Saturday, December 31, 2011

I'm talking about 'Jerusalem'

No!  Not the 1960 Arnold Wesker play, just to read the synopsis of which makes me relieved that I haven’t seen it, though I did once see an AmDram production of ‘Roots’, but the hit of the moment, the Jez Butterworth play, which even to those who may feel that it does not have merit, is extraordinary in acting as a vehicle for the tour de force, not to say primeval force which is Mark Rylance.
In these articles, I usually try to give my own feelings about an artistic event, an exhibition, or a play that I’ve seen.  I like to feel that my writing transcends some of the populist criticisms of the Arts that appear in the newspapers.  But I don’t think I can do better than quote, entire, Charles Spencer’s review of the play which in many ways was the highlight of theatregoing in 2011 – just squeezed in in time – the 1.30pm matinee performance on December 31st 2011.  Up until then, perhaps the most riveting piece of theatre that I can remember lasted about 15 to 20 minutes.  The young and unknown Jonathan Pryce, at the Nottingham Playhouse in 1975, in Trevor Griffiths’ ‘Comedians’.  The feeling of being drawn into a frightening and uncontrollable environment, with eyes and attention only for the stage and the antics of the character in the scene.  Upscale that intensity and ferocity to a play of over three hours and you have some idea of the mesmeric effect that Mark Rylance produces in this play.  Read what Charles Spencer has to say:
“It was with a feeling of apprehension that I walked up Shaftesbury Avenue to see Jez Butterworth’s Jerusalem with its extraordinary performance from Mark Rylance as the wild gypsy and former motorcycle stunt-rider Johnny “Rooster” Byron”. 
This was my third visit to the play, which seemed like an instant modern classic when I first saw it at the Royal Court in 2009. And Rylance’s performance struck me as perhaps the greatest, and certainly the most thrilling I had seen in more than 30 years of professional theatre-going.
Would the magic survive a third visit, or would familiarity breed if not contempt, a suspicion that there might actually be less here than met the enraptured eye and ear?
Reader, don’t worry. Jerusalem, recently returned from a 20 week run in New York, has lost none of its potency and, unbelievably, Rylance’s Tony-Award winning performance seems even more hilarious, moving and inspired than ever.
Watching him is like watching a great jazz musician hitting an amazing streak of improvisation. The basics remain the same, but there are new grace notes, sudden departures into new territory. The comic energy of his performance as a Falstaffian Pied-Piper who attracts Wiltshire village kids to his mobile home in the woods for wild drug and alcohol fuelled parties is now accompanied by a deeper vein of melancholy and apprehension.
The Rooster still makes a blearily hung-over first entrance only to perform a handstand on a water trough and lower his head in it to wake himself up. And his breakfast still consists of a carton of milk, a raw egg, several generous shots of vodka and a wrap of speed mixed up in a pint glass and dispatched in one long swallow.
But I was more aware this time round that character is beginning to feel his age, that his amazing stories of giants and being kidnapped by Nigerian traffic wardens are a defence against a rising awareness that his best days night be behind him and his time is running out.
His awkward dealings with his young son are deeply touching, his constant displays of preening vanity a joy. Rylance is surely the only actor in the world who can somehow contrive to limp and strut at the same time, his dark eyes glittering with a mixture of mischief and something darker and more disturbing.
Butterworths’s Jerusalem is a hymn to both the old England of folk tales and rural mystery, and a lament for the housing estates and petty officialdom that are screwing it up. It is a defiant celebration of freedom, yet at the same time one feels an undoubted sympathy for any proud householder who finds himself living near a man like Rooster Byron.
The play is at once funny and sad, tender and terrifyingly violent, and director Ian Rickson and the superb supporting company capture all its richness and ambiguity. But what lends the play its amphetamine rush of excitement is watching Rylance, an actor of indisputable greatness, giving the most thrilling performance it has ever been my privilege to witness.”
Probably enough said!  For those who want to read on though, there are some hilarious put downs, for example of Morris Dancing.  As Max Baker, who plays Wesley the publican, performs a Morris Dance on stage to delight Rooster and his clan, in order to earn a dose of drugs, he laments the ridiculous outfit (which I noticed said ‘Sarum Morris’).  His explanation of the interpretation of the dance is punctuated by Rooster who observes ‘I thought it meant: “I have lost all fucking sense of self respect”’.  Ginger, Rooster’s cadaveric sidekick is wryly and cleverly played by Mackenzie Crook.  The lines where Ginger recounts the reason that Rooster has been barred from every pub in Flintock are hilarious.  The f count and indeed the c count is extraordinarily high, but all seems perfectly in context when heard in the play.  One surprise for me was the immense success which this production had on Broadway.  It is so full of contemporary English references that one doubts whether Americans can understand more than about half of the play; at one point Rooster hums the introduction to ‘Match of the Day’, the Antiques Roadshow gets a mention, as does David Beckham.  How many Americans have ever heard of Wiltshire, Avebury, etc?  As the play moves towards its terrifying climax, a wonder, a joy:  Sandy Denny’s ‘Who knows where the time goes’, one of my favourite songs, exquisitely appropriate, and in keeping with the folk music feeling that Rooster’s Romany life in the woods engenders.  Remarkably, Wikipedia seems to have tracked this down to a live version sung in a John Peel programme on radio, September 11th 1973.  It’s a rather simple version, without some of the Fairport Convention electric guitar gloss.  The background guitar sounds like Richard Thompson.
It’s only fair to say that there have been some negative comments about this play: the jingoistic ‘Albion Good, new housing estate Bad’ which renders the issues in a rather simplistic way.  At the risk of boring everybody to death about Jerusalem (but the reason is that if you have not seen it you are unlikely to – it closes soon and it is completely sold out), I now quote Charles Moore’s review:

‘Down with this cult of not-so-Merrie England

Charles Moore sees Jerusalem by Jez Butterworth at the Apollo Theatre.

