Showing posts with label Guest Blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Blog. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 January 2020

Guest Blog: Carry On Nurse and other myths, by Helena Sage


In a brand new guest blog, regular reader and Carry On fan Helena Sage writes about her love of a medical Carry On and a deeper look at hour nursing staff are represented in these classic comedies.

So in the first instance let me declare my conflict of interest. I am the greatest of Carry On fans, I am a feminist and I am a trained nurse. None of this sits well with Carry On and its treatment of nurses and women and minorities does it?


However I must say a lot of the depictions of nursing in the Carry Ons have a degree of truth. They are not a million miles away from some of my experiences of nursing in the 1980s and nurses that I know that started their careers even earlier say it is very truthful. 


The Carry Ons and also the Doctor at large series with Dirk Bogarde show the hierarchy and sexism which took place in most London teaching hospitals. The stereotype of Sir Launcelot Spratt and Dr Tinkle (played by Kenneth Williams in the Carry Ons) was largely based on a reality, as was the relentless degradation of the house officers and medical students. The Consultants persecuted the junior doctors and medical students and Matron persecuted the ward sister the ward sister tormented the staff nurses in turn the student nurses. It’s just the way it was.



One of my contemporaries describes it this way:


‘These people were relatively prevalent in the 1980s, ‘I worked with quite a lot of them. There were some absolutely superb surgeons and physicians. Really superb but fundamentally flawed. They would put their own social life and personal agendas ahead of their clinical practices. It was an odd thing to watch.’’ says the professor of intensive care medicine at University College London- Hugh Montgomery.


As in many areas of the arts you must ask the question does Art reflect society or create it.

I do not believe that the depiction of woman and specifically nurses by the Carry On films was its own individual creation, it was a reflection of the times. The freedoms that we enjoy as women in this century were not in existence when these films were being constructed. In addition the casual sexism of everyday life was perfectly acceptable in society and in the workplace. No one questioned it especially those in the receiving end of it. Maybe as women we were compliant in a kind of ‘if you can’t beat them join them way.’


I recall as student nurse we hated our uniforms on day one of issue and at the first opportunity we found a seams mistress that enabled us to take them in by a couple of inches and in addition made our uniforms shorter . By the time we had customised them they fitted extra tight which resulted in a Barbara Windsor type of wiggle as we walked about the wards. Make up was frowned on but we all sneaked on some mascara and eye liner.


The porters at the London teaching hospital I trained at had a little lodge based by the main hospital front doors and had a prime view of the coming and goings of the hospital. They would give every nurse a nickname and were not so flattering. They made up  weekly hall of fame (which yours truly made on a few occasions) with categories. I will leave to your imagination what those categories were.


As women there was no thought to be offended and it would have made no difference if one did. They were burly salt of the earth types the porters, cockney London Fulham geezers (think Sid James)  that heckled and cat called as we  swished past the lodge in our navy blue red lined nurses capes with a haughty look on our faces. 


FYI …Being Greek …they named me ‘Goddess’ or ‘H’ and I heard bellowed at me with a wolf whistle  each shift change. I took to giving them a wave and ‘Good Morning/Evening Ian/Bob/Frank/Smithy’. You had to keep on their good side they could be life savers when you needed blood quickly from the bank or a drip stand or even if a body had to be removed pronto as the admissions were coming thick and fast from A&E. The Nurses treated them as irreverent schoolboys and we knew that in their own way they had utmost respect for us. 


There is an episode in the Carry Ons when Kenneth Williams is about to conduct a ward round and the ward staff and patients are in a state of high anxiety trying to achieve perfection in all areas. This was very much how it was for Consultants ward rounds. This scene is by no means fiction


Ward rounds especially by surgeons could result in spectacular humiliation, on anyone the Doc chose to focus their wrath upon. If he (and it was always a he) was displeased by the tiniest of details all hell broke loose. Even the patients were petrified and ridiculously compliant (unlike those on the carry on films). Patients were referred to as ‘the appendectomy in bed 4 or the laparoscopy in room 2’. I myself was at the tail end of the wrath of a professor of arterial surgery when I forgot to remove a bandage on a diabetic foot quick enough. 


Nowadays it would be totally unacceptable.

