Hello,
Here’s a poem from my show, ‘Bouncer’. It’s about identity, and not feeling like you fit in, and not being called Zach.
I hope you like it.

Performance poet and Professor of Whimsy
Hello,
Here’s a poem from my show, ‘Bouncer’. It’s about identity, and not feeling like you fit in, and not being called Zach.
I hope you like it.

There’s a divine madness about the fringe. It’s so big that it brings out the despair in us all. How can one possibly compete with all of the other shows that are on at the same time? At the last reckoning, possibly six hundred going on at any one moment. Or was it six thousand? It couldn’t have been six million, though at times it seems it.
The venues are tucked anywhere throughout the city. If you stand still for long enough, you become a venue yourself. Underbelly have already contacted me about using space inside my backpack. It’s a new stage which they want to add to their roster, and advertise as The Cow Bag, and then rent it out to theatre companies. But then I moved, and they lost all interest.
There’s a piece of wasteland outside my student accommodation. It’s overgrown with vegetation and bushes and I stopped and looked at it and I thought, yes, there it is. The last place in Edinburgh which hasn’t been turned into a venue or a bar or a festival village. And just as I was standing there looking at it, someone tried to flyer me.
Because that’s what Edinburgh is all about. The flyering. You can have the best show ever written, and you can perform the best anyone has ever performed, but it’s the flyering which ensures people get in to see it, and it’s the flyering that ensures that the show is a success. Which is great if you have a passion for flyering, or if you have a theatre troupe filled with sixteen incredibly enthusiastic and young performers from middle class universities, with floppy hair and high cheekbones and winning smiles, but when you’re a lone operator doing it all yourself, from a seaside town in Devon, then the odds are already stacked against you.
Which is to say that I hate flyering. People scare me. The general public are frightening. I want to be polite at all times, but the moment I steel myself to smile and say hello, some young buck with an improvised opera jumps in and flyers the person that I’m just about to flyer. It’s a dog eat dog world. And also, my brain doesn’t move as quickly as some. I see someone coming and the words kind of tumble out in a nonsensical jumble. You wouldn’t think that I’m a performance poet! ‘Hello there. Yes, what it is, you see, I’ve written this show, and . . .’, by which time they’ve already walked away.
Consequently, I didn’t have much of an audience for the first couple of shows. One person turned up for each, and I knew each person. They were friends. I think my show is good, but they probably would have come even if it was just an hour of me on the stage doing armpit squelch farts. But there’s a guy from Cambridge University who’s already doing that, and he’s winning rave reviews.
I decided I needed a flyerer. I had no idea that you could just hire a flyerer. I thought only the good shows had a flyerer, because why would a flyerer want to flyer for something that nobody had heard of? But I went online and I made contact with a couple of flyerers. The first two didn’t turn up, on consecutive days. But the third did. And she’s wonderful.
I’ve had an audience ever since. She really knows how to bring in the people. I don’t know how she does it and I don’t really want to ask. Naturally, I was worried that she would take my leaflets and walk off and dump them in a recycling skip, but I actually saw her at work several times, and it really did fill me with glee.
We got chatting one day, my flyerer and I. She’s actually getting married in a couple of days. She’s getting married right on the Royal Mile. I even thought about popping along, or at least exit flyering the service. That’s how grateful I am at all of the flyering that she’s been doing.
The show is going well. In fact, the show is going really well. The last three shows have been absolutely wonderful. Great audiences, and I’m so comfortable with my performances. I know it inside out and I’m very happy with it. I think it’s the most accessible show I’ve done at Edinburgh, (which is code for the fact that this is my first show which doesn’t have an LGBTQ theme or gratuitous references to sex). It has: three costume changes, some choreography, a song, a high note which I try to sustain for twenty seconds, and I get to do a lot of acting, too. So yes, I’m very happy with it. From an artistic point of view.
I have a little post-show routine, now. If it’s a good show, I go to my favourite place at the fringe, which is the bar of the Circus Hub on the Plains, and I sit and have a cola and just relax. It’s a great place, because it doesn’t get as busy as the rest of Edinburgh and I can just take in the sunshine and listen to whatever’s going on inside the Big Top. There’s also a stall nearby which sells, quite frankly, the best sausage rolls I’ve ever seen.
So that’s how things are going, as I enter week number two. What will this week bring? Will audience numbers go down a bit, now that the weekend is out the way? Who will I get to do the flyering when my flyerer gets married? How does my show stack up against the six hundred that are also on at the same time? (Someone the other day called it ‘light and lovely’, which I kind of like). And at the end of the day, does any of this mean anything?
They always say that you should ask yourself why you’re coming to the fringe. Is it to get noticed? Is it to refine a piece of work? Is it to meet new fans? To be honest, I’m not sure why I’m here. I think it’s just the challenge of putting on a show, and writing it, and memorising it, and all of those other things. Or perhaps I’m just here to join in this merry dance, to at least say I gave it a bash.
My show details can be found here: https://tickets.edfringe.com/whats-on/robert-garnham-bouncer

Oh my god. I can't move.
I dreamed of static. A television tuned to static, distant radio waves, echoes of the Big Bang.
Bloody hell, my back is killing me.
And there is no static, just the steady splatter of rain on the canvas roof of my tent.
I try to get up. My back makes a creaking sound, pins and needles shoot up and down my leg. I gasp, try to move, stretch out my leg. I get on all fours, like a dog, and the pain begins to subside. I bang my head on the side of the tent and I hear water rolling down, puddling. This is no life for a poet.
What is this madness?
The big bag of unsold poetry books served well as a makeshift pillow all night, until about four o'clock in the morning, once the cold had kicked in and, in my feverish shivering, I cricked my neck.
I’m regretting every moment of this. Hating it. Why on earth did I say yes to this?
I was at a music festival, where I had been asked to perform poetry. Apparently it was something of an honour to be asked, and I was glad that the organiser had thought so highly of my work and judged me able to entertain a festival audience. Another poet had brought me in her car, and as we got closer to the bit of countryside where the festival was going to be held, a deepening sense of doom manifested itself deep within me. The rain didn’t help. I’d never seen such rain, and when we parked the car in what can only be described as a swamp, the sense of gloom rose within me and began to devour me whole.
It was the whitest, most middle class place I had ever been. And this is saying something, because I grew up in Surrey. There were stalls where you could buy wicker baskets, or have your tarot read, or buy crystals, or tie-dye clothing. There were clay pots, or expensive rugs woven from yak. There were more yurts than I’d ever seen in my life, and if that wasn’t enough, you could actually order a flat-picked yurt to take away home with you. There was a stall selling pickle, twelve pounds a jar. There was a stall selling spraghi. I don’t even know what a spranghi is. I’ve googled it, and I still don’t know.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for a knees-up. And some world music can be kind on the ears. But at the end of the day, I’m the product of a council-estate upbringing who lived in a tiny one room flat over an amusement arcade in an impoverished seaside town. I had no money in my bank account. And not for the first time in my life, I felt truly alien to everything around me. I was not in the mood for a knees-up. If anything, I was more in the mood to go home.
