Finally delurking
Mar. 1st, 2004 10:51 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Last Wednesday I saw At the Drop of a Hippopotamus at the Bridewell Theatre, for an evening of Flanders and Swann songs performed by Tim FitzHigham and Duncan Walsh-Atkins.
Of my favourites, Ill
Wind (based on Mozart's 4th Horn Concerto) was there, as
was Madeira
M'Dear (often quoted as an impressive example of zeugma,
discussed by officialgaiman in his journal
entry of 7 January 2004, and
unzeugmatic when explaining
his username). Sadly we didn't get their First
and Second Law (of Thermodynamics).
FitzHigham's and Atkins's introductions and chat between the songs curiously blurred whether they were playing the parts of Flanders and Swann (delivering a script with references to living in Kensington and Battersea, and where our singer has a young and innocent relation who believes that Madeira M'Dear is about cake) or were 21st-century performers of these songs (with topical references to Ken Livingstone and Tony Blair). But given the topical nature of the original scripts, I'm not sure what the "right" thing to do would be. The approach of running through relevant news headlines of the time, as seen before repeats of Have I Got News For You? or Drop the Dead Donkey, might not work quite so effectively for events of the 1950s and 1960s.
(I faintly recall former Conservative MP Teresa Gorman and others appearing on television singing a variation on the Song of Patriotic Prejudice replacing the refrain "The English... are best" with "The British... are best", which could seem to miss much of the point of the original song... And in tracking down the lyrics for that song, I did find a few links to the IT elitists' The Hackers Are Best, which may deserve a mention, although the song is probably not quite so widely parodied as Gilbert and Sullivan's I am the very model of a modern Major-General, meta-satirised in I am the very model of a boring Usenet parody).
Taking advantage of the Evening Standard's recent generous offer, I also saw the 3D Haunted Castle at the London IMAX Cinema. It was the first time I had been to a three-dimensional film, and the technology was impressive. The reaction of the audience was different from that in the late 19th century: instead of shock at seeing the Lumière brothers' film of a train heading towards them (discussed, and partly debunked, in Stephen Bottomore's The Panicking Audience?: early cinema and the 'train effect'), some were reaching out and trying to grab the images which appeared to hover directly before their faces. (Unfortunately the plot was truly flimsy, and seemed to be simply a pretext for showing off the 3D capabilities of the IMAX cinema, but for 45 minutes being shown off at could be a perfectly enjoyable experience.)
[Edit at 17:40 GMT: URL of The Panicking Audience... now corrected in the last paragraph.]
[Addendum on 9 January 2005: the original link now appears broken, but Google does give a few other sources for I am the very model of a boring Usenet parody.]
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Date: 2004-03-01 03:43 pm (UTC)First post.
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Date: 2004-03-01 04:05 pm (UTC)Glad to hear you had such a fine day! The London IMAX is wonderful - bigger and better than the three other IMAX screens I've visited in Bradford, Singapore and the USA. Do they still show a two-minute introduction to IMAX technology showing the screen and the positions of its speakers before the main presentation? They did when I went there to see Fantastia 2000 back in, er, 2000.
May there be many more fine days and posts to accompany them soon! (What are you doing on the weekend after next? I very nearly attempted to call in on you without notice last time I was in London, expecting you not to be in because it would have been during the hours of a workday, but went to see The Museum In Docklands instead.)
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Date: 2004-03-01 04:42 pm (UTC)Of which two had the inspiring titles Test subject and Another test entry (which I suspected Friends would not appreciate cluttering up their pages) and two were previous versions of this post.
They do - and have somebody at the front who warns that the experience can be overwhelming but one can simply shut one's eyes and in a moment the scene will have changed and one can continue to enjoy the film.
The Museum In Docklands was probably more entertaining than the unanswered front door you would have found had you attempted to visit during a normal working day. I'll get back to you on plans two weekends hence when I've checked.
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Date: 2004-03-02 04:56 am (UTC)I like the style too. Having comment pages which match ones LJ is probably what will make me finish my S2 style one of these days.
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Date: 2004-03-03 03:49 pm (UTC)Thank you. There are still bits of it which I want to tweak and tidy up, but spending any more time playing with the S2 without actually posting anything would have seemed a little wasteful...
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Date: 2004-03-02 11:49 am (UTC)Thank you for finding The Panicking Audience? I'd long assumed that tales of train terror were an example of one century constructing itself as more sophisticated than the last, but apparently this assumption of superiority was contemporaneous.
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Date: 2004-03-03 03:53 pm (UTC)Was The Gasman Cometh at the theatre off Jermyn Street? I seem to recall seeing something F&S advertised there, but forget the title.
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Date: 2004-03-04 12:53 am (UTC)