Fast forward to 2019.Dominance, arrogance, aggressiveness, and egocentricity are out. In are: integrity, honesty, and the ability to recognise stress in yourself and your effect on others. The modern NHS is a place where employment practices and bedside manners are much changed from the depictions in the Carry On Films and the Doctor at Large films. But then society is unrecognisable. Some may say political correctness has gone mad. But one cannot respect women and have a degree of humanity in our health service without drawing a line. It was really bullying and harassment by any other name.


I must have had a rebellious streak in me because I specialised in sexual health; primarily HIV /AIDs care where the hierarchy had been smashed by a largely irreverent non-compliant male gay patient group. No uniforms no deference patients made the rules for doctors and nurse to abide by. Homosexuality was only made legal in 1967 and I was in the job in 1990 so the change was remarkable. Gay men had found a voice and financial and political power despite the ghastly spectre of HIV/AIDs. They made us get rid of our uniforms to preserve their confidentiality and they called us by our names. They made us change our visiting hours and introduced many changes which we work by now.

 There were no camp Charles Hawtrey type characters either. They were educated assertive informed men. The gay community was no longer repressed. I also had the privilege of working with many DRAG artists.



Dressing up as women in the Carry On films is common. Think of Carry On up the Khyber, Carry on Screaming and many more. Dressing up as a woman is done very badly with reluctance and forced upon Bernard Bresslaw or Kenneth Connor or some other and it results in high jinks .The Drags artists I met were beautiful and professional and spectacular performers.


In the Carry Ons having to dress up as a woman was the joke it was the humiliation. Well not in the 1990s; trans was a whole new way of living. I was lucky enough to be invited a few times to Madam Jo Jo in Soho to drag performers in all their glory. Could we ever have accepted in the Carry on decades that this was a chosen way of life, I doubt it so we laugh at that which is not understood. 


Changing the way Film represents, or fails to represent, people who are not white, straight, or male, will require making systemic changes and we continue to change and evolve. We can be smug and point fingers at the past and comment on the sexism racism or homophobia of the Carry on franchise and other films. But as the ‘me too’ movement showed we are still not where we should be despite what we may think.




Much has changed and improved and Carry On was a product of its time .What then does film in 2019 say about our world right now.


You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram

Monday, 6 May 2019

Fancy Being a Guest Blogger? Well Carry On...


A couple of years ago I wrote a guest blog for the wonderful History Usherette Blog which is run by @agathadascoyne . I wrote about the social history of the Carry Ons, comparing Carry On Cruising with Carry On Abroad, highlighting how Britain had changed over that ten year period. This experience got me thinking.

I love hearing from fellow Carry On fans on Twitter. Back in 2015/16 I invited some of you to be my 'Carry On Fan of the Week" answering a few questions on your own personal Carry On favourite moments, actors and films. 

If there are any keen guest bloggers out there with a Carry On related subject you are burning to write about, don't hesitate to drop me a line. I'd love to feature your thoughts on the blog. It can be as long or as short as you like and you can provide photos or I can find some for you. 

You can write about anything as long as it has a Carry On connection.

You can contact me via Twitter by direct message, by using the Contact Form on the blog or by emailing carryonfan15@gmail.com

Carry On Scribbling!

You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram

Thursday, 14 March 2019

Fancy Being a Guest Blogger? Well Carry On...


A couple of years ago I wrote a guest blog for the wonderful History Usherette Blog which is run by @agathadascoyne . I wrote about the social history of the Carry Ons, comparing Carry On Cruising with Carry On Abroad, highlighting how Britain had changed over that ten year period. This experience got me thinking.

I love hearing from fellow Carry On fans on Twitter. Back in 2015/16 I invited some of you to be my 'Carry On Fan of the Week" answering a few questions on your own personal Carry On favourite moments, actors and films. 

If there are any keen guest bloggers out there with a Carry On related subject you are burning to write about, don't hesitate to drop me a line. I'd love to feature your thoughts on the blog. It can be as long or as short as you like and you can provide photos or I can find some for you. 

You can write about anything as long as it has a Carry On connection.

You can contact me via Twitter by direct message, by using the Contact Form on the blog or by emailing carryonfan15@gmail.com

Carry On Scribbling!

You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram

Tuesday, 29 January 2019

Fancy being a Guest Blogger, well Carry On...


