The Edinburgh Fringe 2004
Saturday
This year got off
to a much better start than last. We caught
a bus to the rail station and were in plenty of time for the train to London.
Getting to King's Cross by tube went fine too and the journey to Edinburgh
was uneventful. I spent much of it re-reading "Dune Messiah", of which
more
later.
This year we knew where the hotel was and got settled in before essaying
out for our first three shows. I had spent many hours planning the schedule
and hoped that this would pay off. I am pleased to say that it did.
The first play we saw was "Our Father" [***] which was about the
conflicts within a family caused by the eugenic policies of a totalitarian
government that the father was a central figure in. None of the characters
came out of the drama very well, all failed their responsibilities in one
way or another. It was a good start to the week.
After grabbing dinner at a rather nice Italian restaurant, we saw Tom
Stoppard's "Galileo" [*****]. This was an excellent and amusing
account of Galileo's (largely un-necessary)
conflict with the Vatican. It was well acted, and Stoppard's script was
both incisive and fair. The day finished with an
experimental ghost
story: "The Haunting of Hill House" [*]. This wasn't at all
successful, basically because it relied on audience participation and most
folk were much too self-conscious to get into the
spirit of things!
We caught a taxi back to the hotel and spent a peaceful night - unlike
last year! |
Sunday
We were fortunate to participate in the last regular Tridentine Mass to
be held at Miss Neilson's house in Edinburgh. Fortunate because it was
a mass of celebration in thanks of the fact that the Archbishop of Edinburgh
had given permission for Una Voce Scotland and the Society of St Peter
to have regular use of a local church for Sunday Mass. I helped to lead
the singing of the Te Deum. This was one of the highlights of our holiday.
After lunch we saw "Instant Karma" [***] which was about four
friends who met up after one - a professional photographer - had been abroad
for a while: running out on his girlfriend. Just as it looked as they might
just reconcile their differences, we learned that the central character
(the photographer) had been killed - so the characters were denied the
opportunity ever to come to terms with each other. We then saw "Then
Again" [***], a portrayal of a rather strange funeral at which three
estranged friends have to come to terms with the death of a fourth friend
who had been very close to each of them, but who had passed out of their
lives some time ago. The proceedings are convened by an eccentric lawyer
who prepares for the occasion by singing along to Prince’s "I Would Die
for You". The guests are marginally more decorous. A failed playwright
is soon joined by a depressed accountant with the tact of a bison, and
Martha, who has been involved with both men and now has a family of her
own and really does not want to be there at all!
We then saw "Party
Time" [*] by Pinter, which was disappointing. Mainly because neither
David nor I could make much sense of the plot. The action was set
in a cocktail party and was focussed on a character who the party-goers
were trying hard not to talk about: for unexplained but obviously party
political reasons. At the end of the play we were introduced to this
character, who had a soliloquy - after which David and I were no wiser
as to what was really going on or what the point of the play was supposed
to be!
We than saw "Play This" [***] which was a play containing a supposedly
autobiographical play about the break-up of a marriage. This was very entertaining
- but not because it contained entirely gratuitous male nudity.
It must be said that this year we saw much less naked flesh of either sex
than we did last year.
We then had dinner at Pizza Express before discovering that our next
play had been cancelled. We substituted another production at the last
minute called "Disconnected" [***]. This was surprisingly good,
being three playlets about "communication problems". The second was particularly
memorable, being based on the two actors re-using the line "The number
you have dialled is not available. Please check this number before dialling
again" over and over again with variations of tone and emphasis (and limited
re-wording).
The
day was rounded off by "Sub" [*] a monologue detailing the experiences
and "testimony" of a female "submissive" sadomasochist. This would have
been a lot more interesting if it had been written by a woman, but David
pointed out to me afterwards that the playwright was male. One worrying
aspect was that this was the first of two plays that could easily be portrayed
as arguing that it is OK for men to physically abuse and rape women: on
the basis that "women like this really".
"This is a pernicious little play that
serves only to perpetuate the misapprehension that female submissives are
just deeply dysfunctional women who like rough sex. This is shallow, arrogant
work. Mainwaring ought to be soundly whipped. You know, you wouldn't have
written a play like this if you didn't want to be punished, James."
[Kate Copstick, The Scotsman]
|
Monday
We started today
with "Endangered Species: Waking Up" [***]. This was a play about
a class of heterosexual American teenagers discovering - one by one - that
they are all HIV+. This caused their relationships to change, first
for the worse: as they experienced fear, suspicion and recrimination, and
then for the better as friendship won out. The production was very moving
and there was a collection for an AIDS charity at the end. This is what
a member of the cast had to say:
"This show was a very heavy show, and
it was a message the cast and crew wanted to spread and also learn more
about ourselves. We had numerous people come and talk to us about it. We
had two ladies come to our school to talk to us about the effects of HIV
and Aids and also about how it can spread. A man from a neighbouring town
who is living with the HIV virus came and talked to us twice and even to
our audience. I just want everyone to know that we did know what we
were talking about and we hope it was a message that you will take back
to your schools and spread the word."
