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 You're Him, Aren't You?

Actor Paul Darrow, best known to SF fans for his four-year stint as the
amoral Kerr Avon from the BBC's Blake''s 7, discusses his childhood, his
early decision to become an actor, how his stage name came about (he
reasons that "Paul Birkby" isn't a name that would've kept him working),
the many twists and turns of his career both before and after Blake's 7,
and of course, knowing who's likely to be reading, spends quite a bit of
time on his most famous role, deconstructing the character and even
offering an episode-by-episode breakdown of his own analysis of the stories
and his memories of making them.

If there's anything I've gleaned from listening to and watching some fairly
recent interviews with Paul Darrow, it is that this guy who is remembered
as one of British television's quintessential badasses of the 1970s and 80s
is, naturally, a soft-spoken gentleman with both a great deal of pride in
his career, and a great sense of self-effacing humor. These traits are
even more to the fore when Darrow puts his own story on paper. He comes
across as one of the most pragmatic of actors - he freely admits that he's
taken some roles to set his bank overdraft right (!), and has put
everything on hold for other roles (including Avon). Amusingly enough,
much of You're Him, Aren't You? is a glorious exercise in
name-dropping, with Darrow telling stories of his experiences with such
luminaries as John Hurt, Ian McShane, Patrick McGoohan, and every Doctor
Who except William Hartnell and Christopher Eccleston. Darrow admits that
he wouldn't mind piloting the TARDIS himself (Russell T. Davies, please
take note, as I'd love to see Paul in a guest-starring role on the new
show), and even has a fairly reasonable theory about the longevity of
Doctor Who vs. Blake's seemingly frozen-in-amber-and-never-to-be-continued
state.
Oh...yes. That. Whatever did happen to the attempt by
Darrow, former Blake's 7 director Brian Lighthill and producer Andrew Mark
Sewell to relaunch the show? There's an entire chapter on that, in which
Darrow dishes the dirt straight-up and explains why Sewell is unlikely to
succeed with or without him - and yet he does it in a most gentlemanly
manner. (The book is published by the print division of Big Finish
Productions, purveyors of fine audio revivals of classic cult SF/fantasy
properties, and Darrow indeed notes that Sewell's stranglehold on the
Blake's 7 rights precludes Big Finish reviving that series as well - which
he feels would be the best thing for it.)
It's all written with wickedly tongue-in-cheek humor - Darrow doesn't
wish to damage B7's place in the annals of British SF drama, but does admit
to getting a hearty laugh out of it - and so help me, while I wasn't blown
over by his first attempt at fiction (Avon: A Terrible Aspect),
Darrow is a good writer, setting up themes, running jokes and
thematic bookends and paying them off, all while telling his own true
story. His analyses of all 52 episodes of B7 are often laugh-out-loud
funny, as he pokes massive holes through some of the less-than-watertight
plots (and occasionally does the same for performances - including his
own). Perhaps even better than his Blake tales are his stories from his
considerable stage experience, ranging from his stint playing Elvis Presley
to an occasion on which an understudy froze up and he had to convey an
entire conversation between two characters to the audience - on his own!
For fans of Mr. Darrow, this is an outstanding read. If you're not a
fan of Mr. Darrow, this book could conceivably do the trick if you haven't
seen the man himself in action.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster

This item is available in
theLogBook.com Store.

- Year: 2006
- Author: Paul Darrow
- Genre: non-fiction / autobiography
- Publisher: Big Finish
- Pages: 147 pages
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