I was pissed off a lot of the time as a teenager. There were two big issues, to coin a phrase. One was that my dad suffers from depression and didn’t have it treated until he was in his 50s. It was particularly bad through my teenage years. And my parents were on the verge of splitting up for a long time, so the atmosphere in our house was terrible.
My dad knocked out a couple of my boyfriends. Those sort of things overshadow everything else – and didn’t do my relationships any good. It was awful. Humiliating, embarrassing, frightening. Looking back, it is difficult not to feel that the whole time was coloured by my dad’s behaviour but one has to take into account that he was ill at the time. There was much less knowledge about mental health. Particularly for men like him, it would have been the kiss of death to admit you had depression or anxiety.
Because it was so crap at home, I was nihilistic about the future. Any kid dealing with emotional fallout finds it difficult to assess where they are going with their life. My parents were keen I would go to a posh university. We had lived in a village in Kent, and I’d been at a school I really liked, even though it was two-and-a-half hours each way on the bus. When we moved to Hastings, I would skive off and go to a coffee bar on the seafront and sit all day smoking fags. So the idea of going to Oxford or Cambridge disintegrated. I was hanging around with a very unsavoury character, hence my dad lamping him.
My parents met at Young Socialists, so they would talk politics over the kitchen table. I would ask my friends, what do you think about the Kennedy assassination – I was 11 when the second one happened – and they would not have an opinion. I found it weird that not everyone’s household was political.
I didn’t want to act, I just wanted to tell jokes. But there wasn’t any identifiable career path in comedy. All the comics were blokes and nearly all were northern. The only woman was Marti Caine, a beacon of womanhood amidst all the growly blokes. I didn’t know how you did it. It was a question of treading water until I found out.
I was kicked out and moved into a bedsit at 16. It was such a relief. The house was fantastic. Up top were five Korean chaps sharing a room, below them was a Rastafarian called Eric who was a drug dealer, then there was me. Below me was the landlady’s daughter, who was a single mum, and at the bottom was my landlady, who dealt cannabis. It was like being in a play! It was a lovely time. I trained as a nurse, then stayed in nursing for another six years. During that time, the alternative comedy scene was getting going, which was tailor-made for me to have a go.