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Showing posts with label Gladys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gladys. Show all posts

Tuesday, 14 April 2015

11 Gladys Alone: Snap Me!

 

Here it is – Gladys has reached California and the final chapter in this series about the girl who wants to make it big as a pop star. We do hope you have enjoyed this series and the music. Listen out for her latest song – it’s really fun – and it’s called Snap Me !


Read by Natasha
Written by Bertie
Illustrated by Chiara Civati
Song by Gabriella Burnel


The inside of LAX airport was shiny and silvery like her laptop. The taxi driver who picked her up was Russian born and bred, but actually of Korean heritage. He had won a Green Card in the lottery that gave him citizenship in the USA. The ride into town took them past randomly placed tower blocks, long straight roads, huge cars, numerous cheap shops and liquor stalls, endless signs in bright colours – orange, yellow, red… There were few pedestrians.


“The only people on foot are muggers,” said the driver in his laconic Russian accent.


The outskirts of the city seemed random, purely commercial, chaotic, and above all, vast. Where were the pavements glistening with gold?


It was getting dark when the taxi turned into some narrow streets with houses built on a human scale and she caught her first glimpse of the ocean.


She had chosen her hotel on the internet – but what a find! She had a studio to herself overlooking Venice Beach. From her window, she could see palm trees and a huge desert of sand and then the deep blue Pacific Ocean. The only thing that spoiled the view were the down and outs sleeping on the dunes. A lad on a skateboard whizzed past playing an electric guitar, Jimi Hendrix style. He had a battery-powered amplifier. Although she was tired and jetlagged after the thirteen-hour flight, she was too excited to sleep. She took a walk along the crowded sidewalk. She looked at the other strollers and the diners in the cafes where people ate outside in the warm evening air. Super-skinny women picked at salads. The men seemed twice the size as Europeans, broad-shouldered, thicker-necked, square-chinned, and muscle-bound. Many of the hangers-out on Venice Beach sported the torsos of film-stars, but a few were more obese than anyone she had ever seen before, or thought possible. It seemed like a place where everything was on a grand scale. A police car was built like an armoured vehicle. Six robocop officers were interrogating a dilapidated old drunk. A Baywatch dune-buggy scuttled along the beach to rescue a distressed surfer. Bicycles, skateboards, and packs of joggers sped past her. The stalls were hip, in the sense of being stuck in the 1970s, selling beads, string bags, and tattoos. She shuddered at the thought of a tattoo by the beach. Some of the buildings were with turn of the century brick and very pretty, others were UGGGH! They were made of bare concrete and so ugly.


There was no shortage of down-and-outs. Rather worryingly, quite a few of the homeless either strummed guitars, or slept with a guitar shaped bag by their sides. Had they too been hopeful musicians drawn by their dreams to California? Had they once naively thought that they could strike it big just by artistic talent alone? Had they thrown away their chances of education and betterment, and bet everything on their vocal cords? Was she glimpsing her future in this land of opportunity that cared about failure the way the way people feel about disposable nappies? She realised who the true-life ghosts were. Most strollers looked straight through those who never quite made the grade. She saw a man throw a dime to a bum. His wife asked, “Why did you do that? He should get a Job.” The husband replied, “He’s just a guy who made a few bad decisions in life.”


Those were not the only remarks she overheard. Somehow, the sea breeze carried people’s conversations clearly to her ears, almost like whispers in shells. Two female joggers went past saying, “We are all carrying around fat issues.” Two men sitting on the concrete side were saying, “There are great girls there, but the music is no good.”
She loved Venice Beach. She thrilled to it. However, she was glad she had a return ticket in her bag.
She walked on until she came to a sign saying “Santa Monica.” It was like the border post to another country. The bohemian shops and cool cafes came to an abrupt stop, and suddenly there were a millionaire condominiums, palatial hotels, and massively pretentious restaurants. This was probably where a few film and rock stars lived, but she knew she was more at home at her end of the beach in her cosy studio with soft armchairs and coffee bubbling in a pot, and the view through her window of that gigantic horizon over the Pacific Ocean.


The next day she saw more of Santa Monica, because that was where she was meeting Laura. She had to admit that the shopping streets were oh so beautiful – perfect pedestrian walkways with gorgeous boutiques on all sides. It was like London’s Bond Street with the addition of sun and palms, and it wasn’t just one street; every street was like that. Her sister was in her element.