If no one much had seen Jerusalem, I would have been enthusiastically urging them to do so. Indeed, I still do so. The tragic-comic power and physical vitality of Mark Rylance’s central performance are more than enough to set the play well above the average. But Jerusalem, just returned to the stage for a West End run, has now become a cult. On the night I went, large parts of the audience gave it a standing ovation, cheering almost as if they were political supporters after a piece of mass oratory. What is this about?
Rylance’s character, Johnny “Rooster” Byron (funny how the name “Rooster” is a signifier of outcast, crazy wisdom: see also the film True Grit) talks in wonderful, fantastical riffs. One of them is about how all Byron boys are born with teeth, wearing a cloak and capable of speech. Johnny claims that, after being born, he asked: “What is this dark place, mother?” “It is England, my boy,” she answers.
The play is about the condition of England. The curtain is made out of the flag of St George and the action takes place on St George’s Day. The battered old caravan in a Wiltshire wood that is Rooster’s home has a railway sign saying “Waterloo” stuck to it. And of course the play’s title derives from that mystical effusion of William Blake in which he asks a series of questions (“And did those feet…?”) about what may once have happened in England, to all of which the sober, truthful, unimaginative answer is “No”.
The modern England conjured up by Jez Butterworth, the playwright, is dark because it is unfree, and has forgotten its essence. An estate of executive homes threatens Rooster’s sylvan idyll. Health-and-safety, the police and Kennet and Avon District Council are all closing in on him. Even the St George’s Day fair in the village of Flintock has become tame compared with the good old days recalled by Rooster’s younger associate, Ginger (Mackenzie Crook), when punters queued up to pay a small sum to kick a leading citizen in the testicles “all for charity”.
Against this culture of compliance and high-visibility yellow jackets, Rooster and his band of outlaws — under-age girls, drug-abusers, benefit-swindlers and an elderly professor who is crazed by grief and inclined, conveniently, to quote learned stuff about the legend of St George and the merry month of May (though it’s April) — hold out. Rooster is Robin Hood or Wayland the Smith or the Lord of Misrule. In him is concentrated the essence of Old England before eviction orders and mains drainage. He is damaged and threatened, strong and supernatural, in equal parts. He is defeated, yet victorious.
In their standing ovation, the audience is identifying with Rooster, and this is where the fans of the play and, to a lesser extent, the play itself, begin to irritate. You can bet with reasonable certainty that if these cheering theatregoers actually had Rooster and his rout living at the bottom of their gardens, they would be organising petitions against them. It would be the Wiltshire version of Dale Farm. As soon as Rooster’s pikey way of life moved beyond wearing hats at jaunty angles and keeping hens under the caravan to playing loud music in the middle of the night, trading illegal substances and chucking empty beer cans about, they would have the law on to him. And who, to be honest, could blame them? People who welcome gipsies on to their property tend only to be those with extremely long drives.
If the English love of freedom now amounts to no more than yobbish rebellions concocted in the pub after lots of vodka and Red Bull, then it has became a pretty poor thing. One detects, beneath all the profanities now compulsory in any drama that purports to describe “gritty” reality, a vision of English life as sentimental as those early-Victorian pictures of Merrie England some time in the Middle Ages when apple-cheeked totty danced round maypoles.
To be fair, the play, unlike the fans, seems aware of this danger. As it develops (at too great a length), it becomes more sombre. It makes clear that Rooster, despite being a mad, witty fellow, is also a loser, a cheat, a loner. His little son, who shows up, by an uncomfortable plot device, at the worst moment, seems to fear him rather than admire him. There is no suggestion that the man tells the truth about anything.
The worst bits of the play are those in which Rooster delivers speeches about the spirit of England. The best bits — and there are many — are when it leaves off preaching and wanders into the realm of the imagination. I know nothing about Butterworth’s method of composition, but he would seem to combine a lot of time spent in rural pubs with a feel for Shakespeare for which Rylance himself, for 10 years the artistic director of the Globe Theatre, is also famous.
An aspect of the genius of Shakespeare is his reluctance to make a Point with a capital P. His bosky scenes, which appear in several plays, are comic, antic, poetic, not political. Butterworth’s rude mechanicals are at their best when they follow this tradition. There is a marvellous bit when Rooster tells the story of his conversation with a 90-foot giant who told him he built Stonehenge. There is a less marvellous bit, at the end, when he tries to drum up the giants to save his version of England.
Personally, I am a bit of a sucker for Puck, and the magic of “oak, ash and thorn”, but you have only to try to grasp this magic for it to vanish away.’
And finally, even if there are some problems with the play – and the two reviews above I think give a very even handed view – there can be no doubt that one has witnessed a performance of theatrical genius.  Within a few seconds of the beginnings of the applause the entire audience was standing, something almost never witnessed in the UK.
On the previous evening, I had been to the National Theatre to see Lenny Henry in ‘The Comedy of Errors’, and while my ear may not be perfectly attuned to Jamaican patois, I lamented the fact that some directors today pay lip service to the spoken Shakespeare, and the farce is everything.  Only Claudie Blakly and Michelle Terry, hilariously cast as gorgeous WAGS to the Antipholus of Ephesus, were always intelligible.  In the distant past, the RSC used to run entire workshops for their casts on making the metre and the cadence of Shakespeare’s blank verse both audible and intelligible to a modern audience.  While listening to the diction of Mark Rylance and Alan David as ‘The Professor’ in Jerusalem, every word as clear as a bell, I lamented even more.  Time for some light relief – here are the WAGS from TCOE – Blakley centre, Terry right:
The blogging of these events has once again stopped me from writing about Egypt, and even from the other events which made this visit to London so worthwhile, particularly the Leonardo da Vinci exhibition at the National Gallery.  They will have to wait for another time...