I remember texting a friend in Swindon. Don’t worry, mate, he said, if you really don’t like it, you can come and stay here, we’re only half an hour away. And this really touched me, and seemed much more genuine than all of the hoo-hah around, the plaintive yodelling, the exotic percussions, the families with children called Tarquin and Mathilda. Four days, I told myself. It’s only going to be four days.
I knew that I should have felt privileged, being here at this festival, and being paid to entertain people, that those who bought tickets had spent their hard-earned cash to attend and that I should snap out of whatever misery was holding me back, take a step back, and look at the wider picture. Who else do I know who is fortunate enough to have made a career which allows them to travel, and meet new people, and have new experiences, and all that bullshit? On the other hand, the festival was achingly middle class and wryly excluding. I knew that I had to make something out of the day.
I shelter under the awning of a huge marquee. At the end of it is a small stage. There's an old man playing the tin whistle on the stage and in front of him are about sixteen people, watching, or else playing with their smartphones. At least he's got a larger audience than I had, last night. Ordinarily I would have been inclined to get the hell out of there, but a sudden shot of philosophical awareness paints him in a new light. Are we not both performers? He has his tin whistle, and I have my poems. Are we really so different?
I close my eyes.
The sound of the tin whistle is simple, plaintive, hardly overwhelming. It speaks of loss, and innocence, and something timeless. The simple notes draw me in. Liam with his bluster may have been crowd pleasing, if not a touch self indulgent, but this little old man with his tin whistle speaks of a deeper truth. The old man wears a shirt, jeans, and Wellington boots. He's so ordinary, and yet his music is pastoral, its high notes somehow speaking of the futility of existence and all of human endeavour. He's an artist, pure and simple, not a showman. There's no artifice here, no ego. We could be brothers, me and this little old man.
At this moment, a marching band walks on stage. Four trumpet players, trombone, euphonium, then a marching drummer, then a saxophone player, and the crowd roars, and people run in from the rain attracted by the razzmatazz, and then two scantily clad dancers, and the little old man with the tin flute puts it down and picks up an electric guitar, and the crowd goes wild, and I go away and leave him at it, the bastard.
The soil at the festival is a dull red colour and it splatters over everything. The canvas sides of the stalls selling their Yak fleece blankets and yurt construction manuals get hidden beneath a layer of red clingy slime, and so do my trousers. I'd worn my finest cream chinos and one of the first people I'd seen that morning had said, ‘Good luck keeping those clean’.
I find a cafe set up inside a tent, Himalayan blankets and rugs spread across the floor with rows of bare wood tables, the kind that look as if they could give you a nasty splinter, and I buy a cup of tea for four times the price it might have been on the high street, and sit in the corner, the rain pounding on the canvas roof above and making a dripping sound which makes me want to go to the toilet even when I don't. I find my soggy notebook and I start work on a poem, feeling the need, if anything, to grab something back from what is turning into being a really naff day.
All poets exist because they have a voice. Language is their plaything, of course, but content and feeling come from the soul. My mug of tea cools untouched as a torrent of words arrive as if from the ether, that mysterious place wherein one mosh capture free form images and themes as they flit and dance, pinning them to the page as they slot perfectly, holding hands with their neighbours to create a sudden magic. I can hear them in my head as I jot them in my notebook, each line arriving with an ease that I have not felt in a long time. And this, this makes up for everything. I may not be the flavour of the month, the new saviour of the spoken word scene, but my poems are written with intent and have made plenty of people laugh. I occasionally intersperse my own output with true feeling, emotion and greatness. You can beat an audience into submission, but not everyone can then reach in and save them, coax them back out with the tender dance of language.
I can only describe it as a trance. Everything around me dissipates, becomes meaningless, until the whole of existence is concentrated on the nib of my pen, the atoms within the flow of ink. The page of my notebook fills until, oh, until I can write no more. How exhausted I feel as I replace the cap of my pen, take a sip of freezing cold tea, and feel that pounding thump in my chest which only comes when I know that I have written something that might be truly remarkable.
I think part of the problem stemmed from the fact that the festival was so very serious. It was earnest, sickly earnest with its emphasis on experience and culture. My own culture was a mishmash of pop and New York comedy, humour, drag queens and cabaret, snooker, science fiction, sitcoms and sex. The festival was about as funny as Winchester Cathedral and about as sexy as Worcestershire. If it was any more earnest then it would probably have toppled over under its own weight. I felt like an interloper, too broke to afford anything other than the fish finger sandwiches which were ironically churned out from a van shaped as a fish finger, for eight quid a pop, which included a serviette and a paper plate.
The poem is a meditation on the futility of existence. It uses the metaphor of the image of an eyeball floating in a glass of red wine, (Merlot), as a commentary on the internal struggles we all face to justify an enjoyment we might gain from our own amusements. It uses the language of chance to tell the simple tale of a widow in her dacha on the outskirts of the Russian town of Omsk, who pines not only for that one western indulgence - a glass of red wine - but also for her lost youthfulness, ravaged by time and the harsh winters. For her whole life she pines, pines, pines, for the wine, wine, wine, underneath the evergreen pines, pines, pines, so that she can emulate the decadence of the people she sees on her television and in films, that she can hold a glass of wine. And the moment she finally gets a chance to do so, the man in the dacha next door is accidentally vaporised in a freak gas explosion, and his eyeball falls down her chimney and lands, plop, in her glass of wine. It is a stirring and heartbreaking image which says so much about the human condition, and I realise, as I sit there in that lowly festival tea shack, that it's probably one of the best things I've ever written.
And this puts me in something of a good mood for the remainder of the afternoon. In spite of the rain, in spite of the discomfort, the ceaseless dripping, the intense damp, the pungent and pervasive aroma of mould and bad hippy breath, the endless queues for the chemical toilets and the dissatisfaction of not having had a good dump in days, in spite of all of this, the new poem puts me in a very good mood.
I leave the tea shack and wander in a happy daze, slowly, carefully, so as not to get any of the red mud on my cream chinos. I submit to the rain. Just like the old lady in her dacha, I let life and circumstance overtake me.
Oh jeez, I really need to go to the loo.
I'm at a stall selling privet saplings. This is the only musical festival I've been to where someone might decide, hmm, let's go and buy some privet saplings. I'm at the stall not because I am particularly interested in privet saplings myself, but because I've just seen one of the other poets, let’s call her Jade Finch, flouncing like a ghost in the drizzle, all flowing scarves and wistfulness, almost angelic in the pouring rain, and I don't want her to see how damn miserable I am. So I hop into the privet sapling tent and pretend to admire the privets in order to let her past but now someone has stopped to talk to her. I can hear them, even under the heavy thudding of rain on the canvas roof, telling her how mystical her poetry, and how they could all go out some time and buy some crystals together, and perhaps do some incantations and chants, and Jade seems up for it. And if I emerge now from the privet tent, then things would get very embarrassing. And now I need to go to the loo.
