Monday 11 August 2014

Salzburg

We went on a super week's holiday to Salzburg.  We had thought about going last year but are pleased we made it this year!  I wrote this list of things while we were there so thought I would copy it here and hopefully add photos!

Funny things
  • Painful carpet
  • Crumbling rock wall -stein slag
  • Rising bollard
  • Tipping at augustina
  • Potato salad
  • Brownlee dive
  • John and clown
  • Put your hands together ... In prayer
  • We must have some real sound of music fans in the house. Yes. We have a treat just for you. Good.

Day1 weds
  • Flight gatwick to Salzburg.
  • Saw Walter and Amadeus.
  • Delayed flight.
  • Friendly taxi driver-wrong drop off.
  • Didn't know which door!
  • Awesome one room.
  • Drinks and dinner at Cabrera -sheldonian.
  • Walk in the rain along river and window shopping.
  • Ping pong

Day 2-rain thurs

  • Lie in and Harry potter
  • Wander and found bakery. John had half an enormous loaf of ice bun!
  • Wander round shops inc toy shop (awesome games, we bought travel Scotland Yard), interio and supermarket.
  • Saw much higher river - like rapids.
  • Tourist info and walk through some streets and squares.
  • Return via supermarket and cooked pasta lunch.
  • New ping pong game and Scotland Yard.
  • Cabreras for beer guacamole and wifi.
  • Augustina brewery tavern.

Day 3 - sunny fri

  • Lie in
  • Mirabel gardens. Picnic lunch. Music
  • Booked on tour
  • St. Peter's monastery cemetery
  • Huhensalzburg fortress. Funicular views masks museum photo postcards.
  • Cathedral
  • Pretzel apple
  • Maria bike tour -awesome. Jk-views, falling off boat, flags. Ck- music in basket, pics on bikes, fräulein Maria bike, j chain coming off, theatr pic, nunnery,lake and houses

Day 4 sat
  • Lie in
  • John run
  • Catherine market
  • Bus to fuschl with Eva and Abraham help.
  • Paid for resort
  • Lakeside rest, swim, platform, diving board, brass band, slide
  • Hail storm, bus back. Red bull hq
  • Il sole Italian
  • Last night commonwealth athletics

Day 5 sun

  • Lie in!
  • Afternoon rest by theatres
  • Sound of Salzburg dinner show

Day 6 mon -austerity
  • Mega lie ins
  • John yoga
  • Table tennis
  • Supermarket
  • University square
  • Dinner pasta
  • Rock climbers
  • Augustiner krugg
  • Monchslag walk
  • Opera

Day 7 Tuesday rain

  • Bus to mondsee with guide nick and English Frances and poppy.
  • Pick up bikes and cycle to church from som
  • Cycle round lake in non stop rain.
  • Picnic under tree.
  • Trek slip and sliding to waterfall.
  • Guest house closed!
  • Cycle through tunnel
  • Hot choc at guest house
  • Bus back
  • Pasta and debate

Day 8 weds leaving

  • Read
  • Wander round town
  • Ring
  • Tidy pack and lunch
  • Airport
  • Flight

Festival time

This summer I experienced my first ever festival.  I was apprehensive about it not being a camper or someone interested in late nights and noisy music and thought it would be a cultural phenomenon that would pass me by.

We were invited to the festival to share in the 30th birthday celebrations of some friends.  We bought our tickets to the 'small festival' Cock and Bull which won brownie points for me as the money went to the charity, Jamie's Farm.  A group of 9 of us descended on the farm in Wiltshire for the weekend and were lucky enough to have glorious summer weather for the duration.

And... I didn't hate it!!  Admittedly the bits I liked best were the hanging out outside in the sun, but hey that's something.  I even did a little dancing though can't really say there was any of the music I enjoyed!