“Still the same old Gladdy,” she said, kissing and hugging her. They had not seen one another for two years. “If you’re going to meet my record label, we’d better get you some designer gear. Can’t let the family side down with that gypsy dress sense of yours.”


When Gladys took the taxi back to Venice Beach she was laden with shopping bags of clothes and shoes, all bought on Laura’s various credit cards. She wouldn’t have chosen any of it herself, but hey, if that’s how her rich and successful sister wanted her to look for the important meeting, that was fine by her.


By chance, or design, or a bit of both, Darren Wolf was flying out to LA the week that Gladys was there. His agent was in touch with Laura’s, and the deal making was taking place behind the scenes. Gladys’s commodity was being dealt in the market place for talent and she hardly knew about any part of it.


The business meetings took place around the pool of the hotel where Darren was staying in Beverly Hills. Sleek mums stretched their bony bodies out beneath the autumn sun. The kids of filthy-rich parents splashed in the water. Hollywood execs traded the names of actors and musicians under the striped awnings. The palm trees leaned over the pink-painted walls and eavesdropped on the gossip.


“My agent told me not to take the show,” bemoaned an actor, “He said the money wasn’t good enough, but it was better than not working for six months. I shouldn’t have listened to him.”


Not far away at another table, Gladys was meeting Darren Wolf and the music specialist from his talent agency. The agent was another of those men who looked like he had been chiselled out of stone. While Darren greeted her with kisses on the cheek, the agent gave her the most bone-crushing handshakes she had ever felt. There was something about his lips she didn’t like. They were a bit purple like a Roman emperor who drank wine for breakfast, she thought. His wide smile with his expensive teeth, his sculptured hair, his powerful aftershave, his baritone voice, all came across as artificial to her European sensibility – but what did it matter? He was so much more upbeat than the down in the dump Brits.


“So your contract with your current manager has ten months to run,” he said. “It’s no big deal. We shall agree to sign an agreement in ten months’ time. The record company is set to expedite this. They are ready to put their publicity machine at your disposal. They’ll give your image an immediate makeover.”


Gladys smiled, but she thought quietly, “Even Laura’s designer rags aren’t good enough.”


Laura and her boyfriend, Simon Ferg, turned up late – perhaps they might be forgiven, as 11.30 in the morning was early for them to be out and about. They got lost in the hotel’s extensive tropical garden, before finding their way to the winding steps that led down to the pool area. When they breezed in, Laura was all sisterly and kissy-kissy but didn’t quite feel like family to Gladys. The celebrity couple were very nice to everyone, generously scattering their stardust around, but obviously a bit too used to being the centre of attention. Darren was even more famous than they were, but much more genuine.


“Is Shamus here yet?” Laura asked, as she leaned back with Simon’s muscly and heavily tattooed arm around her skinny shoulders. Shamus was her A&R director at the music company.


“Not yet,” said Darren – but it didn’t matter, because nobody was in too much of a hurry to leave such a nice spot by the pool. At least Shamus apologised with charm when he turned up a little after noon. He ordered pancakes with berries, tropical fruit, and ice cream.


He shook Gladys’s hand and spoke in a soft Irish accent. “So we need to get you signed up and making an album with us,” he said.


The agent explained that the legal situation with her contract was a little delicate. Shamus swallowed a mouthful of pancake and wiped his mouth with a heavy linen napkin.


“Don’t fret. Where there’s a will there’s a way. That’s what we pay our lawyers for.”


It all seemed so casual. They weren’t really any more interested in her music than the British company had been, but they were all positive that she had a great career ahead of her. Nobody gave her any lectures.. Actually they largely ignored her, and talked about her future among themselves, like she was a stock or a bond. Gladys decided that the wisest thing she could do was to say as little as possible and stay inscrutable. She sipped on her freshly squeezed pineapple juice and nibbled at her salad like a true LA lady – but then again, perhaps not: she heard a woman at the next table customise her order until it was an entirely different dish from the one on the menu… the poor waiter was practically taking down a recipe.


“No onion, extra spinach, and just a little cucumber. Now pay attention to the next part, because this is the only way I like my salad dressing, it has to be just so…”


“It’s like the Great Gatsby,” Gladys thought, “Only on the other side of America.”


The next day Gladys invited Darren, Laura and Simon over to Venice Beach because an all-day rock festival was taking place on the beach. Gladys soon realised that the person who would have enjoyed it most was her Dad, but he was back in Teddington listening to his vinyl records.


