Archive for February, 2009

Revolutionary Road

Saturday, February 28th, 2009


What a happy film! This is not a good film for the end of the week Friday evening relaxation. It is based on Richard Yates’ classic novel. The film is a riveting and stark marital drama with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet acting together again, this time as husband and wife. How different their parts are compared to the ones in Titanic. It is directed by Sam Mendes Kate’s real husband.
It is set in 1955 New England. They have a picture perfect house, but become increasingly resentful of the path their lives have taken. She wanted to be an actress but never made it. She became pregnant with their first child and so they settled down into their mundane lives. Neither fulfilling their dreams.
April, played by Kate Winslet tries to improve their life by suggesting they go to live in Paris. She feels that she will be able to get a job to support them. Unfortunately she falls pregant with their third child. Frank, played by DiCaprio, is also offered a better paid job.
We follow the internal journeys of these two people through the way they punish each other for failing to make the American Dream work the way it should.

The performances are mesmerizing from all the cast but it is not an easy film to watch.

A Little Night Music

Friday, February 20th, 2009

This Saturday we were in London to see A Little Night Music. This is one of my favourite musicals by Stephem Sondheim. It was at the Menier Chocolate Factory near London Bridge. This is a very small theatre with very hard bench seats for only 150 people. The show could not have been better for me. Trevor Nunn directed and the cast included Maureen Lipman and Hannah Waddingham, who I last saw as the Lady of the Lake in Spamalot. It also included Jessie Buckly who was runner up in the BBC production “I’d do anything”.

The rest of the season is sold out, but it will be tranferring to the Garrick Theatre in the west End in March. The show is all about tangled relationships at turn of the last century, which was fitting for Valentines day. It includes the song ‘Send in the Clowns’ http://www.menierchocolatefactory.com/a_little_night_music

Just to remind you that the special offers in the newsletter only last until the 13th March.

A fun dance video

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Enjoy

Spring Awakening

Sunday, February 8th, 2009
Cast of Spring Awakening

Cast of Spring Awakening

Cast Of Spring Awakening

Cast Of Spring Awakening

Yesterday I went to see the new American musical ‘Spring Awakening’ at the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith. The musical is based on the German play by Frank Wedekind’s who wrote it in 1891. It was banned and only had a private performance at the Royal Court in 1963. The play was about teenage sexual awakenings against a backdrop of religious and parental repression. Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph wrote”With titles like Totally F***ed and The Bitch of Living the songs, are sometimes aggressively in your face. But more often the musical numbers have a bruised tenderness about them.”
The young cast are all excellent in there parts, and this is their first time on the west end stage.
You can see more of the show and videos from it at www.springawakening.co.uk
It is only onto the 13th March unless it gets a transfer to another theatre. It is in the style of Hair and Rent, but it is not just for young people, but for young at heart who can remember their teenage years.

Winner of the TXT Competition

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

On top of the tank

On top of the tank

The winner is Russell Fellows who sent us this email and this photograph:

Dear All,

Having just received a reminder for my appointment on Monday, I enclose my entry for the “unusual place “competition.

I send it promptly as my camera has no date stamp facility for the pictures, or it may have but I couldn’t find it before I lost patience!

When the reminder came I found myself on top of a “cryogenic test facility”, not that exciting I know, but still an usual place to be.

This test bunker is part of a project with which I have been commercially and technically involved for around two years. It is for testing the performance of superconducting magnet coils, these are very high field magnet coils similar to those used in MRI machines. These operate at liquid helium temperature of -270 degrees C! The bunker is made of more than 60 tons of steel, positioned to contain the huge magnetic fields which would otherwise stop heart pacemakers or attract large metal objects from several meters away.

The project is part of a development program for new generation Cancer treatments. The technology is licensed and is proven as a far more effective and targetable treatment than conventional radiotherapy techniques. The goal of this project is to make this treatment more accessible to the world as a whole. It is personally important to me as I have lost close family to cancer and hope that the future will be brighter as a result of these new technologies.