Fringe Benefits part 2

IMG_5765

The Edinburgh Festival – millions of people and thousands of shows. The streets are crowded with buskers, acrobats, fire-eaters and thousands of people like us – trying to find their way around. Everywhere are posters for shows – all very enticing and all involving much mathematical and geographical calculation to ensure we can skip from one event to the other.

Day 3

IMG_5834

The sun is shining and we wander down to the Scottish parliament. We are whisked through security (C Swiss Army knife will be returned when we leave) and we step inside. It is a modern building – the first debate between members took place in 2004 – and there are many pleasing curves in pale wood. Downstairs in the lobby there is a World Press Photo exhibition – photographs taken in 2018.

IMG_5837 (2)   IMG_5860      Scottish parliament exhibition

For lunch we have a rather awful sandwich at Patisserie Valerie (I thought they’d closed) and then move down North Bridge to the Hilton Hotel, where, surprisingly, we shall spend the afternoon. We have tickets for three shows.

We walk upstairs and wait in the light comfortable bar and then we’re called in to see Walls and Bridges

IMG_5724

It is a play about students in 1953 East Berlin, performed, I think, by students. The poster is great, Two or three of the actors are excellent, but the play lacks any real political insight above the usual stereotypes of life in East Germany – the ardent communist who speaks rather woodenly and the young free thinkers anxious to break out of their narrow lives. It is a bit depressing.

We therefore decide to give the next play a miss. We had booked it not knowing it was the same group. Then we read some of the reviews and see it may have more to it than we realised, but it is too late, which is a shame. However, the Hilton Hotel is a very comfortable place to wait for our next show, so we find an empty sofa and have a whisky – Jura.

IMG_5872 (2)

A woman advertising another show – In Pursuet – wanders through the bar with a life size cardboard cut-out of Sue Perkins. The woman herself looks a little like Sue Perkins, but it is not her. In a corner someone is doing face painting. Is it for a show? Or is it just Art?

IMG_5879 (2)Our next show is Sherlock Holmes and the conundrum of Arthur Conan Doyle.

IMG_5721

We are at the funeral of Conan Doyle, his second wife is here and who should turn up but Sherlock Holmes. There is community singing. This is difficult at a real funeral, let alone in a small dark room with 20 strangers. It is a confusing 40 minutes. I am not even sure what the conundrum is. I am pleased that I have actually heard the Radio 4 programme Great Lives talking about Conan Doyle – Gyles Brandreth was very knowledgeable and funny.

It is bucketing down! The new fab walking shoes are not wet-weather proof.

IMG_5720

We make our way to the Surgeon’s Hall to see Dr Phil Hammond talking about the NHS and health generally. He is very good, charming, amusing, with thoughtful easy politics, which is very welcome. There hasn’t been much political content in the shows we’ve seen.

Day 4

Today we are wearing the plastic macs we bought specially for the Fringe and brought to Edinburgh so carefully and neatly and which we left in the room yesterday when we went out in the pouring rain. It is still pouring. We sit damply in a cafe and have a Scottish breakfast.

IMG_5887 (2)

Friend Gill is heading down from Dundee to have lunch with us at David Bann, a very nice vegetarian restaurant.

We meet Gill at Waverley Station and walk to St Mary’s Street. They don’t take bookings during the Festival, but we are very early and there is space. The restaurant meets with Gill’s approval. There is tofu, cooked in a way that even I like it. All is beautifully presented, the staff are friendly and the coffee is good.

Then we dash to the National Museum of Scotland, where there are many obscure and interesting things to see.

Museum of Scotland (16)  Museum of Scotland (18)     Museum of Scotland (20)

At 3 o’clock those toes are feeling very tired – but happy – and we board our train back to London. And then begins another adventure, as the great power cut hits. Our night in Retford.

Retford sunset (2)

Sunset over Retford

 

Fringe Benefits part 1

IMG_5728 (2)

We are going to Edinburgh, to the Festival Fringe, on the train. The weather is quite chilly and the sky is grey. From starting the journey in a t-shirt I put on a (cotton) scarf and my denim jacket.

At York a group of middle-aged women get on the train, and tell the train manager that they are performing at the Fringe. Although I really want to, I don’t ask them what they’re doing in case it’s something like ‘Songs from the Shows’ and we have to go, because we have struck up a rapport.

The closer we get to Scotland, the lovelier the countryside becomes. We pass the Angel of the North

Angel of the North (5)   IMG_5688 (2)     IMG_5696 (2) 

Lindisfarne, Berwick-on-Tweed (which just sounds Scottish). We see the sea and then dark satanic hills, covered in pines, looking like the back of an All Year Round Christmas shop, waiting for a delivery of lights.

And suddenly we are in Scotland. In order to fit in I adopt my best Janet-from-Dr-Finlay accent.  ‘Will ye no have a wee cup of tea before you’re away, Dr Finlay?’ I will of course never use this question or attempt the accent.

The streets are full of posters advertising all manner of shows.

IMG_5716 (2)   IMG_5717 (2)   IMG_5725 (2)   IMG_5719 (3)

We check in to our apart’hotel which is wonderfully central, on the Royal Mile, but unaccountably has a picture of Sean Connery on the wall, as well as a modern monarch of the glen.

IMG_E5769

There is also a dishwasher.

We have already booked tickets for some shows and tonight we are going to see Pizza Shop Heroes,

  Pizza Shop Heroes poster    

a play about and acted by four young men who came to the UK as unaccompanied asylum-seeking minors. They became part of a theatre group, Phosphorus Theatre. In the play, they are now adults, all working in a pizza joint, they tell their stories, their different experiences – long dangerous journeys being ripped off and beaten up at every turn – which are extraordinary and awful and powerful.

