The Heelers Diaries

the fantasy world of ireland's greatest living poet

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Location: Kilcullen (Phone 087 7790766), County Kildare, Ireland

Sunday, May 07, 2006

A Night At The Opera

Kilcullen theatre for a charity recital of classical music in aid of an orphanage in Kenya.
My venerable mother accompanied me.
We sat in the centre seats of the second row.
The fourth highest army officer in the Republic of Ireland was master of ceremonies for the evening.
As Brigadier General Brannigan stood centre stage to begin his introduction, a feeling of deja vu swept over me.
My mind raced.
Improbable as it may seem, a full 25 years ago as a fresh faced teenager, I had been in this very theatre, in this very row, watching a classical music production with this very master of ceremonies.
In those days he had been merely a lowly Commandant.
Which meant that then, as now, he outranked me.
Oddly enough, his superior rank had not stopped my teenage self from disrupting the show.
No really.
Disrupt it I did.
Innocently. Good humouredly. In a fresh faced teenagery sort of way. Without a hint of maliciousness.
In a way that you couldn't help but love me.
Still, disruption it was.
And army officers do not like disruptions. Particularly disruptions of classical music evenings. And most especially disruptions where the audience appears to enjoy the disruption more than the show.
What exactly had I done...
It just so happens that one of the cast members all those years ago had been a school chum of mine.
Coincidentally the school chum was also the master of ceremonies' son.
This son was playing a flag bearer in the American Civil War segment of the show.
I decided to try and distract him.
Whenever my friend came on stage I coughed loudly, or half rose out of my seat, or made faces, or even chanced a few wild hand gestures.
You should know bold travellers of the internet, that although I am a rugged good looking fellow, I have an essentially rubbery face, and it can be difficult for performers to concentrate when I contort it in their direction.
In short order my school chum was reduced to paroxyms (or paroxysms?) of helpless laughter, a situation that made it impossible for him to fulfill his duties as a flagbearer in the unfolding Civil War pageant with the seriousness the role required.
Picture it.
The narrator is saying: "The battlefield was the scene of unparallelled slaughter."
And we see the flag bearer red faced, cheery and chuckling strolling through the devastation.
Soon his laughter proved contagious for other cast members.
Then the audience picked up on what was happening.
There was in the best sense of an old fashioned phrase, the most delicious chaos.
The master of ceremonies stood at the side of the stage helplessly. He had commanded United Nations peace keeping forces in Lebanon but tonight he was in command of nothing.
His cast were laughing fit to burst.
The audience were laughing fit to burst.
Yes, people were enjoying the evening. But for all the wrong reasons. Not much classical music was being played anyway.
And the Civil War had all but ground to a halt as confederate and union soldiers cracked up in giggles.
And there was little Jimmy Healy sitting in the second row with his arms folded, inconscient king of all this wanton destruction.
The master of ceremonies glowered right at me.
He had a ferocious glower. It seared me. A quarter of a century later I can still see it. It didn't stop me, mind you.
A glower will rarely if ever stop a loon.
Let us draw a curtain on this blessed scene.
Back to the present.
Kilcullen theatre, Saturday night, 6th of May 2006.
I'm sitting in the second row, fervently promising myself not to misbehave.
The Mammy is beside me.
The Brigadier is introducing a bunch of suits and ball gowns who call themselves The Millvent Singers.
About two dozen of them are spread out around the stage.
They look like army officers and accountants.
The sort of people who wouldn't spit on you if you were on fire.
I lean over to the mother.
"They should be called the Faces Like Boiled Shites Singers," I whisper.
She shushes me decisively.
The singing begins.
They perform Bach's infernal tootling in D minor.
I sit quite still in my seat.
The 40 year old James Healy is more conscious of his public image than the 15 year old one was. There is no question of any disruption. I have grown up.
The infernal tootling continues.
After an hour of it my self control wavers.
I begin to conduct the Millvent singers.
Without standing up, I do a rather good impression of one of the great conductors of old. My arms fly wildly about. My head jerks majestically from right to left. I keep this up for a little while.
A ripple goes through the audience. Like electricity.
I can feel it.
I begin to throw in rude hand gestures towards the Millvent singers as I conduct them.
The ripple is stronger.
I'm just starting to wonder where I can take this.
How far can I go?
Mercifully the curtain drops and we have reached intermission.
I get a grip and head for the foyer where drinks are being served.
It's not too late. No one is trying to throw me out. There has been no chaos. I can go back in there and behave for the second half.
The Brigadiers wife breezes up.
She is the show's producer.
"What do you think of it?" she asks me.
I look at her keenly, suspecting a double cross.
If I say I like it, she may well demand why I had been flipping the bird at her singers.
"It was lovely," I schmooze warmly. "You are bringing culture to the people."
And there our story ends.

