A vague resemblance to
a Roly Poly
Joyce
Over The Road. I never knew her surname, nor did it matter to me. She was
simply ‘Joyce’. No other label needed. Well... sometimes ‘Big Joyce’ and, on
rare occasion, ‘Big Fat Joyce’, but
never by me. Indeed to say she was fat
doesn’t really do justice to the space she occupied, both in my own
consciousness and in the wider universe. She was truly enormous, physically and
symbolically monolithic. Her cumbrous presence remained a constant fascination
throughout my childhood and then beyond. I didn’t know her as such. For years she lived directly opposite my
grandparents’ house with her husband Tommy, who was Irish and who my Granddad
considered to be mad. This diagnosis was never elaborated upon and the
suspicion remains that Tommy was supposed to be mad simply because he was Irish.
Bearing a vague resemblance to Mo Moreland (the one
everyone remembers from Les Dawson’s fat girl tap troupe the Roly Polys), Joyce
had two distinguishing features beyond her sheer bulk. The first was a pair of
spectacles with lenses that magnified her eyes to ludicrous proportions. The
second, more pertinent to our inventory of obsession, was a towering peroxide
bouffant styled in a perfect beehive. Any one of these attributes would have
guaranteed my interest as child, but all three combined sealed her fate
indelibly. To this day, even from the grave, Joyce looms large.
Joyce’s superhuman auditory function was legendary,
at least as far as my Grandma was concerned. Though insulated by two double
glazed bay windows, two front gardens and a fair expanse of suburban tarmac,
the mere mention of Joyce’s beguiling appearance was enough to provoke fits of
shushing and stage-whispered remonstration. “Shhh! She might hear you!” even became
a family catchphrase for a while, often mobilized derisively in the face of an
unlikely claim or suggestion. Still, I suppose we can’t be certain that Joyce
didn’t sometimes catch our gossip on some improbable breeze and that those
spectacles didn’t occasionally magnify the dolorous plop of her tears.
Somehow, though, I very much doubt it.
Joyce-as-situation-comedy
Eventually (eventually? Perhaps I mean immediately...)
Joyce became semi-fictionalized by my obsession. I’ve always been enough in
touch with the inner cultist to understand that the sacred object can’t but
fail to live up to expectations. That inevitable dissatisfaction that I have
described or will describe in detail elsewhere and that Mark Gatiss termed
‘anticipointment’. In Joyce’s case it was a matter of access. She was only ever
revealed in glimpses: framed from the nose up through the front window; lowered
into Tommy’s shit-brown Cortina, arse first, as rapidly as she could manage so
as not to be observed; leaning against the bus shelter, arms folded tight under
the bosom, an undercranked tracking shot as we sped past in the car. Never
enough. Never the whole picture. Nary a hint of what Joyce actually did, day-to-day.
I have a vague impression of her voice, reedy, almost
strangulated, Prestonian accent held proudly aloft. But no recollection of her
ever talking to me, none of her even acknowledging
my existence. Joyce-wise, I remained forever unaddressed. Un-interpellated?
Perhaps not, but Joyce remains as much my creation as her own or another’s.
Never able to gain access to her sitting room to study her at close quarters
(and at length – oh, how I longed to), I forged a new Joyce out of my obsession
and the scant source materials available to me. This perhaps begins to make it
seem as though I spent hours and hours scribbling away, filling old exercise
books and sketchpads with narratives and images of Joyce, like John Waters and
the ‘awful cheap girls’ of his schooldays.
Joyce-as-low-budget-exploitation-shocker; Joyce-as-fairytale; Joyce-as-middle-of-the-road-midweek-situation-comedy.
You Have Been Watching… Joyce; Joyce; Joyce; with Joyce; and Big Joyce
Over The Road as… Joyce.
In
reality, my ongoing production/consumption (conduction? prosumption?) of Joyce
was much less tangible and much more
insidious. My Joyce was a purely conceptual being, fleeting, generated only by
the feedback loop of my obsession. Joyce simultaneously became and instigated a
numinous repetition, a mantra-in-being, creating transformation, transforming
and thus created. A fixation on the idea
of Joyce, on my idea of Joyce,
always-already a fixation on the idea of a fixation on the idea of Joyce. Repetition
squared, obsession cubed, Joyce infinited.
(First draft: March 2011)
(First draft: March 2011)
No comments:
Post a Comment