Saturday, December 17, 2011

'He nothing common did or mean'

 ‘He nothing common did or mean, upon that memorable scene’.
These words of Marvell came to mind, oddly enough whilst watching ‘Match of the Day’ when the news that Arsenal were celebrating their 125th Anniversay with unveiling of statues of three famous former Arsenal servants, the latest of which turns out to be Thierry Henry.  Now I don’t deny that Henry was a magnificent subtle genius of a player to watch, but on reflection, there is just one action of his which overshadows his whole career:  the flagrant handball in the World Cup qualifier against Ireland.  It would have been so easy for Thierry to have gone to the referee and said, ‘Pardonnez-moi monsieur, mais j’ai touché le ballon avec ma main’ (or something slightly more idiomatic perhaps).  He would have been a hero of fair play throughout the world.  But he didn’t.  So – a statue – don’t be surprised if a little bit of IRA Semtex goes missing in Northeast London – seems inappropriate for the wider world of football on those grounds, outside London N5 at least.  Time lends enchantment to the view, but I would doubt if anybody could recall a similar event in the career of Bobby Moore.
A nice little quiz question came along this week, courtesy of the Daily Telegraph, and if you are with me so far, you might not have that much difficulty answering it:  Name the odd one out: a) Alex Ferguson, b) Michael Jackson, c) Billy Bremner, d) Stanley Matthews, e) Dennis Law.  For the answer read on.  It will appear sooner or later.
While on the topic, I will post below my Christmas Quiz.  Quite a lot of the questions are not mine – they are taken directly from the BBC’s Round Britain Quiz, but they are certainly clever and in some cases abstruse:
Christmas Quiz 2011
1)      Why are these a cosy little group?
a)      Definitely not a self publicist
b)      A U.S. National Cemetery
c)       A royal palace
d)      A much disliked Football club owner
e)      An American fort

2)       Can you connect Bunyan’s hero with a foul mouthed Hollywood outburst and the Mutiny on the Bounty?


3)       What stature is shared by the following?
a)      One half of a 1970s comedy duo
b)      A French international who played for Arsenal and Chelsea
c)       A famous psychiatrist
d)      An England fast bowler

4)      What or rather who is the link between:
a)      A vigilant group of GIs
b)      The phone number of a hotel in New York
c)       A small earthenware receptacle
d)      A streetcar interchange with the name of a dinner jacket

5)      An encounter that leads nowhere; a creature of limited versatility; a settlement without much excitement; the only movie Brando directed; and a machine that will almost certainly rob you.  What do they add up to?

6)      Who might your travelling companion be on a journey via a Russian river, an island in Florida, an historical Devon sporting venue, and another river, this time in Scotland; all ending up in Spain.

7)      Can you link a Badge of Courage, a tropical fever, and one half of a Rock band, and why would they give you a winning sporting combination?

8)       Why would a chemical additive, a choice of aperture on a camera, and an item of underwear form a sequence?

9)       Which is the odd one out and why?
a)      Sir Stanley Matthews
b)      Sir Alex Ferguson
c)       Billy Bremner
d)      Dennis Law
e)      Michael Jackson

10)   What do these people have in common?
a)      John Lennon
b)      Louis Armstrong
c)       Frederic Chopin
d)      George Best
e)      John Wayne

11)   Which of these women was in trouble in 2011?
a)      Jessica Palmer
b)      Annabel Newton
c)       Rebecca Loos
d)      Nafissatou Diallo
e)      Ekaterina Zatuliveter
And who was the other party or parties involved?
12)   a)    A vengeful catholic monarch
a)      A liberated glossy magazine
b)      A first rate bore
c)       A world beater
d)      A dam-busting pilot

Why could all of them leave you feeling a little light-headed?

My original intention when starting this blog was to write about my recent visit to Egypt – a country which every English child must feel they know all about, starting with the Seven Wonders of the World, then moving on to Geography and the Nile, and finally history and the study of the ancient Egyptians.  But I had never been there.  Now I have, and when in more reflective mood it deserves a post of its own.  So before posting some pictures illustrating our year and a few images of Egypt I will close and wish all a Happy Christmas.
And the answer to the football quiz is: Sir Alex Ferguson, but I will post answers at another time...

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Matters medical including Porphyria, Bill Wyman, and the NHS

