The Psychodrome man
 
Welcome to the Psychodrome
Psychodrome is Robert Farrar's identity as a producer of live theatre. It is also his general website as a writer
 
 
Robert Farrar's biog/Contact me
Robert Farrar, from the Mystery Gilrs to The Man Who Knew Too Little to Psychodrome and Wild Fruit
 
 
Blog 2008
Trace the disturbing new trends in my personal development this year
 
 
Short story: Dust
 
 
Fairytale: The Secret Passion Of Squirrel Studkin
From the forthcoming, rather delayed book of fairytales for gay men and their friends
 
 
Films
Robert Farrar's work as screenwriter and film director
 
 
WILD FRUIT
Wild Fruit, a new comedy by Robert Farrar, directed by Phil Setren, was Psychodrome's last production, in June 2006
 
 
Short play: Donut
The full text of the fabulously fattening playlet
 
 
Blog 2007
 
 
Hot Tips 2007
 
 
Poem: Johnny Smith
 
 
Short short story: Strange Meeting
A mere whiff of a story
 
 
The Prince Who Lost His Penis and Other Stories
A new book of fairytales for gay men and their friends
 
 
Article: My grandfather Kenneth Horne, playwright
Robert Farrar writes about his grandfather Kenneth Horne, the West End playwright of the 30s, 40s and 50s
 
 
Music Review: Jay Spears - What's Not to Like?
Robert Farrar on homosexual pop star Jay Spears
 
 
The Mystery Girls, 1983-86
Robert Farrar's former life as lead singer of glam rock band The Mystery Girls
 
 
Playography
A list of Robert Farrar's plays, both produced and unproduced.
 
 
Novels
Robert Farrar's two published novels
 
 
Wild Fruit gallery
More images from the smash hit production of Wild Fruit at Oval House
 
 
Writing Wild Fruit
Robert Farrar writes about writing Wild Fruit; memories of Waterloo Street
 
 
Links
Links to Oval House Theatre and other sites
 
 
Some quotations
things to scrawl when you sign autographs
 
 
Vow of theatrical chastity
My own little Dogma
 
 

Poem: Johnny Smith

During a tantric workshop for gay men
I fell, drum-ravished, into a deep trance
And wandered blinking in a wounded meadow
Until my path came to a ragged hole
Where steps descended into humid darkness.
Nauseous with dread I trod those thousand steps,
Then slipped and plunged into a profound chasm,
One whole lunation plummeting like Satan
Cast from spheres beatific, till at last
I splashed into a subterranean sea
And crawled ashore, sun shining without mercy.
Three days I wandered, chewing bitter herbs,
Then met a mountain which with bleeding feet
I scaled, to a peak veiled in roiling vapours
On which a vast translucent palace floated,
Cool as a crystal cave. The heart astonished,
The senses overwhelmed, I penetrated
Seven sequential portals, then emerging
Into a dappled courtyard less resplendent,
A fountained square for mellow contemplation
Where sat a dark-skinned prince immersed in study,
A mild immortal, who, my presence noting,
Had me sit down and said, This book was written
A hundred thousand years before the flood
By one who journeyed homelessly, his mind
Annealed by grief to diamond concentration.
Here, read. I took the book, and read as follows:
I miss you, Johnny Smith,
Your scorpion eyes and silver crucifix
No other man can make me laugh like you.
I want to pick up the phone
But what is there left to say?
So I guess I’ll just go from town to town
Playing my blue guitar for a bowl of rice,
Dressing my grief in other people's drag,
Getting older and fretting about my looks.

COPYRIGHT ROBERT FARRAR 2007

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