Thursday 4 April 2013

Do I Dare Disturb the Universe?

I can't believe it's been less than two weeks since I've been in London. There is so much I can't even express myself in words. I've seen so many amazing buildings, museums, plays, theatres, houses, gardens...it's been one heck of a ride and there's still five and a half weeks left (is it really that short?)! Don't believe me? Let me tell you all about it...in pictures!
Alfred Hitchcock's London home

One of my favorite sets for the Longing

The egg-shaped skyscraper

The Princess Diana Memorial walk at
Hyde Park

A swan at Hyde Park

J.M. Barrie lived here once <3

I found it! To Hogwarts!

A night view of Soho from across the Thames

The wonderful, amazing Charles Dickens


Big Ben + the Eye

The Tower Bridge and me

Tower of London

A well-preserved (I think) WWII air
raid shelter

Westminster Abbey
So. As you can see from all of these pictures, I have hit quite a few of the places I was meaning to on my list. Not to mention the museums where we weren't allowed to take pictures.

-Charles Dickens Museum
-British Museum
-British Library
-Pollock's Toy Museum
-Kensington Gardens
-National Gallery
-Museum of London
-Harry Potter WB Studio Tour
-Westminster Abbey
-Natural History Museum
-Walk on Tower Bridge (if possible)
-Shakespeare's Globe
-Camden Market
-Brick Lane Beigel Bake
-Tower of London
-Victoria & Albert Museum
-Ride in the London Eye
-Visit Liverpool and Surrey

I'd say that's quite a lot in a week and a half, don't you think? The plays I've seen here so far have been really good too. I feel so lucky to have come study abroad instead of visit myself. Of the four plays we've seen, there were famous film/TV actors in three of them. I was pretty stoked to find that out. 

The first play we saw was a promenade performance. As someone who previously had no real experience with seeing professional plays and musicals, this was like throwing me into the deep end of a pool without teaching me how to swim. I was so confused and scared most of the time because I had no idea what was going on. It felt like an interactive museum or something and it took a lot of thinking for me to actually get what I was seeing. It was definitely an experience, but one I probably wouldn't want to go to again. It had a post-apocalyptic theme, so it was kind of creepy the entire time. 

One of my absolute favorite actors was in Macbeth, the second play we saw. JAMES MCAVOY. I think most of the girls swooned a little to see him up close (me included). Even if he was bloody, puking, or marching around with scruff most of the time. It was so awesome. The play itself was an interesting spin on Shakespeare's tragedy. It's a really dark and violent play, so the director had set it in a post-apocalyptic world in the future sometime. I really liked his take on it even if I wasn't totally a fan of all the female screaming that went on almost unnecessarily. There was just so much to unpack, but that's just how Shakespeare plays are no matter what time period they're set in. 

The other actor we saw was Iain Glen in our third play called Longing, which was really good and based off of two of Anton Chekhov's short stories. I really like Anton Chekhov, so I had a better understanding of this play. I didn't really know the actor that well, but he was really good. Unsurprisingly, they all were. Peter Postlethwaite's son William was in that play too and he played a pretty dominant role. He was also brilliant. 

The most recent play we saw was called Old Times and was the second strangest play I've ever seen. It was super confusing as apparently the playwright Harold Pinter enjoys messing with his audience's minds, but I have to admit I was really taken by the acting done by Rufus Sewell, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Lia Williams. I really like Kristen Scott Thomas and Rufus Sewell from other films and it was cool seeing them act together. It was only a three-person play, so all three got a lot of stage time (obviously). 

I love the English theatre so much. They are all just so good! I only have to pay for one of the plays that I'm expected to write about for my final exam, but otherwise it's pretty good. I'm really happy I'm on this program. I'm in the center of the city, I've really gotten to know the metro system well enough (at least in Central London), I found a church to go to nearby, and I'm getting to see all of these plays that just blow my mind every time. 

When I travel, a line from T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" comes to mind: 
Do I dare
Disturb the universe?  
Or shall I sit back and observe the people, the places, the things that I see? The answer, though perhaps not to J. Alfred Prufrock, should be yes, I should disturb the universe. It's just been a dream, being here, in a place that I have dreamed of coming to for so long. But floating through a dream is no way to dream at all. I need to grip it in one hand and exchange it for reality and find my feet back on solid ground.
"Oh, do not ask, 'What is it?'/Let us go and make our visit."
("The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock")
Taking advice from a static, dawdling character is probably not wise, but in this case it's not so bad. One of the highlights to being here is being able to see the homes and streets and places that English authors I have idolized and studied for so long lived in. J.M. Barrie with his Peter Pan. Alfred Hitchcock isn't an author, but he was one darn amazing filmmaker. And Charles Dickens...oh. Don't get me started on how much I love Charles Dickens. I'll be keeping an eye out for any more houses or museums of my favorite authors.

All right, I suppose that's enough for now. I've got quite the day tomorrow (a tour and workshop at the Globe Theatre (right?)). I am so in love with London right now it's ridiculous in the best way possible.

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