A couple of years ago I wrote a guest blog for the wonderful History Usherette Blog which is run by @agathadascoyne . I wrote about the social history of the Carry Ons, comparing Carry On Cruising with Carry On Abroad, highlighting how Britain had changed over that ten year period. This experience got me thinking.

I love hearing from fellow Carry On fans on Twitter. Back in 2015/16 I invited some of you to be my 'Carry On Fan of the Week" answering a few questions on your own personal Carry On favourite moments, actors and films. 

If there are any keen guest bloggers out there with a Carry On related subject you are burning to write about, don't hesitate to drop me a line. I'd love to feature your thoughts on the blog. It can be as long or as short as you like and you can provide photos or I can find some for you. 

You can write about anything as long as it has a Carry On connection.

You can contact me via Twitter by direct message, by using the Contact Form on the blog or by emailing carryonfan15@gmail.com

Carry On Scribbling!

You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram

Saturday, 24 November 2018

Fancy Being a Guest Blogger? Well Carry On ...


A couple of years ago I wrote a guest blog for the wonderful History Usherette Blog which is run by @agathadascoyne . I wrote about the social history of the Carry Ons, comparing Carry On Cruising with Carry On Abroad, highlighting how Britain had changed over that ten year period. This experience got me thinking.

I love hearing from fellow Carry On fans on Twitter. Back in 2015/16 I invited some of you to be my 'Carry On Fan of the Week" answering a few questions on your own personal Carry On favourite moments, actors and films. 

If there are any keen guest bloggers out there with a Carry On related subject you are burning to write about, don't hesitate to drop me a line. I'd love to feature your thoughts on the blog. It can be as long or as short as you like and you can provide photos or I can find some for you. 

You can write about anything as long as it has a Carry On connection.

You can contact me via Twitter by direct message, by using the Contact Form on the blog or by emailing carryonfan15@gmail.com

Carry On Scribbling!

You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram

Saturday, 17 November 2018

Guest Blog: It's Cracker-Jack Douglas! by Alan Stafford


There are very few comedy performers who have made the transition from straight man to funny man.  But Jack Douglas, who enlivened many a 1970s Carry On with his twitchy jittery Alf Ippititimus, is a notable exception.

When TV producer Johnny Downes launched Crackerjack (BBC television’s first children’s variety show) way back in 1955, he was on the lookout for a resident comedy act to support the show’s host Eamonn Andrews.  Eamonn took care of all the games, including Double or Drop, an idea of his own, where correct answers were awarded with armfuls of prizes while wrong answers or dropped prizes were punished with a cabbage.

For the show’s comedy content, Johnny Downes took a gamble on a variety double-act that had trod the boards for a few years but had little television exposure – Joe Baker and Jack Douglas.  They were the perfect comedy combination, short fat Joe and tall thin Jack, but it was only by sheer chance that the two ever got together.


Jack Douglas was following his father’s footsteps, putting on theatre shows and pantomimes.  He had cast Joe Baker as the Mate in Dick Whittington, but the comic playing the Captain took ill just before opening night.  Jack, being the only one who knew the lines, stepped in.  A showbiz agent who was in the audience signed them up immediately after the show.  When he asked them how long they’d been a double-act, Jack glanced at his watch.  ‘About two hours and twenty minutes.’

While researching for my book – It’s Friday, it’s Crackerjack – I was very lucky to meet Alan Fenton, who had not only been a Crackerjack scriptwriter, he had also written sketches for Jack and Joe.  Alan described their onstage relationship to me:

Jack Douglas was this big tall fellow, thick face, and he loved saying things like, ‘I’ll         smash your face in.’  Joe Baker was much shorter, very fat, not the most elegant in   his manners, but he was funny.  They were wonderful in cowboy sketches.  Jack Douglas was the sort of man who kicked the doors open to come in and threatened   everybody – and Joe would be cowering in a corner.


Jack and Joe were required to come up with a new comedy sketch for each episode of Crackerjack, to be performed live to an audience of children at the BBC Television Theatre (formerly the Shepherds Bush Empire).  This was in the mid-50s, when Television Centre had yet to be built – though the Television Theatre continued to be the home of Crackerjack throughout its run until the very last show in 1984.

