Alison Dowling (Elizabeth
Pargetter)
The
situation between Lilian and Justin is really getting on my nerves - not only
do I not know what’s going on, but it appears that neither do they. The wedding
is scheduled for 22nd December and it’s fair to say that the
swallows are gathering on the wires. Hats have been bought, suits have been
cleaned specially and Tony, as witness, has learned to write his name. Not only
that, but Elizabeth is stalking Lilian, desperate to arrange a meeting to
finalise the last details, and Lilian keeps fobbing her off. At this rate,
Elizabeth will be following Lilian up the aisle (or the Lower Loxley
equivalent), saying things like ‘how many canapés per guest would you like?’
One
such detail is ‘will there be a groom?’ Why Justin and Lilian cannot just get
together and say ‘is this marriage going to go ahead or not?’ is beyond me.
They do meet up quite a bit (usually accidentally) and there is much talk about
it being “time to be sensible, face facts and move on” (Justin) but nobody has
said ‘the wedding’s off’. Justin turned up at the BL party by himself and had
to field awkward questions, inventing a bad cold to explain Lilian‘s absence.
Peggy
was concerned to hear that Lilian has been unwell and quizzes her about it at
the great Ambridge Christmas Lights switch on on Friday. As we have said in the
past, this is a great bit of radio. Lilian has been keeping the estrangement
with Justin a secret, but, at the switch on, she finally cracks and tells her mother
that she feels so guilty about what happened to Chris and the others. Peggy
replies that it wasn’t her fault - Matt was a rogue before Lilian met him and
it’s a good job that she managed to steer clear of him this time. “All these
self doubts will disappear when you marry Justin - he’s someone you can be
happy with.” It’s all too much for Lilian and she tells Peg that Justin wants
to move on - the wedding’s off.
Well,
that will have ruined a lot of people’s Christmases; not least Elizabeth, who
was probably looking forward to a lucrative wedding reception and who now has a
day with no paying customers and enough champagne to float a battleship. But
wait! Could the wedding yet be saved? When Lilian went to the Dower House on
Friday, Justin tells her that Ruby, the puppy, has been sick. Alistair gave
Ruby an anti-vomiting injection and urged Justin to keep an eye on her - she
could have a blockage. Lilian is concerned, as is Justin - could Ruby be the
catalyst that brings them back together at the eleventh hour? If so, I’m sure
that the irony that it was Matt who bought Ruby for Lilian will not be lost on
the happy couple. Whatever is the upshot concerning the wedding, just get on
with it, as I don’t think I can take much more of this uncertainty.
Going
back to the BL dinner, this saw the debut of Ian’s special Christmas menu and
everyone agreed it was a triumph. Ian is in no mood to celebrate, as earlier in
the week he and Adam had visited the fertility clinic, where Ian learned that
he is unlikely to be able to father a child. The couple drive back from the
clinic and a despondent Ian says that it feels like a door has been slammed in
his face. Adam suggests that they could use his sperm instead, but Ian says
let’s let it sink in before they make a decision.
After
the BL dinner, Ian has a heart-to-heart with Lexi in the kitchen. She tells him
he should be in the restaurant, soaking up the praise of the diners, but he
doesn’t feel like it. He tells her about the disappointment of the fertility
clinic and Adam’s offer to father the child - Ian says he wouldn’t feel that
the child was his. All he really wanted was to pass on some of his mother’s
characteristics (she died when Ian was young). Lexi tells him this is rubbish -
Ian can share such things like his kindness and his smile with his and Adam’s
child - his mother’s spirit will live on. Adam comes into the kitchen to
apologise for Brian’s crass remark (Brian clumsily told Ian that he mustn’t
feel like he’s a freak). “Are you all right?” Adam asks his husband. “No I’m
not, not yet” Ian replies, adding: “But maybe life isn’t as dark as it was a
few minutes ago.”
More
talk of babies: Pip is definitely pregnant. Should she tell Toby (it’s
definitely his, as she and Alfie haven’t got to that stage yet)? Break it to
him gently Pip; that’s the way to do it. Alternatively, she could adopt the
direct, brute force approach, which she does, interrupting him wittering on
about geese with a curt “Toby, I’m pregnant.”
This
comes as a shock to Toby, who says that he always assumed he would have
children one day, but he doesn’t think the time is right “especially as we
aren’t even an item. Unless…?” Pip cuts him short, saying no, they’d be
starting all over again and for all the wrong reasons. Toby says whatever, it
has to be Pip’s decision and, whatever she decides, he’ll back her 100%. At the
lights switch on, Pip tells Elizabeth that she’s told Toby and she’s glad she
did. The termination is set for Friday and Pip says “This will be the hardest
thing I’ve ever done in my life.” “I know, Pip, I know” says Lizzie.
And
indeed, she does know whereof she speaks as, before her marriage, a pregnant
Elizabeth was dumped at a motorway service centre by the odious Cameron Fraser.
