
It's somewhat strange when an exclamation mark is used in real names. The English town of Westward Ho! is, I think, the only place name in the UK that officially contains one. Apparently, there is a town in Quebec called Saint-Louis-du-Ha!-Ha! which sounds like a really fun place to live, I reckon. As Nottingham is now bidding to become World Design Capital in 2012, perhaps we should rename the place Nottingham! so that the world might prick up its ears and listen. There are shows and films that have an exclamation mark in their title – Oh! Calcutta! is one example, as is Oliver! and Airplane! There used to be a television series in the 1970s called The Persuaders! which was very much in the genre of the typically stylish crime comedies that were around at that time, but I'm not sure why the exclamation mark was deemed necessary. It didn't last for long, but it gathered a small cult status amongst its followers, not least because the two detective protagonists were played by Tony Curtis and Roger Moore – both very big names in the early 1970s.
I used to love The Persuaders! because (like The Champions, which I wrote about a few weeks ago) it was glamorous and cosmopolitan and displayed a playboy world that I could only dream about as I looked up from the gutter to the stars. Curtis played a rough-edged American called Danny Wilde, and Moore played a British aristocrat named Lord Brett Sinclair. It amused me at the time that the producers of the show should have regarded this particular name as c

Anyway, to get back to the subject, exclamation marks in writing should be used sparingly, if at all. So from now on, you will rarely see me using one, that's for certain!!!!!
Toodle pip, old loves.
2 comments:
After reading your blog I thought I'd double check that none of those pesky exclamation marks had managed to sneak into the article I just sent... and found only the one...
'Barcelona, Amsterdam, Chicago, Buenos Aires and… Nottingham!'
How odd...
x
Nice one! x
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