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Post by kathryn on Mar 30, 2017 10:25:56 GMT
So, who else is going? Should I look out for badges?
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Post by kathryn on Mar 30, 2017 15:49:10 GMT
Well, that was simply wonderful. I just wish they'd given us a cast list - I've no idea who the singers and many of the actors were!
Totally worth taking the afternoon off work for.
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Post by couldileaveyou on Mar 30, 2017 16:39:00 GMT
I was there too! Some of the music felt a bit unnecessary, especially "Not While I'm Around" (I would have never expected to say that about a Sondheim's song!) and it's a shame that titans such as Michael Gambon or F Murray Abraham didn't even open their mouth. But it was wonderful, really, and quite moving by the end. Maggie Smith was phenomenal!
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Post by theatremadness on Mar 30, 2017 16:52:09 GMT
Also there! Was with a friend so unfortunately didn't have time to check here/around for badges. Was totally unsure what kind of afternoon it was going to be - but it ended up being just sublime and a really wonderful & informative gala. Really "tick off the bucket list" moment watching Maggie Smith perform that monologue live. Just sensational. Also had a bit of a nerd-gasm being in the same room as Harry Potter, Dumbledore & Professor McGonagall!! Pretty cool to see so many theatrical giants on one stage but yes, I do hope the National will publish some sort of complete cast list online as I'd really love to know everyone I saw (it wasn't always easy making out faces in the circle) - especially, the man playing Peter Shaffer!!
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Post by kathryn on Mar 30, 2017 17:01:26 GMT
I thought - from the little joke about mentioning his name - that might have been Michael Pennington? I didn't recognise him - but then I never do!
Maggie was sublime, and I actually loved the totally unexpected 'No one's gonna hurt you' - I want to know who sang it!
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Post by samuelwhiskers on Mar 30, 2017 21:44:01 GMT
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Post by theatremadness on Mar 30, 2017 22:03:36 GMT
Ah ha! Thanks for that - and welcome to the board 'officially'!
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Post by Scout on Mar 30, 2017 23:07:26 GMT
Word of this amazing event finally made it across the pond. Would love more details about the performances from anyone fortunate enough to attend. In particular, read that Tom Mison was among the performers, possibly performing an excerpt from The Salt Land with another actor. If anyone can confirm or provide more color, that would be lovely. Also, any chance that this was filmed for a televised event? It seems a shame that this much talent in one place wouldn't have been memorialized. Thanks much!
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Post by couldileaveyou on Mar 30, 2017 23:22:33 GMT
Word of this amazing event finally made it across the pond. Would love more details about the performances from anyone fortunate enough to attend. In particular, read that Tom Mison was among the performers, possibly performing an excerpt from The Salt Land with another actor. If anyone can confirm or provide more color, that would be lovely. Also, any chance that this was filmed for a televised event? It seems a shame that this much talent in one place wouldn't have been memorialized. Thanks much! Oh yes he did. Honestly, I could have done without that, I wished they had performed something from The Royal Hunt of the Sun. Mison was very good, but the scene was not first-rate. Especially out of context
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Post by Scout on Mar 30, 2017 23:41:54 GMT
Many thanks for that information. I'm quite jealous of anyone in that theater this afternoon.
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Post by lamaddalena on Mar 31, 2017 1:35:14 GMT
I thought - from the little joke about mentioning his name - that might have been Michael Pennington? I didn't recognise him - but then I never do! Maggie was sublime, and I actually loved the totally unexpected 'No one's gonna hurt you' - I want to know who sang it! The singer was Hal Cazalet, who helped organise the gala ( and I think was Shaffer's unofficial God-son) - his mother Camilla wrote a tribute in the programme. Definitely Pennington, and he was fab. Dame Maggie was indeed amazing - unlike Danni deNiese, who sounded very uncomfortable in that rep. A very interesting afternoon - such a shame it wasn't a full house.
