1904 ➤ The day Nora made a man of Joyce

James Joyce Tower, Martello, Sandycove

Bloomsday celebrations: James Joyce Tower and Museum is a Martello tower in Sandycove near Dublin. Joyce’s stay here is said to have inspired the opening of his novel Ulysses

❚ “THE GREATEST ENGLISH PROSE STYLIST”, Irish-born James Joyce, met his partner for life Nora Barnacle “sauntering” along a Dublin street on June 10, 1904. The chance encounter is described in Finnegans Wake:

If he’s plane she’s purty, if he’s fane, she’s flirty, with her auburnt streams, and her coy cajoleries, and her dabblin drolleries, for to rouse his rudderup, or to drench his dreams

James Joyce , Nora Barnacle

James Joyce and Nora Barnacle in 1904, the year they met

In those days, romantics young and old didn’t “date”. He asked if he could meet her again and on the chosen day she blew him out, so he sent her a note and then they agreed to take a walk.

On the evening of June 16 Nora, a 20-year-old chambermaid, and James, the 22-year-old writer, went walking to the village of Ringsend. Several aspects of Joyce’s life converged on this day and he was to tell Nora later “You made me a man”. Years on, the author who gave the word “epiphany” its special meaning chose this sacred date for the setting of Ulysses, a modern re-telling of Homer’s Odyssey, in which all the action takes place on the same day in Dublin in 1904. The date was to become Bloomsday, derived from Leopold Bloom, the 38-year-old protagonist of his yarn.

The book was published by the American ex-pat Sylvia Beach who ran the bookshop Shakespeare and Company in Paris in 1922 — the same year as T S Eliot’s The Waste Land, both works resonating to the cultural incoherence thrown up by the First World War. Ulysses furnished a touchstone for the whole 20th-century modernist movement in literature, as well as being spiced with racy humour deemed too “obscene” to publish in England until 1936 (and indeed banned in Ireland until the 1970s). Joyce personalised the chaotic stream-of-consciousness technique — writing as if thinking aloud — by employing a rich lexicon of 30,000 words, greater than Shakespeare’s and most everyday speakers of English, since many words were Joyce’s own musical inventions. About the book’s size, Joyce joked: “I spent seven years writing it. People could at least spend seven years reading it.” Samuel Beckett said of Joyce’s prose: “It is not to be read. It is to be looked at and listened to.”

Leopold Bloom, James Joyce

Leopold Bloom drawn by Joyce

For the past 50 years Bloomsday has been commemorated annually in Dublin as fans dress in Edwardian costume to enjoy readings and merriment as they retrace Bloom’s footsteps through and around the city, taking in landmarks such as the site of Leopold and Molly Bloom’s home in Eccles Street, Davy Byrne’s pub and the old brothel quarter. Tradition has it (though the biographer Richard Ellmann disagrees) that the day before Ulysses begins, Joyce had spent a week in the Martello tower in Sandycove, eight miles south of Dublin on the coast road, where a university friend fired a gun at him, to be immortalised as “Stately, plump Buck Mulligan” in the novel’s opening. Today the tower houses a museum of mementoes and is well worth the metro ride.

The paradox is that not a word of Ulysses was written in the city on the Liffey, because Joyce chose to spend his adult life in exile, variously in Trieste, Paris and Zurich. When he died there in 1940, Nora Barnacle was asked which living writers she liked, and her reply was: “Sure, if you’ve been married to the greatest writer in the world, you don’t remember all the little fellows.” Nora lived on in loneliness and also died in Zurich in 1951, where she shares his grave in a wooded cemetery to this day.

Gordon Bowker, James Joyce A Biography, ➢ As the current book of the week being serialised on BBC Radio 4, Gordon Bowker’s James Joyce A Biography (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, May 2011) paints a wonderfully detailed portrait of the eccentric author in 15-minute segments

➢ The James Joyce Centre at North Great George’s Street in Dublin

James Joyce, Nora Barnacle

Joyce and Nora in later years ... Ulysses ends with Molly Bloom’s words: “I asked him with my eyes to ask again yes and then he asked me would I yes to say yes my mountain flower and first I put my arms around him yes and drew him down to me so he could feel my breasts all perfume yes and his heart was going like mad and yes I said yes I will Yes”

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2011 ➤ Boy George hits the big Five-0 and he now says, yes, he has ‘lots of regrets’

Boy George , 50th birthday,interview, Here And Now 2011,

Boy George at home: 50-up but when will he stop pouting?

❚ ON TUESDAY JUNE 14 George O’Dowd celebrates his 50th birthday with a few select friends at the Vauxhall nightspot, The Lightbox. Yesterday an interview in the Daily Mail reunited him with Spencer Bright, the co-writer of his 1995 autobiography Take It Like A Man, which proved more cringingly honest and fuller of nasty settlings of scores than any popstar in their right mind should attempt. For that reason it was — and remains — a compulsively readable milestone in the endurance course that is Boy George’s life.