At
about this time, it started to rain. After lunch we saw a production of
Oscar Wilde's "The Picture of Dorian Gray" [****]. The central actor
was very handsome and very convincing as Dorian, for that reason alone!
We then dodged the raindrops (I understate the reality of the situation)
and arrived rather damp to see "K-pax" [****], the story of a number
of inmates at a mental hospital. One of them claims - very convincingly
- that he is an extraterrestrial from the planet "K-pax". He helps the
other inmates to recover from their mental illnesses and then vanishes
mysteriously. This was a very heart-warming story and the main character
had some excellent observations to make about the sad state of affairs
of our society and about how easy it would be to put things right if only
we had a mind to.
We
then squelched our way to see "Men" [***] a play about the three
members of a "boy band" having a crisis about whether they can carry on
in their roles as shallow pop icons. This was well played, though the script
was nowhere near as "deep" as that of last years' comparable offering:
"Hard Core".
At this point the heavens opened and incredibly large quantities of
water fell from the sky. Luckily we were able to shelter quite comfortably
in the venue where we had seen "Men", and grabbed a small meal there. Eventually
the rain stopped and we walked to the famous Pleasance Courtyard, where
we saw "Adam Bloom" [****], the half Jewish comedian. As always,
he was very amusing, and also thought provoking in a moralistic - though
not at all "politically correct" way. For me, this was more like listening
to a very superior sermon rather than a stand-up comedian. This is meant
to be a compliment!
We finished the say by seeing "Sprout" [***] a comedy about a
duvet that caused the lady that bought it to fall in love with it and then
to turn into a kind of human-bird hybrid: the process costing her both
her job and live-in boyfriend. We returned to our hotel to snuggle under
a less magical and so much more satisfactory quilt. |
Tuesday
I bought an umbrella first thing, before breakfast. It was needed.
The first play of today was "The Grapes of Wrath" [*****], which
was a very moving story about the migration of a destitute farming family
from the American dust bowl to California in search of work. On the way
a good number of them died, and when they arrived they found little work
and the kind of floods that were also becoming a feature of our stay in
Edinburgh.
We
then saw a play based on "Alice through the Looking Glass" [**],
which almost got me snoring: not because it was boring, but because I associate
this book with reading last thing at night before going to sleep. We then
saw "Forbidden" [****], a play about a lesbian couple in Nazi Germany,
whose lives were torn asunder because one of them was a Jewess. This was
very well acted and very moving indeed. It was played with a light touch.
The situation was so bad that it could have given rise to a very "preachy"
or "sombre" and depressing play, but the Jewess reacted to her plight with
such equanimity and detachment that the play did not get bogged down in
the shear awfulness of what was going on. Instead of this, the positive
character and value of the devotion that was at its heart shone through.
After dinner we saw "Blood Wedding" [*] by the Spanish playwright
Federico Garcia Lorca. This was disappointing, being an inferior quality
story of vendetta, strangely frustrated lovers, and a disrupted wedding
that ended in the death of both the husband and lover of the bride.
The day was rounded off by "The J-boys" [***]. This was the only
"show" that we saw as a repeat of last year. It was great fun and just
as raunchy as last year, but not so "meaningful". The best bit, arguably
was how the performers are so keen to shake the hands of everyone in the
audience on the way out. One feels that a real personal contact has been
made, though this is entirely illusory. |
Wednesday
We started
our day with "Shakespeare For Breakfast" [****], which purported
to present a recently discovered "musical" by the Bard of Stratford. It
was very well done and highly amusing, though of little significance. This
was followed by "About Face" [***] a play about a gay man, his best
friend (a woman) and his new boyfriend - who finish off pairing up with
each other: much to his surprise and dismay. This was well presented but
a bit trite. At this point I discovered that the batteries in my camera
were flat - which explains why there are no new photographs on this web
page.
We then squelched off to the next venue, where we saw two plays. The
first was "The Ghosts May Laugh" [****]. This was set in a WW-I
trench. A number of officers tell Ghost stories in a misjudged competition.
They get more and more believable and of immediate significance, until
a real trauma is revealed. The final crisis is the stark decision to be
made: is there an immortal soul or not? One of the characters says that
the reason that the others are all so keen to tell these stories - however
oppressive and ghoulish they might seem - is just to bolster their own
irrational hope in an afterlife that would compensate for the horrors that
they are having to endure in the present.
The
next play was "Night train to Maduri" [****]. This was about
four "gap year" friends who were back-packing round India. Three of them
ganged up on the other (who was from a very affluent background) to organize
a kidnapping. Unfortunately their ill-conceived plans went horribly wrong
and one of the plotters died of dysentery while and it was far from clear
at the end of the play the the fate of the other three foolish young men
would be any better. This was acted very well.
