My London Your London

A cultural guide

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Theatre Review: The Railway Children, Waterloo Station Eurostar Terminal

By Sarah Cope

What to do with an unused Eurostar terminal? Perhaps the far from obvious answer is to stage a version of E.S. Nesbitt’s children’s classic, The Railway Children, complete with a real steam train.

After walking through the rather airless and abandoned terminal, complete with closed-down shops, stained carpets, and cockroach traps, the audience is ushered into a sectioned-off part of the track, where banks of seating rise either side (platform 1 and platform 2, of course).

It’s a clever idea, but will the play live up to both the aggressive marketing and also the 1970s film version, always a stalwart feature of the Christmas television schedule?

There were some curious casting decisions – young adults play the children, and they tell the story in the past tense, almost taking for granted that the audience is already au fait with the plot.

There were a surprising amount of laughs to be had – good one-liners such as “We saved lives with our underwear” after the children wave their red flannel petticoats in order to avert a certain rail catastrophe.

Also rather knowing was the way in which the actors alluded to the restrictions of the staging – the scene in the tunnel, rather wonderfully done with black netting and effective lighting, was preceded by the warning, “Now for this part you’ll all have to use your imaginations.”

The steam train makes two (rather slow and perhaps slightly anticlimactic) appearances, including in the last scene, where the eldest daughter, Bobbie, is reunited with her father. This is the infamous scene from the film, guaranteed to get
audiences blubbering in unison. There were plenty of tears and sniffling sounds in the auditorium at that point, so it must have passed the tissue test.

It’s a shame that ticket prices are so steep – £20 to £45 – with no reductions for children’s tickets, means only rich children will be going to see this play about poor children, which is somewhat of an unfortunate irony.

The show is now running, with online booking.

How not to write about the people of Spitalfields

First published on Blogciritics.

I was looking forward to The Worst Street in London. An account of an east London street of doss houses frequented by the poorest of the poor might not, I concede, be everyone’s idea of good holiday reading, but I’ve read some spectacularly good micro-histories — Robert Robert’s The Classic Slum: Salford Life in the First Quarter of the Century springs to mind – and sometimes a local focus brings a real humanity and detailed sense of place to history.

That’s not, however, what I got from this account of Spitalfield’s Dorset Street by Fiona Rule. The initial account of the settlement of the area by Dutch weavers, the arrival of the Hugenot refugee silk weavers, the development of the area as a relatively prosperous one is decent enough, if covering well-known ground, much popularised by 18 Folgate Street . But as the street declines, the quality of the research is seriously lacking.

We wander off to the foundation of the colony of NSW, stroll briefly around the Great Potato Famine and occasionally hear random stories of individual suffering – but few are directly connected with Dorset Street or even its immediate environs.

But that’s not what really annoyed me about this book. Inadequately researched popular histories are hardly unknown. What’s totally unforgivable about this book is its thoughtless, reactionary, actively cruel attitude towards the poor people who fill its pages.
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Theatre review: Confessions of a Dancewhore at the Trafalgar Studios

In the introduction to the programme of Confessions of a Dancewhore the creator and performer of the one-person show Michael Twaits says describing what it is is a “semantic nightmare” – and he’s certainly right.

But let’s try: it’s part cabaret, part stand-up comedy, part polemic, part tragedy, a lot comedy, part multi-media performance, a bit of a lecture – that’s a lot in 85 minutes of intense performance, storytelling and confession.

But those are a generally gripping, dramatic, and often moving 85 minutes – certainly not everyone’s glass of vodka, and if you’d described it to me beforehand as an exploration of one person’s gay identity and rage against society’s attempt to put individuals into neat boxes of sexual identity, I might not have gone.

“Why is who I choose to fuck such a decisive factor in who you think I am?” is an interesting question, but in the wrong hands could easily have lapsed into self-indulgent navel-gazing.

But I’m glad I did choose to see Confessions of a Dancewhore – it was a powerful, political, lively evening – and filled with laughs, which is always a plus. And it would have been worth it almost for the line alone: “I am a post-drag queen.”
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A foraging walk in south London with Lewisham Green Party

The entertainments of London are many and varied, but I’d not previously considered a foraging party amid parks and wastelands of south London, followed by a cookup and fine lunch as one of the possibilities. (Thanks Darren!)

