Monday 1 November 2010

Infirm at the Radcliffe

The last time I was in the John Radcliffe Hospital my grandmother was very ill. The time before, my missus gave birth to Molly; when I was a teenager I was treated for what I self-diagnosed as a brain tumour but which was more accurately discovered to be bewilderment and angst. So to say it feels odd to be doing a show here, let alone one with the subject matter we're tackling, is an understatement.
Our contact, Ruth, is charming and chatty and all smiles and enthusiasm, though, and this demeanour lasts right up until she collides with some scaffolding Pete is carrying, whereupon she leaves. Possibly to go to the neurological department to have the lump on her head seen to.
After a start like this you'd be forgiven for expecting the worst, but as the Oxford Playhouse are in the crowd tonight, together with Karen and most of OTC, it can't be the worst. It sort of has to be the best, really.
We're up against it, though. The room is a badminton court, there's a huge wall hanging of a pink gangsta elephant dressed in a doctor's coat facing the stage, and even though it's October it's hot enough to grow orchids.
It's a nervous start, and with phones going off, watches beeping and the side doors opening every now and then, the audience must be having trouble with focus. I have forgotten my show pants, so I'm forced to wear a terrifyingly large and baggy pair of y-fronts which are period but massively impractical. As I remove my PJ trousers under the towel after the dunking scene, I feel the accursed underwear slide over my bum, gangsta stylie, and the audience nearly get an eyeful. Not the way I would wish to be remembered.
 In Act 2 it really starts to fly, though, and there's some great work from Sophia, Pete and Dan. And perhaps me, but of course I couldn't possibly comment on that...
Afterwards I talk films with Chalky, Si Porritt and Baz in the foyer. The top secret film on rugby lines has been put back a couple of months and will be shooting in the Spring. Exciting casting developments talked of, too. My parents watch all this with interest  - and my mother, I believe, has a tear in her eye. My father is very enthusiastic, and despite inadvertently mentioning that I've been "wooden" occasionally in the past, clearly loved it. Good times.

2 comments:

Jewson Smithee said...

Impressed with the show, I feel that perhaps you might be well suited to the stage version of my film "Lost Gypsy Fox". I'm sure you would feel honored playing next to my sister, a talent only discovered by myself. In fact I suspect it is a similar play in many ways to "Vertigo" as a friend said it was "Complete Cock" and left her feeling sick, which I can only suspect is an abbreviation For Hitchcock and reference to the nausea felt when looking down from a great height?

Jewson Smithee

Steve Dineen said...

I was so pleased to see you crouching, hoof in mouth, in the audience. Sadly you missed the emotional climax of the show when your friend Mr Firetank helped you to the lavatory, bot no doubt your brother saved a portion of my discarded clothing as a souvenir?
Would be very happy to meet your sister; I am keen to complete the set after my very enjoyable evenings with your mother and father last summer. Pip pip!