Friday, February 28, 2014

The body in the ballroom



To the Opera House for a new production of Eugene Onegin. The success of the evening is really built on the splendid Tatyana of Nicole Car, who was little short – if at all short – of splendid; a rich totally assured soprano at its best, and a fine dramatic actress not only accomplished but offering much for the future. She was  not really matched by the rest of the cast, which was competent rather than really exciting. Dalibor Jenis is a baritone of very considerable experience, who never falters as Onegin, but lacks both musical and physical excitement, and if an Onegin isn’t emotionally exciting in both those fields he can’t really succeed completely in the part – especially in the last act, never easy to bring off. James Eggleston’s Lensky is rich in decibels but not in sensitivity: he delivered the great aria of farewell to life as though it was a military call to arms, and the sheen of sweet, nostalgic melancholy essential to it was nowhere to be heard. Sian Pendry is a sweetly pretty and charming Olga about whom a tenor might well lose his head. Kanen Breen’s Triquet is properly silly without being decrepit, which is fine. One hoped for much of the Russian bass Konstantin Gorny, but Gremin’s great hymn to marriage, though perfectly adequate, brought no real thrill of richness from his voice. All this probably sounds more denigratory than one means to be: the evening is never less than satisfactory, and sometimes – as in Ms Car’s thrilling letter scene – a great deal more. Apart from . . . on yes, now we come to the production. Kasper Holten’s idea of two Tatyanas and Onegins – of the mature Tatyana looking back at the great romantic event of her youth, with dancers portraying the young lovers, is original and exciting and works extremely well during the first half of the evening. Alas, after the interval – as with so many Big Ideas – everything falls apart and becomes farcical. Lensky, killed in the duel with Onegin, has to remain dead on-stage for forty minutes, with the entire audience’s attention focussed on him – is he really breathing? will he sneeze? did we see him clink? – while Prince Gremin is faced with the problem of giving a really good party with a dead body and a sizable piece of tree in the middle of his ballroom floor. The set is a great mistake, with a line of French windows bisecting the stage, so that both dance scenes become impossible to mount – not so bad in the domestic ball, with its coarse menace (who quite why it should be menacing is another question) but hopeless in the second, with the aristocratic couples actually unable to dance, and forced to shuffle about uneasily trying to avoid the ladies’ dresses getting snagged up in the silly piece of tree (and not always succeeding).
So, in the famous remark of the curate at tea, the egg is good in parts. But hey, who expects perfection. It’s a good evening, Tchaikowsky's score is simply wonderful, and there’s an excellent excuse to have another grumble at directors who don’t really think about the consequences of their Big Ideas. Who could want more?

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Cheers for Marks and Spencers!

Hi Julia here - yes definitely cheers all round for M&S!   No longer will I have to dive into  the Worthing branch when visiting my Brother and Sister-in-law -( the lovely Pat and Paul Lethbridge)   Great! I won't have to lug back to Sydney numerous packs of five pairs of their superb knickers which I know all us British gals rely on (sorry Bonds!)  . .  Another new shopping Mall is under construction in George Street (due to open in October) and it will house our very own Marks and Sparks...   We know that Myers and D.J are getting itchy feet and they'll sure need to scratch them!  But even  more than stunning would be if  M&S  put one of their marvelous  food halls in their Sydney Emporium.   This, once and for all,would  sort out all the b****y,boring nonsense that has been going on between Coles and Woolies, who will sure get far more than a mere slap on their wrists.   Let's keep our eyes and ears open - it's going to be fun!   Cheers for now - Julia

The Little Otleys

Having enjoyed reading and writing about Dashiell Hammett I've gone to the opposite extreme and have very much enjoyed reading Ada Leverson's The Little Otleys - and look forward to more Leverson. What a really lovely writer! - great friend of Oscar Wilde - befriended him in his great crisis, lodged him during the trials and met him when he came out of prison; apart from which a great wit with wonderful insight into the relationship between the sexes. Plus, extremely enjoyable to read. Indeed, a lot of these now ignored women lovelists of the late Victorian and early Edwardian period are really worth reading. Bruce and Edith, the little Otleys, are a marvellously drawn couple, both comic and rather melancholy. Great stuff.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Mr Lilly on PISCES