I now know better. Nettles – yes I knew about those – I’ve made nettle soup (a recipe roughly like this, from young sping nettles in France), although it wouldn’t have occurred to me to make nettle pakora (you could base it around a recipe like this – but really now I realise that you could use nettles in virtually any recipe that calls for cooked spinach.

And as we discussed – nettles are nutrient-packed and every bit as deserving of the title “superfood” as lots of expensively promoted, high cost foreign foods you see in supermarkets.

Now I wonder why it is that they aren’t so well promoted ….!

The only warning is that with mature nettles you should only take the top few leaves – the bottom ones can accumulate crystals not good for the liver.

The other really magic ingredient was elderflower blossom … we didn’t actually make elderflower champagne, but we had a very good taste of it – and very nice (and very alcoholic) it was too!

elderflower blossom

We did have elderflower blossom fritters (well unfortunately I couldn’t because they had a flour – hence gluten – batter – but these went down a treat with everyone else, and I’m reckoning on perhaps giving them a go with rice flour). Basically dip a spray of blossom on the batter, fry, cover with lemon juice and sprinkle with icing sugar.
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Theatre Review: Dig by J.D. Smith and No More, Salvator? by Michael Hart at the Old Red Lion Islington

Article first published as Theatre Review (London): Dig by J.D. Smith and No More, Salvator? by Michael Hart at the Old Red Lion on Blogcritics.

A one-act play is a tricky thing. You need to present the characters, create scenarios for them, then neatly roll it up, all within something less than an hour.

You need to grab people fast, but make them feel like they are getting something meaty and substantial, with something to talk about after the show.

The two plays that have just premiered together at the Old Red Lion in Islington take two different approaches, although both are centred around the interaction of two characters.

The first, Dig, sees an incompetent, nervous, weak hitman try to force his planned victim to dig his own grave. But his victim isn’t playing ball.

It’s hardly an original scenario, and it really doesn’t quite work. The behaviour of the nervous hitman is logical enough, but that of his victim-to-be makes little sense. The explanation he gives to the audience – I really couldn’t tell if we were supposed to believe it, I certainly didn’t – just doesn’t hold together.
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Theatre Review: George Orwell’s 1984 presented by the Blind Summit Theatre and Battersea Arts Centre

That you could turn 1984 into a seriously comic story is one surprising aspect of the Blind Summit Theatre’s premiere production of the Orwell classic. That you could play Charrington and Goldestein with puppets and make that make glorious sense is another. And when you add quite the oddest, but possibly most effective, sex scene you’re likely to see on stage in many a year into the mix, then this is a production that delivers the unexpected.

That it also delivers a polished, entertaining, gripping evening is a tribute to director Mark Down, puppet designer Nick Barnes and a fine acting team.

There have been many attempts to stage and film 1984, and few have been successful. Really, this is a book about what goes on in Winston Smith’s head – and that’s not easy to put on the stage.

The challenge is centrally overcome here by the use of a chorus – which sets the scene and carries the stories, and the thoughts, along. It marches for Hate Day, it dances obediently to Big Brother’s tune, it sings patriotic songs, it is the puppet-master – and it never leaves the stage. Even when Julia goes to light a gas flame in Winston’s “secret” room, the “flames” are the dancing fingers of a chorus member. And then there’s that sex scene – Winston and Julia’s first meeting in his “golden country” – in which the chorus manipulates their bodies. It sounds weird, but in fact it is an effective metaphor for the whole story unfolding before us.

Added to that central frame provided by the chorus are some fine, sophisticated conceits. This is – an old trope but in this case an effective one – a production within a production. We meet the cast on the bus on the way to the BAC, and they explain the staging, and announce each scene.

And there’s also a “staging” of Emmanuel Goldenstein’s The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism by means of moving comic book – playing wittily off the current trend towards “comic book” versions of philosophical and political foundational texts.

The puppetry too is entirely self-conscious and upfront. A cardboard thrush is an odd conceit, so to a Goldenstein of head and hands that pops over a screen, yet both are curiously effective and affecting. And the spookily human-and-yet-not-human movement of Charrington, the junk shop owner who rents Winston a room, is something that will linger in my mind.
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