Here are my bullets of enjoyment:
  • how our tents were in a little circle and we sat on picnic rugs and shared drinks together
  • the goat that wondered round and how I first saw it when sitting at the top of the hill reading by myself and I saw it jogging up the hill to the accoustic tent and had no one to say, look at that, to!
  • Reading generally on the grass, woohoo!
  • the accoustic tent was nice
  • watching the farm olympics with great events like hay bale toss
  • listening to the talk about Jamie's Farm
  • the food - yum yum yum!!!  lots of nice stalls of deliciousness
  •  playing Kubb and ultimate nerf thrower
  • John's story of falling asleep during the documentary 'gone curling' and then finding it was a q and a with the director and he was the only one in there!
  • the camera obscura was cool
And the noteworthy if not enjoyable:
  •  succesffully managing to go to the toilet four times in the weekend.  the first time i can remember using a portaloo.
  • successfully showering
  • being awake to listen to music at the main stage barn, although preferirng lying on the wool sacks with my eyes closed!
Happy birthday D&H! 

Tuesday 29 July 2014

Holiday list

We are off on holiday - woohoo!

Having in the last week been to my first ever festival (!) and on an anniversary camping trip at Stowe National Trust, I have used the camping list on the blog and found it very useful and updated it with a few things.  As I am loving the lists and organisation aspects of the Large Families on Purpose Blog, I thought I would try make a list to help with future holidays.  So here goes...

Before holiday - things to organise:
  • travel money, credit/debit cards (I used debenhams via moneysavingexpert.com)
  • travel insurance (I used protectyourbubble.com via moneysavingexpert.com)
  • airport parking (I used skypark with a meet and greet service - fingers crossed!)
  • check in online
Packing - clothing
  • trousers/shorts/skirt tops/jumpers day outfits
  • knickers and socks more than 1 per day
  • pyjamas
  • coats/waterproofs
  • hats, scarves winter or summer
  • shoes/slippers/sandals/walking shoes
  • swimming costume, towel, goggles
Packing travel overseas
  • passport
  • adapters 
  • case padlocks
Packing pleasure things
  • books
  • magazines
  • phones
  • chargers
  • headphones
  • puzzles/games
  • kubb/molkky
  • geocache
  • sports watch
  • snacks
  • water bottle
  • address book 
Packing oddments
  • toilet bag
  • moisturiser
  • contact lense solution
  • hairbrush
  • sun cream
  • towel
  • first aid kit 
  • insect repellent
  • sunglasses
  • glasses
  • make-up and remover
  • jewellery 
  • perfume
  • pillow 
  • bedding

Saturday 28 June 2014

Musical - Wicked ADD PHOTOS

Now I had to think about whether this would be the first Wicked post on the blog and indeed it is.  I first saw it 5 years ago (to the day I think) at the end of my PGCE year.  We had finished placement and we had a week before leaving.  I was to be in London for a friend's birthday in the evening and decided to treat myself to a matinee and Wicked it was.  I knew it was popular and I liked it, but didn't love it.  And not until Defying Gravity was on Glee did I start to become obsessed and buy the soundtrack and start to love it.  I even broke the school gate by driving into it while listening to defying gravity!!

With just two weeks to go we decided to take SIL for her birthday.  Isn't it nice to have the excuse of other people's birthdays to do things you want!!  We went yesterday, Saturday 21st June to the matinee.  With help during paired reading from musical obsessed Mr B at school who has seen Wicked about 50 times, we bought 4 tickets.  Two were cheap side view seats and 2 were 6 seats along with good view.  As luck would have it, it wasn't full.  John and I were able to move over one seat at the beginning and then we were able to move next to family for the second half.