Qualities of the Signe Pisces   Is of the watery Triplicity, Northern, cold Signe, moyst, Flegmatick, feminine, nocturnal, the house of Jupiter. and exaltation of Venus, a Bycorporeal, common or double-bodies Signe, an idle, effeminate, sickly Signe, or representing a party of no action.
Sicknesse   All Diseases in the Feet, as the Gout, and all Lamenesse and Aches incident to those members, and so generally salt Flegms, Scabs, Itch, Botches, Breakings out, Boyles and Ulcers proceeding from Blood putrifacted, Colds and moyst diseases.
Places   It presents Grounds full of water, or where many Springs and much Fowle are, also Fish-ponds or Rivers full of Fish, places where Hermitages are, also Fish-ponds or Rivers full of Fish, places where Hermitages have been, Mats about Houses, Water-Mills in houses neer the water, as to some Well or Pump, or where water stands.
Corporature   A short stature, ill composed, not very decent, a good large Face, palish Complexion, the Body fleshy or swelling, not very straight, but incurvating somewhat with the Head.
Kingdomes, Countries, Cities   Calabria in Sicilia, Portugall, Normany, North of Egypt, Alexandria, Themes, Wormes, Ratisbone, Compostella.

-          William Lilly, Christian Astrology (1647)

Monday, February 24, 2014

Tickling the ivories

Is David Jones in Sydney the only store to engage a pianist? Certainly I think the only one in Australia - maybe there's one somewhere in America? Don't know of one in the UK. Anyway, Michael Hope has been tickling the ivories at David Jones' for a considerable number of years, now - always happy to chat and play requests, though he stops short of Liszt's arrangement of Beethoven's Ninth. Long may he
reign!

Julia's latest Pilates news!

Hi gals and guys!     As usual I had my great Pilates Session with Brad Leeon yesterday (Monday) afternoon, and as ever he challenged me with new positions and interesting specialised breathing techniques.   He often helps me regain my balance,  because a few years ago I badly tripped over wearing simple flat sandals, and  knocked my head (Derek says he'll never forget the sound of my hitting the pavement right by Hyde Park Gate). So blood stained and seven stitches later, with the the reassuring news that my skull wasn't cracked as the doctor had seen it -  I staggered home at 3.30am.  However, yesterday, after practicing walking on a steeply curved surface - not doing too badly -  Brad asked me to walk backwards.   His face was a study.   'You walk backwards far better than forward!'   I even got the impression that this was something new even to him!  I was surprised that the fall hadn't seriously disrupted my backward movements;  'but no', my extremely wise teacher replied ' It's disrupted your forward walking because up to the moment of the fall you were, in fact, walking forward and it's that that's making you so apprehensive!   I said that I was so used to walking backwards because of so much time I've spent with the Queen! (joke!)  'Bye for now -  keep breathing and exercising!

Saturday, February 22, 2014

No more news(papers)?



The Sydney Morning Herald publishes its last broadsheet edition today. As someone who felt that taking advertisements off the front page of The Times was a sufficient shock for one lifetime I don’t really approve of the way all the papers have gone tabloid – somehow it seems to diminish their dependability - though I dare say this is illusion; somehow the Guardian simply being the same shape and size as the Mirror is unsettling. But I guess newspapers are on the way out anyway, or statistic suggest it (a new weekly is nevertheless about to be published in Australia). I take the SMH from Friday to Monday, and find this quite enough reading to do outside ‘normal’ reading pattern – and it’s surprising how many articles I drop after the first two or three paragraphs. A lot of the writing doesn’t, frankly, seem very good – and good news services on TV (here, notably, the BBC World News and the ABC news) seem to fill the bill as far as actual news is concerned, while a good many on-screen commentators are excellent. The only thing one will really miss about newspapers, sadly - being hard-nosed about it - are the commentaries and critics (not nearly enough time given to the arts on TV nets and current affairs programmes).