'Can I help you?'
'No, I'm fine, thank you'.
'Let me know if you need any help'.
'Thanks'.
'Are you in to topiary?'
'I'm sorry?'
'Topiary?'
'Is that like origami?', I ask.
'No, sir'.
'I once booked myself some origami lessons at a community college. It folded'.
'How very unfortunate, sir'.
'It's a, erm, it's a joke'.
The pressure in my bladder is building up. Jade is still nattering away. At some point I am just going to have to face her. But the embarrassment of her seeing me wet and miserable in the middle of the day at this sodding festival mitigates against making a sudden exit.
'The humble hedge is making something of a come back', the salesman continues. 'Privet is a very versatile species.'
'Have you got a rear entrance?'
'I'm sorry?'
'Is there a way out of here that doesn't involve going out the front?'
'No, sir'.
Because Jade Finch has never seen the real me. None of the other performers have. The version of myself which stands on the stage is nothing like the real version of myself that I have to live with. I might be jovial and funny and comedic once I'm behind the mic, but when I'm at home or on my own, or particularly in the middle of the day, I'm a miserable bugger. It's why I wear specific clothes in which to perform, it's like putting on a costume and becoming another person. And right now, I'm the genuine Roland Garnier. I don't want Jade to see me.
And on top of everything else, I really need to go to the loo.
Rain drips from the sides of the privet sapling tent. It's not a comfortable sound.
'I'm sorry about this ', I say to the gentleman in charge of the stall. 'I really am'.
I crouch down on all fours and pull up the side of the tent, wrenching the canvas away from one of the Guy ropes, and I slide myself flat on the damp floor, underneath the canvas, and out into the fresh air. I might even have knocked over a couple of privets.
'Hey!'
Bladder full, I run to the row of chemical toilets. Oh, how I imagine the relief of getting there and relieving myself! It becomes the most important thing in the world, and as I run and slide around in the mud and see the faces of the other people, I feel that they must know why I'm running. I'm not running to escape. I'm not even running from myself. I'm running for the one purpose that running was probably invented for. I turn the corner and stop in my tracks.
There's a queue. It's a long, long queue. It stretches from the chemical toilets right past the shamanic lawyers and the new age holistic car mechanics, right as far as a small stage where there's currently a choir of men dressed in flowing robes, humming in perfect unison. It's too late. I know that I can't queue for this long, and the pressure is building up in a way that probably doesn't happen with the middle classes. There's nothing for it but to head straight for a copse of leafy, verdant rhododendrons just behind the log drummers workshop tent.
Nobody is looking. I merge myself into the leafy vegetation, it's like a piece of thick rainforest jungle transposed, and suddenly, I feel myself alone amid the fleshy leaves and the roots. The further I move into the thicket, the more the overhanging branches shield me from the worst of the rain. I shuffle myself as far as I can from the prying eyes of the other festival goers, into a small clearing where the noise and the movement seem less pronounced. And then, in absolute solitude, I unzip my fly and begin to urinate.
And the bliss. Oh, the blessed relief! I close my eyes, and for the first time in ages I feel myself relaxing. Everything bad about the day melts away, even my back pain, and I start to think, well, maybe this isn't such a bad place after all.
'Oh my god!'
I look up. Three people, right there in front of me! And there's no disguising what I'm doing. Indeed, steam rises from my pee stream as if accentuating my purpose. The lady in front is carrying a clipboard. The two behind are a woman and a young man. And she's wearing a very purposeful hat.
‘Afternoon’, I say, in a very cheery tone.
The cheapest option seemed to be to spend the rest of the day sitting in the spoken word tent. At least here I’ll not be tempted to buy anything. I’ve brought my own fold-up chair with me, and it seems the most exuberant luxury possible to be able to sit down somewhere that wasn’t damp or muddy. During the night, when my back had been at its worst, I’d set up the fold-up chair inside the tent and sat down, my head touching the canvas roof, just for the sheer blessed relief of not having to lie down. My fold-up chair seemed to be my only friend in the entire place.
The spoken word tent was a medium-sized marquee with a stage at one end. It wasn’t as big as the other marquees. In fact, it wasn’t even as big as those that you might see in people’s back gardens from the railway line. The spoken word stage was the last item listed on the poster that advertised the festival, and as my name was the last listed on the spoken word tent’s own poster, which meant that officially I was probably the bottom of the bill for the entire festival. I didn’t mind that at all. All the pressure was off. The audience would have their expectations automatically lowered.
So I sat there, and chatted with the other performers, most of whom were incredibly happy to be there, and they regailed me with stories of acts that they had seen, and how they’d stayed up till the small hours partying and drinking and having a fantastic time, and woken to the morning with yak’s milk and a sudden desire to take up the bongos. And I nodded and said that it all sounded wonderful, and that I’d enjoyed everything I’d seen so far, which was a lie, because I’d spent most of my time in my tent watching Netflix.
Every day at the spoken word stage, there would be a big name, a headline act. Today’s headline act was scheduled for just after the lunchtime break. I left my fold up chair at the side of the marquee and placed my poetry notebook on top of it, then went for a wander in the rain, wondering why I just couldn’t find any enjoyment in the festival. My back was still hurting. Everyone I met just seemed so fake, and I wondered if the problem was with me. Why didn’t I have the capability to enjoy myself? Was I actually a snob, preferring the comforts of a bed and a hotel room to the rawness of camping? Was I using my working class background as an excuse to suspect all of the other festival goers as faking whatever enjoyment they seemed to be getting from the event? Should I have been more grateful? Well, yes.
I wondered about the new poem. Should I perform the new poem, when I did my set? It’s always bad news at a poetry gig when someone performs something that they’ve only just written, but on the other hand, not all of these people are geniuses like me. The new poem had been the only good thing to have happened at the festival, although I did have the seeds of an idea for a new poem in the phrase which kept coming to my lips. Festival wankers.
I queued for a bit for a fish finger sandwich, to match the fish finger sandwich which I’d had for breakfast, and the fish finger sandwich I’d had for dinner the night before. But my cash supply was dwindling. Would they let me have half of a fish finger sandwich? I then decided to save some money and go back to the spoken word marquee, where there were free bottles of water for the performers.
I was surprised when I got back to see that the place was packed out. A crowd had gathered to watch the big name headliner, and the crowd was so big that they’d had to open up one side of the marquee to let them see in. There must have been about four hundred people at that marquee. A-ha, I thought, at least I have my fold-up chair in there. I rummaged through the crowd, apologising profusely but telling everyone that I was one of the performers, that I just had to get there. But when I got to the front of the stage area, my fold-up chair was gone. The poetry notebook was on the floor. But the chair was gone.
What the hell, I thought. Has one of these festival wankers made off with my fold-up chair? And that’s when I saw it. The fold up chair was on the stage, and the big name headliner was sitting on it, tuning his guitar. The big name headliner, who was so famous that his name was actually on the main festival poster, was sitting on my fold-up chair.