In recent years, interviews have been marred by self-serving psychobabble and improbable mysticism, but yesterday’s talk with Spencer Bright finds George momentarily on a more even keel. Finally, finally, Spencer elicits an astonishing confession from him: “Now, I can actually say that I do have lots of regrets.”

Boy George, 1987, Gabor Scott

“Junkie George”: Gabor Scott’s © 1987 photograph

George had always been among the more highly visible of London’s style-setting Blitz Kids. By the mid-80s he had become one of the biggest popstars of the decade and his “blue-eyed reggae” band Culture Club was among Britain’s half-dozen New Romantic supergroups dominating world pop charts during the second British invasion of the US. Culture Club’s first two singles Do You Really Want to Hurt Me? and Karma Chameleon reached No 1 in several countries during 1982–83, and the band won a Grammy Award in 1984.

After four albums, songwriting had made George a millionaire several times over but he had also fallen prey to heavy drugs and at the age of 25 his band dumped him. He began squandering his life away, as outlined in Ex-jailbird George here at Shapersofthe80s, and fully documented at Wikipedia. A much sanitised account of his teen years was broadcast last year as the TV drama Worried About The Boy, after which ex-Blitz Kids gave their verdicts at Shapersofthe80s.

➢ IN YESTERDAY’S DAILY MAIL, SPENCER BRIGHT WRITES:

At one point it didn’t seem as if Boy George would make it much past his 25th birthday. Yet here he is, about to celebrate his 50th next Tuesday, and the transformation from the boy popstar to man seems astonishing. No one could be more pleased than me. George and I have a long history, from the days when, as a newspaper reporter, I used to follow him on the club and music scenes. In the early 1990s I helped him write his autobiography Take It Like A Man. We’ve been through a lot together. The book took four-and-a-half years, with much shouting and screaming, mostly from him at me, and moments where he’d crack me up so much I could hardly stand up.

GEORGE IS DESCRIBED AS A SOUGHT-AFTER DJ, PRODUCER, SONGWRITER AND PERFORMER:

People know me recently for lots of drama. For being arrested and going to prison. I’ve got my work cut out to remind them what I actually do.

The Mail interview airs various optimistic hopes which, for somebody with George’s track record, are a hostage to fortune. After claiming to have kicked many of his vices, we’re told he gave up smoking cigarettes six weeks ago — but ask any smoker how many times that gets said in a lifetime! “There are hopes of soon working with top producer Mark Ronson on a record with a reunited Culture Club, and an arena world tour next year.” But no mention of how his criminal records will bar entry into a significant number of countries.

GEORGE CONCLUDES:

I’ve never been a bad person and always had quite good morals. I cherish the moderate life now: I don’t want drama or complication.

➢ Read the full Daily Mail interview with Boy George dated June 9

➢ George performs with other 80s stars in the 2011 Here And Now summer tour from June 17. The single Sunshine Into My Life by Funkysober featuring Sharlene Hector, written and produced by Boy George, is out now on his own label, VG Records

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2001 ➤ Hear about the many lives of Midge Ure, the Mr Nice of pop


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Midge Ure ,Ultravox,Live Aid, Band Aid, pop music❚ FRESH ON YOUTUBE, the life of “all-round good bloke” Midge Ure OBE, the former engineering apprentice from Glasgow who decided to play guitar. Told for the BBC’s This Is Your Life in 2001. We hear the Stumble demo tape complete with ice-cream van chimes, how for Salvation his name Jim was turned backwards to make Midge (because it was posher than Mij), how he became a teenybop star in Slik, joined “this filthy punk band” Rich Kids in London and co-founded Visage, survived the US tour as a Thin Lizzy stand-in sporting a pink shirt and yellow Aladdin trousers, and being pipped to the No 1 chart spot in Ultravox. Spandau Ballet’s Martin Kemp describes Midge as “one of the nicest blokes I’ve ever met in the music business” while Gary Kemp believes Midge’s pencil moustache defined the New Romantics stance of the 80s.

