A Magical Evening!
Yesterday I wrote about my
excitement and anticipation going into the city to see King Lear with my friend
Vanessa. So today I can report that it
was a magical evening!
We had an early dinner at a tapas place
between Penn Station and the Cort Theatre.
Vanessa and I share a love of anchovies that most people I’m acquainted
with don’t share. This includes my
husband and two daughters. But Vanessa
and I frequently wind up discussing and ordering anchovies. Anyway, we had a few tapas consisting of
Caesar salad and roasted eggplant and those aforementioned anchovies. Vanessa also had grilled octopus which I
can’t even seem to taste, since it’s, well, octopus. I don’t have too refined a palette. Then we
walked to the Cort Theatre.
Three and a half hours of
King Lear made me a little nervous, but if Glenda Jackson who is 82 can get up
there and be King Lear, then I can be an audience member. It was sensational! She is the consummate actress, and it was a
heart-wrenching role. Another prominent actress, Jayne Houdyshell, played
another male role, that of Earl of Gloucester. Ruth Wilson, who I love in “The
Affair,” played Cordelia, Lear’s youngest and most truth-telling daughter, as
well as the Fool. The role of the Fool
showed what a range Ruth Wilson has. She was singing and prancing about onstage,
and she was fabulous. This production
had such interesting and unusual touches – such as a deaf Duke of Cornwall who
had a person signing up there with him.
The cast members were also quite diverse. There was haunting original
music by Philip Glass, performed by an exquisite string quartet. I didn’t mean to go into such detail about the
play, only to share that it was quite compelling.
While the play itself had
horrendous storms at some point in the action, New York City was also experiencing
thunderstorms, unusual for a March night.
But when we exited the theatre, the storms had subsided. And although we trudged around a bunch of
puddles around Times Square on our way back to the train, the rain had
completely stopped and it was unusually warm, adding to the magic of the
evening. Vanessa and I added another
memorable adventure to our growing repertoire.
That list line sums it up so beautifully, to think of each adventure as "a collection of plays, dances, or pieces that a company or a performer knows or is prepared to perform" makes the evening all the more magical.
ReplyDeleteAll in all, sounds like a perfect evening! I love it when things work out like this. :)
ReplyDelete