It was fun going into the green tinged Apollo Victoria and I resisted all mentions of Starlight when we were actually there.  Even the fact that there were bars areas at the back of the stalls where I imagine the 'tracks' were.  I wonder if they took seats out for the tracks and never put them back so put the bars instead?  ... Just had a long diversion to wikipedia and very excited to discover that there is still a permanent production in Germany.  Think I may be making my first visit to Germany :-)

I was excited by the setting over the proscenium arch, is that what it's called?  Lord of the Rings and Matilda are my favourite sets growing into the auditorium, but I liked that there was a dragon at the top who was all mechanical and scrap metal-y.  I was even more excited when the dragon started to move!  I had seen two men at the top of the stage sidings who were who were holding big spotlights.  And I had only been wondering recently if there were any people left who held and moved lights now, or if they were all computerised and I had lamentably decided they would be all computerised now so it was a very pleasant surprise that these men were here!  And then I saw the man on the left, our side, step away from his light to nearer the front of his little stage towards some ropes and he pulled them and that moved the dragon!!!

The musical was really good!  I had listened to the soundtrack a bit in the run up to going and I had got John to retell the Wizard of Oz as I wanted him to spot all the connections.  I remember the tin man bit being so shocking the first time I saw it.  So 'WOAH' and 'AHAAAA'.  I was all ready for it this time and it was weird how he was wheeled behind the wardrobe when watching for it.  There were many connections that I hadn't spotted last time.  Like the witch who was good with weather and caused the hurricane.

Defying Gravity lived up to its billing and was really powerful.  What a way to end the first half.  Loved her flying, very effective.  And the music really filled my chest.  Am sure there is a better description than that, but that's the closest I can come up with now.  That's how a judge a powerful and moving song/number.  It sure had it.

There were tears at the end of the second half, 'changed for good'.  What a situation for the two girls to end up in.  I don't fully know what I think of the moral of the storyline.  It sure is a tricksy one. 

After wards we came out and realised we were near the stage door so lurked for a little.  We realised we wouldn't recognise Elphaba when she wasn't green!  We did see Nessa, Fiero and Boc.  And the Wizard.

Super time had by all, even John who didn't think he was going to like it.  Afterwards we discussed where we thought it ranked for each of us and I said top 10 and was then challenged to do my top 10 and I came up with 9 so think it may well be time to list them!

Tuesday 25 February 2014

Musicals - Ghost

The latest in the school musical outings to Oxford New Theatre, this was one I had heard about in London, but never got around to seeing.  I had never seen the film (which most of the people I went with were quite shocked about!) and didn't know an awful lot of what to expect.

I was sat with three others from school right nearer the front on the side.  I've got to say how much I absolutely loved the show and the experience.  It was fun, moving, dramatic, exciting, unexpected, clever and I left buzzing from it.  For some reason I didn't realise someone was going to die so that came as a shock and the circumstances, well!  And then the big reveal about his friend - even more crazy.  And I was amazed how I totally bought the changing of emotions between her state of mourning and then the laugh out loud parts of the psychic.  I really loved the variety.  And it was edge of your seat stuff following along with the story - I really didn't want the interval to happen - I wanted it to carry straight on!

And then there were all the technical sides of the performance.  It was amazing how the lighting managed to be so different on the ghosts.  And how he managed to walk through the door!  And the scene on the train.  I thought the other people were dummies and was thinking they were fairly life like and then they turned out to be real actors!  And I liked the big show numbers and dancing; that's often my favourite but of a show but not this time.  I did really enjoying the acting and performances.  The screens and projection of moving films was good too.


Thanks for organising another great outing, Mr B.  And thank you for putting on such a good show cast and crew of Ghost.  Seen Tuesday 25th February 2014

Sunday 2 February 2014

Wittertainment Correspondance

My sister and I have both written in to the BBC's Flagship film and entertainment radio show - or something like that!  We are both proud of each other's epistles so I thought it would be useful to have them here for posterity:

From: E********* G****
Date: 25 March 2013 20:49:02 GMT
To: mayo@bbc.co.uk
Subject: Wittertainment- Worst cinema experience

Dear Danny and Fozzie,

I was prompted to finally email in a cinema story that has haunted me
a number of years by a surprise mini shout out in last weeks show; I
am the occupational therapist who tom conway, your listener undergoing
a craniotomy, made reference to as visiting him on the hospital ward
just to say hi to jason Issacs. I want to say thanks to tom as it was
a joy to finally merge the working and wittertainment worlds and I
eagerly await the production of the wittertainment badges so i can
wear one to work in the hopes of sparking many more jason related
conversations in the future.

