It was 1984. Return of the Jedi had come out a year ago.
A disappointed global public had realised that an apparently great
cinematic villain was not only such a poor leader that his army could be
trounced by a gang of stone age teddy bears but also that – beneath his iconic
helmet – he resembled a cross between Humpty Dumpty and a bruised scrotum.
It may seem incredible today, but with no immediate prospects for further Sith work, Darth Vader was
reduced to doing PAs for furniture companies at sports centres in west Suffolk.
And that’s where I met him. True story. There’s his
signature to prove it.
"Never cross near parked cars" - that was his other catchphrase |
Now, my parents were quick to assure me that this was indeed
the “real” Darth Vader – viz. quondam Green Cross Code Man David “Stop, lookand listen” Prowse. Of course, the helmet remaining firmly in place, it could
have been anyone tall.
Oh yes, it’s not all exercise books. I have loads of other
peculiar fragments of my childhood to show you.
“Peculiar fragments” being
largely all there is. We have always lived far away from our wider family, and
in 1987, me, my mum, dad and brother moved away from Bury St Edmunds to Boston
in Lincolnshire. I was 11. I wrote letters to my friends, but that fizzled out
by 1990 or so.
As a result, my sense of my early life is composed almost
entirely of what I remember – without much third party corroboration at all.
Where I live now, there are loads of people who have always lived in the area,
who have known the friends they see every day since they were babies and whose
parents, aunts, uncles, grandparents and so on all live within a mile radius. Their
senses of personal history must be pretty well integrated.
That’s not me. I’m not complaining: it is, as they say, what
it is. It just means that looking through old stuff I haven’t seen for 30 years
or so gives me a very weirdly vertiginous feeling, that the conscious Roger of
Sicily is only a part-time tenant of this brain and that the true landlord is
somewhere else entirely.
Enigmatic, eh?
Not as enigmatic as this story about a “family of dwarfs”,
who uncovered a plot by spacemen to take over the world – admittedly, while
waiting in ambush to murder them with pointed sticks, which takes some of the
sheen off their earth-saving heroism.
When the spacemen declare “the time to conquer the world is
here”... it ends!
That’s the last page of the frigging book!
What was I
thinking? I’d give my eight-year-old self a piece of my mind for leaving such a
cliffhanger unresolved, if such a thing were even remotely metaphysically
possible.