Some of the longhaired and wildly bearded bands must have been going twenty or thirty years and not hit the big time, but you couldn’t help feeling that these old-time rockers loved what they were doing. They all seemed very chummy with one another, as if they had all been around on the same circuit for decades. As the day wore on, the acts got younger, and frankly, the music got better. Gladys was starting to wish she could take a turn up on stage behind the microphone. Naturally, Laura and Simon turned up so late and they caught the best part. By this time, the audience contained more famous faces than the acts on stage, so it wasn’t really that surprising when a photographer for a music blog sold pics of the onlookers, not the stage performers, to an image agency. The next day snaps and rumours about Darren and Gladys were circulating once again on celebrity websites, Twitter, and the Daily Post. The record company that Gladys had seen in London dropped her an email asking her to revisit them. She forwarded it to Darren to ask him what to do, and he sent it to his agent.


Shamus kept his promise to stoke her publicity up, even though the label hadn’t signed her up yet. They arranged an interview with a music journalist. It took place at a super posh restaurant in the centre of Hollywood. Gladys had to endure lunch with a journalist and a publicity agent. She didn’t actually mind the woman who was interviewing her – she seemed articulate and smart – it was the PR man who irked her.


The questions were fair enough. “What are your musical influences? How was her music different from her sisters?” Even so, she had to be careful. She wanted to say that she was more serious about her art than her sisters, but that might irk them, and Laura was helping her, and the last thing she needed was a public slanging match with Mandy and Sam. She said that she was taking a less commercial approach, and then realised that the record company probably didn’t want to hear that – after all, commercial meant “money” and that was what they were most interested in. Her sentence was floundering. The PR butted in and spoke for her. “Gladys has staying power because she fits into the classic tradition of singer-songwriters.”


Gladys realised that the PR guy hadn’t actually heard her music because she wasn’t quite a traditional singer-songwriter, she was more the serious end of pop . Even so, she nodded.


Then suddenly, as if to try and get at the real Gladys, the journalist said, “Do you promote girl power?”


“Sure,” said Gladys.


The PR man clarified. “We wouldn’t really want that to go in the article. Girl power suggests Brit Pop from the 1980s. That is not what Gladys is about. She fits into the contemporary scene.”


“Okay, let’s put it another way,” said the journalist, “Are you a feminist?”


“Hmm,” said Gladys, “interesting, I suppose…”


The PR man butted in quickly, and said, “Those sorts of questions are not really appropriate. Gladys is here to talk about her music.”


Therefore, the interview never really got anywhere, because Gladys couldn’t overrule the PR Man, as she really needed to sign the contract with the record company. She could see that the journalist was disappointed with the interview, and really hoped she wouldn’t write anything nasty. If only Darren had been there. He would have managed the conversation more subtly, and let Gladys be herself and speak her mind. The journalist would have got a great double interview. Then again, she didn’t want people to think that she and Darren were an item. Oh it was all so complicated!


Gladys flew back to England a different woman from the ghost girl who had come out – yes she did feel more like a woman now, although she was only sixteen and a half years old. She hadn’t had a boyfriend. She hadn’t had a first single out, let alone an album. She really should have been at school, but the 10 days in the navel of the entertainment industry had taught one big thing – that she must have kind of a detachment from her own career – like she was a ghost girl, but one who was going to float to the top. She felt she was talented, but she didn’t kid herself that her talent had got her this far – it was luck. The wheel of fortune had spun a few times and eventually the little ball had fallen into her number. Another equally talented girl could have kept on trying and trying for years and never got further than playing at weddings and birthdays. She had met the right person and he had helped her. Had not Darren taken an interest, even her own sister Laura wouldn’t have lifted a finger for her. Once others scented her potential to make money and be successful, they all wanted to be part of her. They treated her like she was their property. The press, the PR people, the agents and managers, the record companies… to them she was just a commodity to package up and sell. Thinking this all over on the long flight back home, she wrote the words to one of her most catchy songs, “Snap Me!”


[Play out on “Snap Me.”]


Story Books for Kids

Monday, 13 April 2015

10 Gladys Alone: First Date

 

Gladys has been invited out to dinner with Darren Wolf the dishy vampire actor. Her friends are excited for her, and she is nervous. Will he be angry when she tells him she is not interested in romance?


