Category: London Page 9 of 12

REVIEW: ‘Speed-The-Plow’

Given that I always seem to take the longest possible route through a sentence, you might be surprised to learn I’m a huge fan of the writing of David Mamet. He’s arguably best known for his screenplays for The Untouchables and Glengarry Glen Ross, or for the semi-fuss surrounding his play (and later film) Oleanna, all of which feature a very distinctive rhythm to the dialogue – in essence, clipped sentences, frequently overlapping. I like it – it’s a pleasant change from most other forms of dialogue which you see on stage or screen.

Which is why I was rather excited to see that Kevin Spacey and Jeff Goldblum were starring in a version of Mamet’s play Speed-The-Plow at the Old Vic Theatre here in London, and even more pleased when m’lady got me tickets for a performance last week by way of a Valentine’s Day pressie.

Goldblum plays Bobby Gould, a rising film producer. His friend Charlie Fox (played by Spacey) brings him a sure-fire hit, an action film featuring this month’s latest star – but his temporary secretary Karen (Laura Michelle Kelly) recommends he should green-light a more worthy project, adapting a novel she’s very keen on. As he’s taken a bit of a shine to Karen, Bobby finds himself torn between a sure-fire commercial hit (honouring his friendship with Charlie) and a film of artistic merit (the commissioning of which might well lead to some sauciness with Karen).

The first act is fast and funny – Goldblum’s an enthusiastic tangle of limbs as he and Spacey exchange lines, and they’re surprisingly physical as they get more and more excited about their inevitable success. I knew Goldblum could do comedy, but Spacey surprised me in doing this so well – I tend to think of him as a more weighty and serious actor, but the jokey dialogue bounces along cheerfully here. The second act slows things down a fair bit (as Goldblum and Kelly discuss the novel that might become a film), but things liven up again in the third act when all three actors are onstage for the conflict caused by Bobby Gould’s dilemma and need to make a decision, though there are still laughs even here. Spacey’s very much in his element here – a genuine sense of barely-suppressed anger in his performance, and on more than one occasion the audience stopped laughing dead as the mood swung from funny to tense.

And the ending? Ah, that would be telling, but trust me when I say it’s a solid ending and perfectly logical given everything that’s gone before.

Overall, this is a very strong play, with a good cast (I’ll cheerfully admit I was drawn to it by the combination of a writer whose work I admire and the chance to see two actors I like live on stage, but Kelly does a fine job in their company, even if she is rather hindered by having to rhapsodise a book which sounds like a radiation-fixated version of The Celestine Prophecy). It’s on until April 26, and you can book tickets via the Old Vic’s website.

I heartily recommend it as a night out – and as it runs 90 minutes with no interval, you’ll be out shortly after 9pm, leaving enough of the evening remaining to get a cup of tea (or something stronger) before heading home.

It’s Not Exactly San Serriffe, Granted…

… but in the spirit of April Fools’ Day foolery, I would urge any London-based Facebook members who are free at 6pm on Friday 11 April to get involved in this.

As I’ve said many times and with probably inappropriate venom, I’m not a member of Facebook, but I fervently hope that those of you who are find you’re able to get involved.

Or, at least, that you’re able to film it and send me a link to the footage.

As That Other Director Mr Roeg Put It, Bad Timing

Granted, it’s probably a question of deadlines and unexpectedly intervening events, but the combined effect is to make the cover of the latest ‘ES Magazine’ (a glossy piece of bilge given away with the London Evening Standard) appear to be saying ‘Another Minghella in the press’… which is more than a bit unfortunate this week, isn’t it?

Not half as bad as Parade Magazine in the USA publishing an interview weeks after its subject had been assassinated, sure, but still…

LIST: Five Things I Have Learned In The Last Month

(Shared in the interests of adding to the sum of human knowledge)

1. If you’re going to the Tutankhamun exhibition at the Dome in London, make sure you take along a Waterstone’s loyalty card, as this allows you to jump the queue (apply for a free card here).