Matters medical including Porphyria, Bill Wyman, and the NHS
Grumpy old doctors are renowned for harrumphing over their whisky and soda ‘It’s not like it was in my day.’  In my own case, although I don’t harrumph, and I can’t remember the last time I had a whisky and soda, I live my life as Thoreau would have it, ‘in quiet desperation’, but it is a desperation born not of whatever he felt were the demons that assailed the common man, but of a fear that one day I will need the emergency services of the NHS and find myself treated by underprepared juniors in a system which militates against the sort of continuity of care which was a feature of working in a hospital in, say, the 1970s.
Two articles in the Daily Telegraph of Wednesday November 16th sparked off this anxiety.  The first pertained to an inquest in Darlington on the death of a 38 year old woman after a caesarean section.  The lady lost two litres of blood during the operation and the gynaecologist asked for an urgent blood transfusion.  Two hours later, the transfusion had still not been given, the patient developed liver and kidney failure, she was not admitted to ICU because of a lack of beds, and nobody thought to link the organ failure with the fact that she was hypoperfused and hadn’t been given the blood.  Her husband stated that ‘the doctors and midwives dealing with his wife... did not communicate properly’, and ‘medical staff gave the impression that no one person was in charge of her care’.  Now, a newspaper article cannot give the entire facts of the case, but unfortunately, after a lifetime of working in the NHS, I’m afraid that it seems an all too credible scenario.  This is particularly true in the case of obstetrics I’m afraid.  Anaesthetists sometimes say that their work is 99% routine and 1% sheer terror, and obstetrics is a little bit like that.  Most medical personnel are reluctant to admit to this, even though they know it is true, but in common with a number of gynaecologists I have a rather low opinion of midwives.  They may be very good at the touchy feely stuff, but apart from the routine management of labour, their medical knowledge is poor.  Gynaecologists/obstetricians likewise lead a very blinkered existence.  They are so entrenched and focussed on a very limited area of medicine that their other clinical skills are rudimentary.  Fortunately, out of say 1000 deliveries, only one or two give them cause for concern.  In the case above, who knows why the gynaecologist didn’t return to the patient’s bedside for two hours?  He might have had a huge operating list to work through.  He might have had to go to clinic.  He might have had to pop in to his local private hospital to pour unction onto the ego of an overpampered late primipara.  It’s best I leave this one because the details were not given, but unfortunately, another case on the same page perhaps raised deeper concerns about the lack of experienced junior doctors available and the lack of basic clinical skills.
The headline read:  ERRORS:  ‘Tonsillitis’ was heart inflammation.  I quote the entire article:  ‘An NHS hospital is retraining nurses after a teenager with suspected tonsillitis died when staff failed to properly monitor her condition.  Melissa Furnival, 18, was taken to Wigan Infirmary after she complained of being unable to speak or eat, Bolton coroner’s court heard.  Over the next seven hours, staff were said to have made a series of mistakes over the way she was monitored.  Miss Furnival, the mother of 15-month-old Rosie-Leigh, lapsed into unconsciousness and died.  Tests showed she died of viral myocarditis – an inflammation of the heart muscle.  Verdict: natural causes’.  Now, for all of you non-medics, viral myocarditis is a rare condition, but its manifestation, namely heart failure, particularly when this severe, is easy to pick up if a proper clinical examination and simple but sensible tests are performed.  I’m not arguing that the nurses may need retraining, but once again the implication that it is the nurses who should be diagnosing and managing the condition is very worrying.  Did the A&E staff only summon an ENT SHO?  Was there nobody senior enough to see this poor young woman who could have said ‘Wait a moment.  This isn’t just tonsillitis.’  I suspect that because our hospitals are so busy and so under-doctored, the patient was only assessed by a triage nurse.  Scary stuff isn’t it?  Among the various problems that the NHS has faced in recent years, the one that without doubt has ruined the training of thousands of doctors is the EU Legislation on Working Hours.  Junior doctors, whose lives have changed immeasurably since I was ‘on the house’, are only too keen to have the extra time off, but it is patient care that suffers, as well as a reduction in the clinical experience that juniors can acquire.  No one is arguing for a return to the 100 hour week that some of us worked, but regrettably, 40 hours or less is not acceptable, both because of the lack of experience that results, and also because of the reduction in continuity of care.  I suspect that some will feel that I have ‘got that off my chest’, but the most far-sighted of junior doctors also agree that this is the case, and rue the fact that they may get sent home at the end of a shift, without the option of attending to watch a difficult operation or a case that is a little out of the ordinary.
Time to move on!  Things medical are on the mind not just because of newspaper headlines, but because we have been to see Alan Bennett’s ‘The Madness of George III’.  Despite my fulminations above, nobody can gainsay the fact that Medicine is somewhat better than it was in 1788, when the play is set.  Alan Bennett loves to have a little go at all sorts of sacred cows, and doctors are a valid target.  Few playwrights have been able to resist the urge to do this, and Shaw is the prime example (The Doctor’s Dilemma).  Alan Bennett first caricatured doctors in his play ‘Habeas Corpus’ as I recall, and he has returned brilliantly to the topic in his recent novella ‘Smut’.  Indeed, now I come to think of it, one could find a very good PhD thesis in the portrayal of doctors on the stage from Shakespeare to Moliere and beyond.
For those who don’t know, after some clever medical detective work in the 1960s, it seems most likely that King George III suffered from a rare inborn error of metabolism called acute intermittent porphyria.  The key features of this condition are sudden and terrifying abdominal pains with constipation, fits, and psychiatric symptoms.  There is a fast pulse and sometimes hypertension.  In the classic form of AIP, large amounts of the precursors of heme appear in the urine and discolour it.  After exposure to ultraviolet light the urine turns blue or purple.  All of these features occur in Alan Bennett’s play.  Most sufferers from this disease only have crises with symptoms if they are given certain drugs.  I can only recall seeing two cases in my professional career, it is remarkably rare.  To cut to the chase in Alan Bennett’s portrayal of the doctors, the first laugh comes when the King’s Physician is sent for.  Sir George Baker, President of the Royal College of Physicians, attends, and says ‘Good God.  With any patient I undertake a physical examination only as a last resort.  It is an intolerable intrusion on a Gentleman’s privacy.  With His Majesty it is unthinkable.’  After the King’s illness is plain, Baker is found to have sold his stocks and shares.  ‘The King’s doctor sells his stock, ergo the King is not expected to recover.’  Next we meet Dr Richard Warren, physician to the Prince of Wales.  The King reminds him that he cannot be the servant of two masters.  Warren says ‘I am a servant of humanity, sir.’  The King responds, ‘Yes, and how much does humanity pay you?’  Finally we meet Sir Lucas Pepys, a physician who is completely fixated on stools and their appearance as a guide to health.  There follows a scene where the three physicians reveal the depth of their ignorance, the general view being that a ‘gouty humour has settled on the brain’.  After bleeding and purges they decide to ‘decoy the humours’ to another part of the body by blistering the King’s back and legs.  The King retorts, ‘And it is His Majesty’s opinion that the physicians’ health would benefit by the application of blisters to their arse.’  But it is no use.  The King is now a victim and not a monarch.  Finally, as most of you know, a clergyman physician who runs a lunatic asylum is called in.  He has no idea what is wrong, but asserts ‘Oh I can cure him.  I’m just not certain what from.’  In porphyria, as indeed we see in the play, recovery is spontaneous but gradual.
So, what was this production like?  David Haig, who played the King, gave a superb performance as King George.  But one cannot forget the magnificent acting of Nigel Hawthorne in the film (and of course on stage in the original casting).  Haig was especially good at portraying the agony of the King, and at recovering his majesty in the closing scenes.  The poetry of the lines where His Majesty remembered the wonders of America was delivered with a slightly frenetic style by Haig, whereas Hawthorne momentarily ‘forgot’ his madness, and delivered them with the beauty that they deserved.  The play transfers to the West End from mid January 2012 until the end of March.
We booked for Bill Wyman a long time ago and had good seats at the Lighthouse.  Unfortunately the sound system was not great.  The speakers were all in a huge bank above the stage and there was a good volume, but little distinction between the instruments, for example when the flautist stepped up to the mike to add to the accompaniment.  Bill has a very low key and deadpan delivery.  He quite clearly enjoys just playing the music he likes, and is able to gather great players around him.  For most of the evening, he just stands there, partly hidden by his tinted glasses, and plays.  There was a good mix of most types of song, jazz, blues, pop.  Georgie Fame played for almost all the numbers, and performed some on his own.  A surprise special guest was Mary Wilson of the Supremes.  Apart from a little avoirdupois she looks fairly remarkable for her age of 67!  Higlight song for me:  a beautiful version of the Everly Brothers’ ‘So sad’ sung by their vocalist and one of the band.
Final entry for the last week or two:
Bakkels Gets on the Case!
A not very imaginative pun on the conductor at the BSO yesterday – Kees Bakkels (Dutch, hence the wordplay).  Wonderful concert.  If you were going to design a wonder concert this would be pretty close to the best.  First half: Beethoven Emperor Concerto played by Louis Lortie.  Second half:  Mahler No. 1.  Not that I am an expert, but Lortie seems to me like a man at the top of his game.  From his CV a hugely experienced professional – has given complete series of Beethoven Concertos, Chopin Etudes, Mozart piano concertos, etc.  He has apparently conducted regularly from the keyboard and it shows.  When he plays with the right hand only his left wanders off into space, drawing shapes through the air in time with the music.  All of these movements were studiously ignored by Kees Bakkels, one of the orchestra’s favourite conductors, who carried on regardless.  Kees now looks just like Liszt’s double in his long frock coat and long straight hair.  My parents gave me the Beethoven when I was very young, an old recording by Jakob Gimpel.  Wonderful.
Finally – because Lindsay’s book club had read ‘We need to talk about Kevin’, we all went to see the film on Tuesday.  Well acted, but incomplete compared with the book, and in all probability an unfilmable book...
Concluding rapidly and without any clever sign offs.  Tomorrow very early we are off to Egypt for a holiday.  Nervous because of the unrest there.  Well, we will see...