Read by Natasha
Written by Bertie
Illustrated by Chiara Civati


Gladys goes it Alone, Chapter 10: First Date


By eleven the next morning, Gladys had a message on her phone from a dishy voice that loads of girls would have gladly suffered a Transylvanian bite of death for. Darren Woolf was inviting her to Rubies, a club in Mayfair where all the celebrities and the posh socialites with titles like, “The Honourable” hang out. Some of the people on the dance floor are in line for the Throne.


“I would be a fool to turn him down,” she thought, “but I vow to myself that I’ll be careful. I will be up front about not wanting to take it any further. Even if he hates me for it, it doesn’t matter. I’ve not lost anything.”


She decided that a date with a film star did call for something a bit special to wear. For once, she did a sensible thing and asked Sara to come shopping with her. Sara suggested a purple dress but the shop assistant said that for a posh date, you can’t go wrong with a little black number. Gladys wavered. She overruled her friend and went with the shop assistant’s advice. It was a good decision. Suddenly she looked something she had never seemed before: sophisticated.


Gladys had discovered something surprising. The prospect of a posh dinner with somebody who is world-famous for being dishy is actually more nerve wracking than performing in front of a huge crowd. She was quieter than usual as they took the bus home. “Don’t worry. All you have to do is sit and look pretty,” said Sara.


“I can’t help being serious,” said Gladys. “It’s my personality.”


“You can’t be Miss Sensible for the rest of your life,” said Sara.


“Yes, I can,” said Gladys.


It wasn’t often that Dad complimented Gladys on her looks, but as she came down the stairs on the evening of her first ever date he said, “Wow! Where are you going honey?”


“Out to dinner with Darren Wolf,” replied Gladys coolly.


“Is he a friend from school, love?” Asked Dad, who knew nothing about any film made more recently than about 1977.


“Yes,” said Gladys. “He’s just a kid from school.”


The Rubies Club did not exactly advertise itself. Its entrance was just an ordinary door leading onto a pavement in Mayfair. It did not have to tout for custom however. Anybody who was worthy of the name of “socialite” knew where it was.


A very smart and good-looking man stood outside the door. His Italian suit fitted perfectly around his powerful shoulders. He could have been a sportsman perhaps, or even an up and coming actor. Then she noticed his hands. Surely, nobody but a bouncer would wear leather gloves.


“Good evening,” he said, as he opened the door for her. No questions asked. She stepped into a little entrance hall. There was nothing impressive about it, apart from a girl who sat behind a desk.


“Good evening,” she said. Her teeth were as perfect as her pearls. She was beautiful, but she looked like the sort of girl who is afraid to smile in case she gets a wrinkle.


“Darren Wolf has booked a table for two, I’m Gladys Jones.”
The girl’s glacial blue eyes dipped momentarily to the laptop on her desk.


“He’s waiting at the bar for you,” she said.


“Yes,” thought Gladys as she went in.
She walked through the club, trying not to stumble on her high heels, looking for Darren, and hoping that she did not seem to be celebrity spotting. “Oooh,” thought Gladys, “She’s famous, I’d better not look. Oh no! He’s even more famous, though I can’t place his name; he’s so old that Dad would know it.”


Then Darren stood up. “Gladys, you look stunning,” he said.


“Thank you,” she replied. Nobody had ever said anything like that to her. Did he really mean it? Did he know that if she wasn’t actually a schoolgirl, she probably should still be one?


He had an ice bucket with a bottle of chilled white wine leaning in it, but she said that she didn’t drink and asked for water. She nearly said, “tap water” but didn’t. The barman asked her, “Still or sparkling Madam?”


“Still,” she said.


“You know, there’s something I probably ought to tell you,” Gladys admitted, dipping her eyelids down shyly, and then looking up at him and appealing for sympathy. “I’m only sixteen and this is my first date. Oh no, I didn’t mean it quite like that. What I meant was; I’ve never been out with anyone. I mean, rather I didn’t mean to say that this is a date, but rather that it isn’t, if you understand.”


Darren did look a little surprised for just a moment. “Your first date?” He said. “Well I didn’t quite realise. We had better make it special then. How about champagne?”


“I’ll just stick with the water.”


“I’ll just stick with conversation. I wanted to say how much I like your music, and discuss if I can help your career.”


“In any case,” added Gladys who had been reading the celebrity blogs, “You’ve got a girlfriend.”


