Showing posts with label Bertram Turnibull. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bertram Turnibull. Show all posts

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Odette Turnbull


Reclusive. Haggard of feature and waspish. Once an infamous actress, known for hair raising antics, both on and off the stage, Odette was a renowned belle of the artistic elite in her twenties. Having cultivated a long and risky career, often flaunting convention, Odette finally reached the apex of her artistic flight when she joined forces with the theatre manager Olivier De Cowgill who was putting together a performance of 'The Lovers of Lady Archmole'. Everything ended for Odette when her horse took fright of a fanfare and bolted for the orchestra pit. Several players were crushed to death, and Odette lost her leg. De Cowgill was furious. Holding Odette responsible he stole Odette’s amputed leg and absconded. He was later rumoured to have opened a theatre in Serrenisma. Odette recovered despite her horrific wound and later married Olivier De Cowgill’s financial backer, Bertram Turnbull.

A decade later and Odette, her gay abandon burned into bitterness, now hides from the public gaze. On the rare occasion she ventures forth, she is frequently greeted by a crowd of street urchins who urge her to ‘shake a leg’.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Bertram Turnbull

A placid, solid man, heavily built with a wide face, Bertram Turnibull wears dark, sombre clothing of quality manufacture, hinting at a level of affluence above most of the locals. He is a lawyer, a merchant of sorts and some kind of financial supporter of The Arrow Theatre. He is seldom seen locally as he lives a busy life, but has been known to frequent The Red Fox on occaision. To the locals he is a respectable, but anonymous face, usually associated with the upper levels of society. Amongst the acting fraternity he is usually described as being a frightful bore, a dullard and a tiresome accountant.

Bertram Turnibull is married to the mysterious Odette Turnibull who was a renown actress until she lost her left leg in a boisterous performance of 'The Lovers of Lady Archmole'.