The scriptwriter was Bill Douglas, Jack’s brother, who would go on to have a long career as a theatre producer and writer under his real name of Bill Roberton.  But, in fact, the scripting was something of an afterthought.  The sketches were devised through improvisation and it was Bill’s job to make some scripted order out of the creative chaos.

Although the straight man of a double-act is often called the stooge, this wasn’t the case with Jack and Joe.  They were both idiots, but Jack was the slightly smarter of the two.  In fact, if anyone was the stooge, it was the third member of the team, a crotchety old man called Mr Grumble.  He was never credited under his real name, which was actually Joe Baker.  Just as Jack Douglas came from a dynasty of theatre producers, Joe Baker’s parents had been a variety double-act themselves, and Mr Grumble was Joe Baker’s dad.


The sketches they did for Crackerjack were mad, manic and messy.  It was one of few BBC children’s shows that had no educational pretentions.  Eamonn said of the show’s origins, ‘All the important things were catered for, and it was our job to find something unimportant.  In the first show Jack and Joe attempted to bake a cake.  In later episodes they built a brick wall, reopened a derelict railway station and went to the seaside.  Whatever the premise, there was slapstick galore and Mr Grumble usually came off worse.

Every show ended with an explosion, when Jack and Joe (dressed as mischievous schoolboys) would hand a suspicious package to Eamonn.  In the first show, Eamonn emerged from a cloud of smoke with a blackened face to say goodbye.  In the final show of the series he sent the package-bearers up to the production gallery and the whole theatre exploded.  Yes, the early days of Crackerjack were one huge orgy of slapstick, anarchy and arson.

Jack Douglas and Joe Baker returned the following year for another series of Crackerjack when there was a slightly different approach to their sketches.  Instead of a domestic setting for the custard-pie capers, there was a vast array of historical events – The Norman Conquest, The Great Fire of London, The Spanish Armada.  Obviously this wasn’t a total change of style.  You couldn’t possibly do a sketch set on a ship where somebody didn’t end up drenched with bucketloads of water.  Slapstick and historical parody proved to be the archetypal ingredients of every Crackerjack sketch, and both elements were introduced during Jack Douglas and Joe Baker’s time on the show.


After Jack and Joe left, the physical contrast between straight man and funny man was perpetuated when Ronnie Corbett, another television newcomer, was paired with three different stooges over three series.  Then, after that, everything changed.  The short fat guy was now Peter Glaze, who became a permanent fixture for nearly twenty years.  But Peter was the stooge.  And so the tall one became the comic – first Leslie Crowther, then Rod McLennan, then Don Maclean and finally Bernie Clifton.

And Jack Douglas’s own transformation from stooge to comic was also under way.  The character of Alf had briefly twitched into life during a theatrical performance, when Jack was playing a magician and Joe was supposed to be a ‘volunteer’ from the audience.  One night Joe was late making his entrance, so Jack adlibbed a few comic convulsions, scattering the props over the stage, and buying himself valuable time while he picked them all up again.

In 1961, Joe Baker decided to go solo.  For a while Jack Douglas quit the business to run a restaurant.  But then he was persuaded to form a new double-act, with Des O’Connor as the feed and Jack (or rather Alf) as the comic.  Although it is Alf who we mainly see in the Carry On movies, it’s possible to sample Jack’s considerable versatility (both as comic and stooge) in the many Carry On television spin-offs.


Alan Stafford is the author of It’s Friday, It’s Crackerjack – the inside story of a teatime TV classic – available in hardback from Fantom Publishing. https://www.fantompublishing.co.uk/product/crackerjack/
It’s also available online or can be ordered from any bookshop.


(Photo of Jack Douglas and Joe Baker courtesy of David Bryceson)

You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram

Saturday, 10 November 2018

Guest Blog: Rich & Craig from Sitcom Delights!


I'm delighted to bring yet another guest blog to Carry On Blogging. Rich and Craig are behind the 'Sitcom Delights' Twitter feed and organise events celebrating the very best of classic British comedy. Rich and Craig have both written about what the Carry On films mean to them.