My worst cinema experience to date goes as follows- A few years ago my
friends and I went to our local generic cinema complex to watch high
school musical 3. Filled with efron excitement we took our places with
me choosing the aisle seat which I thought was a wise decision at the
time- oh how wrong I was. Just as the BBFC logo appeared on the screen
the women across the aisle from me leant over and proceeded to
projectile vomit across the gangway space between us. The people in
other rows fled form the smell but my friends and I were trapped by a
blockade of sick. The perpetrator's friend rushed to summon a poor
cinema worker who was forced to clean up the debris (they may not have
projectionists at these chains but they don't have an easy life) but
sadly the smell lingered on.

This event would have been distressing enough on its own (and also a
quite unfair review of the movie) but the real horror of the episode
was that the woman didnt then leave the cinema, not even to go and
rinse her mouth out, resulting in me, and the rest of the audience
enduring a nervous 2 hours wondering if it would happen again and if
it wasn't for my love of zac and the gang I may have been forced to
leave myself out of a fear that next time she may get me.

Therefore I am writing to request an amendment to the wittertainment
code of conduct along the lines of- if you show any signs of illness
at the cinema that for your own good and for the good of the rest of
the audience you forfeit your ticket price and leave.

Thank you
May I also say a quick hi and thank you to my sister catherine for
introducing me to the podcast and for being my faithful wittertainment
ally for many years.


Lizzie Greg
BA English and Philosophy
Bsc Occupational Therapy

PS. Mark, I went to the girls equivalent of your school- stop
pretending that you didn't have a privileged education.

------- Original Message --------
Subject:    Time Space Continuum Magic Wittertainment
Date:    Tue, 19 Nov 2013 17:11:46 +0000
From:    C******** K*******
To:    mayo@bbc.co.uk

Dear Time and Space Continuum,

Long time (PotC3 - the review in Cannes), first time (at last!).  I have
just been listening to a podcast in which you read out an email from
Drew Turnee/Turner.  The podcast in question is 12 July 2013 and Drew
questions whether there are other witertainees who are as far behind as
he - January 2013.  I feel like a dedicated wittertainee, and as
wonderful as marriage has been for me for a year and a half, it has
resulted in me being about 5 months behind. I can't bring myself to skip
up to date, I have to listen to each podcast in full.

I am a primary school teacher and my big catch up times have turned out
to be when I am on a course which I get to walk or cycle to which has
now happened three times including today, and some strange time space
continuum coincidences have happened each time.

1.  I went on the course last spring and on the way I listened to a
podcast (from January 2013) in which Mark was described as
sesquipadalian.  On the course (which was about teaching phonics) the
course leader wrote up three words which we had to read and then she
asked if we knew the meaning.  The third word was sesquipadalian and so
going very red I told her what you had told me that morning through my
headphones.

2. At the beginning of September as I headed to the course again, I
listened to you come up with the idea of Well Done U and I finished my
session with you saying if we never hear of it again we can guess what's
happened.  That evening I put on 5Live in the Live manner that the name
suggests to hear you advertising for us to tune in this week to hear a
big announcement. Lo and behold... Well Done U was happening, about four
months after first suggested although only days after I'd first heard
about it.

3. Today, when you discuss the magic effects of your Wimbledon time
shift, (including Simon guessing the card in Now You See Me which I had
just bought on DVD for my husband and we both enjoyed.  Yes, your
programme isn't about films or spying or sharks as I never really act on
Mark's reviews!), you read Drew's email out about being behind on
podcasts so I decide it's finally time to email these spooky
coincidences. Although as you pointed out in the podcast it would be a
long time before the subject was brought up again, and an even longer
time till Drew or I ever know if this is read out.