I lingered for a bit, of course. But then I wandered out, into the rain, to the rear of the crowd who were gathering eagerly, some standing on tiptoes. The big name headliner started his set, brought the microphone close, and told the assembled crowd that he felt safe there, that he was going to tell us something he’d never told anyone before, not even his closest friends. He was bisexual, he said, and it was such a great weight lifted from his shoulders to tell the world this. There was a small gasp from the audience, and then a ripple of applause, and then the applause became thunderous, and I applauded too, and it seemed a magnificent and wonderful moment because, apart from anything else, this big name headliner had just come out to the world while sitting on my fold-up chair.
I performed the first of my two sets that afternoon. By then the crowd had gone, dissipated back into the drizzle. The overbearing thrum of someone else's music pulsated through the canvas walls of the spoken word marquee from one of the main stages. I had an audience of about five to begin with, and then three left, and then people who were wandering past came in, and I ended up with a very respectable eight. Four of these were a young hippy-ish couple and their two kids. The kids had kept running around and I had to shout, because the band on the main stage was so loud. One of the kids spilled my wine. And the parents kept shouting at the kids while I performed. The kids were called Aria and Esher. I know this because I kept hearing, Aria, will you stop fiddling with that mic stand? The poor man is trying to speak, or, Esher, stop that will you, Esher? That’s not nice.
I hastily amended my set. I’d wanted to do my poem about Orgasms, and my poem about odd shaped penises, and my poem about snogging an aardvark, but I couldn't, what with the kids there. Who on earth brings their kids to a world music festival, and then to the poetry stage of that festival? And the moment I finished my set - inevitably, with the Beard Poem - the crowds started coming in on the way back from the main stage where the band had just finished. Random inquisitive souls pumped up by the throat singing and the techno sheltering from the rain in the poetry tent. They poured through the entrance just in time to hear me say, 'Thank you so much, everyone! My name is Robert Garnham, thank you for flying with me!’
I handed over to the next poet, who now had an audience of about a hundred and fifty.
‘Cheers’, he said. ‘Nice one’.
I’d wanted to perform the new poem. But the more I’d thought about it, the more I realised that it was terrible, it was too conceptual, and apart from anything else, I couldn’t read my own writing. When I finished performing, I stood by a small table where there were a selection of my poetry books for sale. Nobody was interested. Some of the books had probably got wet. I packed away the books, folded up my chair and walked back to my tent. I didn’t even feel like a fish finger sandwich.
The next morning dawned a little brighter, as did my mood. Maybe this was because there were now glimmers of blue sky amid the occasional showers. Or maybe it was because I was now one day closer to going home.
The occasional showers persisted as I stood underneath my tartan umbrella in the queue for the chemical toilets. Jade Finch was in the queue in front of me, all unnecessarily bubbly and wide eyed and as fluffy as her poetry.
'Did you see XXX last night? Oh my goodness, I didn't even know he was on the bill', she says.
XXX was yesterday’s headliner at the spoken word marquee, the chap who had come out as bisexual while sitting on my fold-up chair.
‘No, unfortunately, I didn’t. I mean, I saw the start of his set, but there were too many people there and . . Someone had taken my chair’.
'He's the best, isn't he?'.
'He's good'.
There's nothing worse than toilet queue chit chat, and in any case, I was dying for a dump.
'He did that poem last night, oh, you know the one, about the importance of recycling. Only halfway through you realise he's actually talking about his ex. And then he really racked up the emotion and the energy, and you'll never guess what . .'.
'I was there'.
'He started bodysurfing. I'd never seen such a large crowd at a poetry stage. He started bodysurfing the crowd! Like a rock god genius, and all the time he still had the mic and he carried on with the poem! Can you believe it?'
'I was there'.
'They're giving him an extended headline set tonight'.
'HAAAAH!'
'What is it?'
'Sorry. My back just gave a twinge'.
'I mean, we are just privileged to be on the same bill as him, that's what I say'.
She was probably right. And thankfully, two cubicles opened up at the same time, so we went our separate ways. Having felt imposter syndrome at the best of times, this was merely another reminder just how low down the pecking order I was in the performance poetry community. But it didn’t matter, because I was determined to have a good day, and a good day started with a good dump.
I thought about having a fish finger sandwich for breakfast, or maybe a trip to the tea yurt and ordering whatever the cheapest drink happened to be on their menu. Instead I went back to my tent and ate half a packet of crisps that I’d found in my backpack. I looked once again at the poem that I’d written the day before and I couldn’t believe how bad it was. But not even this could dampen my increasingly good mood. Indeed, the only thing that could possibly dampen my increasingly good mood was the actual damp.
I set up the coming-out fold-up chair inside my tent and I started work on the Festival Wankers poem. I couldn’t think of a good rhyme for entitlement. I decided that whatever might happen, the Festival Wankers poem should probably not be debuted at an actual festival, which seemed to make it all the more subversive that it should be written right here, right now. I wrote a whole verse around the subject of disposable income, having seen someone the previous day purchasing a wicker bedside cabinet.
There was something of a spring in my step as I eventually went outside into the main part of the festival. I went to the tea yurt, but unfortunately, owing to a build-up of maggots in its rafters, the place had been closed down. This, the barista assured me, was merely a temporary setback, and he cited the bad climate along with the natural materials used in its construction as a possible reason why there had been a build-up of maggots. ‘It proves at least’, he explained, ‘That no chemicals had been used in the building process’.
I went to the fish finger sandwich van and ordered a cup of tea in a polystyrene cup for five quid, then sat on the edge of a dance stage to enjoy it as a light drizzle was reflected in a rather sheepish sun. I took a deep breath and could feel the goodness of the countryside purring its way into me. Things can never be so bad, I thought, as they felt at the time when they were their worst. And just at the moment when you think life will probably get worse, well then, that’s the moment when things have already turned a corner.
I went to the spoken word marquee. I’d decided that this would be where I’d spend the entire day. I didn’t care about the world music stages, I didn’t care about the stalls, I didn’t care about the expensive food or the fact that my wallet now had nothing in it. I would sit there, and I would watch every single act, and I would damn well enjoy it.
And that’s exactly what I did. I sat there, for every act. And I felt relaxed, for the first time since I’d arrived at the festival. And the sun was out. They opened the side of the marquee again, just like they had when XXX had performed, and this seemed to draw people in who were walking past. Hello, they said, what’s going on here? They came in and they watched the poets, and they enjoyed it, and the more the sun shone, the more people started to enjoy it.
It was about this time that I started to realise how wonderful people were. Not just festival people, but all kinds of people. I was there, and I felt a part of the whole show, and this was in spite of the fact that I had been a complete and utter misery the day before, perhaps noticeably so. By the time that it was my turn to perform, the sun was persisting enough for the actual stage itself to be moved outside, which meant even more people were stopping to watch. I had quite a sizeable audience, and they laughed at all the parts that they were meant to laugh along with, and I was brave enough to jump off the stage at one point, and go wandering with the mic, and people laughed at this and there were smiling faces everywhere, and it was so different to the day before. I finished my set to an applause which was far more enthusiastic than I’d probably deserved, but it didn’t matter, because it put me on a high, and even standing beside the table piled high with my poetry books which nobody then showed any interest in didn’t faze me in the least. The applause had felt so sweet. I may have been the very last name on the bill for the whole festival, but right at that moment, I didn’t feel like it.