Saturday, May 06, 2006

new light on an old window

Friday, May 05, 2006

Interludes

Afternoon in Dublin for Italian lesson with Angela. She's been my teacher for a year. She arrived gorgeous as ever. The most beautiful girl I know. And the last one I would entertain any romantic feelings for. Mainly because I trust her as I would adders fanged. Let me put it this way. I've always had the feeling she'd willingly knock me over the head for fifty bucks. That is, if she for a moment in her villainous little heart of hearts, believed I had fifty bucks.
But I digress.
She's a genuinely superb teacher.
We have our lessons in a cafe.
Today she sang some sort of a love song in the halflight of the cafe.
It was part of the lesson.
She would sing a line and then translate it.
Some classic lyrics...
"I want to grasp you to my bosom. I want you to see me as you have never seen me before."
The effect of this nonsense coupled with Angela's hypnotic brown eyes was a tad startling.
All this time I've simply considered her a villain who happened also to be a very good teacher of Italian.
All this time I was sure I had her figured out.
All this time I felt in no danger at all.
I still don't know if I was wrong about Angela. But I just may have been wrong about myself.
Later in the day met Hodders for coffee at Starbucks. We drove to Kilcullen and collected some of her clothes and books which I'd housed for the past year. Back to Dublin to deposit them in her apartment. We drank tea and watched television for a few hours.
I got home again to Kilcullen around 2am. Dropped over to Uncle Bernard's to see Aunty Marie. She was in bed. Aunty Eileen, who has been minding her, was still up. She nearly jumped out of her skin when she saw me at the window.
"You won't believe this," she said when she'd calmed down. "I just thought of you five minutes ago. I thought to myself: One of these nights James is going to arrive at the window and scare the wits out of me."
I told Eileen that this thought had actually been her guardian angel letting her know I was on the way.
We had coffees. She told me she could see Marie was fading fast and asked had I noticed. I said no.
Outside beneath the most splendid array of stars I asked the Lord for a miracle.
Back home to do some arteekling. Dawn rising before I got to bed. I took some photos. The sky was striated gold. I felt the pulse of artistic purpose.
This is why I live.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Scottish Git Gone

The flying haggis has left.
The Managing Director, aka Big Bad Montie Stalwart, is gone.

Gone!
And hath not left his peer.
Who would not weep for Stallie?
He knew himself to weep,
And sink the occasional beer...

Well, you know what I mean.
An email from Sneeran informed me of Duns Scrotus's departure. The email was curt enough but careful enough.
I was not fooled. Poor sad doltish Sneeran is always at his most dangerous when he's being polite.
The paper came out today. Only three of my photos published out of sixty submitted last week. Twee alterations to one of my arts reviews as well. So that's how he's going to play it.
Sneeran must be very upset to be losing the haggis.
Although, let's face it, the haggis despised him
The most undignified moment at our last little meeting chez Stallie, came when the editor mixed up some photocopies he'd kept of my emails.
Stalwart glowered at him.
And Sneeran said in a little boy voice: "I'm sorry Montie."
For all my own troubles, I realised at that moment that I wouldn't swop with either of them.
Not with the thuggish MD. Not with the cowardly editor.
Both prisoners of their own device.
Both fairly contemptible human beings.
Both lousy really.
But perhaps I'm not the most objective judge.
(The email of mine which Stalwart had expected old witless to produce on queue included the classic line: "I made it clear to you that you were not to use bullying language in your dealings with me. I used terminology even a dullard could understand. Apparently I overestimated your IQ."
Ah memories...)
Now we face a new reality.
At least it's newish.
Even without Stalwart to hold his hand, a certain shambling weasel is still editor.
But we may be forgiven for allowing ourselves a wry smile at Scotty's departure.
One bastard down, one to go.

Rang Bianca in Napoli this afternoon. Her mischievous musical voice cheered me immensely. Also photographed my two year old nephew Ryan at the piano. Rather pleased with the result.
Most stylish and sensuous Chinese girl in the library looking on me with great favour. I was conscious of the feeling that I want to love the girl not the accoutrements.I mean not her designer glasses, or her clothes, or her shoes.
Now I'm in Starbucks Cafe. I can see the facade of Trinity College from where I sit. Of course with Trinity College, everything is a facade.
Arf, arf.
If I had a humour column I'd use that last remark in it.
Ah me I fondly dream.
Hey folks.
Stalwart is gone.
The tide turns at low water as well as at high.

Monday, May 01, 2006



"Dishonesty in the racing industry? Don't look at me guv."