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Letter to America - November 2011

Letter to America – created November 6th to 9th, 2011
This post is primarily created for Lindsay’s cousin, Tod, who lives in Lancaster, PA.  Tod is an opera buff, and this Saturday, November 5th we have been together, ‘in a virtual sort of way’, as Tod observed.  We’ve been to ‘The MET Live’ to see Siegfried, Lindsay and I in Poole, and Tod and Annie in Pennsylvania.
The week in Dorset has not been notable for good weather.  It has been grey and dry or grey and rainy.  On Tuesday evening, Penny Jarvis from the hospital came round to show us her pictures and tell us about her charitable fund raising ascent of Kilimanjaro.  It was impressive, in a practical way, with helpful information about everything from clothing to toilets.  Helpful at least if we ever get around to doing it.  We sponsored Penny as did many other people, but I was left feeling that we hadn’t given her enough, considering the miserable weather she encountered.  Wednesday evening was our usual visit to ‘The Lighthouse’ for the BSO concert.  Remarkable young conductor, Krysztov Urbanski, and a lovely concert, somewhat underattended.  The programme started off with Sibelius Peer Gynt Suite No. 1, and continued with the Dvorak violin concerto (Alina Pogostkina on her 1709 Strad).  The second half was Smetana’s Ma Vlast.  Sometimes I think the inhabitants of Poole only turn out if it’s the principal conductor, Kirill Karabits, or if there’s a piano concerto on the programme.  The hottest feature of the evening was Lindsay’s Keralan vegetable curry, served afterwards.
Our most unusual event this week was our visit to Ronnie Scott’s on Thursday evening, to hear the American chanteuse, Stacey Kent.  This was rather impulsively booked only a few weeks earlier, and given the rotten weather it wasn’t a journey we looked forward to.  We first heard Stacey Kent in slightly strange circumstances.  When we were walking the Lycian Way in Turkey this May, our first hotel was a little lodge called the ‘Olympos Mountain Lodge’, an hour and a half west of Antalya.  The music in the lodge was streamed from the manager’s Apple Mac.  Soon we recognised Pink Martini’s ‘Sympathique’, sung in French.  Shortly after this, another song in French with a rather similar feel, but not Pink Martini.  We aked the owner.  ‘Stacey Kent’, he replied, with a surprised air, as if we should have known.  Soon, back at home, we were the owners of her album ‘Raconte-moi’.  Our journey to London was something of an ordeal.  It took us two hours to get to Kensington, where we parked near the Albert Hall, avoiding the crowds arriving for ‘An evening with Engelbert Humperdinck’ and took a cab into Soho.  A rainy, dark, miserable and traffic crowded night in London.  My team at Royal Bournemouth Hospital had done a fantastic job in getting through my cardiac catheterisation list by 4pm, so we were able to walk into Ronnie Scott’s at about 6.30pm.  We had only managed to get restricted view seats, but arriving so early we were allocated the best possible restricted view seats, and they were fine.  Now I hadn’t been to Ronnie’s for around 25 years, and indeed the atmosphere is still great: intimate, and nobody is that far from the performers.  My memories of past visits are so vivid – because of the quality of the artists.  The last visit was to see the legendary guitarist Joe Pass, and before that I sometimes used to go around Christmas time when George Melly and John Chilton’s Feetwarmers always had a one week slot.  The opening act was the James Pearson trio – all very good, fantastic piano by JP.  When Stacey came on, she was as good as we’d hoped and we also found the band members outstanding.  The pianist was so good, so restrained and elegant.  The drumming was genuine accompaniment and not obtrusive, and the bass was a perfect counterpoint – all notes audible and in harmony.  Then of course, there was Stacey’s husband, Jim Tomlinson on tenor sax.  Wonderful, warm sounds, reminiscent of Stan Getz.  In fact, an article about Stan Getz specifically mentions JT as making music in the Brazilian traditions of the Great Stan.  Musically, the Brazilian numbers, mostly by the famous Antonio Carlos Jobim, were my favourites.  Stacey’s sets, as far as I can recall them and notated them were as follows:
Breakfast on the morning tram
It might as well be spring
They can’t take that away from me
Dreamer (Jobim)
Quiet nights of quiet stars (Jobim)
Mon amour
Sait-on jamais
So nice
-----------------------------
Waters of March (Jobim)
How insensitive (Jobim)
The Ice Hotel
Postcard lovers
Cambaya (the train)
S’wonderful
Samba triste (?or samba sarava)
What a wonderful world

The songs about the Ice Hotel and the Postcard Lovers were co-written by Jim Tomlinson (music) and Kazuo Ishiguro (lyrics).  Kazuo is something of a Stacey Kent fan – he chose one of her songs in his Desert Island Discs, and has been pleased to revert to what is apparently his first love – song writing.  He was in the audience for the set, so we felt doubly privileged – for the remains of the day at least.  We enjoyed a good meal as well.  We could have stayed until the wee small hours and listened to the second set by the James Pearson trio – but I guess not many of the aficionados present came from Dorset, so at about 11pm we set out into drizzly Frith Street and walked down to Shaftesbury Avenue.  No cabs of course.  We were almost at Piccadilly Circus before we were picked up and then had to travel back to the Albert Hall.  By the time we arrived back in Kensington all of Engelbert’s fans had long since gone home to their cocoa and hot water bottles, so there wasn’t exactly a crush.  Good journey home but it was 1.30 am before we were in bed.

