Thursday 16 February 2023

Part 5 The Making of JOAN - Real life events that fit the characters in Punch & Judy

Real life events that fit the characters in Punch & Judy

Armed with my characters and my theme, I now have to fill in the missing pieces. I need to find a way to bring each of her puppets to life, to establish who they were and their relationship to Joan. How do they fit into her story? But more importantly, how do I keep the whole story fitting the theme of Joan’s puppet show, the one we now know as Punch and Judy?

It's been quite a challenge to cover 450 years of history in this timeline, especially since Joan is still alive today. We've tried to be as historically accurate as possible, since this is her 'biography' and she lived through all of these events. Hopefully we've done her justice! When I think of Joan, I can't help but imagine her living in the Lake District with all her family around her!

I had to find a suitable date of birth for her based on her experience of Commedia dell arte. It's clear that she was very familiar with the art form, so she must have seen it performed live, maybe even in her home town of Rome. I consulted a few sources and found that the first recorded mention of Commedia dell arte was in 1545. From there, I was able to track back and determine that she would have been around 20 years old when she first saw it performed. This means that she would have been married young by Italian standards.

In medieval Europe, the average age for marriage was around 21 for men and 18 for women. However, it was not unusual for men to marry earlier or later than this, depending on their social class and circumstances. For example, nobles and other high-ranking men often married younger women in order to produce heirs as quickly as possible. Meanwhile, commoners and other lower-ranking men often had to wait longer to marry because they needed to save up enough money to support a family. The acceptable age difference between a medieval man and his wife varied depending on the man's social class. For example, nobles were expected to marry women from other noble families, who were usually around the same age. However, commoners had more freedom in choosing a wife, and it was not unusual for a commoner to marry a woman who was a few years older or younger than him.

As it turned out for me, this story almost wrote itself. All the characters I needed to develop and the situations I needed for Joan to experience seemed to fall into place. The research I did for this story could fill an entire book, but I only want to share a taste of it in the hope that you will enjoy the story as much as I enjoyed researching it!

A medieval wedding: It was delightful to research medieval weddings, which uncovered some interesting aspects beyond finding wonderful designs for the bride's wedding dress and groom's outfit. For example, the couple were officially married outside the doors of the chapel before being allowed inside for the nuptial mass. This is contrast to a Protestant mass, where everyone in the congregation is given the body and blood of Christ for communion, whereas Catholics are only given the body of Christ, except in the case of a nuptial mass.

 Another fact that I discovered is that on the wedding night, a medieval wife would not wear a nightgown but present herself naked before her husband. I ignored this fact for the sake of my story and called it authors prerogative.

A wife’s place in society through the ages: Wives were considered no better than chattel, in fact for a long time, they were had less value than chattel! How women have been perceived in society has been quite disturbing over the centuries anything from being beaten once a week to keep her in place to taking all her worldly goods as her husbands, with no rights over land, money or even her own children until the nineteenth / twentieth century.

Child birth:  

Medieval Mothers were not meant to be seen in their final days / weeks before baby is born. They had to 'prepare' for the birth with religious amulets, tokens, prayers, asking for forgiveness for their sins all in order to have a safe delivery [confessing sins to a priest also prepared them to be free from sin should they die in childbirth too! All very sinister when you think of it] This horrific looking cutter was used to cut through pelvic bone if the baby was stuck in childbirth, saving the child was more important than saving the mother for a long time even up until the  twentieth century in some cultures.

When it came to finding how to fit the crocodile into the story... well... that was an interesting one for I discovered the reason Mr Punch traditionally calls the crocodile a 'kitty, kitty'. Crocodiles or cocodrillo's,  make a purring sound when warning people off.  To someone who had never seen a crocodile before, hearing the purring sound would be like hearing the purr of a cat, and Pulcinella or Mr Punch would have been no different!

For even further research, I wondered how Joan and her family would feel when they found out they were immortal... I decided to ask the public. Using social media this time, I asked the questions:

Would you choose to be immortal if offered a potion for life eternal? 

-Only one third of people said they would, which surprised me. I'd thought that if someone discovered an elixir for immortality that everyone would want it! 

Then when told that the potion could be taken by their whole family 

-a further fifty percent said they would consider it, not definitely, but they'd consider it. 

So immortality wasn't as popular as you'd think! 

That brought me to wondering how Joan, Pulcinella and their baby would handle finding out they would never die, they would never meet their maker, they would never find peace? You'll have to read the story for what happened I'm afraid though, haha!

So what is the story about?

Joan and her family became immortal after taking a potion intended only to heal, from their family friend John Dee; but there's more than friendship binding John to her family, a secret she has yet to uncover.

JOAN - Put on a Happy Face is the first of a trilogy meant to whet your appetite for what is to come...


Available as eBook on Amazon
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08HKQDQDS
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08HKQDQDS






Thursday 9 February 2023

Part 4 The Making of JOAN - Researching Nicholas Flamel

Researching Nicholas Flamel 

History was now getting very interesting.  Nicholas Flamel and his wife Perenelle lived in the early part of the 14th Century which was filled with rumours of magic, stories that legends are made of, and Nicholas was an alchemist, a scientist, an educated man. He owned his own bookshop and was a scrivener to all. Despite being a strongly religious man he was attributed with discovering how to turn lead into gold. 

