Magical Evening

This Thursday I will be visiting the world’s oldest and last surviving grand music hall called Wilton’s. A wonderful and magical place hidden in the centre of London near Tower Hill. John Wilton built the theatre behind his pub ‘The Prince of Denmark’ in 1858, later know as the Mahogany Bar. A sun-burner chandelier with 300 gas jets and 27000 cut crystals dominated a mirrored hall. The auditorium remained incredibly intact: the original cast iron ‘barley sugar’ pillars support a papier-mâché balcony under paper roses set in a vaulted roof. In Wilton’s day, 1500 people used to cram into the music hall to hear the top acts: artistes from the Covent Garden were lured over in full costume to perform late night arias.

Here, I will be attending The Soldier’s Tale by Stravinsky which was recommended to me by J. A music-theatre performance: a mix of drama, music, film and physical theatre. Presented by the world famous Academy of St Martin in the Fields, which joins forces with director Lawrence Evans and internationally acclaimed and highly versatile violinist, Anthony Marwood in a unique production of The Soldier’s Tale, a Faustian fable of a Soldier cruelly tricked into giving his soul to the devil. I’m really looking forward to this, I will bring my camera along *as usual* and will try to catch the perfect moment to share… I’ll be accompanied by Chris that evening and will be wearing my chocolate satin dress that I’ll have to finish tomorrow. I think it will blend in nicely with the magic of the evening… :)

© G. Allen, The Entrance

© G. Allen, The Auditorium

© Wilton’s, The Auditorium

© Wilton’s, The Auditorium

A Night Out

I had my birthday today… Thanks CH. for your text message! Thanks JdB., Dalton, Nicky and IvS for your emails! Thanks Uncle and Aunt, and AS. for your lovely birthday cards. And thanks AS. for organising a surprise party for two, it was wonderful!
We went to a Scottish restaurant; lots of nice fish *yummy!* ‘Loch Fyne’ and it seems to be one of two fish restaurants in London. AS. was lucky booking a table; it was all reserved for at least two weeks. The food was excellent! I had crab cakes with Thai green bean salad, AS. had the best halibut I’ve ever tasted with a caper salsa and lovely steamed veggies… totally yummy!
AS. gave me a really cool A3 printer, colour, so now I can print all my artwork and stuff for my portfolio, totally awesome! I will have to buy A3 paper though but that won’t be a problem I reckon, no clue where to get it from so I will have to do some research online. I will probably buy it online anyway, it’s easier… Well here are a few pics:
emoticons/laughing.gif

My present



The Restaurant [Loch Fyne, Covent Garden]


AS.’s dinner [Halibut and Caper Salsa]


My dinner [Crab Cakes and Thai Green Bean Salad]


AS.’s dessert [Cheese and Oatmeal Biscuits *yummy*]


My dessert [Chocolate Mousse]

After dinner we went to see a play at the Fortune Theatre, Russell Street which is called “The Woman in Black” Which wasn’t as terrifying as they mention below. It was good! Some of the women in the audience were a bit tense since they screamed a lot whenever something was slightly ‘scary’, perhaps I’m just not one of the faint-hearted like they seemed to be. I thought the scary bits where cool and these women slightly annoying… Anyway, I didn’t let it ruin the play, we had a splendid evening.
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The Woman in Black
One of the less well-known West-End fixtures, this adaptation of Susan Hill’s Gothic novel has been packing out houses since 1989 through word of mouth alone.
In Stephen Mallatrat’s stylish adaptation, an elderly lawyer hires a young actor to re-enact the experiences of his youth – the events in Hill’s original novel – in order to exorcise the ghosts of his past.
Suspense is superbly sustained by the two actors, who slip beautifully from past to present. With elegantly controlled tension and a great twist, this is one of the best spine-chillers on the London stage. Genuinely terrifying.
The Fortune Theatre
The first theatre built after World War I is an astonishing piece of architecture. Built in 1922-4, it preceded the arrival of the Art Deco and Modernist style whose smooth curves were to dominate the inter-war period. Instead, it takes its inspiration from the artistic style of Cubism, with an unpredictable, blocky geometry that constantly defies expectations and divides opinions. The quirkiness of the architecture is matched by the Fortune’s most influential show ‘Beyond the Fringe’ (1961), the show that launched the careers of Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Jonathan Miller and Alan Bennett, and which has been credited with the invention of modern satire and stand-up comedy.
Calling your theatre the Fortune is asking for trouble – the Elizabethan theatre with the same name burnt down in 1621 – and failure dogged this intimate playhouse from its opening. For much of its existence it has been unable to make money and was reduced to staging amateur productions. Then, in 1989, Stephen Mallatratt’s ‘The Woman in Black’ arrived. This brilliant shocker has been filling the Fortune ever since, based almost entirely on word of mouth.
© londontown
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The Stage

The Audience


The Stage after the break








Covent Garden

After a little stroll we took the bus back to IS. and CS.’s place who just got back from India, we crashed there till 06.30 in the morning. Not a clever thing to do because it takes me three days to recover…