Many thanks to you two for the delayed hours of wittertainment, and also
thanks to my wittertainee sister, Lizzie, who keeps me up to date with
the big Wittertainment news and patiently joins in when I say 'Do you
remember the bit when...' from 6 months behind.

Love the show Steve,

Catherine
A few qualifications but too British to say

PS I finished the email and went back to the washing up, leaving the
email unsent, for me to proof read shortly when yet again, a coincidence
occurs:

4.  You read out an email from Tom Conway, who said he may be remembered
as the listener who had had brain surgery a few months before.  Well, my
previously mentioned sister, Lizzie, was an occupational therapist on
his ward at the time of his op, and being an up-to-date wittertainment
listener was able to go to speak to him about you guys.  Tom emailed
after that and mentioned my sister. She then emailed the show and
mentioned her worst cinematic experience - in brief, when the patron
next to her threw up at the beginning of the film, but didn't leave the
theatre - she told it a lot better. Sadly the week she emailed it was a
pair of understudies in the show, so we will never know whether her
email would have been worthy of reading out. (BTW is there anyone else
who finds the lovely tones of Zoe Ball and Jo Whiley indistinguishable?!)
My questions is, will we be two sisters whose Wittertainment epistles go
unread?

PPS - Hello to Jason Isaacs.  One of only two Habs boys I can feel proud of.

Sunday 19 January 2014

London Theatres

While updating my musicals viewing blogs I got to thinking about London Theatres and was wanting to find out how their sizes compared.  I found this really good page about it where Jackburton has kindly collated the list for us.  Here is the information:


1) Royal Albert Hall
Kensington Gore, London SW7 2AP
  
"Ordinary Let maximum capacity: 3,901
Exclusive Let maximum capacity: 5,222  In 1871, to raise extra funds
for the completion of the building, private individuals were invited
to purchase 999 year leases on some of the seats in the Hall. Under a
Royal Charter, stating the basis on which the Hall operates, most
events are classified as Ordinary Lets and the Members are entitled to
occupy their seats. However, in some cases an event may be classified
as an Exclusive Let, and the Members are therefore excluded from their
seats. Such classifications are granted on a limited basis dependent
on the nature of the event. On such occasions the privately owned
seats are also available to the promoter for sale to the public."
http://www.royalalberthall.com/text_only/hiring/conditions.aspx
  
  
2) London Apollo Hammersmith Theatre
Queen Caroline Street, Hammersmith, London W6 9QH
  
"Total 3326 seats, with 298 standing places are also available, 120 in
the stalls, 178 in the Dress Circle, should the box office choose to
sell them. When all stalls seats are removed, around 3000 standing
places are created, taking venue capacity to about 5000 in total."
http://www.theatremonkey.com/HAMMERSMITHbooking.htm
  
  
3) Royal Festival Hall
Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX
  
The Royal Festival Hall seats 2,900. 
The two smaller venues, the Queen Elizabeth Hall and Purcell Room seat
917 and 370 respectively.
  
  
4) London Coliseum - On the Town
8 St Martin's Lane, London WC2N 4ES
2356 seats
  
  
5) London Palladium Theatre
8 Argyll Street, London W1V 1AD
2286 seats
  
  
6) Apollo Victoria
17 Wilton Road, London, SW1V 1LL 
2208 seats
  
  
7) Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Drury Lane, London WC2B 5JF
2205 seats
  
  
8) Dominion Theatre
268-269 Tottenham Court Road, London W1P 0AQ
2171 seats
  
  
9) Royal Opera House
51 Floral Street, Covent Garden, London WC2E 9DD
2156 seats
  
  
10) Lyceum Theatre
21 Wellington Street, London WC2E 7RQ
2082 seats
  
  
11) Prince Edward Theatre, Jersey Boys
28 Old Compton Street, London W1V 6HS
1618 seats
  
