It's been a bit of hard couple of weeks
for fans of comedy, variety and pro-wrestling like me. We lost a lot
of good ones. Paul Daniels sadly passed away (Something I wrote about for Chortle), as did the great Ronnie Corbett. British wrestler Kris Travis also left us, and all three were celebrated greatly by those
who loved their work, and mourned by the same people who would have
liked to have seen more of it.
And then, last night, as I checked my
phone after coming off stage, I was told that Michael Pearse had
joined them.
When I was in my teens, before I
started performing professionally, I used to go to the Columbo Street
sports centre in South London every Sunday afternoon. For a few hours
every week, for years, there was a juggling workshop held there. The
sports hall was crammed with pros, hobbyists and the curious, all
trading tricks, stealing tricks, and eating crisps. When you're young
and lonely, as I was, and have a crazy idea for a job, as I did,
places like this are important. They show that there are others with
the same crazy idea, and a few that are actually living that dream.
They fill you with inspiration, ideas, fantasies and the knowledge of
how good you'll have to be to compete in the industry you're dreaming
of being a part of.
The people I met there became my peers,
my influences, and in a couple of cases, some of my best friends, and
none were more influential than the late Michael Pearse.
I was in the corner of one of the halls
mucking around with my dirty yellow diablo when he bounded up to me,
clutching his. “Show me yer tricks, will yer?”, he panted, as he
untangled his strings, “Then we'll both know more tricks!”, and
he grinned wildly. Can't fault that logic. For months, years
afterwards, he'd always ask me to show him a new trick, and he'd
always show me some of his in return, and in a hall full of
sportswear-clad young men trying to see how many whatevers they could
keep in the air, Pearse was different. His tricks were more creative,
more interesting. He used household objects, sports equipment, props
he'd made himself. I'd look around the hall and see pretty much the same trick
being done over and over, and then I'd look at Pearse, and see a
crazy, dapper old Irishman with a glint in his eye, showing me
something I'd never seen before.
I immediately knew what kind of
performer I wanted to be. I wanted to be Pearse.
(Oh, and you'll notice I'm calling him
by his last name. That's how I knew him first. His name was Michael
Pearse, but I knew him as Pearse Halfpenny, so that's how I'll always
think of him)
I had the pleasure of booking him for
one of my London Varieties shows, and of course, he brought the house
down. I also took the opportunity to chat a little to him about his
life. He caught the bug when he was 12, when, back in his native
Ireland, he saw a juggler in a circus. All his skills were
self-taught, and he worked off and on throughout his life. By the
80's he was working as a building site foreman in London, and in his
lunchbreaks he'd go around the corner, to Covent Garden piazza, where
he saw lots of young jugglers doing street shows. Pretty soon he was
bringing in some of his props and showing the youngsters a thing or
two under the church portico.
Seemingly he worked more and more as he
got older, indeed, when Pearse was 65, Ken Dodd presented him with an
award for “Best comedy newcomer”, which is as perfect as it is
ridiculous.
He was working right to the end, and
had dates in his diary for the future, too. Which is a fact that will
make every performer reading this nod their head contentedly. That's
how you want to do it.
He was fiercely original, always
well-dressed, charming, witty, immensely skilled, and with a streak
of beautiful craziness running through him that made anyone who met
him never forget the event. I will miss him.
You can watch his act, as part of my
London Varieties show, here. His bit starts at about 34 minutes.
2 comments:
Wonderful thank you
you said at the age of 65 he was introduced as a new comer only shows how original he trick were all through his long and giving life I didn't know him but i'm sure a lot of people will no doubt miss him sorry for your loss of an old and valued friend Matt.
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