Artwork Details
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DescriptionDid you know that the National Gallery in London celebrates its bicentenary this year? I had no intention of visiting it that weekend I spent in the capital back in March of 2015, but someone asked me to pick them up something from the gift shop so I thought that whilst I was there I would have a mooch around. As I was moving from the main building to the newer extension I spotted someone who looked vaguely familiar. They were wearing a baseball cap, speaking into a mobile phone whilst standing at the top of the steps leading down to the Sainsbury Wing. As I got closer I notice that it even sounded like who I thought it was, before I realised it definitely was him. If this happened tomorrow then I might have thought twice about approaching him what with all this publicity in recent years about celebrities feeling their mental health and well-being is compromised when they are out and about because people expect them to be always on duty to provide autographs and pose for selfies when all they want to do is get on with their day-to-day life. Together with this, social media has recorded how these encounters between celebrities and fans can go horribly wrong when the object of the fan’s adulation ignores, or even in some instances is actively rude towards the adoring fan. Whilst this is understandable – the star may be having a bad day – you cannot help but think that this meeting will colour the way the fan thinks about their idol and even their work in future. Because social media was back in 2015 not so developed/out of control these factors never occurred to me for a second. So I stood to one side waiting for him to finish his phone call. After he had hung up and saw me approaching he instinctively knew the drill, perhaps because it had happened to him a gazillion times in the past, or perhaps he saw the phone in my hand set to selfie-mode and he pulled in close to me, directing the shot you might say, before flashing his 1000-watt smile. After the photo had been taken but before I had a chance to fanboy him he said something like, “Okay, that’s it. Time to go,” and made a beeline for the main building. His assistant – it did not look like Max (obligatory comicbook-creator reference) – who had been watching the proceedings with some amusement smiled at me and left in the same direction. I was not in any way offended that he had been so abrupt, as I knew he was and probably still is a very busy man. I did not learn how hectic his schedule was until a few days later when I found out the reason why he was in town. He was performing in a one-night-only one-man show in the West End, but he was also attending a British Film Institute ceremony to receive their highest accolade – the Fellowship.It seems appropriate, given the location in which I met him, to quote one of my favourite pieces of dialogue of his from my all-time favourite film of his, the 1967 version of The Producers (thanks to IMDB for the precise wording of the quote): Franz Liebkind: Nobody ever said a bad word about Winston Churchill, did they? No! “Win with Winnie!” Churchill! With his cigars. With his brandy. And his rotten painting, rotten! Hitler, there was a painter. He could paint an entire apartment in one afternoon! Two coats! Thank you for the precious memory, Mel. I raise a toast to you on your 99th birthday. Social/Sharing |
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Marcus Wai
Member Since 2005
Posted on 6/29/2025
Ah, but the servant waits... while the master baits.
Simon Ma
Member Since 2013
1 - Posted on 7/11/2025
Marcus Wai wrote:
Ah, but the servant waits... while the master baits.
“I beg your pardon!” was my first reaction to your comment until I Googled it; sorry, but that is one of his films I have not seen. Back in the 1970s when my brother was in a single-sex high school he had a friend with the surname Bates. I am sure you have a shrewd idea as to what that friend’s nickname was. That is what happens when you go to a school without the civilising influence of female pupils.
Marcus Wai
Member Since 2005
1 - Posted on 7/11/2025
Simon Ma wrote:
“I beg your pardon!” was my first reaction to your comment until I Googled it; sorry, but that is one of his films I have not seen. Back in the 1970s when my brother was in a single-sex high school he had a friend with the surname Bates. I am sure you have a shrewd idea as to what that friend’s nickname was. That is what happens when you go to a school without the civilising influence of female pupils.
Even at that school, they must have taught History of the World Part 1 at minimum.
Simon Ma
Member Since 2013
1 - Posted on 7/24/2025
Marcus Wai wrote:
Even at that school, they must have taught History of the World Part 1 at minimum.
Like Steve Rogers in The Winter Soldier, I am gonna have to add that film to my list of recommendations to watch.
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