Tag Archive | West End

Second Day of the Colloquium and ‘Annie’ at the West End

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Second Day of Colloquium and Annie at the West End  

            By the second day, we got fully into the schedule of the colloquium. Familiarity with our global colleagues developed easily, coffee and tea with snacks acted as fine ice-breakers, the presentations were superb and provided much food for thought and discussion. Lunch (more substantial burgers and quiches this time) provided yet another opportunity to socialize as the afternoon brought more interesting panels. We were all done by 4. 30 pm, when I made plans to join my colleague Brendan at his faculty apartment at Byron Hall near Russel Square.

A Lovely Evening at Brendan’s:

Brendan has been the NY-appointee at London for the past two years and will be staying for yet another year. He has moved house from a spacious, rather special apartment that NYU faculty members in London once occupied to a far more pedestrian ‘one-bed’ apartment in a student dorm—not the most uplifting of moves. Still, refusing to have his spirits dampened, he provided for some of us—prosecco and warming bowls of lentil and corn soup that his wife had cooked. Ifeona, Afrodesia, Brendan and I had a very talkative evening as we mulled over varied aspects of our careers at NYU.

I did not stay as long as the others as Shahnaz had informed me (by phone) that she had managed to get us 20 pound day tickets to see Annie at the West End. It was not a play I would ordinarily had chosen to see but the role of Miss Hannigan was being played by Miranda Hart who is one of the UK’s best-loved comedienne. Viewers might recognize her name for the major role she has on Call the Midwife, a show to which I have never warmed.  I also saw her being interviewed on the Graham Norton Show and thought it would be good to see her make her theater debut.

I walked briskly towards Holborn, reached my hotel, brewed a cup of decaff tea for myself, ate a hasty cookie and left.

Seeing Annie at the West End’s Piccadilly Theater:

Well, I hate to bad mouth what was obviously a very sincere effort at excellence, but Annie fell miserably short. Apparently, there are three little girls alternatively playing the role of Annie and, I am guessing, we probably saw the worst of the lot (I simply cannot believe there could exist a worse Annie). The entire set and the costumes were drab and the kind of superb co-ordination that you expect to see in a staged musical was simply missing. As for Miranda, she simply does not have the personality to play Miss Hannigan as she is meant to be played—as a cut-throat female Fagin. Instead, she played a sloshed care-giver who looked horribly awkward as she pranced around and managed to provide not the slightest hint of the sinister. A very disappointing night at the theater indeed!

Neither one of us was hungry even after we left the theater. Besides, we both needed to get home to pack our larger case –which we intended to leave at NYU’s premises when we were in Devon. We’d be leaving with a pull-along backpack. Tomorrow morning, we shall take our cases to NYU and leave them there.

Back Home to Pack:

Packing did not take us too long as we made sensible choices in shoes and clothing for our four days in Devon. When we were done, we took showers and got ready for bed. It was not long before we hit the sack after what had been another eventful day in London. It is a relief that that the heat has abated and the day was far more comfortable.

Until tomorrow, cheerio.

Surviving Record-Breaking Heat Wave in AC-ed Comfort at Colloquium and Sensational Audra McDonald in the West End

Tuesday, June 21, 2017

London

After spending a virtually sleepless night (I stayed awake till 3.30am and then took a pill to lull me to sleep), I awoke at 7.30 am.  Having reviewed my presentation last night, I felt thoroughly wired for more than half the night and wondered how I could possibly make my presentation with no sleep.

Light Brekkie and Departure for Colloquium:

Shahnaz suggested I eat some yogurt before leaving and I crumbled up a granola bar into it, downed a cup of decaff coffee, dressed and left by 8. 15 am.  I needed to do some urgent work at a PC in the Faculty Lounge at NYU-London before the Colloquium began at 10.00 am. It took me less than ten minutes to walk from our hotel to campus. I got a lovely warm welcome from the porters (Dave and Mark) before I ran into Ruth who also gave me a hug. Her husband Joe was with her and it was great to see him again too.

Then I was down in the basement where the Faculty Lounge is located and where I found a PC. I managed to get my work done quickly enough (although it took me forever to figure out where the @ key is on a British keyboard—I had forgotten how to find it!).

By 9. 45, I was upstairs in the room where coffee and cookies were laid out. As conference participants came trickling in, we greeted each other and continued getting acquainted. By 10.30 am, Welcome Remarks were made by our Dean and the panelists began making their presentations. From the get-go, each presentation was very absorbing indeed and I found myself fully engrossed in them.