One way or another, "Carry On" has a daily impact on my life. It could be a friend sending me a voice recording of a line from a film which when opened if strolling along in public receive some odd looks when the likes of "I tried it once and didn't like it", "Poor Old Pratt" or "Not the Cross Voice,The Daddy Voice" come roaring out the speaker! It's always a welcome chuckle.Then it could be something completely at the other end of the spectrum, at the moment we are working with the wonderful David Kernan who played Nicholas in Carry On Abroad, David is putting the finishing touches to his autobiography and news of the release date will be coming soon.


I'm sure many will agree that one of the toughest questions a Carry On Fan can be asked is "What is your favourite Carry On Film?" It is pretty much impossible to pick one selection from that amazing franchise. 

So I'll make it easier and give you a top five ( in no particular order! )
Convenience,Abroad,Matron,Dick & Behind.

Matron has become quite special to me as I was privileged to represent the late, great Bill Maynard in the final year of his life. I had some memorable conversations with Bill regarding his time in the Carry Ons. He especially enjoyed playing poker with Sid during breaks in filming!


In "Matron" the performance of the group of crooks - Sid James, Bernard Bresslaw, Bill Maynard and Kenneth Cope is truly outstanding along with that sinister piece of music which plays in prelude to some of their scenes. One particular scene, at the table discussing Bus routes is priceless.


Bill was always baffled as to why his name wasn't on the Carry On Matron poster, especially as it was a big supporting role. Unfortunately there's probably nobody around to shed light on that.

Someone who always deserves a special mention is Peter Butterworth. Whether he had a major or minor role in the film he always stood out. The facial expressions, the body language, the delivery of his one liners and I have to single out his performance as Barnes in "Behind". It is so believable that he is an odd job man and hasn't washed in god knows when!!

There is nothing like Carry On. It has captured the hearts of generations. Here we are sixty years later and still absolutely mad about it. On that fact, you have to tip your hat to the writers and cast. We are still hooked.

Hooked so much that we head out to filming locations in the middle of nowhere. Everyone who has done this will tell you how much of a buzz it is,t o walk the same ground those legendary cast members walked. When you're there you feel the goosebumps.
I've a picture somewhere running out the gates of St Mary's Church in Hitcham, Buckinghamshire, a la "Reverend Flasher".

Bonkers? Of Course!

A huge thanks to Graeme for having us as guest bloggers. The work he does keeping the memory of Carry On alive is amazing and everyone appreciates it.

Rich @sitcomdelights 


-----------------------------------



Carry On films are like a member of the family. They have been around all of my life. I grew up watching the exploits of comedy legends such as Sid James, Kenneth Williams, Hattie Jacques, Peter Butterworth, Kenneth Connor, Joan Sims, Charles Hawtrey, Jim Dale and Barbara Windsor. 

The franchise was a brainchild of film producer Peter Rogers and he, along with director Gerald Thomas created something very special. A series of films stretching over five decades laced with double entendres, innuendo and saucy postcard humour that today are sadly frowned upon in a politically correct age we live in. However, they still have a cult following across the globe. 



As for which Carry On is my personal favourite, that has changed over the years. Carry On Camping is the one that made its mark on me as a youngster and brought home to me how much I love the films. However one has grown on me to a degree that I would now call it my favourite and that film is Carry On At Your Convenience. It upset many at the time due to it being a direct dig at the unions at a time when trade unions were at their strongest and it bombed at the box office but today it is widely regarded as one of the very best. 

My favourite Carry On moment is a close call with Peter Butterworth as Brother Belcher in Up The Khyber when he loses the plot saying 'Strawberry Mousse' as the residence is under siege in the film's fabulous finale. Also the great delivery of Kenneth Connor in Carry On Abroad as the Spanish police officer makes a gesture to which he replies dryly: 'Damned filth.'


I have now adopted that line in every day life. The Carry Ons continue to make me laugh and always will until I take my last breath. Thank you Graeme for this opportunity to share my love of this great film franchise.

Craig @sitcomdelights


A big thank you to both Rich and Craig for taking the time to write this brilliant guest blog for me. If you would like to have a go, please do get in touch via Twitter or by emailing me at carryonfan15@gmail.com. 


You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram

Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Guest Blog: Fenella and Me


I'm really pleased that Amber, a huge fan of the late, great Fenella Fielding got in touch with me. She wanted to write something about her meetings with Fenella and how much the star of Carry On Screaming meant to her. It's a delightful read.