I’m not a natural performer. People have often said that I change completely the moment that I get on stage. Which is to say, reading between the lines, that when I’m not on stage, then the vibe I give off is of a miserable so-and-so. The Robert Garnham who exists when he’s performing is totally different to the Robert Garnham who exists the majority of the time. The nerves go away and the world brightens, and something weird occurs deep down. And when I stop performing, the old me comes back fairly quickly, but some remnant of the performer version of myself still exists.
I sat back down after my set, and my abortive attempt to flog some poetry books, and I could feel the warmth of the world. Somewhere on the main stage, drums were sounding, and they did so with a rhythm which filled my heart with a sudden goodness. Oh my god, I thought, I’m starting to enjoy this festival. What on earth has become of me?
The other poets performed. Jade Finch performed. XXX performed, and, maybe it was just my memory, but he didn’t really seem as ‘on it’ as he had done the day before. And with an hour to go before the day’s schedule for the spoken word marquee was done, the poet who had driven me to the festival whispered, ‘We’ll be leaving in an hour’.
This was news to me. I’d assumed that I would be staying the next night and packing up the next morning. But now I realised that I only had an hour left at the festival. An hour to pack up my tent, an hour to pack my bags, an hour to endure the rain and the mud and the continual damp smell of canvas tents and incense sticks.
‘Fantastic!’, I whispered.
‘You can stay if you like . .’.
‘No! Just try and stop me’.
I was off back to my tent and I think I managed to take it down in about six minutes flat. I stuffed it back into its bag, and I grabbed my backpack and my fold-up chair and my unsold poetry books, and I was ready to get the hell out of there.
And that’s when I heard the drums again. The same band was still on the main stage. Those same drums that had thrummed into my soul just half an hour before, and filled me with a sudden goodness. And just for that second back then, I’d thought I was enjoying the festival. But I wasn’t, really. I’d actually just become resigned to it. Because the moment an escape route had opened, boom, I’d gone for it. What a fake I was! That just for that short period of time, just right then and there, I had become a Festival Wanker.

Hello,
Here are two videos taken from my show, Yay!, which you can stream on this very website.
I hope you enjoy them.

So I’ve performed my new show five times now. And I’m performing it again tomorrow in Paignton, to an invited audience at a secret location. I’m starting to get to know it now, because these sorts of things only seem to come alive once they’ve been seen by an audience.
In a sense, I only really discovered what the show was about once audiences had seen it. It’s far darker than I thought, with themes touching on fame, ambition, truth, disappointment, even mental health.
There are poems which always seem to get good reactions from the audience. Two of these, ‘Who Wants Fame?’, and ‘Fabaranza’, are real fast-paced silly poems. ‘Zach’ always seems to go down well, too. As does ‘You Should Write A Poem About That’. In the latter poem, I decided to employ a puppet so that it appeared that I was having an actual conversation with someone, and I think this part of the show really works.
The first place I performed the show was at the St. Anne’s Centre in Barnstaple, a wonderful ex-chapel with very creaky floorboards and Gothic architecture. It’s so old that the new extension on the side was built during Tudor times! I performed the show four times here and had some lovely audiences. Last week I performed the show in Guildford, upstairs at The Keep pub, to another lovely audience. I made a slight change for this gig, adding a poem at the start of the show, ‘Coffee Shop’, which I’d written in an attempt to emulate the style of Dame Edith Sitwell.
On the way home from Guildford, I pondered on the script and how there are several moments where it seems that the tension needs popping. To relax I listened to one of my favourite comedians, John Mulaney, but instead of relaxing, I listened to how he would do this during his own monologues. I’ve since added three ‘tags’, as the Americans call them, moments where I comment on what I’ve just said, hopefully for some audience reaction. I’ll be using these ‘tags’ during the Paignton performance this week.
The thing about a new show is that one is always comparing it with the show that came before. The previous show, ‘Yay!’, accompanied the Burning Eye book of the same name, and I performed it over two years. I’d also written and rehearsed the show during lockdown, so I knew the thing inside out. But there was always the sense that the scope of the show was limited because it had to use poems from the book.
With ‘Bouncer’, the sky was the limit, and while I was free to choose the subject matter, I then had to write bespoke poems to fit in. So it felt with ‘Bouncer’ that the poems were not as well established as those in ‘Yay!’, particularly because the poems in ‘Yay!’, had been written over a period of five years, not a few weeks! Consequently, I rehearsed much, much more because I wasn’t sure myself whether they should have been in the show at all.
But I’m now much more relaxed about the show. I know it inside out, more than I probably ever did with ‘Yay!’, and because of this I can have fun with my voice and delivery and movement and all of the other things that a performance poet has to think about, rather than just trying to remember what comes next.
So, basically, I’m very happy with how the show is going. The next stop is the Edinburgh Fringe in August, and who knows what that will bring?
Below is a list of the poems in the show, as well as a video of ‘You Should Write a Poem About That’.
Coffee Shop
Zach
You Should Write a Poem About That
Who Wants Fame?
Beard Envy
London is Mine for the Taking
The Contestants Await
Fabaranza
Your City Never Seemed So Cruel
Woodlouse Boy
Barnstaple TheatreFest Diary
I arrived in Barnstaple yesterday lunchtime. I’d spent the train journey listening to an audio recording of my show and going over the finer details in my mind, so the journey didn’t seem so long. Went immediately to one of the cafes on the riverside, ostensibly just for a cup of tea, but because I’d taken up one of their outside tables (for four), I felt obliged to order a sandwich. When it arrived, I didn’t know whether to ask for a knife and fork or a stepladder. I don’t know how people were meant to get their jaws around it. Perhaps that’s the motto of Barnstaple, that it always gives you more than you asked for.
In previous year’s I’ve spoken about the wonderful community ethos which comes with being a part of the Theatrefest. I went from the cafe to a bar / nightclub called Junction 27, where the taster session was scheduled, and I had a part in it. Within seconds of coming in through the door, I met two people I’ve known for quite some time, and quite a few people who chatted and showed an interest in my show, and whose shows looked genuinely interesting to me.
I performed the ‘Who Wants Fame?’, song from my show, and it seemed to go down well. I was glad about this, because it was only the second time that I’d performed it at an actual gig. It was the dance that goes with the song that they seemed to like the best. I saw lots of other snippets from shows which I made a mental note to try and get to see. The chap dressed as a tiger who did some mime / clown work, which immediately spoke to the clown part of me. The comedian with a show called ‘A Wank In Progress’. (‘Difficult to flyer for that one’, he said. ‘You’ve got to choose who you give a leaflet to very carefully. Also, be careful when you’re doing a Google search’). And a show based around Moby Dick, the odd thing about this being that Moby Dick was one of the subjects I’d thought of doing a show about. I’m quite glad that I didn’t, now!