“Well not anymore, actually, but more to the point, have you still got that terrible agent?”


Gladys felt comfortable talking about business. She told him that she had been locked into a yearlong contract. She laughed and said that all she had got out of it thus far was a tattoo that she didn’t want.


“I noticed that,” he said, glancing at her shoulder. “It’s cute.”


He suggested that she simply write to the owner of her management company and ask to be released from her contact. He might well let her go. In any case, he would realise that she was unhappy and he might try harder. Gladys was enough of a businesswoman to see that Darren was talking good sense.


“And when you get out of your contract, whether it’s now, or a year from now, I’ll introduce you to my agency. They manage musicians as well as actors and they have offices all over the world. I can’t promise anything, but I am sure they will at least see you. Can’t do any harm, hey?”


“Thank you so much,” said Gladys, “It’s really kind of you.”


“It’s nothing,” said Darren. “I’ve seen you perform. I really believe in you. I know you’re going to go far. You’re all the more amazing because you’re just sixteen.”


Gladys ate scallops, followed by rack of lamb, and tiramisu. They went into the disco and did a little dancing to 1980s music – Gladys remembered what the music execs had said about the 1980s not coming back anytime soon, and wondered if they really knew what they were talking about.


The dance floor was still going strong when Darren called a car – not any old taxi, but a limo with a driver in a peaked hat. He escorted her all the way to Teddington, even though the driver could have dropped him off at his flat on the way.


The next morning there were eight messages on her phone. One from Darren thanking her for being such beautiful and charming company – and seven from her friends asking all about it.


“He was a perfect gentleman,” Gladys texted back to Sara.


“Oh, boring!” Came the reply, and then, “Go on, tell us what really happened.”


Gladys really wasn’t hiding anything. She had found someone genuine who really wanted to help her.


“None of my friends would believe it,” thought Gladys, “but I believe it. I think good things are going to happen now.”


——


Jay-Jay texted her at lunchtime and said, “Hey Gladdy, you’re famous.”


“What do you mean?” Gladys replied.


“Seen the Daily Post online? Your pics in the sidebar with all the celebs.”


What had she done to deserve inclusion in the ‘Sidebar of Shame’ where the online newspaper dumped all the celebrity tittle-tattle that made it so popular?


To her amazement, and some horror, it was true. She could hardly believe her eyes – not one, but three pictures of her, coming out of Rubies holding onto Darren’s arm, walking across the pavement, and then getting into the back of the Limo. At one point Darren was holding her hand… but it had not been like that. He was just helping her.


“How did they snap those?” She thought. At the time, she had hardly noticed the photographers – she assumed they were interested in Darren, not her, because, well, she wasn’t famous yet. She took a deep breath and scanned the article.


Who is that young chick on Darren’s arm?


(“Chick! What a cheek!” Thought Gladys. She had somehow managed to forget that her family’s fame rested on a band called the chiX).


Darren Wolf was spotted stepping out with sixteen-year-old Gladys Jones, the younger sister of girl band, the chiX, which broke up last year. Gladys, who was too young to join her song-sisters in their heyday, has now quit school to pursue her own musical career.


A friend of Darren Wolf told the Post, “There’s nothing romantic between them, they’re just close friends. Darren wants to see if he can help Gladys professionally. He really respects her as an artist. I think he likes her a lot, but she is a tad on the young side for him.”


Other diners at Mayfair’s Rubies club reported that the Bitten star seemed smitten by his pretty, young companion as they were dancing up close later on.


The news that Darren’s old flame super-model Michelle De La Mare is seeing boxing champ Hussein Akwal has set tongues wagging about who will be the vampire actor’s next victim of love. Watch this hot couple for further developments.


Gladys’ first bite of fame actually quite annoyed her. “It’s all wrong,” she thought. “I’m not seeing Darren; I just went out with him once. Besides, I don’t want to be known as Darren’s girlfriend, I want to be me, just me in my own right; an artist, not a chick. In any case,” she wondered, “how did they know my name?”


She realised there were two possibilities: either the club had tipped off the press, or Darren had told them. Why would he drop her in it? She dialled his number.


“Hi Darren,” she said, “It’s me, Gladys. Have you seen the Daily Post?”


“Yes, I’m just looking at it now. Nice pics of you,” he said. “You have two great advantages. You are young and you don’t drink. You looked fresh at 2am. Even the top models look pretty iffy when they come stumbling out of Rubies.”