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Post by dlevi on Mar 31, 2017 6:12:35 GMT
It was a lovely afternoon, far too long but lovely nevertheless. I think with three or four more performances, it would get trimmed down and be ready to go on the road. The thrill of three Salieri's together on stage, the quartet of actors from the original Royal Hunt of the Sun and of course Dame Maggie were the highlights for me. Mr Callow was, as usual, an affable and intelligent host. The real flaw though was not telling us who was who. Only the Michael Pennington reference made me realize that it was Michael Pennington, themusical performers ( and the pieces performed) will remain a mystery. I was surprised that Peter Firth wasn't there. What did become clear though was that other than Dame Maggie , he really didn't write for women -not that he was obligated to, but in looking at his long career, the number of good women's parts seem to be few and far between. Still a memorable afternoon.
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Post by Dawnstar on Mar 31, 2017 20:45:56 GMT
themusical performers ( and the pieces performed) will remain a mystery. The list of performers that samuelwhiskers linked to includes Fleur de Bray, who is a soprano, and Wendy Dawn Thompson, who is a mezzo, so I would imagine they were involved in whatever singing went on.
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Post by Nicholas on Apr 18, 2017 14:41:51 GMT
This was a lovely tribute, in which Shaffer came across as a lovely man, let alone a leading playwright. For someone who clearly was working right until the end on pushing boundaries and progressing further, what was great was that this tribute paid tribute not just to when he pushed the envelope, but to how, and why, with each new play. To have simply staggered from Equus to Amadeus with scenes and sections would have been to show him as an inventive playwright, but it wouldn’t have shown him as him; by focusing on him as a character and collaborator and creator, this painted him as a pioneer and a person instead. Hell, how wonderful to focus even on the flops – how lovely that it wasn’t just one-sided, that masterpieces were written but mistakes too were made, and that juvenilia seemed as important as the masterworks.
And to quote lovely Pennington quoting lovely Shaffer, “Oh, the actors!” Even if we didn’t get to hear F Murray Abraham do that scene or Michael Gambon pretend to be a 20-something Spaniard, how moving – and how telling – to see titans like that giving their thanks. He clearly was instrumental in vitalising a number of careers (a point Daniel Radcliffe made very heartfelt-ly, I thought), and it felt like a very personal repaying of many favours. All the little vignettes had the competence and quality of proper performances, not one-offs – was particularly struck by the power and vindictiveness Jacobi bought, in five minutes of monologuing out-doing most of his recent cosy work. And oh, seeing Maggie Smith all but recreate her Kenneth Williams days – bliss! A delight, too, for the completely random musical interludes (and Sondheim, what an anecdote!) – all giving a fuller picture of the peerson, all making the afternoon even more nice. This account is rather wonderful in summing it all up - bookanista.com/peter-shaffer/.
Within Callow's show, I felt there was an argument underneath that Shaffer may lack the immediate name-recognition of his contemporaries, but that's solely because his voice kept developing, his style kept changing, his every new play was a brand new idea. It seemed what Callow wanted to do was not just pay tribute, but make the argument that where “Pinteresque” means – to – pause – a – lot, and “Stoppardian” means “too clever by half”, “Shafferian” may not have entered the lexicon, because how do we get from blinding horses to black comedies via Amadeus and the Andes? If such a term ought to exist, it ought to mean “unpredictable, apart from predictably doing something different”; Shafferian is adventurousness, it’s curiosity, and it’s character. Kudos to Callow, this tribute was ideally Shafferian. Not that I know Shaffer’s work all too well, but I felt Shaffer would have been chuffed to be commemorated not by a stuffy series of scenes, but by this witty biographical ribbing. In fact, one of the greatest compliments I can pay this is that, despite the glitziest of casts, it didn’t feel like it was aimed at me – a near-stranger to Shaffer with only a passing acquaintance to some of his works. It didn't want to explore the work, it wanted to explore the man. It felt aimed at the family, the friends, those familiar to these words – and the fact that it then worked for me was mere testament to how well he wrote. A great tribute to a clearly great man.
Now bring on the Tchaikovsky play!
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Post by Elisa on Apr 18, 2017 15:44:13 GMT
Lovely review, Nicholas. I just wish they had recorded this show.
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