



one woman's struggle to educate her silver-fox through a love of the theatre, film and his credit card.
Dame Judi appears with the help of a cane, though one that never caresses a bare buttock, a consequence of her spraining an ankle last week. One can only presume she was making a break for sanity and was injured when being wrestled to the ground by stage management.
Scouring the programme for a reason why the Dame lent her reputation to this painful experience, the Silver-Fox came upon this..
"Before I look at any play, I like to hear a vision for the piece. I need to be excited by other people's enthusiasm and so I start by listening to what the director has to say. When I finally read Madame de Sade, I realised I hadn't come across anything like it before."
I think we know what she's saying.
When the Marquis was finally announced to be at the door I was thinking, let it be Russell Brand! but the old bugger showed the greatest of taste in not appearing in this most unsexy piece about sex.
As the applause, and there was alot of it, died down a chap in front of us turned to his wife/companion and with a deathly finality said, "Well that's that then", and you just knew that she'd blown her chance of seeing the inside of a theatre for the rest of the year. Leaving, a woman behind us tapped me on the shoulder and said: "I noticed you were fidgeting a bit, what did you think of it?" I gave her my frank opinion, it didn't take long, she turned to her friend saying: "See it's not just me!"
Maybe there is a whole audience of people clapping like crazy each night all thinking that they were the only one to see that the Emperor had no clothes.
This is the cast.
See what I mean?
Maybe the evening would prove a trip down scholastic memory lane with tales of midnight feasts and tuck shops and roastings in the dorms. Well James Robertson Justice how wrong could a girl be?
To misquote Boney M....."O Those Germans".
It's crap being a teenager; bad hair, bad clothes, bad teachers, all the hormones in the world and no where to put them. If only someone could write a great musical about being young and in love and misunderstood, maybe adapted from a great play! Oh, I forgot they did..Stephen Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein and West Side Story.
The songs in Spring Awakening are the kind of adolescent soft-rock that you hear in shopping malls, immediately gettable and instantly forgettable.The lyrics think they're shocking and radical and they may be if you are fourteen and saying fuck very loudly in front of your parents over and over again gives you a hard on. Speaking of which, Mark Ravenhill handled synchronised masturbation much more enjoyably in Over There at The Royal Court.
What did we like? The cast are fresh and energetic, Bill T Jones' choreography in "The Bitch of Living" (surely a shoo-in for our next Eurovision entry?) was a highlight, the set and lighting by Christine Jones and Kevin Adams are fun. We were particularly taken by a sideways moving Stannah chair lift creation that crawled across the back wall for no palpable reason, and I loved the innovation of the song list being written on the school blackboard so I could count them off more easily than sneaking a look at my programme too often. The hair products used should get their own credit.
It all ended to a standing ovation, saving S-F and myself , and a reprise of that old crowd pleaser "Totally F***ed". Speaking of which how about the search for the next Connie Fisher/ Lee Mead being based on Spring Awakening and every time one of the contestants is voted off they have to be serenaded by the others singing..."you're f***ed, you're f***ed, you're totally f***ed"?
Turning on Newsnight at home we found the debate being about sex education for the young, with the prospect of abortion clinics being advertised on television. Nothing changes.
Michael Winterbottom had a spare few weeks in his hectic schedule so he decided to take a crack cast of American actors, plus Equity's Mr. Dull - Colin Firth, follow them round the older bits of Genoa and scare the bejeesus out of me.
With shades of Don't Look Now, twisting alleyways and glimpses of a loved one, and bizarrely Walkabout (maybe it's the browning of a sixteen year old skin, or the trailing of one sibling by another) the film follows a newly widowed Firth and his two children, Willa Holland and Perla Haney-Jardine as they re-locate to the titular Italian city after the death of his wife in a terrible car accident. Firth teaches, what, I'm not sure, at a university and dabbles in a flirtation with a younger student, the elder child, Holland, explores her sexuality, the local lads and the local drugs, while her sister plays the piano, sketches and is visited by the ghost of her mother.
And watching it unsettled me more and gave me more distress than a barrel load of Japanese horror movies.
I don't think I recovered from the terrible way the Hope Davis dies in the opening scene and as Winterbottom racked up the sense of guilt and forboding and despair I just wanted it all to stop...and then it did incredibly abruptly.
the horror, the horror.
Genova is released on Friday the 26th of March.