Midge Ure ,Ultravox, pop music, Chris Tarrant, This Is Your Life

Chris Tarrant, host of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? — cruelly reminding Midge Ure on TIYL of the superior act that kept Ultravox from the No 1 spot in the charts © BBC

Midge Ure ,Ultravox,Live Aid, Band Aid, pop music, Bob Geldof,1984, This Is Your Life

This Is Your Life, 2001: Bob Geldof who sprang the surprise on Midge Ure

And of course we hear of the day in 1984 when Bob Geldof had seen the tearjerking news bulletin about the famine in Ethiopia, and rang his partner, the TV presenter Paula Yates, who was working at Tyne Tees Television and he asked who was appearing on The Tube pop show that week. She said Midge Ure. Put him on, said Geldof, “And I was embarrassed because I’m not having hits, he’s having mega-hits”, and Geldof was trying to propose making the epic charity record by Band Aid [read more at Shapersofthe80s on the song that became the biggest hit in British pop history]. “And Midge said ‘Are you going to write it?’ And I said well I dunno, and he said ‘You write a bit and I’ll write a bit’. An instant solution without me being embarrassed. And within a day a tape came over. He was so enthusiastic.” The rest was Band Aid/Live Aid history.


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➤ Wise-cracking Sallon shimmies back onto London’s party scene

Philip Sallon, Alice Shaw, Mare Moto,

A frock to shock: nightlife entrepreneur Philip Sallon adds a diamante sparkle to Alice Shaw’s birthday dinner. Photograph by Alice

❚ LOOK WHO’S OUT ON THE TOWN! Here’s the first picture of the flamboyant Philip Sallon — a supernova in London’s nightlife firmament— since his three-week stay in hospital following a horrendous assault two months ago which left him unconscious on the pavement at Piccadilly Circus. He is pictured at the Chelsea restaurant Mare Moto where his close friend Alice Shaw was celebrating her birthday with a dinner last week. Alice reports: “He’s still treading carefully… Considering what he’s been through, he’s making remarkable progress. Philip suffered quite a major trauma, so it will be some time before he recovers fully.”

In that snazzy diamanté party frock (on the exclusive Primark label complete with an off-the-shoulder McDonald’s name badge), the veteran host of the 80s Mud club looks as sharp as rhinestone. On Tuesday Rusty Egan bumped into him at the London Club and Bar Awards where, he says, Sallon “cracked at least 10 cheesy jokes — so I think he’s back!”

In the early hours of April 2 Sallon was thrown to the ground in a “martial arts move” outside Ripley’s Believe It or Not exhibition and had his skull fractured by a young thug. Alice and friends started campaigning to find Sallon’s assailant by setting up the Facebook page, Supporting Philip Sallon. Then two weeks after the attack they staged a Soho walkabout at the same time of night and this resulted in a witness giving a “very detailed description” of the suspect, said Detective Chief Inspector Mick Forteath of the Metropolitan Police. They are looking for a man aged about 20 who is approximately 6ft (1.8m) tall with an athletic build. He has broad shoulders and short black hair, and was wearing a tight, short-sleeved T-shirt which may be blue or light coloured, as well as blue jeans and black trainers.

Philip Sallon, Benjamin Till, police appeal,

A fortnight after Sallon’s attack: campaigners led here by composer Benjamin Till (centre) gather at Piccadilly Circus before seeking witnesses during a Soho walkabout. Photograph by Michael Peacock

After a brief conversation by the traffic lights outside Ripley’s, this man attacked Philip Sallon who was later found unconscious on the opposite side of Shaftesbury Avenue outside the exhibition. The suspect had made off up Coventry Street towards Leicester Square. Today, however, the Met said no arrests have been made in connection with this incident. Mick Forteath still urges anyone who is reluctant to contact the police to do so.

Sallon says he remembers little of the attack. “It was a severe blow to the head. From leaving home I remember nothing. It could have been some stranger who lashes out and just hates queers. But I also can’t rule out other possibilities.”

❏ If you have information about Philip Sallon’s assault on Saturday April 2 at about 3:15am, contact Westminster Serious Violence Team on 0207 321 9315, ref 65 1803/11, or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. No personal details are taken, information is not traced or recorded and you will not go to court.

Philip Sallon, Boy George, Twitpic

UPDATE JUNE 17: Hahahahahaha. Here’s the latest photo via Boy George’s TwitPics. Philip Sallon back on form — upholstered as a Regency armchair. You can’t convince us that little knock on the head in April has done him any harm at all. Hahahaha.

➢ View video of Philip Sallon being his usual self

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➤ Mix your own version of Bowie’s Golden Years

Golden Years, remix ,David Bowie, iPhone application,EMI/iKlax ,Golden Years App

❚ OUT JUNE 6 ON EMI, David Bowie’s Golden Years from the landmark 1976 album Station to Station transformed into the Golden Years remix EP on CD, 12in and digital download by the Los Angeles public radio station kcrw.com  . . .

❚ ALSO NEW TODAY, the EMI/iKlax Golden Years Remix App for iPhone. Lets you deconstruct a Bowie classic such as Golden Years via the eight stems (bounced down from the original 16 tracks) and to mix your own version so it’s completely different from the original.

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