I love London, it is definitely in my top
three of favourite cities. Bangkok is also there and I’m leaving room for the
third as I haven’t quite travelled the whole world yet. Like Bangkok, if I can
find an excuse to go to London I will. This time it was for the France Show at
Earl’s Court. The show itself was possibly a slight disappointment, the
catering was most un-French – lots of queuing, no seats and plastic cups. Ok,
the coffee, when we’d finally got to the front of the queue was good – but drinking
it standing up (as most were) or guiltily sitting on a seat, unable to talk to
your fellow show-goers as you battle courageously in a vain attempt to avoid
eye-contact with the thousands of seat-less coffee drinkers (as approx. 57
people were) rather marred the experience.
We met one very engaging
man – and if you’re at all interested in French properties in the South West
then I’d recommend his website and, other than that, spent an hour squashing around
the French market, gazing with some small amount of interest at the overpriced
ceramics and marvelling at the interesting array of dresses and shawls that
make-up the total of French fashion. Parisians may dress well – the rest of
France tends not to. Rob then queued for twenty minutes to get us an overpriced
bowl of boeuf bourguignon and a large glass of wine each, and I took in the
delights of the rather fractious British public; all of whom were too hot, too
tired and just a little bit miffed at the dire catering. This show had been
billed as a ‘Slice of France in England’ and it wasn’t.
At 2pm we had our
wine tasting. It was informative and passable but, after six of some of
Bordeaux’s finest I can still say quite safely that I’m a Burgundy fan. Apart
from the Sauternes at the end which was delightful – and frustrating. Around
80% of the audience left their Sauternes but it just didn’t feel right to dash
round the lecture theatre quaffing the dregs from others’ glasses.
Whilst the day
started disappointingly the rest of Saturday was fabulous. We watched a very
entertaining string quartet in the middle of Covent Garden market, and then
drank very delicious coffee to the beautiful songs of a pretty skilled busker.
His rendition of Mad World was inspiring and had me jotting ideas in my
notebook for future writing. The café had outdoor heaters, so we sat outside in
order to benefit from the atmosphere – and regretted it, no heater in the world
is match for the fierce North wind which was ripping relentlessly through
London on Saturday.
We made our way to
Leicester square safe in the knowledge that you can always get a decent pie and
a bottle of wine in one of the local pubs for under £30 for two. But it was
Saturday and the theatre doors hadn’t opened so there were no free tables –
then we spotted the posters outside St-Martin-in-the-Fields advertising a
Vivaldi by candlelight – something I’ve long dreamed of.
The recital was
lovely, only tainted by the fact that our seats were unreserved so we had to
arrive at 7pm for a 7:30 start and then they didn’t start till 7:40 but the
atmosphere and acoustics promised to make up for the long hours sitting on a
fairly uncomfortable church pew. For the first 5 minutes. Then things started
to blur, I spent a while squirming in my seat – half in the hope that that
would make me feel better and half from the stress of knowing how embarrassing it
was going to be if I had to leave mid-concert. I was sitting at the front and
there was a door just to my left but this seemed to be for musicians only so my
only exit was the huge doors right at the back of the church. Eventually I had
to leave – you know something is wrong when you put your fingers to your face
and it feels like you’ve plunged them into a sink, you also know something is
wrong when other members of the audience lean backwards at your approach in a
desperate attempt to keep as far from you as possible. My exit from the church
was faltering, rather hazy and every bit as embarrassing as I’d imagined. The
doors at the back-right of said church swing shut with a resounding thump
preceded by a sharp intake of breath from the freezing outside – just as if the
doors are sighing in disgust.
Fast-forward fifteen
minutes (I’m sure you don’t want to know the details of my demise) and, after
sitting for several minutes in the church entrance revelling in the cool breeze
from outside, there was a lull in the music and I silently inched back in. Not
feeling 100% but fairly confident that I was no longer facing my imminent
death.
Both Rob and the
lady next to me were sympathetic and very concerned. And then the lady offered me
first-aid Little Britain style. And
for all you that watched the mint paramedics and scoffed, let me tell you it
really works. So I’m not sure who I should thank especially – the kind lady from
Northampton with the mints (she insisted I had two based on her diagnosis) or
David Walliams himself (clearly the founder of said technique) but either way
it worked.
I’ll be back
tomorrow with details of two wonderful places to visit whilst in London and a
delicious recipe.
1 comment:
My favourite city is a good poser, but I'm not sure that London gets into my top three, which consist of LEEDS, where I spent 5 years as a student, ate my first curry, and learned my politics, NEW YORK, where I spent most of my summers in the post Woodstock era, and BANGKOK, where the people will do anything for you, and where the food is unbelievable.
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