We slept in a little on Friday, and prepared ourselves for our other major cultural endurance event to come that weekend – the visit to Poole Lighthouse for the aforementioned Met Live performance of Siegfried on Saturday.

After writing this, I felt it was a little uninspired, and felt that only a determined friend or a serious Stacey Kent fan would bother to read on after the introductory paragraph.  After going to bed, I watched a film about the making of ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’, the Simon and Garfunkel album.  It was made in honour of his 70th birthday (October 13th).  I was so inspired I wanted to get up and write on.  It brought back memories of working in the research lab at Will Rogers Hospital, Saranac Lake, upstate New York, in summer 1970.  I worked with a local lad – David Meyer – who had an 8-track stereo player, and the tapes we played all summer were ‘Bridge’, Chicago, and the Crosby Stills and Nash album.  When I left David gave me a copy of the album on vinyl.  Happy memories.  But, remarkably, some of the best quotes in recent weeks have come from the sports section of the Telegraph, and here is one: ‘Nostalgia is the neurotic inability to be able to deal with the present’.  So – I need to move on, but one day, will we look back and say ‘Do you remember when we heard Stacey Kent at Ronnie Scott’s?’

There are Wagnerophiles everywhere, some more likely than others.  To use Shaw’s description, I should perhaps call them Wagnerites.  I wouldn’t really count myself in that number, though I do admit to going to Tristan and Isolde this year, so perhaps I’m changing.  In the audience at the Lighthouse was one of our oncologists, who I wouldn’t have picked as a Wagnerite, and our recently retired Danish cosmopolitan ‘Renaissance Man’, (well he is an artist) neurophysiologist, Christian Wulff (who I wasn’t surprised to see).  Now Tod was enthusiastic about our trying Siegfried.  He called it more ‘approachable’.  There certainly is a lot more going on, with evil dwarfs, dragons, a magical bird, and the occasional leitmotif for one to hang one’s craving for musical recognition on.  I recall going to Gotterdammerung at Covent Garden, before the days of surtitles, and listening to the three Norns groping around in the semidarkness for what seemed like about 2 hours during the first act, not understanding a word and not particularly enjoying the music.  It took several hours and several acts to get to Siegfried’s Death music – magnificent.  As the two old ladies said, talking about Wagner:

‘Wagner has such wonderful moments, dear.’
‘Yes, and such awful half hours.’

But thanks to the magnificent set, the magnificent sound, the quality of the singers, I found that I really enjoyed Siegfried, and could even go back and do it all again.  Jay Hunter Morris, who sang Siegfried, was terrific, and the behind the scenes filming during the intervals showed him as a refreshingly unaffected opera star, from little ol’ Paris, Texas.  In fact his off stage persona conveyed exactly the right heroic naïveté that his on stage character is meant to have.  His recent job working in a health club presumably gave him the magnificent biceps that one needs when forging a magic sword from little pieces.  It certainly helped to have Rene Fleming doing the interviews, and scarcely gave us time to produce our pseudo-Glyndebourne feast (champagne, salmon en croute, dips etc) that we had planned on for the intervals.  It did feel slightly incongruous eating such a wonderful picnic in the unattractive surrounds of Poole Lighthouse.

On Sunday, we had a rather tedious journey to Taunton, to a luncheon party of Susanna Joy’s.  The lunch was good, but it was four hours of driving.  Sobering moment – driving under the M5, queued all around Taunton, because of the major motorway crash there on Friday, the worst in the UK for twenty years.

So that’s the diary.  Lots of other little happenings.  England play an international football match this week, and there is ‘poppy rage’.  They are not being allowed to wear poppy emblems on their shirts.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

This article was written for an Open University Creative Writing course in May 2009.  It's one of my favourite 'essays' and I put a lot of thought into it.  Unfortunately I didn't answer the question posed - it was meant to be more of 'travel theatre' with characters interacting and the surroundings described.  It therefore scored the lowest marks of my submissions on this course!  Fortunately I made it up with other submissions, but the article itself is still a favourite of mine, and still represents what I think are my best thoughts on travel writing...


