All the World is a Show

All the World is a show, particularly if you’re inside a theater.

Shows are back in London, and it felt like things were back to normal for at least a couple of hours. Yes, I was double-masked. We had a buffer in the Garrick Theatre of a few rows in the stalls that did not sell, but we’re as COVID careful as we can be.

Honestly, all concern vanished once the show began. I didn’t feel any mask once that first song was underway; that’s the magic of the west end.

The Garrick Theatre was on the ball. All of their communication around the tickets and signage for the performance spoke of requiring masks for the show, and the show-goers for this performance were good with the requirement.

I was pleasantly surprised by The Last 5 Years. I’ve always enjoyed the music from the Jason Robert Brown show, but the movie version underwhelmed me, and it consequently put me off from seeing the stage version. That was a mistake. The hook in this failed relationship musical is that the two leads are going in the opposite direction. Jamie is singing from the beginning of the relationship and Cathy from the end. Part of the creativity here relies on the audience to fill in these scenes based on the songs. The only thing on the stage is a piano, and the two performers sing their parts leading to their story. Jonathon Boyle’s brilliant minimalist direction lets the words in each song have their effect: one actor would sing like the other plays on the piano or becomes a prop in their partner’s rendition.

Oli Higginson was powerful as Jamie, an author whose star is rising while meeting his “Shiksa Goddess.” Molly Lynch’s Cathy is effectively sympathetic, a role I found more cold in the film. She evened out that performance for me; I thought Lynch was fine. The show, as presented, has a real nightclub feel.

It was a Theater Thursday in London, so after a brief coffee break, we were off to the Barbican Theatre. Unfortunately, it was a different mask experience. The folks sitting to my right had masked, but the two older women to Joel’s left could not be bothered. We had one seat there as a buffer (Garry’s chair and had he been there, he would have left).

Sutton Foster did not disappoint. Anything Goes is a pure old-fashioned show with numbers and schtick that kept this audience afloat for the three-hour cruise. Foster is so incredibly solid as Reno Sweeney. When I heard Megan Mullaly had dropped and Foster would take over, that’s the moment we bought tickets.

Actually we overheard a story in the row behind us regarding what happened with Mullaly. I don’t know if this is accurate so take it with a grain of salt but according to the row behind she left because she couldn’t do all the tap choreography and tried to get it completely cut from the show. When Foster was called she only agreed to do it with all the tap back in. Anyway, the tap dance numbers were very good. The show of course was an evening of Cole Porter classics, Foster, Robert Lindsay and the talented cast made sure Anything Goes was a night we wouldn’t forget.

The Permanent Way

My first time at the Vaults theater was a pretty eye opening experience. I was expecting a real off-off-west end experience and I got that but it was really wild underneath the Waterloo Station.

In truth, the two plays we were looking at for this night were both housed at this newer theater and event space so we were going to end up here anyway. It was a Shepard play vs a Hare play and we decided on David Hare’s The Permanent Way, a criticism (justified) of the disorganization regarding management of Britain’s Rail System. It was a train play underneath the Waterloo Station — one of the biggest stations in the city and appropriately enough we could hear trains coming in and out. It was not loud but it was there as a sound backdrop.

Finding our way to the small theater meant crossing underneath a tunnel like graffiti walled pathway, where you were greeted with the smell of fresh spray paint and music. I thought I had walked onto a film set for an 80’s rap / breakdancing movie.

The play is good. Several actors play different parts, first detailing facts about the different train systems, their jobs and how the management had been privatized. Hare weaved information leading to different train crashes, that were caused by exactly the same thing with one actor playing the Prime Minister walking onstage proclaiming: “This can never happen again” which he comes back later to reprise, which is a combination of funny and horrific.

As we detail one crash, then another, instead of this bogging down into information overload, the actors changed parts from train employees to crash victim family members and that kept us locked in. We were surrounded by good performances. They continued to take us to different stops, filled with management denial and political face saving. It was theater about another sort of theater and Hare doesn’t let those responsible off the hook. Bravo.

Later, I found out that the graffiti tunnel was founded by Banksy and the area was meant for alternative arts and immersive theater. I felt Hare’s Permanent Way was pretty immersive like feeling the weight underneath a big train station.

11 More Days

Let’s hear it for those quiet weekends. With my work week done on Friday, I got up late today (Saturday) and am slowly hitting a few chores. We’ve got nothing concrete planned for the weekend and can absolutely lay back. I am someone who can appreciate the restful times, particularly when there hasn’t been much of it lately.

Yesterday I got home and I was truly going on about this and that at work. My hubby poured me a glass of wine and I sat and finished whatever the heck I was talking about and it was done…processed. Hello, weekend.

It’s 11 more days until we fly to London. I’m at that countdown stage, where I’m reminding myself of how close I am to the trip. It helps when I’m swamped at work, as a psychological shot of espresso. “What’s that…what do you need..oh, well I’ve got 12 more days to London.”

The National Theater announced a production of Translations, which fits our timing so we picked up a few tickets. We will also see Solaris, Falsettos, and an evening with Ian McKellen. There might be one more show there but we want to check out the half-price ticket booth. This trip is probably the quickest jaunt I’ve taken to the UK ever, as it’s under two weeks but I’m happy for the time.

On the way back, instead of flying all the way back, we will stay for a few days in New York City. We will meet up with my friend Joel, who is visiting from Las Vegas and catch Tootsie and Inheritance (part 1).

11 more days…

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