“Was it really 2am?” She asked, horrified that she had been out so late.


“Something like that,” he said. “But don’t worry – it makes it perfectly clear there is nothing going on between us. I insisted on that.”


“You mean you spoke to them?” Asked Gladys, quite taken aback.


“Not me, but my agent did. He is very much interested in you by the way. His colleague in the music department is keen to get you on their books. They thought a little publicity wouldn’t do you any harm.”


“But nobody asked me,” protested Gladys.


“The press don’t ask permission,” said Darren. “It’s a free country. Sometimes they write things you do not like. Sometimes they get it a bit wrong, but if you are going to make it in the world of entertainment, you have to cut a few compromises. If a journalist calls, get back to them right away, or get your PR to get back to them, because journos are always on tight deadlines. Be polite to these people. Give them what they need, but on your terms. If you do not help them, they will write something anyway, and they might twist the knife. These are the rules you have to learn. Take it from me. When you are newsworthy, your career starts to become a whole lot easier. People call you. Things start to happen.”


“But what if they write too much about you?” Asked Gladys. “Shouldn’t you keep the press at arm’s length?”


“Hey Gladdy, when you’re BeyoncĂ©, you can worry about that. Right now, you need to get your name known.”


Gladys began to see it is a big advantage if people know your name. When she had walked into the record company, they had been so patronising. They thought she was a sixteen-year-old nobody. It wasn’t her music they were interested in. What did some smooth geezer in a suit care about her art? It was her value as a commodity. They valued her price as next to zero. They wanted someone they could package up and sell to the public. If the public had seen your picture, and thought you were the girlfriend of the star in a vampire movie… well you had done half the work for them – your price tag had gone up a few notches. It wasn’t so hard to imagine your name on the bottom of a recording contract.


People did start to get in touch with her. The first was Laura – that evening she received a rare message from her starlet sister who resided in California.


“Hey Glad, just drooling over the pics of that vampire boy you’re stepping out with. Lucky little sister me thinks.”


Gladys replied, “He’s a nice guy, but I’m not stepping out with him, and I’m not planning to. He wants to help me with my career.”


Then Laura messaged, “Still same old Miss Sensible-Pants. Well get your bum on a flight over here and meet my record label. They want to snap you up before anyone else grabs you.”


“Wow,” thought Gladys. “What a change! Just one silly article in the papers, and suddenly my sister wants to help me. Well Carpe Diem!” She wrote it down absent-mindedly on her notepad. If she had stayed on at school, she would have taken Latin as one of her A-levels. It meant, “reap the day,” or, “seize the moment.”


Oh! How was she going to afford a flight to California? She had spent almost all her savings on recordings. How was she going to seize the moment without any money? The situation was such a … she nearly said a bad word aloud, but she was too nice to do that, even in the solitude of her own room. Instead, she picked up her teddy bear by the ear and threw him across against the wall. He was sixteen years old, like Gladys, and a bit too doddery for rough play.


She couldn’t sleep that night. She had a sort of waking dream. She was thinking of a flight taking off for LA, and could see a passenger seat occupied by a ghost girl. She couldn’t fasten the seat belt around her tummy, because it wasn’t substantial. She couldn’t even taste the rubbery airline chicken. Then she was looking out of the window. She could see the palm trees on the beach, the cool dudes surfing the waves. She imagined the sleek offices of the music company – and there she was – not actually her, but the ghost of the girl who might have been a star. Her first break and she couldn’t take it. She knew how changeable and unreliable Laura was. If she didn’t get on a flight right away, her sister would forget all about what she had said. Next week could be too late. How was she going to beg, steal or borrow the price of an airline ticket? She might have to ask her management company, but they had been so rubbish at managing her, she did not want to get into their debt. Oh fiddle sticks!


You never know what is around the corner though. Sometimes the planets do all line up and pay you favours, because the next day she received some more good news. Do you remember her dustbin song? She had actually forgotten all about it.


“Thank you for caring
Thank you for sharing,
Your rubbish with me.”


It was hardly her most profound composition, but she had sent it into a competition run by the local council.


The prize for the winning entry, which would be used to thank people who kept London tidy by dropping their litter in a bin, was £2000. Guess what? Gladdy won it! It now meant that she was on her way to California to do business with the entertainment industry.


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