We then had dinner, before seeing "OFSTED The Musical" [****],
which was a wonderful finale to my experience of Further Education. Unrealistically,
the OFSTED inspectors were presented as the "bad guys" and the school's
management as the "good guys". The reality, in my experience, can be far
from this! The day concluded with "Drag King Richard III" [*****],
which was a moving portrayal of the ongoing relationship between a lesbian
and her best girl-friend, Laurie, who feels that, like the malformed King
Richard, she is a misshapen creature who is doomed to wander the Earth.
Laurie eventually decides that she wants to undergo gender reassignment.
The setting was intimate and one felt very involved in the drama. I have
every sympathy with people who have to go through such a traumatic experience
without love to uphold them. |
Thursday
Our first play of the day was "Glimpses" [***]. It was a set of
playlets presented by some American students. They dealt with various aspects
of teenage angst, on the whole very effectively. The sketch based on a
pair of red pumps was particularly enjoyable. The next production, "Bang
Bang, you're dead" [**], was not so successful. The play was about
a shooting incident that took place at an American High School. While the
acting - again by a set of American students - was fine, the script did
not convincingly explain the motivation of the young man who shot so many
of his class-mates.
We
than went to see "The Laramie Project" [*****]. This was amazing.
It
famously deals with the murder of a young gay man, Matthew Shepherd. The
acting was excellent and the script powerful. Both bigots and decent folk
were portrayed convincingly. For once, I was proud to be a Catholic, because
the local priest was portrayed as sensitive and compassionate!
After dinner, we went to see "Bangers and Slash" [*], which was
a somewhat disappointing play set in Hell. We rounded off the day with
"A
Weekend in the Country" [****], which I had expected would be an Agather
Christie like "whodunit". In fact it was much superior to this. It was
both a comedy (based on the idea that the host of a weekend house party
had committed murder and that the guests had to be inveigled into helping
him dispose of the body) and a serious study of the insecurities and obsessions
of the various characters represented. |
Friday
The weather was good today: warm with lots of sun. If only the rest of
the week had been like this!
We began the day with "Sweetness Follows" [***] this was about
six people trying to understand their inter-woven lives. It was a bit difficult
to follow as the following summary might suggest:
"Alan has realized he's not in love with
Sylvia anymore but with the skinny cornershop teenager, who's also once
entranced George, who's wife, Violet, has taken him back against her better
judgement. Alan prefers a bulimic figure; Charlie can't remember ever loving
his mother; Julia is furious her gay son doubted she was fine with his
sexuality."
After lunch we went to "Son of the Father" [****], which was a very
non historical but very thought provoking play about the relationship between
Mary and Joseph. The scenario was that Joseph was in fact alive when
Jesus was crucified and that he blamed his wife for "egging" Jesus on in
his "Messianic delusions" out of a hunger for personal power. While I thought
that as an attempt to re-write history it was absurd, as a piece of drama
dealing with love and ambition and conflict it was superb.
We
then saw a powerful play called "Say Sorry" [***]. This dealt with
a physically abusive romanto-erotic relationship between two men, and the
inadequate response that it elicited from the best friend of one of them.
It ended in the abused partner being killed: partly because he would not
flee his abuser and partly because his friend failed to make him see sense
or alert the police to the developing situation.
The final play that we saw was arguably the best of all. It was called
"The
Lifeblood" [*****] and dealt with the last days of Her Royal Majesty
Mary Stewart: Queen of Scotland. She was presented as a kind and noble
lady who was the victim of merciless and devious men. Her conviction for
treason against Elizabeth Tudor was shown as being both unjust and illegal
on many grounds. Before she was executed, she made it clear that it was
not her will to re-impose Catholicism on anyone, but just to obtain some
solace and respite from persecution for English and Scottish Catholics.
In
the evening we set off to see the show "Ladyboys of Bangkok" [*].
It was quite a long - but pleasant- walk out from the City centre. We arrived
in the vicinity rather too early, so popped into a pub for a "wee dram".
While we were enjoying our malts, a young man approached me and remarked
on the fact that I had a copy of "Dune Messiah" with me. Hence started
a long conversation about politics, philosophy and religion which I felt
to be a real "moment of grace" for him.
This conversation almost made us late for the start of the performance.
In fact it wouldn't have mattered if we'd missed it altogether as the show
was dreadful. Simply tacky, but mostly just dull and boring. David and
I walked out after about twenty minutes. Given that it was the most expensive
show that we'd paid for I very much regretted buying the tickets. I also
regret curtailing my conversation with the young man in the pub. I only
wish that we had exchanged 'phone numbers or email addresses so that the
dialogue might have been continued. I hope that some things that I said
made a difference to his life and that he finds faith.
We walked the long way back to our hotel. |
Saturday
Our journey home was somewhat fraught. The train from Edinburgh was delayed
three times and arrived at King's Cross just over an hour late. By the
time we got home, David and I were quite shattered. Our tiredness persisted
though Sunday - when we were fortunate to be able to attend a Tridentine
Mass for the Assumption held in Reading. We didn't really recover until
Monday: which was the day I started my new job: teaching electronics to
the soldiers of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. |