The Holy Rosenbergs
This looks like a play worth seeing.
Spider-Man has Trouble with Health and Safety
Apparently the Broadway musucal about Spider-Man is in trouble with Health and Safety according to the Daily Mail.
He’s obviously not a real superhero! Now Dan Dare wouldn’t have had that sort of problem!
Meera Syal in Shirley Valentine
Finally on Friday night, I got to see Shirley Valentine.
I found it very uplifting and just as Shirley broke out of her old life into her new, it encouraged me to try to do the same.
As I suspected, the play shows that good writing and drama, transcend races and nationalities. It was not wrong in any way, to see an actress of Indian origin playing an archetypal Liverpudlian housewife.
And long may it remain so!
The Gilded Balloon
The Gilded Balloon is one of the main venues of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
I’m not sure, but I think it used to be the Student’s Union at Edinburgh University. It certainly has that feel and is a friendly place. I bought a coffee in the bar and the waitress offered to take it upstairs for me, as the stairs weren’t that easy. Only a small thing, but things like this can make your day when you have problems. I should say that since my return from the North, my arm is a lot better!
I saw two other shows at the Gilded Balloon in addition to Jarlath Regan; Stripped and Lockerbie:Unfinished Business.
As I have said in other posts Jarlath was funny and it cheered me to see someone, who I’d last seen at nine, perform.
Stripped was very much worth seeing and was a one-woman show describing the life of a stripper. It was sad, funny and touching!
Lockerbie was one of the most moving shows I’ve ever seen and it was about Dr. Jim Swire’s search for the truth about the death of his daughter in the Lockerbie Air Disaster. My heart goes out to people like Jim who’ve lost children to violence. I know that I’ve lost my wife and son to cancer, but in some way it’s not so bad for me, as both of them died bravely with the highest personal dignity.
I have always believed that the Pan Am Bombing was revenge for the shooting down by the USS Vincennes of the Iranian Airbus. But that is not to absolve Libya for any of the acts that they committed like the shooting of Yvonne Fletcher. In that case, we should never have lifted the siege on the embassy, without a full investigation into who fired the shot. It could also be argued that because we let diplomats and other foreign nationals act outside of the law, that others follow suit.
Whatever we do with rogue states like Iran and North Korea, we must never go outside of the law and behave such as to give them justification for what they did.
If you do get a chance go to see Lockerbie:Unfinished Business.
An Extraordinary Theatrical Experience
There has been a lot of publicity in London about the Railway Children, which is playing until January at the old Waterloo International Station. It sounds as if it will be worth seeing, especially as one of the stars is a Stirling Single.
It is a superb example of how to reuse a redundant building.
You also wonder if the various railway museums and perhaps disused stations around the world will also stage the experience!
Chaos In Trafalgar Square
I left the National Gallery and walked down the side of the square to the Trafalgar Studios to get details on Shirley Valentine.
According to another bus stop, from outside the theatre, i should have been able to get a bus to King’s Cross for the train home. But works in Whitehall meant that the bus stops had been suspended. So I walked towards Parliament Square to find a bus to take me somewhere in the right direction.
Five minutes later, I found a 24, which would take me to either Leicester Square or Warren Street.
I boarded and then spent forty-five minutes stuck in a traffic jam caused because car drivers couldn’t turn up the Strand or use the bus lanes because of road works. So they just illegally parked or blocked the buses instead of retreating south down Whitehall. The chaos wasn’t helped by all of the tour buses trying to do similar things. So we just sat and waited and fried. A lady in a burqa told me she might faint, but luckily we limped to Leicester Square and we all got out safely.
Shirley Valentine
I have never seen Willy Russell‘s iconic play, Shirley Valentine about the Liverpool housewife, but I have seen the film starring Pauline Collins and Tom Conti. It is now being staged in London again, with Meera Syal as Shirley. It may seem stage that an actress of Indian origin should take this role, but this play has a history of good actresses of many races and nationalites having success with the part of Shirley.
I remember once many years ago, I drove from Chicago to Washington, leaving The Windy City just as it was getting dark. For the first two hours, I was listening to a chat show on the radio, where Ellen Burstyn spoke about her role as Shirley in the play, which was touring the United States and was at that time running in Chicago. Having heard that interview, I regretted that I had not known about the play, whilst in Chicago, as I would certainly gone and seen it. Ellen explained how she had been nervous to take on the play, as being set in Liverpool, she was worried about the accent. But then Willy Russell had reassured her and she decided to have a go. She said she couldn’t do the accent, but that she could do Irish, as she had that blood. Willy then explained that most Liverpudlians had Irish ancestry, so an Irish accent would do. In the end she made a great success of the part of Shirley.
So now that Meera Syal is taking over the part in London, all she is doing is following a great tradition of playing one of the best parts ever written for an actress.
The History Boys
I went to see The History Boys last night in Cambridge with a friend.
Perhaps, I should have gone to a matinée as I had a bit of a problem staying awake. But not because of the play which was very good.
I hadn’t actually seen the original stage play, but I did see the film of a few years back with my late wife. The two are different obviously, but the story is virtually the same.
So if it comes to a theatre near you then go and see it. You won’t be disappointed.
