“I do like an arched door,” commented one woman, taking a photo of said arched door. She turned to her companion. “Shall we get a drink?”
Flummoxed by all this tranquility, I too hung back, taking my own pictures of the space. There’s plenty there to photograph. Bookcases, artworks on the wall, big sprawling wooden tables, a bar heavily laden with knick-knacks.
But you and I both know that such serenity couldn’t last. Not in my little anxious soul.
As the clock above the bar sloughed away the seconds, I began to grow restless and I found myself heading over to those arched doors. There was no holding back. I was going in.
After all the arched doors and squashy sofas and bookcases, I’d expected something a little bit different than the regimented rows of neat blue seats that I found inside the theatre.
With the light pouring in from the rear, highlighting the backs of everyone’s heads, it was almost like being inside a cinema. A feeling not helped by the actors already in situ on stage, sat in formation, staring out at us. Watching. Dressed in vintage blacks, they looked a still from a silent movie come to life.
I may have been in all-black too, but mine wasn’t vintage. My own efforts had a distinct lack of black satin flowers. There was no black lace capes draped over a matching black lace gown. No black beaded trim, black ribboned shoes or… Ooo… what was that? Shiny black jacquard? Yes, please! The costume-envy was going to be strong on this one. I could already tell.
Hoping the cast didn’t misconstrue the lust in my eyes, I quickly shuffled into an aisle seat about half-way back for some quality outfit-perving.
But someone was coming down the aisle, blocking my view. Someone familiar looking.
Michael Billington, theatre reviewing royalty. Nay, the king himself. Whatever grain of salt you use on his reviews, he deserves respect. The man’s been a drama critic for The Guardian since before I was born.
Golly.
It wasn’t press night was it?
I checked.
No. It was the last preview.
Cheeky.
Still, I was intrigued to see where the great master would sit. I creeped on him under the guise of reading the freesheet.
The row behind me. On the aisle.
I congratulated myself on my seat choice. Mid-way back and on the aisle - the critics' choice.
But in all my pretend reading of the freesheet I had managed to not read something.
I went back to it, unsure if I had not read it because I was not actually reading, or not read it because it was not there.
I scanned the narrow pages.
Nope. It wasn’t there. No running time.
Had the woman on box office mentioned a running time? I couldn’t remember. I had been thinking about crumpets.
Was there even an interval?
Considering the play I was watching was primarily set in intervals, this could all become quite meta very fast.
I was there for The Orchestra, where the frenzied back-biting between the musicians takes place in the interludes in their playing.
Or rather, not playing. The music was piped in as the actors bowed, plucked, and pounded at their instruments - not making a sound for themselves.
When a cello was replaced by knitting needles, I craned forward, trying to see if that was being faked too.
“Japan stitch is vulgar,” sneered one of the characters, also leaning in to have a look.
Japan stitch?
I’d never heard of it, but then, I haven’t knitted much since I was a teenager.
I turned to the expert, my fiend Ellen. She knits for the stars of The Royal Ballet. She’d know.
“Ellen - is the Japan stitch vulgar?” I messaged her as the lights rose.
“I’ve never heard of it! It’s a knitting term?” she messaged back a minute later.
Hmm.
Helen was equally dubious. “I reckon Japan stitch is completely made up,” she interjected. “1. Japan doesn’t knit traditionally. 2. If it was a stitch it would be all metaphysical and ineffable and inscrutable and zen and that.”
Well, quite.
But all this lead to another question. Had the play finished? I mean, I knew it had, because we’d clapped and shit. But the other things that happen when plays come to a close had, well, not.
For example, leaving. People weren’t doing that.
The laid back atmosphere of the Common Room had invaded the theatre. No one wanted to budge.
Taking some initiative, I put on my coat and scarf, and as no one made an attempt to stop me, I left.
“Excuse me,” came a voice from behind me as I paused to look at one of the pieces of art on the wall.
Oh, shit. Maybe there really was more.
I turned round.
“Would you like me to explain the artwork?” said the small woman standing behind me.
I did. It looked strange and wonderful. A series of white cloth dolls, perfectly poised on rows of string - like a display of voodoo dolls, available to purchase for the curse-rich but time-poor witch.