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On August 30th, long time island resident, Bob Sherman lost his battle with cancer. Below is the obituary from The Times on September 11, 2004 Bob Sherman WHEN Bob Sherman dramatised Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea, Rod Steiger flew all the way from Los Angeles to London for a radio drama. Sherman had attacked Hemingway’s fable of man, sea, fish and sharks with such relish that Steiger felt obliged to take on the role. As well as being a writer, actor and sometime troubadour, Sherman was a sailor. His love of the sea began when, as a teenager, he joined the crew of Errol Flynn’s yacht and cruised the coast of California. Those weeks at sea led to his own years of sailing and carousing before he carved out a career as an expatriate American actor in London. Sherman’s love of the sea and his love of freedom were counterbalanced by a healthy scepticism about the American Dream. Having witnessed the red-baiting years of Senator Joe McCarthy, he would memorably bring to the English stage in 1977 a powerful and popular production of Eric Bentley’s dramatisation of the congressional hearings on “un-American activities”, Are You Now Or Have You Have Ever Been? As well as taking the role of Larry Parks, the actor who was destroyed by the anti-communist fervour of the 1940s and 1950s after naming names and admitting to the House Committee on Un-American Activities that he had been a communist, Sherman was a producer of the show, and reshaped the script for British audiences. It moved from the Bush Theatre in London to a national tour and long residency at the Mayfair Theatre, London. Sherman’s tales of his own life were rich, colourful and sometimes lacking in crucial detail. His relationship with the taxman meant that amid the years of on-stage stardom, when he played Chuck Baxter in the Burt Bacharach musical Promises, Promises and appeared in Harvey, there were also spells when he was obliged to succumb to the lure of the sea. A programme from the 1963 American Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Connecticut, when he was briefly Bob Benedict, summarised his life: Bob “started his career in San Francisco in TV, where he played with Wendell Corey in Harbor Command. Went to Old Globe in San Diego while a pre-law major at San Jose College. Apprenticed at Stratford before becoming a regular member of the company. Born in Redwood City.” This omits Sherman’s time in reform school and his first credited film appearance as Robert Sherman in the 1955 movie of Mickey Spillane’s Kiss Me Deadly. It also gives no clue to his next few years as a rogue and vagabond in Europe, playing with Jacques Brel as a duo of troubadours. His sister maintains that he was born in San Francisco. The reason he achieved an affectionate eminence among American actors in Britain was his huge heart. Renowned for his generous and instantaneous gestures, he once leapt into his car and drove to embrace an actor friend at the moment of hearing that Aids had just been diagnosed in the man. His own love life was complicated: there were long-lasting relationships with women, and many spontaneous encounters. As a dramatist, Sherman could attract the best actors to his work, from Steiger to Kenneth Haigh and John Sessions. But it was as an actor that he found steady employment, providing film-makers and theatrical producers with a resident American talent of considerable charisma and appeal. Recent roles included the portrayal of President Reagan in The Falklands Play for BBC 4, and his final role as a television host in this year’s shocker Hellboy. Reagan was not his first President; he regularly revived a performance as Franklin Delano Roosevelt opposite his good friend William Hootkins as Winston Churchill in the play Their Finest Hour, which he had expected to perform in New York this August until failing health made it impossible. From a CIA agent in The Pink Panther Strikes Again, to head of the CIA in History Made at Night, Sherman’s persona for film was ruggedly adventurous, which was not far from reality. His favourite times were spent on his boat in the Mediterranean, bumming around. In later life he lived and wrote on his houseboat, Helianthus, moored at Tagg’s Island on the Thames. It was there that he wrote a dynamic pair of plays for Radio 4, The Titanic Inquiry, based on little-known transcripts of the US Senate investigation into the Titanic disaster that showed a complicity of guilt that ran from Marconi to the White Star Line. Other projects had not fared so well. His outrage at Britain’s ceding of the island of Diego Garcia as a US military base led him to write a screenplay that became a stage play and a radio play. It was never to be made. Despite the passionate support of many, including Harold Pinter who had committed himself to performing in it, it was considered too contentious. He enjoyed better luck with final screenplay, Hotel, which is due to be filmed with Bill Nighy. In the week before his death, Sherman married his long-term partner Robin. She survives him, as does his daughter from a previous relationship. Bob Sherman, actor and writer, was born on November 16, 1940. He died of cancer on August 30, 2004, aged 63. |
| Orrington & Beyond 24th February 2004 From Ian Lancaster Dear Taggs Island Neighbours, As you probably know, we have bought “Orrington”, so we thought you’d like to know our plans for the next few months. We decided that Orrington is too far gone for us to restore, so we will be building a new houseboat, which we have provisionally named “Far Horizon”. But we are delighted that Tanya Burne and her boyfriend have bought Orrington and intend to restore her to her former glory! They already rent one of the few remaining Oxford Barges, so they know the lifestyle and are very taken with the idea of restoring Orrington. As part of the restoration they will remove the upper deck, and have decided that they should do this before towing Orrington to dry dock. So she will remain on the mooring for a few weeks while they remove the upper deck, and they will either moor a barge alongside to take the rubbish, or bring in a skip. (We are in touch with the Environment Agency about the barge.) Once Orrington is away from the mooring we will get any necessary work done on the bank and piles, before we start erecting Far Horizon. This will be marginally longer and wider than Orrington, but we have checked with the EA and we won’t interfere with navigation. We are having the pontoon hull built of ferrocement and if all goes according to plan it will be towed onto the moorings at the end of April. The house will be delivered a few days later. We have chosen a timber-framed structure clad in western red cedar, which is being built in kit form in Vancouver, It will be shipped in containers, which will be brought to the Thames on lorries to be lifted onto barges for delivery to the site. We’ll probably deliver to the quay at Platt’s Eyot and tow from there, and we’re now looking into whether we keep the barge on site for a few weeks or lift the containers onto the land. The house will be erected on site. This will take about four weeks, and then the plumber and electrician move in. And after they’ve laid their trunking, we get the fixtures and fittings installed. We hope to have Far Horizon completed and ready for us in late September. (Pity to miss the summer on the Island, but we aim to have many more!) We will ensure that all our contractors know that they have to keep noise and disruption to the minimum and that their working day doesn’t start too early or finish too late. Hopefully, having the kit house and using barges for delivery, there will be no heavy or large vehicles using the Island roads, but we will make a contribution to the road fund to cover the disruption and any deterioration caused. |
| The New Millennium Sundial The New Millennium Sundial on the Terrace Gardens opposite Taggs Island was especially commissioned as a tribute to Gerry (Braban) who died in December 1993. He lived on Taggs Island for 23 years and was the inspiration behind the bridge and the houseboat community. David Harber, an international designer and maker of sundials, based at Henley on Thames, created this unique and pleasing design especially for this site. It incorporates the eight cardinal points of the compass and a series of concentric rings representing the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, the Equator and the Polar Axes. Gerry's family hopes that this new addition to the local river landscape will give a lot of pleasure as well as being a fitting memorial to him. |
| Development of a Houseboat Community In 1980 one of the residents, Gerald Braban, formed Taggs Island Limited to rescue the Island from dereliction. He created a new lagoon for 20 houseboats in the centre of the Island that funded the construction of a new roadbridge. Although most of the great Victorian and Edwardian houseboats have now disappeared, Taggs Island remains a beautiful peaceful place and is still the only Thames Island where you can actually drive to your front door. |