My name is Amber, I'm 14 and I come from the UK. I also have Autism.

I got into the Carry On films in June of last year (I was 13), I can still remember the one I first watched, which was Carry On Abroad!

My idol is Fenella Fielding. I found out about her through Carry On Screaming. I loved her voice, her looks, how gentle she was. I then started collecting photos and all films she was in on DVD. You would expect a 13 year old back then to be into someone like Justin Bieber or a singer like him. She just seemed to grab my attention instantly. I created a fan group for her on Facebook, 'The Fenella Fielding OBE Appreciation Group', who would've known that the creator was a 13 year old girl?!

When I found out she was coming to Liverpool in November to perform her memoirs at the Unity Theatre, my heart skipped a beat. I live in Cheshire so it made an ideal occasion. I persuaded my mum to get me tickets and we go and see her.


On the night we went to meet her, I felt so nervous, my heart was racing, I was sweating... only on the train to Liverpool! I can remember nearly everything about that night, me shaking in Pizza Express eating my tea because I was incredibly nervous, walking to the theatre after that. But it was all worth the wait, I waited 3 months to meet her, and that moment had finally arrived.

Watching her perform her memoirs up on that stage was mesmerising. I felt as if a huge weight had been lifted off my shoulders. I was more nervous to meet her than see her perform! When I went up to meet her afterwards, I nearly cried. It was probably the best moment of my entire life. I hugged her and I gave her all my gifts I made for her, she even gave me a box of eyelashes signed by her as a gift!

I missed her very much after that, and I hoped that I would meet her again. For Christmas last year I even got a signed photo and bookmark from her (Thanks to my mum and Simon McKay). In March of this year, I found out she was due to appear at What A 60th Carry On (an event being held on the 3rd June in Ealing to celebrate 60 years of the Carry Ons) with a few other stars like Jacki Piper, Anita Harris and at his first ever Carry On event, Billy Cornelius aka Oddbod Jr!


My dad took me to this event. On the train down to London I was super excited to meet Fenella again and get my book signed, when we got into the Drayton Court, Fenella and Simon were walking out of the bar as I was walking in! My heart nearly stopped it was so sudden!! I introduced them both to my dad and I had a quick selfie with Fenella before heading downstairs. This event was one of my most favourite ones I've been to this year. I met a lot of people I knew from the Carry On films community, they recognised me from the Fenella fanclub! I got my book signed by both Fenella and Simon. Unfortunately I was in a rush to meet the other stars so I never managed to get another photo with her. As Fenella once said 'Quality not quantity!'

I hoped to meet her again in the future, but little did I know, that was the final time I would ever meet her in person.

When the news broke that she had a severe stroke just over 2 months from when I last met her, I was so disheartened. I just hoped she would recover for days and days. She never recovered.

I remember talking to my online friends and an alert came up on my phone. Fenella's account tweeted a tweet with the caption 'Ms Fielding RIP' with a link to a Wix Shoutout, sadly breaking the news that she died that afternoon. I was in tears for nearly 3 days. I felt as someone had ripped a hole in my heart. My world fell apart, I grieved so badly, even at school.

Even though we met twice, Fenella was like a grandma to me. She made a load of people smile and laugh over the years. I'm glad to have been a part of her fan club. It's been just over a month since she died, and even though I miss her, I think of the happy memories I had meeting her.

RIP Fenella Fielding, thank you for making me smile, and fly high up there!

Thanks for reading this blog post and thank you Graeme for this opportunity!

You can join the Fenella Fielding appreciation group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/522349838142390/?ref=br_rs

My Twitter: @ AmberDoesItAll
My Instagram: @ amberthefangirl
My YouTube: Amber The Fangirl


My first time meeting Fenella: https://youtu.be/fR_5gh4S0fY
My second time meeting Fenella: https://youtu.be/Hp-FYNPxP6s
My tribute to Fenella after her death: https://youtu.be/nwpUNjF5JwQ

I'd like to thank Amber for taking the time to write such a lovely, personal blog on her heroine, Fenella Fielding. If you would like to write a guest blog for me, please send me an email to carryonfan15@gmail.com or contact me via Twitter.


You can follow me on Twitter @CarryOnJoan and on Instagram