2. As well as making beautiful beds, the customer service supplied by Warren Evans is top-notch. And I speak as one who used to work in customer service, and worked hard at being good at it.

3. However, the camlocks and the like supplied for constructing furniture purchased from Next are feeble and not fit for the job at all. My screwdriver set is far from the strongest in the land, and it broke several of the camlocks. And the instructions contain errors – how, I ask, are you supposed to put a camlock into a piece of wood if you’ve already screwed another bit of wood over the appropriate holes? You can’t, and given that it took me more time to construct a wardrobe last weekend than it did to complete the London Marathon last year, Next will be receiving a letter of complaint in the near future. A very hoity one at that.

4. The free podcasts by Adam and Joe from BBC Radio 6 are a lot of fun, and worth your time.

5. Unless you relish the possibility of disinfectant or other people’s urine on your fingers, you should always check your shoelaces are tied before entering a public lavatory.

Yes, I Will Be Sending This To Private Eye

Spotted in the London Paddington branch of WHSmith.

I like to think that the near-obliteration of the A and the subtle amending of the G into an O is entirely deliberate.

And while we’re taking cheap shots, is it just my imagination, or is that one of the least convincing photo-montage jobs of all time? Sergeant Pepper’s looked more like all the people were actually there, and that was in 1967 or so.

(Note to my American readers: don’t be fooled by Morgan’s appearance on various TV shows over there, he’s not any kind of representative of the UK; for example,not many of us Limeys have been fired from our newspaper editing jobs for publishing fake photos purporting to show British servicemen urinating on Iraqi prisoners. In fact, the number of British people who are on record for doing so is very slight – just 1 in something like 60 million.)

You May Need To Enlarge This To Appreciate It… As The Microbiologist Said To The Lab Technician

Spotted in London last week, a sharp reminder of the need to always read the small print at the bottom.

In what way are the sweets like a jacuzzi, I wonder?

(Quite Literally) Talking Bollocks

Well, it’s been a couple of days since I’ve posted anything, and it recently occurred to me it’s been quite a while since I posted anything personal, so I thought I’d share something from my past. This is a supportive environment, right?

The following is entirely true, but – as is so often the case with my life – a mix of stupidity and more serious matters. I don’t know if I’d go so far as to say it was a blend of comedy and tragedy, that’s for you to decide.

Anyway.

It’s fairly rare for me to have a bath. Don’t worry, I’m not grubby (I shower at least once a day), but as I’m over six feet tall, it’s often difficult to find a bath which allows me to fully lie down – by which I mean I usually have to decide whether it’ll be knees or shoulders and upwards out of the water. Neither of which is ideal. But, one Thursday evening about ten years ago, I was sharing a flat with a friend in Hackney Wick, East London, and as she was out, I thought I’d have a nice hot bath to see if it was as relaxing as all the adverts seem so keen to suggest.

It wasn’t very relaxing, as it turned out – though that was less to do with the temperature or the bubble bath I used, and more to do with the fact that, as I was washing in the general groinal area, I felt something which I’d never felt before. No, I don’t mean a sense of shame or self-loathing, I’m all too used to that, but my hand passed over something in the scrotal regional which felt out of place. The bath was warm, but my stomach suddenly felt cold – one of those sudden chilling clenches in the gut, like when you realise you left your keys in the house.

I checked again, and there was no doubt about it – on the side of one of my testicles, towards the back, was something that felt oddly hard (don’t make the obvious comment, this is the serious part of the story, okay?), like a small pea. It didn’t feel right, and I’d never felt it before. Shaken, I hurriedly got out of the bath and dried off, and said nothing about it to my flatmate (or anyone else, for that matter). It felt too big and scary to discuss, and somehow as if it would become more real if the words were said aloud. I slept, but not well.