During the afternoon the thought occurred that a part of the show in which I have a conversation with someone would work much better if I had a puppet. I went out around Barnstaple with the intention of looking for a puppet, only to discover that, in a bizarre freak of circumstances, I’d already packed one. I’d hoped to incorporate it into my act the week before in Brighton, but I’d scratched it due to time, and just left it in my luggage.
I did my first performance of the show at 5pm at St. Anne’s arts centre. I was worried that there wouldn’t be anyone coming along. It was a baking hot day, and I thought, well, who’s going to want to watch a show at 5pm on a Thursday afternoon? As it was, I had quite a respectable figure. Indeed, if this had been Edinburgh, then I’d have been over the moon with the ten people who turned up! And the show went well. They all laughed at the bits that I’d hoped they’d laugh at. And I only stumbled over my words once. And that was during the Who Wants Fame?, song, the very same song I’d sung that afternoon at the taster session! I was particularly glad with how the other fast-paced banger, Fabaranza, went. Indeed, this got one of the biggest audience responses of the show. And the bit with the puppet? It went down very well indeed.
I went back to my hotel for a bit and got changed, as I was drenched in sweat. Three costume changes is probably a bit too much for an hour fringe show, and wearing a sequin jacket, feather boa and top hat on a very hot day, and dancing around a stage, is probably not a good idea!
In the evening I went out to the Queen’s Theatre and I watched a wonderful performance of the David Mamet play ‘Duck Variations’. The last time I’d seen a David Mamet play had been on Broadway with Nathan Lane starring. But Nathan Lane wasn’t at the Barnstaple Fringe. It was a wonderful show in any case, and on the way home I bumped into five people that I know. A photographer, a comedian, a magician, and two actors. That’s the kind of great community there is here.
There was due to be a social event at 10pm but I was too tired. I go to bed most nights around 9, and I knew I’d be dead to the world if I’d gone along. As it was, I was probably asleep by half nine.
And now here we are, Day Two. I’m going to have fun, see as much as I can, and try to get people to come along to the second showing of Bouncer at 7pm tonight!

Poem
When does a mess become a muddle?
When does day become the night?
When does a spillage become a puddle?
When does a shudder become a fright?
When does a brag become a boast?
When does a mess become a fuss?
When does bread become toast?
When does a train become a rail replacement bus?
When do we become middle aged?
And do we only know we are middle aged when we've lived
Our whole lives?
Is it only then that we can look back and say, oh yes,
That's when I was middle aged, that's when I had a
Midlife crisis,
The day I went out and bought a jetski?
When does a crowd become a throng?
When do pants become a thong?
When does a dirge become a song?
When does a whiff become a pong?
When does a settee become a sofa?
When does a look become a demeanour?
When does a pamphlet become a brochure?
When does a verbal warning become a grievance procedure?
When did I decide that maybe you weren't the one for me?
Was if at the opera, or was it in the supermarket?
Or was it that time I came home and found you in bed
With a stamp collector from Barnstaple?
When does a trumpet become a bugle?
When does an imposition become an impertinence?
When does prudent become frugal?
When does a TV advert become a nuisance?
When does pruned become sheared?
When does uncanny become weird?
When does stubble become a beard?
When does a poem not have to rhyme?
When do we lose ourselves to the delirium of the
Beauty of the world of the planet of the people of the creatures
Of the moon of the tides of the sea of the land of the cities of the
Absolute if the spiritual of the technological or the brave of the bountiful
Of the beautiful, possibly at two PM on a Thursday afternoon.
When does it all become meaningless?

This is a poem from my new show, ‘Bouncer’. It’s about something that people say to me every time they discover that I’m a comedy performance poet. I’m sure lots of other people also get told this especially if that’s the sort of thing they do.
I hope you like it!
My new show will be coming to various places in 2023 and 2024. At the moment it is booked in for the Barnstaple TheatreFest Fringe, the Guildford Fringe, and for two weeks at the Edinburgh Fringe. I’m also hoping to do it at other places, too.
Here’s the new poem:
If you like what I’m up to, feel free to buy me a coffee! https://ko-fi.com/robertgarnham
As I did with my last show, I’ve been keeping a diary charting my progress from the very first day I started work on my new show, to the present moment. Obviously, as the show has not yet been performed before an audience, there may be spoilers here. But not many people read this blog, so that should be OK!

Bouncer diary
23.8.22
Decide on theme of show to be based around appearance on BGT
25.8.22
Write some linking material about poetry, and start work on opening poem ‘Welcome to my Show’
26.8.22
Work on ‘Welcome to my Show’ and an autobiographical poem called ‘Orange Juice’, which may or may not be used to add background character.
28.8.22
Sat in the sun in the back garden in Brixham. Worked on a new poem, provisionally titled ‘This City Never Seemed so Cruel’, the obligatory downbeat poem for near the end of the show. Also worked on some linking material about my Great Uncle, and a bit about Thundercats.
29.8.22
Back in Paignton. Heard the Squeeze song Hour Glass on the radio, and then some show tunes, and the idea for a call and response poem came, with a similar structure as the chorus of the Squeeze song. Called ‘Everyone Wants Fame!’ Jotted it down on a ticket, then home, worked on the poem. It’s the bare bones of something fun, but it really needs to be 30% funnier.
30.8.22
Worked on ‘Everyone Wants Fame!’, added two jokes.
31.8.22
Worked on ‘This City Never Seemed so Cruel’, ‘Orange Juice’ and ‘Welcome to my Show’.
1.9.22
Wrote new poem ‘You Should Write a Poem About That’, plotted the storyline and poem list for the show, then worked on a new version of ‘Fabaranza’ written from the point of view of the BGT producers.
4.9.22
In Brixham, worked on linking material. Wrote the goose joke, and then one other joke, and then thought, ahh, that’s two jokes, a good days work, let’s relax for the rest of the day.
5.9.22
Back in Paignton, more work on linking material.
6.9.22
Paignton, worked on linking material, then started to put the show together so far, right up to the Covid section.
7.9.22
Worked on ‘You Should Write a Poem About That’, then typed up all of the show so far before working on more linking material. Worried that the version of my portrayed in the show is negative, whiny, too much like a victim, and generally unlikeable.
8.9.22
Worked on rewriting linking material, added a few more jokes and funny lines. Worked on ‘You Should Write a Poem About That’, took out the line about all other poets being bastards!
9.9.22
Unexpected day off due to yesterday’s death of HM The Queen. Started work on the BGT phone call linking material.
11.9.22
In Brixham. Worked on new poem, ‘The Contestants Await’.
12.9.22
Worked on linking material and ‘The Contestants Await’.
14.9.22
Worked on the start of the BGT section. Worked also on the ‘Everyone Wants Fame’ poem.