THE TROUBLE WITH TRAVEL WRITING

            Why do travel articles always start ‘In Medias Res’?  This technical writing term means ‘In the middle of the action’.  You know the sort of thing I mean:
‘I sat uncomfortably on the rocky ledge.  The snake fixed me with unblinking eyes.  I edged slowly away towards the far end of the ledge, a few feet above the rushing torrent of the Iguana Falls’.  Or:
‘My seven year old son danced for joy in the morning sunlight.  Careful, I warned him.  You may be the youngest person ever to climb Mount Dampprüf, but there’s still a ten thousand foot drop just behind that rock.’  These opening phrases represent what editors call ‘the Hook’, and draw you in to the story.  They persuade you to read on.  You are meant to feel a part of the ongoing action which is then revealed in the rest of the piece.  But the article itself may have little to do with travel, and everything to do with the personality of the writer.  It may be what one might call a ‘Gee Whiz’ article.  In this type of writing, one is invited to appreciate just how clever, how brave, how unusual is the feat which the writer has accomplished: ‘By Dog Cart Across the Sahara.’  This begs the question of what is Travel Writing?  Fascinating articles can be written about the most mundane of journeys.  In the ‘Just Back’ feature recently, I wrote about a difficult voyage in a small boat to Spitsbergen, but other winners have submitted remarkable and engrossing stories about a beach in East Sussex; and a trip on the ferry across the Mersey.  The quality of the writing is therefore important.  Sometimes we may find both quality of writing and an interesting place to read about.  Stevenson’s ‘Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes’ is an example.  The Cevennes remains an unspoilt area of France, but in 1879 it was almost primeval.  Some travel writing therefore appeals precisely because of this.  We recognize that we can never make the journey again.  The beginning and the end of the itinerary is not only geographically distinct, it is separated from us by time, which is a gulf that we can never cross.  ‘The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.’
If all that we want is the stimulus to visit a place however, then a picture alone will do.  The ‘One Minute Wonder’ feature stimulates the travel palate with a picture, followed by an explanatory paragraph.  This was the reason why I sailed in the Arctic.  My Spitsbergen trip came about after a previous voyage to the spectacular Lofoten Islands which lie north of the Arctic circle, off the western coast of Norway.  My only reason for the voyage was that I had once seen a picture of the Lofotens in my ‘O’ level geography textbook.  Sometimes, all we need is the practical information – how to get there; how much will it cost; are the natives friendly?  ‘Handbag or Moneybelt?’ as another Telegraph feature asks.  If so then Rough Guides, Travel Supplements, and their ilk do the job for us.  But often this will beg the question ‘Why do we travel?’
Have you ever been away from your home for a long time?  I mean weeks or preferably months.  And then returned?  Do you remember the feelings, the sensations?  Wasn’t there a freshness, a richness about that previously ordinary-seeming home?  I remember working away from England and returning in early summer after over a year.  The extraordinary greenness of everything.  From the air, as the plane descended over the Sussex countryside, the intensely thick whiteness of the May-laden hedgerows.  The feeling that one was in a far northern country when twilight was still luminous at an hour where my previous residence had long been pitch black, despite the summer heat.  To travel therefore enriches us twofold: we experience the new, the exotic, the unfamiliar, with its excitements and climate changes.  At the same time we are storing up the enchantment of once again being introduced to what has previously become over familiar, which is our own home.  This may be what T S Eliot meant when he wrote: ‘We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.’  More prosaically, in Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame wrote with longing and affection for the Mole and his little home, which he found almost by accident after his exciting stay with the Water Rat.
Much of the best travel writing engages us with the people, the characters, who may in themselves make the journey worthwhile.  A book about climbing a mountain can only be a technical manual with some pretty photographs unless there is more than one climber.  In ‘Touching the Void’, Joe Simpson’s famous survival epic in the Andes of South America, the relationship with his climbing companion Simon Yates is perhaps the most important feature of the book.  No matter what travails Joe went through after he fell into the crevasse when Simon had to cut the rope that bound them together; somehow or other, if only because the author of the book was Joe, you knew that real tragedy, in the shape of his death, was not going to happen.  For me the highlight of the book was not Joe’s miraculous escape after landing on the snowbridge, or crawling over the rocks with a broken leg, but the events that happened before Simon cut the rope.  Surely the most exciting moment happened on the way up?  I know little about the technical aspects of climbing, but there is an episode in a whiteout (frightening enough already), where Joe realises that Simon has fallen through the cornice of snow on one side of an arête.  Joe’s survival depends on his literally throwing himself off the mountain, so that the rope which connects them will straddle the arête.  This appears in the text in a moment, providing a frisson of horror.  Of course, a moment later you realise that they are safe.  Because of the fact that neither can see the other, Joe has a 50:50 chance of making the correct decision as to which side of the ridge he should throw himself down!  This version of climber’s roulette is literally heart-stopping.  Neither did the twists in the relationship end with the end of the expedition.  In fact it might be said to have started from this point on.  When the climbing fraternity learned that Simon had saved his own life rather than allow the two of them to perish, he was pilloried.  Nowadays Simon Yates gives fascinating climbing lectures, with particularly stimulating images of the mountains of Tierra del Fuego, but everybody in the audience is of course waiting for his account of one of the most famous episodes in modern climbing and exploration.  His approach is direct and honest.  ‘I didn’t see what else I could do really,’ he says, in a somewhat deadpan style and accent reminiscent of Jasper Carrott. 
For some of us, T S Eliot’s assurance that returning to ‘know the place for the first time’ is not the be all and end all of travel.  Not all of us are content with staying where we are.  We are all journeying, and all seeking.  Many if not most of us are uncertain what it is we are seeking.  The human experience is an unfolding, continuously written book.  If there is no curiosity then every page would be predictable, dull, without leaven.  Our journey is as much spiritual as physical; philosophical as well as geographical.  In some different cultures we can find lessons in how to live and how to appreciate our lives, and nowhere is this as evident as in the examples of peoples who practice Buddhism.  Peter Matthiessen’s ‘The Snow Leopard’ represents the ultimate travel book for those whose journey is as much spiritual as physical.  For many, what we seek is an illusion, and we return to realise that what we have is as fine as anything that we have seen.  For Matthiessen, the snow leopard that he is seeking proves to be an illusion too.  He never finds one.  But his journey is an arduous one, full of pain, hunger, and discomfort.  It is a journey through the most remote parts of Nepal.  Although his aim is to find and to see a snow leopard, at the end of his journey, the fact that he has failed is unimportant.  In Joe Simpson’s most recent book, the fact that he has failed to climb the north face of the Eiger is unimportant too.  In both cases, what the authors find within themselves is the resolution of their travels.