The next day, Friday, I booked a session to see my doctor. The appointment was for Monday morning before work, which unfortunately left me a solid weekend in which to dwell on it. We lived opposite Victoria Park, and looking out of my window as I mulled the possibility of something being seriously wrong, I remembered how Dennis Potter, when he was aware that he was dying of cancer, said that the blossom on the tree outside his window was “the whitest, frothiest, blossomiest blossom” ever. It being late winter, the trees I was looking at remained steadfastly bare-armed, but I could see what he meant. It felt like one of those “if I turn out to be okay, I’ll do all those things I keep putting off” moments. Well, more a series of moments, really; a whole weekend of them.

Monday morning arrived, and I went to see the doctor. He worked in the Wick Health Centre – named after the area, of course, but somehow it seemed only fitting. I entered his office, and explained, and he nodded and asked me to drop my trousers. Reasonable enough, given the issue on my mind, but it had been a bit of a ‘dry spell’ that year (future biographers will probably suggest it was an extension of the same ‘dry spell’ I’d experienced in the years since birth, but that’s a discussion for another time), and as a straight chap I was slightly disappointed that the first hands in years that were willing to touch my gonads were the hands of a middle-aged man. Still, testicle-lump-worriers can’t be choosers and all that, so I stood by his examination bench, my trousers and underwear spooled around my ankles, and he examined my genitals.

You may have read in scary books about how a man’s scrotum retracts when he’s afraid, and it’s true that happens – and it certainly occurred that morning, as I was scared he might say that, yes, there is a lump, and it’s probably cancerous, so everything was pretty shrunken down there. Then again, it was a winter morning as well, and as I wasn’t actually looking to impress the doc with my package, but just to get a diagnosis, I put that out of my mind as he checked where I explained I’d found the lump.

“Well,” he said eventually, “I can’t find anything wrong.”

“No?” I asked, as I pulled up my trousers. “Nothing ?”

“No, nothing abnormal at all.”

“Oh, good,” I said, but that was an understatement. I felt as if the sun had broken through the clouds, and I was being given the chance to get on with my life.

“I’ll put a note on your records, but I don’t think there’s anything to worry about,” he said, and as good as his word, he added the day’s date and a brief description of the session to my medical record card; nothing abnormal detected – or, to quote the all-too appropriate acronym he used, NAD.

I picked up a leaflet on self-examination from the waiting room as I left, and made my way off to work. As I waited for the bus, I read the leaflet, which stressed the importance of chaps checking themselves regularly, which is only sensible; part of the instructions, though, urged men not to get worried and think they had a lump when they had in fact isolated the epididimus (basically, the point where the tubes join the back of the balls). As I read further, I realised that was exactly what I’d done, and was annoyed with myself – for want of a bit of basic biological knowledge, I’d convinced myself that this was definitely it: I was going to die soon, and that I’d never get to climb mountains or woo fair maidens or write novels or anything.

Mind you, I seem to have a fundamental problem with remembering that my testicles are actually attached to my body by tubes; some years earlier, bored and inspired by watching someone on TV skilfully rotating those shiny steel ‘stress balls’, I’d tried to do the same with my own balls. I haven’t attempted such a thing since, mind – I learnt a swift and painful lesson that day on the non-swappable nature of my nads.

Though, given the above tale, it was and is painfully obvious to me now that, in the matter of the human body, it is as the Buddhists say: everything is connected.

Corrective Vandalism

Delighted to spot this in the Dome on Saturday (no, I shan’t call it after the phone company who bought it for a tenner, as I, like many other people, paid for the thing to be built, so I’ll call it what I blimmin well like).

I like to think the ‘vandalism’ was by a member of the public, though if it was a later correction by a member of staff, that’s not so bad either. Grammar for the people, and used by the people, and all that.

Sign “O” The Times, Alarmingly

This sign has recently appeared in the Gents at the place where I work.

Given that I’m amongst the youngest there, it’s a bit alarming that they feel that we need a refresher course in how to wash your hands, surely?

Even The Evening Standard Classifieds Would Be More Dignified Than This, Surely?

Looks as if a sexually frustrated tube worker has craftily inserted a subliminal message into a sign at Mile End tube station, asking for physical affection.

Not exactly John Donne, though, is it?

Page 9 of 12

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