16.9.22
Worked on the BGT hotel section. Went to a coffee shop and thought of two jokes about the contestants which made their way into the show script.
18.9.22
(In Brixham). Worked on the BGT section. Almost finished the first draft of the script, just need to write a kind of summing up section. Current word count is over 7000 so it may need editing down.
19.9.22
First draft completed!
24.11.22
Had a read through of the linking material having worked on the Cold Callers project in the intervening months. Pleasantly surprised at the cohesiveness and tone of the show.
27.11.22
Had a complete table read run through of the show at Brixham’s Sunrise Rehearsal Studio. 52 minutes, happy with that. Had a couple of rewrites to ponder: Fabaranza as a poem instead of a song, and tightening up the lyrics of the opening song Welcome to my Show. Also, does the show need the Covid section? Seems put in just to get on the one liner list! Later on, back in the Rehearsal room, rewrote the opening song ‘Welcome to my Show’.
28.11.22
Paignton. Ran through ‘Welcome to my Show’ a few times, then rewrote the song ‘Fabaranza’ as a fast-paced poem.
30.11.22
Began line learning ‘Welcome to my Show’.
1.12.22
Line learning ‘Welcome to my Show’.
2.12.22
Line learning ‘Welcome to my Show’.
3.12.22
Line learning first batch of linking material.
5.12.22
In Brixham. Ran through ‘Welcome to my Show’ several times and videoed it so see how it looked. Worked on linking material.
6.12.22
Paignton. Line learning linking material.
7.12.22
Line learning linking material and began line learning ‘Zach’. First five minutes of the show memorised.
8.12.22
Line learning ‘Zach’.
9.12.22
Line learning ‘Zach’.
26.12.22
Been ill for two weeks so unable to line learn or rehearse without erupting into coughing fits. Staying in Brixham for Christmas. Had a great line learning session in the Sunrise Rehearsal Studio, memorised the whole Zach poem and videoed it too.
27.12.22
Brixham. Worked on the Zach poem and the subsequent linking material. Started a video diary.
29.12.22
Paignton. Linking material and You Should Write a Poem, which I also rewrote.
30.12.22
Learning You Should Write a Poem
31.12.22
Learning You Should Write a Poem.
1.1.23
Brixham. Learning You Should Write a Poem, plus ran through whole show so far, about 12 minutes.
4.1.23
Paignton. Line learning You Should Write a Poem.
5.1.23
Line learning You Should Write a Poem.
6.1.23
Line learning You Should Write a Poem. Managed the whole poem with no mistakes, 3m30. Then performed the first 12 minutes of the show with no mistakes.
7.1.23
Line learning linking material.
8.1.23
Brixham. Line learning linking material (producer phone call section), then started work on a possible backing track for Welcome to my Show. Very camp.
9..1.23
Line learning linking material. Chatted to film maker John Tomkins about filming the show with an audience.
10.1.23
Line learning linking material.
11.1.23
Line learning linking material. Chatted to photographer Jim Elton about taking photos for the publicity pictures. That evening, performed two minutes of linking material at the online Woking Write out Loud gig. People laughed at the funny bits!
12.1.23
Rewrote ‘Who Wants Fame?’
13.1.23
Line learning Who Wants Fame?
14.1.23
Line learning Who Wants Fame? Chatted to photographer Emily Appleton about taking publicity photos.
15.1.23
Brixham. Line learning Who Wants Fame? Then to Paignton, to Emily Appleton’s studio, had head shots taken in various poses for possible poster designs.
16.1.23
Paignton. Line learning Who Wants Fame?
17.1.23
Line learning Who Wants Fame?, and adding some choreography.
18.1.23
Went through all the material I’d learned so far. Then line learning linking material. To Exeter, performed five minutes of material and the Zach poem at Taking the Mic. On the train home I started rewriting Fabaranza.
19.1.23
Rewriting Fabaranza.
21.1.23
Rehearsing the show so far and experimenting with different tones of voice.
22.1.23
Brixham. Line learning linking material.
23.1.23
Line learning linking material.
26.1.23
Bristol. Line learning linking material. Back to Paignton. Started learning ‘London’.
27.1.23
Line learning London.
28.1.23
Early morning session, line learning London.
29.1.23
Brixham. Didn’t get into regular Barnstaple Theatrefest so applied for an ‘alternative space’, pledging to do four shows.
30.1.23
Line learning London.
31.1.23
Line learning London. Barnstaple Theatrefest alternative space application successful!
1.2.23
Ran through all the learned show so far. Experimented with using song or different tones of voice on Who Wants Fame. Line learning linking material. Then in the evening, completely rewrote Who Wants Fame, now based on the music to Three Little Fishes, with an incredibly stupid chorus.
2.2.23
Continued rewrites of Who Wants Fame. Line learning linking material.
3.2.23
Line learning new version of Who Wants Fame.
4.2.23
Line leaning Who Wants Fame.
5.2.23
Brixham. Line learning Who Wants Fame and linking material. Also worked on the poster after Emily’s photo arrived.
6.2.23
Paignton. Line learning The Contestants Await.
7.2.23
Line learning The Contestants Await and Who Wants Fame. Then worked on the show poster.
10.2.23
Line learning The Contestants Await.
11.2.23
Line learning The Contestants Await.
12.2.23
Brixham. Line learning linking material and rewrites of Fabaranza.
13.2.23
Paignton. Line learning linking material and rewrites of Fabaranza.
14.2.23
Line learning Fabaranza.
15.2.23
Practising random bits of the memorised material so far, then line learning Fabaranza. Evening, went to Exeter and performed five minutes and Who Wants Fame?, at Taking the Mic. Fluffed one line but generally it went well and people laughed at the jokes.
19.2.23
Brixham. Line learning and practicing Fabaranza. Afternoon, went to Totnes and performed at Word Stir, tried out some linking material in front of an audience.
20.2.23
Paignton. Fabaranza more light rewrites.
21.2.23
Line learning Fabaranza.
22.2.23
Ran through all of the show so far and was very pleased at how much I remembered. Then line learning the section after Fabaranza. Good progress.
23.2.23
Line learning linking material. Also, ordered a game show style buzzer as the only prop for the show.
24.2.23
Line learning linking material at the shop before work. The buzzer arrived. Evening, performed a little of the new linking material at an event at the Little Theatre, Torquay.
26.2.23
Brixham. Line learning linking material incorporating the buzzer.
27.2.23
Paignton, Line learning.
28.2.23
Line learning linking material.
1.3.23
Line learning linking material.
2.3.23
Line learning This City Never Seemed so Cruel.
3.3.23
Line learning This City Never Seemed so Cruel.
5.3.23
Brixham. Line learning This City Never Seemed so Cruel and linking material. Made decision to read the final poem from a piece of paper during performance to accentuate the fact that it was a piece written, so therefore the line learning phase is completed. On to actual rehearsing, now.
6.3.23
Line learning This City Never Seemed so Cruel.
