I think I’ll set up a Dreamwidth account and create a community to use as a backup ao3 archive (DW communities can, conveniently, be used rather like tumblr sideblogs). And I like longer form blogging, if I can commit to it — although I would keep that entirely separate from the former. Do let me know if you’d like to interact over there.
Why, this is very midsummer’s madness. Twelfth Night (1996) dir. Trevor Nunn
Aneurin Barnard as Gisbon in Dunkirk (2017)
Season 2, behind the scenes.
I’m not sure I have blorbos, or even favourite characters necessarily: I like how all the pieces (every character, theme, setting, etc) work together to make a good story, and there are usually characters I like more than others, but I’m only obsessed with characters when I’m working on a piece of writing for them, and I tend to view that obsessional period as a necessary evil/unfortunate side effect/occupational hazard. (I’m always obsessive when it comes to writing; characters are just one part of that.) It all comes out in the wash.

McCallum Mondays
►Hell Drivers (1957) /David McCallum as Jimmy Yately Playing the main character’s younger brother, Jimmy. He runs a small corner store with their mother. Small role, but he was very adorable walking around in his crutches.♡
But when Marta came back two days later it was not with knitting needles and wool. She breezed in, very dashing in a Cossack hat worn at a casual rake that must have taken her several minutes at her mirror, just after lunch.
‘I haven’t come to stay, my dear. I’m on my way to the theatre. It’s matinée day, God help me. Tea trays and morons. And we’ve all got to the frightful stage when the lines have ceased to have any meaning at all for us. I don’t think this play is ever coming off. It’s going to be like those New York ones that run by the decade instead of by the year. It’s too frightening. One’s mind just won’t stay on the thing. Geoffrey dried up in the middle of the second act last night. His eyes nearly popped out of his head. I thought for a moment he was having a stroke. He said afterwards that he had no recollection of anything that happened between his entrance and the point where he came to and found himself half-way through the act.’
‘A black-out, you mean?’
‘No. Oh, no. Just being an automaton. Saying the lines and doing the business and thinking of something else all the time.’
‘If all reports are true that’s no unusual matter where actors are concerned.’
‘Oh, in moderation, no. Johnny Garson can tell you how much paper there is in the house what time he is sobbing his heart out on someone’s lap. But that’s different from being “away” for half an act. Do you realise that Geoffrey had turned his son out of the house, quarrelled with his mistress, and accused his wife of having an affaire with his best friend all without being aware of it.’
‘What was he aware of?’
‘He says he had decided to lease his Park Lane flat to Dolly Dacre and buy that Charles The Second house at Richmond that the Latimers are giving up because he has got that Governor’s appointment. He had thought about the lack of bathrooms and decided that the little upstairs room with the eighteenth-century Chinese paper would make a very good one. They could remove the beautiful paper and use it to decorate that dull little room downstairs at the back. It’s full of Victorian panelling, the dull little room. He had also reviewed the drainage, wondered if he had enough money to take the old tiling off and replace it, and speculated as to what kind of cooking range they had in the kitchen. He had just decided to get rid of the shrubbery at the gate when he found himself face to face with me, on a stage, in the presence of nine hundred and eighty-seven people, in the middle of a speech. Do you wonder that his eyes popped.’
Josephine Tey, The Daughter of Time (1951)