We stopped for Lunch at 12. 30 (the platters of tiny finger sandwiches which is what lunches are all about in the UK at Faculty meeting have not changed), did some more socializing and discussing of the presentations we had heard and then returned for the afternoon session—which was when my panel was scheduled. My colleagues Kevin and Peter presented before I did—and then it was my turn and I was off and away. The focus of the colloquium was Politics and the Classroom—and indeed we have so much to talk about and think about in terms of this topic that there was no dearth of items to dissect. I have to say that I enjoyed presenting information on the tools and techniques I have used to balance discourse in the contentious classroom and going by the questions and feedback that followed, the entire panel was very well received. I was pleased to find out that a lot of my colleagues use role-playing as a technique in different ways and that it seems to work for all of them.

The final sessions of the afternoon followed after a break for tea and cake. Again, everything was deeply stimulating and participants got into the spirit of the colloquium with great enthusiasm.

Hottest Day in 34 Years in London:

As it turned out, today was the hottest day in 34 years and the United Kingdom was sweltering. People were wearing practically nothing and for the first time in my professional life, I made a presentation in a T-shirt and sandals as I had brought the wrong wardrobe altogether for this befuddling heat wave. One of my colleagues was telling me that this is the most informal outfit in which he has ever seen me. But almost everyone was dressed in like manner (so I was in good company).

Outside, on the street at Bedford Square, when I got out of our building at 4. 30 pm, it felt like walking into a sauna after spending the entire day in blessed air-conditioning. I walked towards my hotel at Holborn, stepped briefly into Sainsbury to buy a new Lebara SIM card and top up my phone, called my Dad in Bombay and then got to my room for a cup of tea and a biscuit and a good helping of Tiramisu which is one of my favorite things to buy from Sainsbury. I ate a huge helping of it and got rid of my craving in one go.

Off to Leicester Square:

Not too long after, I left the hotel, walked to Holborn Tube station that was mobbed as commuters tried to get into the tunnel during peak hour rush. The trains were so packed and so hot that it was like walking into an airing cupboard. In ten minutes, I was at the Wyndhams Theater at Leicester Square where Shahnaz was waiting for me. She had managed to get into the queue at 10.00 am to get us tickets to see Audra McDonald play Billie Holiday in Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill which transferred from Broadway to the West End only a few days ago. For 20 pounds, you could not go wrong and it was thrilling to be able to see this sold-out show in this city.

Both of us were too full to go out in search of a bite—so we decided to postpone it until after the show. And because it was so hot, we very gratefully escaped into the theater to cool off.

Watching the Inimitable Audra McDonald at the West End:

Shahnaz not only managed to get us day tickets, but they were actually on the stage itself as the set was a reproduction of Emerson’s Bar and Grill in Philadelphia where Billy Holiday made her lasing reputation. I had no idea what to expect—but for the fact that one of America’s greatest live performers was the star of the show, Audra McDonald, I knew nothing about it. So I was delighted to discover that she would be playing the One and Only Billie Holiday. And was she phenomenal! The life of ‘Lady Day’ that she spelled out through her blues performance was so sad, so moving. McDonald was simply splendid in the role. That she is a sensational singer, I had taken for granted. But that she could act as well as she did simply took me by surprise.  I had no clue that for most of her shows, Lady Day was drunk as a skunk. And yet she charmed her audience night after night by the sheer power of her talent. And McDonald got it just right. There was not a false note—and I do not mean literally. I mean her emoting was just spot on—neither overplayed nor underplayed. It was just perfect. Her accompanists were a pianist, a drummer and a double bassist and between the three of them, they were a fantastic counterpoint to her monologue. What a great night at the theater!

Dinner at Busabu Ethai:

We walked past Leicester Square for dinner at Busabu Ethai—a chain I have been meaning to check out for a long while. So I was quite pleased that Shahnaz suggested it. We decided to split a bottle of Thai Change beer—with the weather being what it is, we could drown in chilled beer—and an order of Classic Pad Thai. This was probably the worst Pad Thai we had ever eaten. It was insipid and served cold—such a terrible disappointment! However, the beer was refreshing and as we went over our day, we decided that despite the let-down we suffered at dinner, each of us had a very satisfying day indeed. (Shahnaz spent most of her’s at the Victoria and Albert Museum where she studied Kalighat paintings in the South Asian section).

Until tomorrow, when the heat will, hopefully, wave goodbye, cheerio…