8.3.23
Ran through the whole show so far. 58 mins so will have to prune maybe the last poem. Also decided that the back of the piece of paper uses for the last poem will have David Walliams written on it in big letters. Email from Guildford Fringe offering a date which I accepted.
9.3.23
Rewrote ‘To the Celebrity’.
10.3.23
Rehearsing ‘You Should Write a Poem . .’.
12.3.23
Brixham. Writing the show blurb and publicity material.
An Introvert’s History of Performing
So a colleague from work was chatting to me the other day.
‘I’ve seen your act’, she said. ‘You become a completely different person when you’re on stage. In fact, you seem to be much more awake’.
I didn’t know if this was a compliment or not.
And I remember back in 1996, when I first moved down to Devon with my parents from Surrey, and then surprising them with the announcement that I’d decided to take acting lessons at a night school run in a local theatre.
‘I suppose this means that you’ll want to grow your hair long’, my Dad replied.
(Mind you, hair length was always a touchy subject with my father. He would complain about the students at the local college with their long hair and he would declare that everyone should have the same hairstyle. Dad had gone bald in his mid twenties).
So it really does come as a surprise when people discover that I am a comedy performance poet. It’s like having a secret double life. It’s not like I’m the sort of person who wouldn’t say boo to a goose, but I probably would preface the boo with ‘I hope you don’t mind, but . .’, before I said it. If anything, my parents had always taught me to be polite.
‘Hang on a minute. Exactly why are you going to Milton Keynes next week?’, someone might ask.
‘I perform comedy poetry. That’s what I do’.
‘You? Really? But you’ve never said anything funny’.
To which I might have responded with, yes I do, and sometimes it rhymes, but he was quite right, I never say anything funny, and by the time I’ve thought of such a witty comeback, they’ve long gone.
I’m not the most outgoing person. I don’t go out much and I probably have around two or three friends. I’m not a big drinker and I hardly ever go to pubs. And yet in spite of all this, I’ve managed to make something of a career as a comedy poet who stands on stage and does outlandish things and makes people laugh. How on earth did this happen, and how did it come about?
Quite by accident around twelve years ago, I started performing comedy poetry. I went along to a gig and I really liked the atmosphere and the people, and I asked the host whether it would be possible to come along and read some poems. Id always written comedy poems, only I’d never really shown any of them to other people. I still don’t know why I decided to do this, and I remember being incredibly nervous in the days before, but the night itself went well and people seemed to laugh at the right moments. After a while, people started inviting me to other gigs in other parts of the country and before long, I was zipping about all over the place to strange and erotic places like Lancaster and Swindon.
I was just as surprised as anyone else. Looking back, I didn’t think it would ever be possible that I’d have the ‘guts’ to stand up in front of a group of people.
For a start, I’ve always been what you might call an introvert and it’s probably still the same now. Part of working in the arts is having the confidence to put yourself forward for opportunities, and this is still an area where I struggle. I’ve never applied for funding or any other kind of sponsorship because, well, that’s not the sort of thing you do, is it? I hardly ever apply for big gigs or showcases, either. If someone asks, that’s great, and it makes me really happy for the rest of the day. But the idea of asking them gives me the willies.
Another reason is my dyslexia. I just can’t handle all the forms and the paperwork and the incredibly complicated questions using big long words like community stakeholder engagement or financial budgetary management. My mind just fizzes and pops and nothing makes sense. I’ve tried to get funding on numerous occasions, like the week or so I spent filling out an Arts Council form to apply for a development grant, only for them to immediately reject it because the form I’d used was for project grants.
I’m also really bad at self-promotion. I think the default setting of a comedy poet is to downplay one’s achievements. It doesn’t seem natural to talk about one’s successes, particularly if you’re having difficulty thinking of any to begin with. A friend of mine, who works in the arts in the theatre side of things, said, ‘Just make it up. They won't check’, but that would make me feel very nervous.
And it’s not just me. When I put on a poetry night in Torquay and asked a comedy performance poet to headline, I was overjoyed when they said yes. I asked them to send me some publicity material and a blurb, and the blurb they sent was so self-deprecating that I don’t think anyone would have bothered coming along if I’d used it.
‘X performs poems, badly. A lot of his friends have told him to pack it all in. None of them have any literary worth. He’s won slams in places like London and Edinburgh, but only because no-one else turned up’.
The version of me who appears on stage is nothing like the version of me who exists 99% of the time. The persona I’ve created is just that. I don’t even wear the same sort of clothes on a day to day basis. And this is interesting, because for the 99% of the time that I’m not performing, the very idea of it also gives me the willies. It’s not my natural environment. Again the thought comes to mind that this is not the sort of thing that should be happening to someone like me!
Yet one or two people have said that there are parallels between the stage ‘Robert Garnham’, and Robert Garnham the human being. Someone once said that they kind of liked my ‘vulnerability’, and my sense of being ‘ever so slightly nervous’. Yet typically, them saying this made me even more nervous! Nevertheless, it’s rather comforting to me to know that there aren’t too many differences between the two different sides of my personality.
Social media creates avatars, versions of ourselves that we want the world to see. I see poets and comedians in the real world acting more or less the same as the version of themselves that appears on stage, and to this day it makes me wonder where they find the energy. My other little rule is that I never mention my comedic poetic adventures in ‘real life ‘. I’ve never shown any of my friends any of my books or videos, and frankly, if I did, I’d feel very embarrassed indeed, and as for my family, well, I've never even mentioned it to them at all. For a start, nobody is interested. It’s like living a bizarre double life, like some kind of poetic super hero.
But that’s what makes it so amazing. Right at this moment, reading this, I wonder how on earth I can possibly stand in front of strangers and not completely clam up. I go through a comprehensive sequence of preparation methods before I perform, including putting on a costume, doing my hair, changing my glasses, lying on the floor, doing breathing exercises, and then listening to very loud music. I think it’s fair to say that I’m not a natural performer! I still get very nervous indeed.
Indeed, people ask me about the nerves, and I reply that perhaps it’s good that I’m so nervous. It means that I’m concentrating on what I do, and that kind of allows me to step away from the introverted version of myself. Nerves are a sign, perhaps, that I care about what I do. It still comes as a surprise, though.
Often, I’ll be on a bus, or doing my laundry, or walking home from work, and I’ll think of what I’ve done and what I’ve achieved, and it really makes me smile. Sure, it feels like it’s been done by someone else, but it’s a person I know really very well. This last year I’ve worked very hard on my performance and next I need to start working on being a bit more forthcoming and what my dad would describe as ‘pushy’. I’m like the kid in the corner who wants to join in but is too scared of the big kids.
I was chatting about this to another friend, who’s a poet, and she reckons it might be a class thing. I don’t have that middle class sense of entitlement that some of the bigger names might have, nor do I have the confidence that I have a voice that should be heard. I take great comfort in those who are naturally quiet, who seem to have made a successful career, and have done so through a mix of intelligence and luck, and I think, oh, I think, wow, I, too, have been really lucky!