  
12) Victoria Palace Theatre, Billy Elliot
Victoria Street, London SW1E 5EA
1517 seats
  
  
13) Adelphi Theatre 
Strand, London, WC2E 7NA 
1480 seats
  
  
14) Shaftesbury Theatre
210 Shaftesbury Avenue, London WC2H 8DP
1404 seats, on 3 levels
  
  
15) Palace Theatre
Shaftesbury Avenue, London W1V 8AY
1400 seats
  
  
16) Cambridge Theatre, Matilda
Earlham Street, Seven Dials, London WC2H 9HU
1283 seats
  
  
17) Her Majesty's Theatre
Haymarket, London SW1Y 4QR
1216 seats
  
  
18) Piccadilly Theatre
16 Denman Street, London W1V 8DY
1200 seats
  
  
19) Open Air Theatre
Inner Circle, Regents Park, London NW1 4NU
1187 Seats
 
  
20) Barbican: Theatre 
Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS
1160 seats (Barbican Theatre)
  
 
21) Prince Of Wales Theatre, Mamma Mia
31 Coventry Street, Leicester Square, London W1D 6AS
1160 seats on two levels
  
 
22) Savoy Theatre, Cabaret 
Savoy Court, Strand, London WC2R 0ET
1158 seats
  
 
23) Aldwych, Dirty Dancing
49 Aldwych, London, WC2B 4DF 
1129 seats on 3 levels
  
  
24) New London Theatre
Parker Street, London WC2B 5PW
1102 seats
  
  
25) National Theatre Olivier
South Bank, London SE1 9PX
1100 seats
  
  
26) Strand Theatre
5 Aldwych, London WC2B 4LD
1068 seats
  
  
27) Old Vic, The
Waterloo Road, London SE1 8NB
1067 seats
  
  
28) Peacock Theatre
Portugal Street, London WC2A 2HT
1037 seats
  
  
29) Phoenix Theatre, Once
110 Charing Cross Road, London WC2H 0JP
1000 seats
  
 
30) Queen's Theatre, Les Miserables, Les Miserables
Shaftesbury Avenue, London W1V 8BA
990 seats
 
  
31) Lyric Theatre Shaftesbury
29 Shaftesbury Avenue, London W1D 7ES
932 seats
  
  
32) National Theatre Lyttelton
South Bank, London SE1 9PX
900 seats
  
  
33) Shakespeare Globe Theatre
21 New Globe Walk, Bankside, London SE1 9DT
Audience Capacity: 900 (650 standing in the yard)
  
  
34) Gielgud Theatre, The
Shaftesbury Avenue, London W1V 8AR
889 seats
  
  
35) Theatre Royal Haymarket
18 Suffolk Street, Haymarket, London SW1Y 4HT
888 seats
 
  
36) Albery Theatre, now Noel Coward Theatre, Million Dollar Quartet
St Martin's Lane, London, WC2N 5AU 
872 seats and 21 standing, on 4 levels
  
 
37) Playhouse Theatre
Northumberland Avenue, London WC2N 5DE
800 seats
 
 
38) Comedy Theatre
6 Panton Street, London SW1Y 4DN
796 seats
  
  
39) Apollo Theatre
31 Shaftesbury Avenue, London, W1V 7DH 
775 seats
  
  
40) Wyndham's Theatre
Charing Cross Road, London WC2H 0DA
750 seats
  
  
41) Vaudeville Theatre
404 Strand, London WC2R 0NH
690 seats
  
  
42) Garrick Theatre
2 Charing Cross Road, London WC2H 0HH
678 seats
  
  
43) Duke of Yorks Theatre
104 St Martin's Lane, London WC2N 4BG
650 seats
  
  
44) Whitehall Theatre (Trafalgar Studio)
14 Whitehall, London SW1A 2DY
646 seats
  
  
45) St Martins Theatre
West Street, London WC2H 9NZ
550 seats
  
  
46) Criterion Theatre
Piccadilly Circus, London W1V 9LB
591 seats
  
  
47) Young Vic and Young Vic Studio
66 The Cut, London SE1 8LZ
The theatre ('Main House') can seat up to 500 / The Studio can seat up to 90
Combined total: 590
  