Years later he, more than his wife, was said to have discovered the secret of immortality, a blasphemous accusation for any religious person. He was simply an alchemist, a man of science, a scrivener and bookshop owner living a simple life, giving whatever he could to those less fortunate than himself. 

He and his wife created sanctuary for the homeless, a refuge in Paris that still stands today in the form of a Restaurant. They did so much for others that their memory has been immortalised for centuries – despite being given the accolade for his discoveries, none of it has been proven, but then what is this we now find...?

Part of my research uncovered a treasure of a find - an Elixir for Longer Life! 

Is this what people have been considering as the elixir for immortality? During medieval times it would have been normal to live for forty maybe fifty years on average, it could be seen therefore, anyone living beyond those years, when the rest of their family or friends were dead, could be considered immortal!

The discovery I found is called Chartreuse: Elixir de Vegetal and consists of 130 flowers, plants and herbs distilled in alcohol and is produced by the Carthusian Monks using a closely guarded secret recipe that dates back over 400 years. It is said to have been prescribed by French doctors until recent years as an actual medicine as a potent medicinal liqueur.

The elixir should be consumed in tiny quantities. Only a couple of drops are needed

* in a cup of hot water, Lemon and Honey,

* in a tisane,

* as a "bitter" to add strength and flavour to cocktails, 

* on a sugar cube.

Known as an "Elixir of long life" the Elixir Vegetal is believed to have health giving properties and can be taken to:

* ease Digestion,

* cure tiredness, sickness and discomfort,

* restores a sense of  wellbeing and vitality.

The Elixir Vegetal needs to be stored in its own protective wooden case, away from the light, to keep it in perfect condition.

Additionally, which I think adds to its mystery, is the fact that only three monks ever know the recipe at any one time. Two know only half the recipe each whilst the third knows when and how to bring them together for storing in the wooden barrels in the cellar of their monastery.

For more modern day use the Elixir has been developed into a slightly lower volume alcoholic liqueur sold as its natural colour of green or with honey where it turns into a yellow coloured liqueur suitable for the more popular cocktail / wine bars of present day.

Out of curiosity, I bought a bottle of the Elixir de Vegetal and took some.  Strangely enough, within three weeks of starting the three drops a day on a sugar lump, my platelets, which had been low for five years and needed monitoring every three months, returned to normal... go figure... FASCINATING!! J

 Chartreuse: Elixir de Vegetal is available on Amazon Prime


Thursday 2 February 2023

Part 3 The Making of JOAN - Researching Punch & Judy Shows

Researching Punch & Judy Shows

It is interesting to see the variations of the same puppet show. Though there are hundreds of puppeteers performing Punch and Judy all over the world, they are all different yet someone, in essence, the same. It is amazing to see how one show can be interpreted in so many ways and still maintain its originality.

Punch and Judy was based on Commedia dell arte, so I decided to keep researching the history of the theatre-style. I found that each show was different, because there was no script to follow. The performers would improvise around a theme or topic, often making it comedic and lewd. This was totally politically incorrect by today's standards! The performers would flaunt authority and mock nobility.

Finding out about Joan was fascinating to me, considering I never had an interest in history before. It was exciting to be learning something new that I was actually interested in. 

My story looks at the story of Punch and Judy from the perspective of Joan herself. She'd be outraged by the way society today perceives her shows; Joan's shows are about her family and friends, her loved ones! Why are they so much against her? More to the point how could she be outraged today, if she was over 450 years of age?

She would have had to have been born long before Samuel Pepys even wrote about Punch and Judy on May 9th, 1662. My eldest son posed the question: how could this come about?

Is she an old retired puppeteer who has lost her mind? Has the puppeteer got dementia and believes herself  to be Judy? Is it that she's a schizophrenic who has become obsessed that she is Judy? NO! I didn’t want MY Joan to be a sick old lady. She had to be strong, confident, resilient... a survivor of all that life has thrown at her over the years! She would be the one to tell her own story.

It was while pondering the dilemma that my eldest son set for me that my youngest son asked if I'd heard about Nicholas Flamel and the elixir of immortality? Like many, I'd only heard of him through the Harry Potter books by JK Rowling, but apparently he had been a real person. So from researching Punch and Judy shows, to Commedia dell arte I was now off on a new line of research, that of Nicholas Flamel. According to my son, Nicholas Flamel was a French philanthropist, who donated much of his wealth to hospitals and charities. He also happened to be an alchemist who discovered the Philosopher’s Stone, which supposedly could turn any metal into gold. And as if that wasn’t enough, he was also said to have found the elixir of immortality. Now I was really interested!

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08HKQDQDS
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08HKQDQDS



I'm so excited!

I'm so excited! I'm so excited and I just can't keep this to myself, but I've finally finished the first draft of my next bo...