dance in the world. For a month, Edinburgh becomes one massive performance space, with shows happening in churches, bars, bus shelters…and the occasional theatre.

Reminds me of the flat, before we got the couch

Reminds me of the flat, before we got the couch

So. A week in Edinburgh in August with real human company, you say?* How to spend the time? Did I:

  • Take the grand historical tour of Edinburgh’s 1200 year old castle and 4500 listed buildings?
  • Take a historical walking tour of the city that graced figures such as Charles Darwin, Robert Louis Stevenson and (cough) J.K. Rowling?
  • Shop for kilts, Scotsmen and haggis?
  • Or DID I go to four shows a day in a disgusting dramatic gorge?

Tricky call.

I know, I know. Disgraceful lack of concern for new experiences, a disgrace to the traveller, waste of a trip, could have been anywhere bla bla bla. Look. All I’m saying, mother, is that some of those building things have been around for a thousand years of monogamous love affair with the city, but performance art is but a fleeting mistress in the night (or morning, or afternoon). And I think we all know who wins the battle between the constancy of the craggy old bag and the seduction of the dimly-lit hussy. Besides, there’s something satisfyingly grand in travelleing all the way to a UNESCO-declared city of Literature and Culture, only to sit in a dark room watching a purple haired man in tights expose his nipples.

Speaking of travelling and cultures, I must just stop here to point out that Italians (bless them, they really don’t give a flying fagioli**) didn’t check my passport AT ALL at the airport – they waved me through, happily, and with just a touch of impatience (it must have been brunch time). The canny Scots, on the other hand, actually sent security to follow me to the gates in order to send me back to double scan my passport because “something did nae look right.” On a domestic flight.

Och aye.

As with most things, it’s a luck of the draw sort of thing. There are – literally – thousands of performances to see, 99% of which you’ll never have heard of. So, how do you choose? Personally, I went on several indicators, here listed in  order of emphasis:

  1. The attractiveness of the cast
  2. The attractiveness of the flier design
  3. The attractiveness of the audience walking into the show
  4. The newspaper reviews
No Caption Needed

No Caption Needed

Needless to say, with methodology as scientific as this, there were several moments where I passed the time in the play thinking about the seconds of my life that were irrecoverably ticking by, never to be regained for more fulfilling and pleasurable pastimes…like disembowelment.

Most notably, this latter category included our very first play, chosen before we’d really honed our attraction-based ratings technique. Essentially, it was an hour sketch of various people’s reactions to a traffic jam on the London ring road. It culminated in one self proclaimed ‘yummy mummy” smearing purple goo over her face, taking off her clothes and leaping balletically around the stage, watched by couples in plastic golf carts (am still unsure as to whether it was meant to be yoghurt, or if there was an alien subplot involving her demon spawn that I somehow missed).

Thankfully, there was also complete awesomeness – including probably the best piece of theatre I’ve ever seen – Gecko’s ‘The Overcoat’ (a sort of Medieval morality play meets modern movement piece. Which doesn’t make it sound as awesome as it was). Jason’s going to give it a spirited try to get it to open Out the Box in 2010. If it happens, trust me, you’re going to want to see it.

Japanese restuarants in Scotland leave much to be desired.

Japanese restaurants in Scotland leave much to be desired.

What else? I giggled at a slurping noodle tango between two Japanese performers in yellow raincoats, cringed at a devilishly funny clown troupe making love to a mannequin, sobbed as a Victorian lamplighter and his daughter drowned in a swirl of lights and sea foam and ooh-ed at a sunstruck dance between an aeroplane cog and a delirious pilot. As if that wasn’t surreal enough, Jason (whose awesome job as puppeter with Handspring makes him  our favourite festival friend EVER) snuck us into the final dress rehearsal at the oh-so-luxurious King’s Theatre for the completely sold out ‘Il Retorno’ – the Handspring puppet/William Kentridge collaboration opera based on Osysseus’ return. Afterwards, we took him out for a drink in the bar and ended up sitting next to William Kentridge too. In fact, come to think of it, I’ve run into every celebrity performer/artist I’ve ever seen in a bar. *** Surprise, surprise.

Ok, so you know it’s got to be dealt with here.  I’ve cunningly led you into it and now there’s no stopping me. Yes, it’s already had its own post, but nothing – nothing – can detract from the supreme awesomeness of The Rickman Encounter. Not even death by boredom of you, my lovely reader. I mean, AR began my actor fetish – he’s the original! Sharleen Spiteri knew what she was doing when she cast that music video, is all I’m saying. To make it more manageable for you, feel free to insert long, drawn out, sarcastic ‘ooooooh!’ s wherever you feel necessary.

Now indulge me. He did. [ooooooh]

So, Jon and I were just hanging out in the Traverse Theatre, when I saw this man head to the bar. My heart skipped a beat because, if I didn’t know better, I’d say it was…I took a second look anyway. That’s when I saw Rima Horton. I knew it’s Rima because I have previously spent large portions of agonised internet time pondering how she managed to pull that one off…and how similar skills might be applied to my life (I think it’s her fringe). Then my legs gave way.

Despite this momentary handicap, I decided to play it suave. Unfortunately, as anyone with even the slightest memory of the now-infamous Hives in the Bookshop incident will know, my hormone-fuelled excitement is sometimes too strong for mere physical containment. Anyway, I went over, dragging an extremely reluctant Jon in one hand and camera in the other. Exchange (abridged):

CL: You must be ineffably bored with autograph hunters. [thinks: why did I say 'ineffably' Who says 'ineffably'?]
AR: *Looks*
CL: [brightly] So, can I have a picture with you?
AR: No.
CL: Oh. In that case, can I have your autograph…?
AR: *Looks* signs.
CL: [dragged away by JK].

Sheer poetry.

Now, true he could have been nicer. In fact, Bec is undoubtedly correct in her character assessment that Mr Rickman is a “grumpy, rude doos.” But, I have to admit, that’s part of the draw. Yup. Had he engaged in light banter whilst gripping me in a bear hug for an impromptu bartop photo shoot like some twinkely-eyed, benevolent (yet strangely seductive) Saint Nick, I’d not only have been disappointed, I’d have probably lost all interest. I mean, it’s not his fault that he didn’t recognise our clear chemistry – he was distracted by Jon, whom he assumed to be my boyfriend (curses!). Anyway, I felt like a kid at Christmas, the absence of a lascivious Saint Nick nonewithstanding.

Still, bloody nervewracking, that Looking. You know.

The final word on this matter, though, must go to an ex-student of mine, who wrote to me in an earnest facebook congratulory message saying, “Meeting ones heroes is always special.”

Well yes, yes it is. And so is correct grammar. Maybe someday we’ll both get what we want.

*Well, mostly so. Jon flew out from SA to visit his sister and joined me for the week – perfect cost cutting and real training for conversation skills that have languished in Bournemouth’s month and a half long involuntary silence vow.

** this actually means ‘bean’, but we’re going with the base sounds. Besides, flying beans sound awesome.

*** Roger Taylor in Julep. William Kentridge in whatever the bar is next to the King’s Theatre and Alan Rickman in the Traverse Theatre bar. Aside from RT, who does very little for me, both of the others have a similar repulsive attraction for me. I maintain that AR is the sexiest man alive despite all horrified calls to the contrary, but WK is, I’ll admit, a slightly further out choice.

[Many thanks go to VDM, whose otherwise inimitable blogstyle has left me starstruck.]

- ”I cannot take responsibility for people’s fantasy. I can’t think about it, I can’t live with it and I won’t dwell on it.” – Alan Rickman

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