She subsequently had an abortion, which caused no little friction with sister
Shula, who was desperate to have a baby of her own and could not understand how
anyone could have a termination, but Elizabeth went ahead.
The
Reverend Alan Franks is beginning to wonder why he ever volunteered to organise
the panto this year. At rehearsal, he is buttonholed by Lynda, who has drawn up
notes about her character (Nightshade, the Evil Fairy) and she wants to
understand her motivation. Mystified, Alan says that she’s an Evil Fairy -
isn’t that enough? Not for Lynda - what turned her evil? She wants to portray
the suffering and angst that she feels Nightshade must have undergone and her
performance is punctuated by meaningful pauses and gazing into the middle
distance. She has also made alterations to her part to better suit the nuances
of her character.
This
is all too much for Susan, who is angry because Lynda’s changes are affecting
the rest of the cast and disrupting the flow of the performance. She gets quite
insulting and, after a particularly pretentious speech by Nightshade, Susan
accuses Lynda of showing off. Lynda is scandalised by this (to me perfectly
reasonable) accusation and a full time row is brewing, but Usha steps in to
defuse the situation.
She
does this with the aid of a little white lie - Susan complains that her
costumes are all too small for her and Usha must have written down Susan’s
sizes wrongly. Usha is adamant that she gave the costumiers the sizes that
Susan told her, but later on she interrupts the Lynda/Susan argument by saying
that she was wrong - she did make a mistake over Susan’s measurements. A
mollified Susan immediately forgets about her row with Lynda.
Alan
is grateful to his wife and tells her he is glad that she is on his side. He
says that he feels like the captain of a ship going over a waterfall. “I’m not
cut out for this job” he tells his wife. I’m sorry, Alan, but I have no
sympathy for you - you were warned before you stuck your oar in and you have
only yourself to blame. As they say, you have made your bed.
I
also predicted that Lynda would not be able to stop herself interfering - ok, I
admit that it wasn’t the most difficult thing to predict; the words ‘nailed-on
certainty’ spring to mind - but it’s still nice to be proved right. If only you
had stepped back, Alan, and let the panto sink without trace, you could have
saved yourself all this grief. Do you still think the panto is a fun thing that
brings the villagers together in a spirit of unity and enjoyment? No, me
neither, but serves you right. If he’s not careful, Alan will have Lynda
rewriting his sermons and examining the motivation of various biblical figures
- after all, Satan was an angel once, so he presumably wasn’t originally all
bad…
We
had a rare, and admittedly minor, victory on the part of Joe and Eddie Grundy
last week. People who buy turkeys are being given a bottle of Tumble Tussock
cider, but nobody knows what it tastes like. Eddie decides to invite Jim Lloyd
along for a tasting - he has a good reputation in the village and his word
counts for something. All that is needed is for the cider to deliver the goods,
taste-wise.
Except
it doesn’t. Eddie cracks the first barrel and the cider tastes foul. In vain
does Joe bang on about it being an acquired taste - Jim has no intention of
acquiring it. A despondent Eddie opens the second barrel, which contains a
second pressing of Tumble Tussocks - and it’s wonderful. Jim is ecstatic and
Joe says it tastes just as he remembers. Jim says to put a couple of bottles
aside for him and, quick as a flash, Eddie says that only if he buys a Grundy
turkey. Begrudgingly, Jim says “OK - a small one.”
But
what of the third barrel? Eddie tastes it and makes a face - it was as bad as
the first barrel and he wouldn’t insult Jim and Joe by making them taste it.
Jim leaves and Joe says “I suppose one barrel is better than none.” Eddie plays
his master stroke and tells his dad that au contraire (not in those
exact words, of course) - the third barrel was the best of the lot, but they
don’t want people to think that there is a plentiful supply of the stuff, or
they won’t be so keen to buy a turkey. Undoubtedly something will happen to
upset the Tumble Tussock cart - it usually does with the Grundys.
Finally,
the prize for this week’s crassest remark is a toss up between Brian’s well-meant,
but insensitive, ‘freak’ comment to Ian and a misguided attempt at humour by
Johnny. He was in the village shop when Emma came in with Keira. Keira was not
happy when Emma chose a cheap can of beans, which Keira doesn’t like. Johnny
agreed with her, saying the dearer beans are much tastier. Emma tells him off,
saying that they are saving to buy a house (as they need another £11k, that’s
an awful lot of beans, Emma) and they have to economise on everything. On top
of this, Emma is holding down three jobs and Ed is working as much as he can
“and it doesn’t help, losing contract work to cheap, unskilled labour” Ouch!
That told you, Johnny. Johnny apologises and mumbles that he didn’t mean
anything - he was only mucking about. Good job he didn’t tell Emma that Adam
has offered him a full-time job at Home Farm, or he might well have had to have
a can of beans surgically removed from his body.
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