  
48) Duchess Theatre
Catherine Street, London WC2B 5LA
470 seats
  
  
49) New Ambassadors Theatre
West Street, London WC2H 9ND
450 seats
  
  
50) Fortune Theatre
Russell Street, London WC2B 5HH
440 seats
  
  
51) National Theatre Cottesloe
South Bank, London SE1 9PX
400 seats
  
  
52) Royal Court Theatre & Jerwood Theatre
Sloane Square, London SW1W 8AS
395 seats
  
  
53) Arts Theatre, The
6-7 Great Newport Street, London WC2H 7JB
358 seats
  
  
54) Venue theatre, The (Formerly Notre Dame Hall)
5 Leicester Place, Leicester Square London WC2H 7BP
350 seats
  
  
55) Donmar Warehouse Theatre
41 Earlham Street, London WC2H 9LD
252 seats
  
  
56) Barbican: Pit Theatre
Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS
190 seats (The Pit Theatre) 

Saturday 18 January 2014

Musicals - Cats

I was excited to see for most of the year that the Christmas production at the Oxford New Theatre was to be Cats.  And I decided that I would like to go and see it and as John wasn't that interested I used the Chickbeans Christmas money to take myself on the eve of the last day of term.  And using Mr B's discount and choosing a restricted view seat (that wasn't really and I moved for the second half) I only spent £15.  I was very excited to be going again.  My three previous visits are briefly described in My Musicals Love.  I wasn't too sure how the show would live up to my expectations.  I was both highly excited about it and at the same time saying it really wasn't going to be that great.

Fortunately, it was excellent!  I loved the music (not every song, it does have some lower points), the cats movement, the costumes.  I spent a lot of it counting how many cats are on stage at any one time and realised that lots of them play many parts.  I was also trying to work out which one was Mr Mistofelees.  There were some bits I remembered but lots and didn't, and some bits that happened which then produced an inkling of recognition, like the giant boot falling onto the stage early on.  I still loved Mr Mistofelees and I also enjoyed Rum Tum Tugger more than I remembered - it was his Elvis bit.  I also enjoyed the suspense of Macavity and I liked Skimbleshanks which I remember 'discovering' last time I went in Oxford at uni.




There was a funny bit during Magical Mr Mistofelees when a cat had been sitting on a drain pipe and most of the cats were looking at her including Rum Tum Tugger who had been leading the song.  She came off the pipe towards Rum Tum and he said, rather than sang, 'get back on there' and then turned to the audience and said 'sorry' and then the cat went back to the pipe and a magic trick happened.  It was all quite strange and I guess it had been a mistake.

I came running out of the theatre to where John was waiting for me and I was on such a wonderful high.  When I got in the car John played me a bit on the radio where the breaking news was the collapse of the roof in a West End Theatre.  It was quite spooky and brought me back down to earth.  Fortunately no one was killed.

Musical - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

After enjoying Matilda and Billy Elliot, we were thinking of going to see the new production of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory that had opened in the Spring and had quite a lot of hype.  We then found out that they were doing a special Children in Need Gala Performance of it so we decided to try get tickets for that.  So on Thursday 7th November, I got on my gladrags in the staff loos and we headed off to London and met the same friend we had seen Billy Elliot with.  There was a red carpet at Theatre Royal Drury Lane but sadly we weren't allowed on it and we made our way up to the rafters.


