Hamilton Bentley

My struggling actor friend has formed a bandHamilton Bentley and The Jesus Robots – and has just asked me to produce their first single.

‘I never imagined you as a singer, Ham,’ I laughed.

‘Wonderful, isn’t it!’ He flopped on to the leather sofa in the control room with a loud thump. ‘The idea hit me like an atom bomb.’

He played me some tapes of a recent rehearsal. It was awful. It sounded like Perry Como singing songs by The Damned.

‘You’re not serious, are you?’ I asked him.

He gave me a tight smile. ‘Deadly serious.’

‘Ham, I – ‘

‘More serious than I have ever been, dear boy.’ He was looking at me with the kind of focus that could, in fact, split an atom.

Raising an eyebrow, I showed a spark of appreciation and told him, ‘Leave it with me. I’ll have few more listens and see if I can come up with any ideas.’

‘At last,’ he sighed, ‘fame beckons.’

‘Indeed.’ I had to push him out the studio door. ‘You should go now, Ham, it’s time for your midday drunkening. The stimulation is just too much for me – if we talk about your new career any further, I’m afraid I may have an orgasm. I might spontaneously combust due to over-excitement. Cheerio.’

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Lead In My Pencil

by Enormous on July 27, 2008

I had some oysters yesterday. Fresh and big and full of the taste of the sea.

My actor friend Hamilton Bentley paid Audrey and me a visit. He came to boast about his part as an extra in the new British film Donkey Punch. He recounted how he had asked the director for a line and had been given one, only for it to be eventually cut in the final edit. ‘That’s life,’ he suggested, his words full of guarded hope.

His overall demeanour was as resigned as ever but he had decided to celebrate none the less, bringing with him a large cool-bag full of ugly shellfish and two bottles of frosty Cava.

I have never eaten oysters before and to tell you the truth, I was a little apprehensive. I needn’t have been; they were delicious.

Audrey would not eat one, though, preferring instead one of her curly chews made from cows’ eyes.

These particular oysters caught off the Essex coast are apparently prized for their aphrodisiac qualities. Look out local ladies – I’m a loaded gun.

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
Fortress Round My Heart – Ida Maria

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Blog Off

by Enormous on April 20, 2008

No post today, I am trying not to think.

Hamilton Bentley, my actor friend, paid me a visit last night in his new car – a twenty-year-old Lada that had so many rattles, it sounded like he was delivering a drum kit – and made me get drunk with him.

‘You should see your face,’ he told me as he entered the house.

‘Why?’

‘It’s lovely.’

I think it is marvellous that a man can pay another such a compliment without there being even the slightest suggestion of attempted homosexual seduction. Hamilton is a very liberated individual, and coming from him, such a statement is nothing more than a very accurate observation. He wouldn’t have said the same thing if he had seen me at 7am this morning, however.

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Double Glazing

by Enormous on December 20, 2007

Audrey and I put Hamilton on the train to Manchester this morning. He spent more than an hour on the telephone to his agent after breakfast and has managed to borrow a modest flat in the city for a few months. He even has some voice-over work lined up.

He also dug deep and managed to find the energy to flatter the attractive girl in the ticket office on the frosty westbound platform of Alfreton station. ‘Darling, your beauty is so radiant that it brings unspeakable pain to an average man’s eyes,’ he told her.

She eyed him with feline detachment from behind the toughened glass of her tiny booth before replying, ‘That’s twenty-five pounds and seventy-nine pence, please.’

Then, rather unexpectedly, she looked at me and held my gaze for a few seconds. If I was more fanciful, I might have assumed that there was some romantic significance in her stare, but I fear it was merely my overactive thyroid playing up again. Either way, I cannot deny that Hamilton’s observation was not inaccurate: she did indeed have very beautiful grey eyes and otherwise exquisite features.

‘Your Uncle Nelson arrives tomorrow,’ I reminded Audrey as we made our way back to the house.

The dashing and debonair Mr. Galaxy will be here for two weeks to continue working on his début album and, it being Christmas and all, we shall probably have to venture out of an evening to hunt for sexy lady women girls. ‘Tis the season to polish my mojo.

Meanwhile, my little dog knows that later today she will be having her yuletide bath (I may even have one myself, come to think of it) and consequently, she is doing her best to hide from me. She is ensconced presently in a dark corner under the bed trying to look as tiny and inconspicuous as possible. She is being as quiet as a mouse, but if she were to say anything, it would probably be this: ‘Nobody here but us chickens!’

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Whisky Echo

by Enormous on December 19, 2007

The bottle of whisky that Scottish Brian gave me a few weeks ago was polished off last night. Surprisingly, I do not have a hangover at all. I do, however, have a bad case of indigestion – whisky always does that to me, especially Jack Daniels. As I was walking Audrey this morning, I was repeatedly burping oak-matured alcoholic fumes into the frosty early-morning air. To tell you the truth, I think I was still a little drunk from the evening before: the birds were swaying and the trees were singing and – unusual for me – I was more than happy to stand and chat with a few fellow dog-walkers.

The blended malt was all I had to offer Hamilton at 10pm last night when he surprised me by turning up at the house completely unexpectedly. He was carrying an old leather suitcase and was looking very dishevelled and forlorn. ‘I’ve been evicted from my lodgings in Nottingham, dear boy. Could I crash with you?’ he asked softly.

‘Just for the night, Ham,’ I told him. ‘I simply don’t have the room.’ I felt awful.

He went on to tell me a sorry tale of unpaid rent and threats with violence and of nights spent wandering the city and sleeping rough.

‘What about your sisters?’ I asked him.

‘They want nothing to do with me,’ he snorted, full of rancour. ‘I’m such a disappointment to them.’ (Oh God, here we go, I thought.) ‘The bailiffs came and took all my belongings – I don’t have a bean.’

‘You must feel awful,’ I said.

‘It hit me like an atom bomb, old boy.’ Hamilton is always going on about atom bombs; it’s his favourite subject. At school, he was known as Atom Bomb Hamilton.

‘I don’t want to be a Scrooge, Ham,’ I told him, ‘but you’ll have to find somewhere else. Nelson will be here in a few days to work on his album and he’ll be on the sofa-bed in the studio.’

‘I’ll sleep in the bath,’ he growled.

‘Shower,’ I corrected him.

‘Don’t worry, Atom Bomb,’ I said eventually, ‘we’ll sort something out for you. We’ll ring that good-for-nothing, hook-nosed publicist of yours in the morning.’ I poured him another tumbler of Scotch and patted him on the shoulder.

I’m seriously worried, though – not for him: he’s been in this kind of situation before and always lands on his feet – but of what the cerebrally-challenged elements of the community will think. I fear there will be a public stoning when they find out that there is a songwriter, a glamorous transvestite and the bloke from the Mr Sheen advertisements living together in a terraced cottage in the middle of the village.

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Doc True

by Enormous on December 18, 2007

When comedienne Catherine Tate let slip on Jonathan Ross’s Radio 2 programme the other day that the next series of Doctor Who could be the last for actor David Tennant, she was confirming something that I already knew.

Hamilton Bentley, an actor friend of mine (from the Mr Sheen ads) is acquainted with Tennant and was aware of his decision to quit the popular BBC TV series a while ago.

‘Why don’t you go for the part, Ham?’ I asked him on the telephone.

‘I would do, dear boy, but fear they are looking for someone a little older than me.’

‘That’s a pity,’ I told him, ‘I’ve always pictured you as a dynamic and dashing young Time Lord.’

‘Why thank you, Napoleon,’ he gushed. ‘Anyway, ciao, my friend – must dash.’

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