Tag Archives: claxton

4 July 2008

I think I shall call this picture Stalks. I took it up on what I believe is known as the Old Library Park, about 50 yards away up the hill. There’s some kind of campaign going on to improve the area: we’ve been asked for suggestions. The poppies may indicate that the locals are trying to grown opium, or they may be natural. I didn’t mention them. In my opinion the Old Library Park is vastly improved by having Oliver and Amy in it, but I didn’t mention that either.

Yesterday and today have both been very warm, and I feel pretty tired after having been out in it. Last evening we picked up Stephanie and went to Claxton Opera, about 8-10 miles along country lanes. As I may have mentioned before, the theatre is actually in a house, and this year they are putting on The Threepenny Opera. At first I thought I was going to be disappointed, but it got going after about 20 minutes and turned out to be quite successful. Oddly, they split it into two, with about an hour and a half before the interval and less than half an hour after. There was the usual minor irritation of having to wait for a minibus afterwards, but we got talking to Hereward and Diana Cooke.

Pretty exhausted after we got home, but still didn’t sleep particularly well. Nonetheless we went into the city this morning to buy a couple of things and pay in a cheque, staying on for an early lunch at Caffee Italia. Flaked out on the bed after getting home, but made the mistake of putting a video on – Enemy of the State – which proved to be so compulsive I didn’t doze off as I had intended. Halfway through Liz D called for a cup of tea, and now Dot has gone to Sainsbury’s in anticipation of the Coomes’ visit on Sunday.

6 July 2007

A fuller view of the refreshment hut mentioned last time: a truly amazing agglomeration of cast-off building materials, it also contains a library, or maybe a secondhand book shop. It was hard to tell which. It is situated just behind what used to be a shingle bank at Cley, and its continued existence is truly remarkable. Perhaps it was washed up by the sea some time in the past, or repeatedly.

The weather has continued very wet, although I managed to get into the city and back yesterday, and managed a two-mile walk the day before. I now have my watch back with its new battery and accompanying reassurance. Existing without a watch is a very odd experience: it’s easy enough to find out what the time is, but mostly you don’t bother. Days seem to last longer. I also got some euros for Ireland, in the hope that further terrorist cock-ups don’t shut down the airports. Last week failed car bombs in London and an attack on Glasgow airport that didn’t work.

Last night I had what was probably a unique experience: I went to an opera and loved every minute of it. I steer clear of operas because the language and the plot are usually so banal, and you can’t hear the words anyway, but we went to this one because a friend was singing in it. It was The Night Bell, a one-acter by Gaetano Donizetti, and it was put on by Claxton Opera. This is a group based in a small village near the River Yare, east of Norwich – really out in the wilds. We had to park in a farmyard and were driven by minibus up to a large house (The Old Meeting House, but someone actually lives there), where the inside had been re-formed to provide a small concert hall holding about 80-90 people. The orchestra were on the ground floor beneath the stage, which was therefore on the first floor – level with one set of seats. We were in the second-floor “gallery” – front row, with a great view down on to the stage.

The production was highly professional, from stage sets through costumes to acting and direction. The first half of the programme was Stravinsky’s The Soldier’s Tale – not an opera, but an acted-out story with a narrator (the brilliant David Newham) and of course Stravinsky’s music, which was rather in the style of Kurt Weill. The acting was excellent and the story not too bad, but there were rather tedious lulls where the music took over and there was nothing for the actors to do – so we had dancers prancing around rather pointlessly.

The Donizetti was stunning, however. Our friend Ruth was Serafina, one of the leading roles: I knew she could sing, but her acting was a revelation – some beautiful comic touches. The whole thing was extremely funny, and the two leading men were both superb, as were the chorus. Maybe it was the acoustics, but you could actually hear what people were singing.

Needless to say it started raining as we left Norwich and continued all evening. There was a bit of hanging around waiting for the minibus afterwards, but we had umbrellas, and we managed to have a chat with Ruth and with a woman in the chorus who we’d known long ago, when Dot taught at Surlingham.