In my case, my journey in Nepal was hardly to an unexplored area.  The Annapurna sanctuary is a Mecca for a few climbers and many trekkers.  To stand in front of the South face of this famous mountain (Annapurna I) is to remember the suffering of both the original French expedition of 1950, and the later ascent by Chris Bonington’s expedition in 1970, during which his friend Ian Clough died.  One feels humility, compassion, an almost overwhelming sorrow, and a sense of awe that, in front of you stands a wall of snow which comprises two north walls of the Eiger stacked together, with its base standing far higher than even the summit of the Eiger.  My journey was an arduous 5 days trekking from the base of the Modi Khola valley, a small victory for me, but nothing compared with the triumphs of serious mountaineers.  Like the London Marathon, although the winner will accomplish something nobody can emulate, all who participate can win, and win against themselves.  This journey simplifies one’s life.  The only goal is a physical one.  Everything: eating, sleeping, thought, discomfort, must be subjugated to achieving the goal.  Along the way, I learn from direct example, that our three companions, Khadka, Kes, and Buddha, have dedicated themselves to our achievement, and our achievement alone.  At seven in the morning, ice all around, Khadka appears in front of our unheated bunkhouse room in Chomrong, hoists half of our luggage on his back in his cane basket, supported by a headband and says ‘I go quick, get best room’, before he races off to the next teahouse up the punishingly steep paths.  As we ascend, one of the world’s most beautiful mountains, Machhapuchre (Nepali for Fish Tail), rises some 5000 metres above us, like a beacon, for ever leading us further up the valley.  Its twin summits, separated by a razor sharp ridge are holy and unclimbed.  After our three days of descent, at the bottom of the valley in Birethanti, some unseen hand has pulled a veil of cloud across the peaks above us.  Sitting on the verandah of our lodge is a fat lady who has decided that she cannot accompany the rest of her party up the valley.
‘My legs are killing me’ she confides.  Tired after our long trek, we heave the rucksacks around our shoulders to the ground.  Half confidentially, half knowingly, the fat lady inclines towards me.
‘You know,’ she says, ‘You can’t see it now but just behind that little cloud there is a very beautiful mountain called ‘the Fish Tail’.  A trek is never over until the fat lady sings.  I sink into my verandah chair.
‘Thank you,’ I whisper back.  ‘At least she came as far as Birethanti,’ I reflect.  The goal of that immaculate summit is just as unrealized for me as it is for her, but in Zen, it is merely a little further away.

Memories of Nepal will always return to me, and in this it is unlike some of my trips and voyages.  ‘Adventure is discomfort remembered in tranquillity,’ is a powerful stimulus to the memory.  The best of journeys take you from the familiar and comfortable, and will be remembered.  Good travel writing may not always lure you into visiting the place which is described, but it will give you a journey to remember, and in metaphysical terms, you will have travelled as a fellow passenger.

Word Count: 2035

Note:  Because this is a text presentation for publication, the usual referencing is not used in the text, but the references are easily identified from the list below.


COMMENTARY

Good travel writing has always fascinated me.  It probably stems from reading adventure books for boys, and the vicarious experience of the heroic explorers remains compelling.  I love the experience of travel, and for many years have dipped into travel supplements in the weekend papers.  When the Saturday (weekend) Telegraph Travel section announced a competition for travel writing I eagerly entered, but after two or three rejections, I began to look at my style of writing, and what it was that I really wanted to say.  I found that, in common with many of the articles within the supplement, there was a well tried formula, where the place or people described always began ‘in medias res’. (Neale, 2006).  Cunning phrases with allusions were used.  When I adopted this approach, and wrote about a voyage I made to Spitsbergen, I won immediately.  I felt that I had hit on a successful formula, but to some extent felt disgusted with myself for playing the game and tricking the reader into reading my piece.  Instead, I wondered what it was that was wrong with much of travel writing.  My editorial contact (Michael Kerr, Deputy Travel Editor) at the Telegraph agreed to look at another piece, and so I wrote the above piece, which is an honest view of what is important in travel writing.  Although I will be sending it to him, I am sure that it is far too honest to be published.  No editor wants to alienate his readership.  Along the way I looked at several other travel magazines, CondeNast Traveller, Wanderlust, and an Indian magazine called Outlook Traveller.  The reason for the latter was an experience I shared with an Indian journalist, Hari Menon, in a remote part of the Indian Himalaya, where he had been commissioned to write an article for the magazine.  Hari writes well, but his article is still formulaic, and full of exaggeration and hyperbole.  He knows that he has to engage his readers however, and his future as a freelance for the magazine depends ultimately on whether some readers take up the suggestion that the Kumaon Himalaya is worth a visit.

An account of travel is a small life story.  It has a beginning and an end.  Inasmuch as travel writing is autobiographical, the important point made by Neale (Neale, 2006) that ‘Your life story is as much about the people you meet as about you’ is one of the most vital and enjoyable aspects of a travel journal.  Indeed, Bill Bryson’s ‘Notes from a small island’ is memorable to me mainly for the beautifully realized (and funny) characters that he depicts along the way.  When reading work like this, the details of the travel seem immaterial.  But the experiences of travel are, by definition, novel, and it is this which must convince and entertain the reader, otherwise the narrative will fail.

Word Count: 477



REFERENCES

‘Adventure is discomfort remembered in tranquillity’.  I have been completely unable to track down this quotation.

Bryson, W (1996).  Notes from a small island.  London, Black Swan.

Eliot, TS  (2004 [1943]).  The Four Quartets: Little Gidding.  London, Faber & Faber.

Grahame, K (1956[1908]).  Dulce Domum, The Wind in the Willows.  London, Methuen.

Hartley, LP (2000 [1953]).  The Go-Between London, Penguin Classics.

McLeod, A (2009) Just back:  Daily Telegraph, 14 March.  Travel Supplement: T28.  (also available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/travel-writing-competition/4979145/Just-back-To-Svalbard-on-stormy-seas.html  (accessed 9.5.09).

Matthiessen, P (1987[1978]).  The Snow Leopard.  London, Penguin Nature Classics.

Menon, H (2008).  Outlook Traveller, December.  Available at: http://www.shaktihimalaya.com/images/press/rare&indulge.pdf (accessed 12.05.09)
Neale, D (2006).  Structure.  In, Anderson L, ed.  Creative Writing.  A workbook with readings.  Milton Keynes, Open University, p146.
Neale, D (2006).  Life Characters.  In, Anderson L, ed.  Creative Writing.  A workbook with readings.  Milton Keynes, Open University, p343.
Simpson, J (1988).  Touching the void.  London, Jonathan Cape.

Simpson, J (2003[2002]).  The beckoning silence.  London, Vintage.

Stevenson, RL (1967[1879]).  Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes.  London, Folio Society.