Archives for posts with tag: other people’s houses

This week’s digs are simply somebody’s spare room. I’ve stayed in worse, but after a few weeks of this now I’m itching for my own – by which I mean an anonymous – space. The bed is a single, very springy mattress, but the get-in at the theatre was so tiring that I haven’t noticed that too much. What’s harder to ignore is the wiry pubic hairs, conspicuous on the bathroom floor. That, and the terrible smell of cat-shit focused around the kitchen, which is the reason, I assume, for the superabundance of Glade plug-ins, pumping out a continuous and sickly fug of poison, making the place seem like something from the set of Se7en*.

Oh, and this? On the wall?

Morning!

Morning!

Mind you, the alternative is this.

Mwah!

Mwah!

There is no place like somebody else’s home.

*That’s 7even. I mean, Seven, even.

She’d seemed a cultured woman. She goes to the theatre, there are lots of respectable books in the flat, she listens to Radio 3. But I had to get out of there quickly this morning. Why? Because this was oozing through the entire property. What was? This:


I’m so sorry, but you had only 30 seconds at worst. I had at least half an hour, before I got to the front door, my torn and bloodied hands scrabbling at the handle.

It’s no way to end the week. And not a dream-catcher in sight.

This week, I’m living with a pensioner. It’s a peculiar state of affairs, as a man in his mid-thirties, to be sharing the home of a woman forty years my senior, who I hadn’t met before this weekend; after all, if I’d wanted to be in a Joe Orton play, I’d have auditioned for one. But that’s the theatre digs list for you.

The whole notion of digs is fraught with competing interests. Speaking as the visitor, you’re looking for the ideal combination of anonymity (the ability to come and go as you please without having to engage in lengthy conversation), private and modern conveniences (a bathroom of your own, say, with working appliances – for me, a shower is purely utilitarian and of limited value as an ornament), and keenly priced (the Equity touring allowance doesn’t stretch to long stays in major hotel chains. Nor short stays in minor ones, come to that).

People put themselves on the digs lists for all sorts of reasons; evidently, the main one is to make some money from a room/flat/outhouse that would otherwise be lying empty. And it’s funny how overriding a concern the filthy lucre can be, as I’ve met plenty of landlords and landladies who like that part of the arrangement but are less keen on the actual ‘having someone else in their property’-bit. Mind you, John Cleese noticed that thirty-five years ago, and made something of it, so it’s hardly a novel observation.

But there are people who do it for other, or, at least, complementary, reasons: I’ve stayed in the granny-flat of a landlady’s late mother, who worked at the local theatre, so being on the digs list was a fitting way of finding a use for a now empty annex; with people who work in other branches of the arts, who use it as a way to meet other interesting, like-minded types; with a hearty Christian, who provided the best breakfast I’ve ever had from guest accommodation, and who saw something of a vocation in putting people up for the night. They all wanted paying, of course, but there wasn’t the usual avaricious glint in their eyes, and they actually exhibited what appeared to be genuine concern about about my comfort.

A typical view from the bed

A typical view from the bed

But it is an odd arrangement. My current landlady has been very good about stating explicitly that I have free reign in the house: that I can use the kitchen to cook whatever I like, that I can sit in the living room or go into the garden, that I can, to all extents and purposes, treat it like my home (this isn’t always a given: once, in digs in Watford, I cooked a meal, washed up and put everything away. The next day, the set of pans I’d used had vanished from the kitchen, replaced by something from Steptoe’s yard). But, it’s not my home, it’s hers, and she’s living in it. Coming in, after the show at night, it would be lovely to make a cup of tea, slouch into the sofa and watch an old, fourth-time-round repeat of Never Mind The Buzzcocks (well, you know what I mean). But as this would mean taking the remote from her hand, switching over from Midsomer Murders and turning the volume down 65 notches, I’m not inclined to.

I bought a loaf at the start of the week to make sandwiches. I put it on the side in the kitchen. Next day, it was in its own plastic box, on a tray, with a knife and plate, all of which was covered by a tea towel. That’s the infuriating thing about digs – you’re never left truly alone. Though I’m sure she thought she was being in some way helpful, it meant that, even in the simple act of taking and replacing the loaf from the box, I no longer had autonomy over the simple act of making a sandwich – she had become part of it. And when you’re already spending the majority of the week in the intense bubble of the company of people you’re touring with, being robbed of your tiny amount of personal time and space – the time in which you make a sandwich and dream your dreams – is exhausting.

IN SUMMARY: £25 a night. £25!

I’m on tour, for the first time in years. This means the varying pleasures of digs or guest houses, not eating enough fruit or veg, and taking a moment to remember what part of the map you should be looking at when watching the weather forecast in the morning.

Staying in small-scale accommodation in this country is where I learnt about life – not in any sexual coming-of-age way, lying in anticipation in a room across the landing from the proprietors’ toned and wayward son or anything remotely similar. No, rather in meeting the kind of people who are prepared to take money from strangers but can evidently barely tolerate having them under their roof.

I’ve stayed in the house of a giant woman who leant casually against the top of the doorframe and DEMANDED that we drink her home-made lemonade, with a retired colonel whose wife was holding a Young Wives meeting when we arrived and whose breakfast room was furnished liberally with royal memorabilia (plates, tankards, place mats, cutlery, tea-cosy, spoon rest…) and with a couple who demanded I move the van from the front drive, to prevent it sinking into it, and who stipulated that I turn the steering wheel as I reversed to avoid scuffing the tarmac. I’ve slept in rooms that were named, disconcertingly, after the owners’ departed adult children (and also a ‘Rumpus Room’), that contained anything from one to five individual single beds, windows you either can’t open or can’t shut, televisions that always omit at least two terrestrial channels, and sheets that hadn’t been cleaned since Vatican II.

Oh, what a beautiful morning.

Oh, what a beautiful morning.

I’ve gone from being blissfully asleep to violently conscious at the foot of my bed on three occasions due to fire alarms going off in the middle of the night: twice above a pub in Bury, which was only terminated by the landlord going to the room next to mine, kicking the door and shouting “Malcolm! MALCOLM! WAKE UP!!!” continuously for ten minutes, and once in Huddersfield, where I joined the cast of Where The Heart Is on the pavement, all of us in our pyjamas, waiting for the fire engines, which was, I’m sure you’ll understand, an unusual start to the day.

I’ve seen more wickerwork and cheap porcelain than is good for anyone on a regular basis, and eaten more limp toast and grey scrambled egg than I care to remember. Noticing an individual, foil-wrapped portion of butter can still bring me out in a terrible rash.

Right now, I’m staying in a small guest house that advertised wi-fi in every room, but which I find impossible to access, which proves that, while the surface details may change with the times, the underlying failure and disappointment doesn’t.

IN SUMMARY: Travelling through the country is so thrilling.

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