The show was very good.  Lots of big and clever sets - I really liked the TVs that they met the golden ticket winners in.  The first half was all about Charlie at home and everyone winning the tickets.  The finale of the first half was getting to the factory but you didn't go to it till the second half.  It seemed like quite a long build up to it.  The first view of the chocolate land was good, but not good enough in my opinion.  It was like a stand alone island so it didn't encompass the walls of the theatre which disappointed me.  There were lots of clever effects with big film screens.  Including the opening which was a Quentin Blake cartoon on how chocolate is made on sort of the curtain.  It was exciting that Wonka was Douglas Hodge who we sort of knew and he was very good.  The oompa loompas were clever and did lots of good puppetry sort of things.  The Great Glass Elevator was special at the end.

At the very end we were excited that Pudsey and Terry Wogan came on to the stage and were presented with a cheque by the cast for a lot of money - can the show really make half a million in one night?

Just after we saw the show a series started on Channel 4 called the Sound of the Musicals about West End theatre.  The first episode was all about Charlie so it was interested to see how it was made.

Theatre - The Mousetrap

This was another school outing organised by Mr B on 8th October 2013.  It was my fourth time seeing the show.  The other three were at St Martin's Theatre in London.  This was a special tour of the show to mark it's 60th Anniversary - the longest running play in the world!  My first visit was a special grown up outing with one parent and R, my best friend from primary school.  The second time was not long after with the whole family and my French exchange.  And the third time was with John on a summer London adventure day.

The funniest thing about this was that I couldn't remember who the murderer was - I had got it very confused in my mind after the second time I saw it, a man in the audience said it was the butler who did and I think he might have said he had played Major Metcalfe in the play at one time.  So it was a nice surprise for me watching it this time and still being able to enjoy the twist.  I liked that the set looked the same - I do like a country house room set with lots of different doors.  There was a funny bit where the curtain, which is opened and closed comically many on several occasions, was gradually coming off more and more hooks each time it was opened until it fell off altogether and the audience gave a nervous laugh.

Pleased to be able to see it and enjoy it again.  This was also about the time they showed the final four Poirot's on TV and I read a few of my Agatha's from home so I was really having a murder mystery overload!  Way to go Agatha!

Musical - Once

John had been mentioning this musical as he had seen the film some years ago, but I didn't know anything about it.  I decided to get us tickets for it for our first wedding anniversary.

We went the night (Friday July 26th 2013) before John did the London Triathlon and we were staying in a hotel for the night near the Excel.  I had read that there was entertainment before hand on the stage so I was keen for us to get there early.  The set was an Irish pub and it was serving drinks which as we watched from our seats in the circle we realised members of the audience were buying and drinking on stage.  And meanwhile people were playing musical instruments and singing Irish songs on stage.  It later turned out that these singers and musicians were the cast.  As 7.30pm approached, they certainly removed the audience from the stage and after a few more songs, the show started.



I really liked the staging.  The cast were on stage almost the whole time, but when they weren't required for a scene, they moved to the side of the stage (still inside the 'pub') where they sat on chairs and watched the performance and then they became the musicians when needed and they played a whole host of instruments.  I enjoyed the music as it had a my kind of folksy feel to it.  The show was interesting, although I didn't think it would survive deep rationalising, and left you feeling upbeat.  I thought the two lead actors were really good as were the others.  I enjoyed the scenes when the characters were speaking Czech, but all that really happened was they put up the Czech subtitles, until a nice twist at the end!

 At the interval, the bar came out on to the stage again.  After lots of embarassed no's from me, we eventually went down the stairs and through the stalls up on to the stage - eeek!  I have stood on a West End Stage.  It was hard to take it all in and we weren't allowed to take photos.  We bought 2 J2Os for the most expensive price ever - £10!  We did get souvenir plastic glasses with lids that we are still enjoying using.

A very enjoyable evening.  Thank you John for the suggestion.