I continue boisterously.
“It’s great. It has pages on Kris Kristofferson and a load of stuff about the devil because The Omen had just come out.
I had forgotten it was a Salvation Army shop; I should probably have kept quiet about Satan. She leafs through it.
“I can’t sell this to you.”
I am confused and presume she has found there is a missing page or some damage.
“It’s fine how it is.”
“No, I am not allowed to sell it to you. Just take it away.”
My face and I are baffled, so I put twice the marked price into the donations box and walk off.
As I leave, I hear an assistant saying, “Yes, you are quite right. We can’t sell that sort of thing in the same way that we can’t sell alcohol.”
Who is at fault? Is it Kris Kristofferson or the Devil? Ten metres down the road, it all makes sense. I think she didn’t see Photoplay, I think she read it as Playboy.
To the Salvation Army, I am now a porn purchaser. I am tempted to return and explain but now they see me as some lascivious perv, I can only see myself making it worse.
That night, I watch Sylvester McCoy and delight in his mischievous nature as he roams from story to story and then roams the audience to take questions. The Slapstick Festival is a place devoid of cynicism.
The next day, I sit on stage with Adam Hills and discuss the 10 comedy films he would take to a desert island. He talks of the social progressiveness of Blazing Saddles and the bold way it tackles racial politics, then we show a clip of cowboys farting loudly.
He is rheumy eyed as we watch the final scene from Planes, Trains and Automobiles, and he talks of getting to know Gene Kelly’s wife after everyone beams throughout the Singin’ In the Rain routine. We all want to jump in puddles afterwards, but the pavements are sadly dry today.
Standing in a pub at the end of it all, ill-advisedly drinking liquorice Sambuca, the effect of 31 events – from Chaplin’s The Gold Rush with a live orchestra to Brian De Palma’s glam-rock reworking of The Phantom of the Opera – is clear to see. People are elevated. This is why comedy should never be considered “just a job”. Not only can it make you happier to be alive, it can even earn you the kind of money that allows you to buy pornography from the Salvation Army.
Robin Ince is a comedian, writer and broadcaster.
His book Bibliomaniac (Atlantic Books, £10.99) is out now. You can buy it from The Big Issue shop on Bookshop.org, which helps to support The Big Issue and independent bookshops.
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This article is taken from The Big Issue magazine, which exists to give homeless, long-term unemployed and marginalised people the opportunity to earn an income.
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