   IMG_5747 

Day 2

Cherie – My Struggle is on at 10.30am, at the George Hotel – a one-woman show, a woman in a red dress and dark hair and a wide mouth, whose name I cannot discover. It is a very accomplished show – the life and times of Cherie Booth.

IMG_E5786

I don’t know what to expect, but I realise now I want more politics – why was she Labour? What was the difference between her and Tony in their attitude to Labour politics (apart from the fact she was born to it and he decided on it after a posh upbringing)? Did she feel betrayed by his career in politics – other than by the fact she got Thanet North when she stood as a Labour Candidate – and therefore never had a chance of winning and he got Sedgefield and won?

Having said that – it is accomplished, it lasts 50 minutes, it reminds you of bits of political history you’ve forgotten – the tragedy of the death of John Smith, Gordon Brown’s strange agreement with Tony, and  the terrible shock of discovering in the newspaper that your beloved dad’s got a new wife and child.

IMG_E5790

Afterwards we go to Frederick’s Coffee House. There are many steps to climb to get here. Edinburgh is so full of highs and lows. I am wearing my new M&S (black but sparkly) (unwontedly sparkly) trainers which I bought to enable the trekking around Edinburgh. They’re comfortable but my feet are very hot.

Edinburgh trainers (shimmer) (2)

We have a flat white and a slice of (very sweet) blueberry sponge cake.

After lunch we go to see Syd, Arthur Smith’s show, an hour of memories of his father. It includes singing (he has a young woman accompanying him on the piano) – which is unexpected.

IMG_5802

Arthur Smith has a tuneless gravelly voice. He sings Leonard Cohen and Kinks songs which I quite like but C thinks is sentimental. But Arthur Smith is about the same age as me, so many of his references reverberate with me, talk of the war, music, adverts. But his father was a policeman, which was not something that would have happened in our house.

IMG_5820 (2)

Next we wait in the rain, under a tarpaulin, to see Sarah Keyworth, nominated for Best Newcomer in 2018. She is a young lesbian and very funny. It is extraordinary how a single person on a stage can keep you amused for an hour, how she can remember all her lines, how she keeps it fresh after doing the same set night after night.

We give the last item on today’s agenda a miss as my legs are aching. It’s an interesting looking play about a murder – but quite a long walk away. Is it wrong to determine your cultural intake by geography? I answer this question by saying we need time between events to savour the content of what we have just seen.

IMG_5749 (2)

Dijon – we are keen as mustard

Dijon edited (34)

We take the train from Gare de Lyon in the south east corner of Paris, and head towards Switzerland. But we are not going so far – we are on our way to Dijon. Our journey will be an hour and a half. We pass flat acres of corn, an occasional river and now and then a small village with red roofs and a church spire.

It’s still hot but the sky is grey and the air is heavy. We are optimistic travellers and hope the weather stays dry. We have not come prepared for rain.

Gradually the landscape changes. It is getting a bit hillier. A few dark forests. Villages now ‘nestle’ in valleys, or straggle up the sides of inclines. The houses look more Germanic, higher roofs, bits of dark wood – verging on the chalet-like. I feel a Julie Andrews moment coming on.

We alight at the station and walk out into the wide forecourt. What a calm, clean place Dijon is, small but perfectly formed – a lot of golden creamy stone and stories of Dukes and Duchesses. The historical centre of the city has been registered since July 4, 2015 as a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Dijon is the capital of the Côte-d’Or département in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region and as well as mustard it is famous for its churches. Our hotel is next to the Cathedral and we are prepared for religious drama.

We have lunch in Place Rude, where C has Eggs in an Epoisses cheese sauce. I have a taste – this version is not unlike a savoury Ambrosia Rice Pudding without the rice. I have ham with parsley. It is a terrine with parsley laced through it. And very nice. Washed down with a glass of Petit Chablis (a poor person’s Chablis, I understand).

Dijon (3)

We sit beside a small roundabout designed, apparently, by Gustave Eiffel (or Mr Tower, as we should call him).

Dijon (6)

In Dijon there is an ‘owl trail’ – little brass/bronze owls in the pavements point the way round the city centre with stories about the buildings and squares. We go to Tourist Information and buy a helpful booklet (‘hibou,’ I say, practising my French. ‘Non, chouette,’ corrects the assistant – it’s female), then we follow the signs

dijon-owl

to discover a little of the town – watchtowers and museums, cellars and walls. We pass the ‘roofless’ house – where, legend has it, a pie-maker made delicious paté, but one day a child’s finger was discovered in his wares. The pie-maker was put to death, of course, and the roof of his house removed.

Dijon church of St Philibert (6)

We venture into the 12th Century church of Saint Philibert, beside the cathedral, right by our hotel. It is an empty shell, its pillars and arches propped up with intricate wooden structures and odd bricks. The floor is covered with soft white brick dust – deadly for wearers of black shoes, like myself – and there was an art exhibition of modern unappealing paintings. But the church was stunning.

Dijon Brasserie des Beaux Arts (2)

The next morning is sunny and bright. We have breakfast in the Brasserie des Beaux Arts, in the Place des Ducs, which is a small green square. It is early. There is only one other table occupied. We see a man arrive with a basket of baguettes. Behind the rocks in front of us, is a small waterfall. Two women are sitting on a bench, reading. All is peace and quiet, totally tranquil.

Dijon Brasserie des Beaux Arts (6)   Dijon Brasserie des Beaux Arts (7)

We go into the Musée des Beaux Arts – it’s free! – a modern museum that takes us through the story of Burgundy, and resolves the question of how England could own a small part. Look at the map – Calais (Angleterre).

Dijon (123)

We are walking past the market and notice an alleyway with a sign pointing to a café. We walk down and look inside. It looks friendly, if a little ramshackle. It is very cheap. It is full of serious looking thinking people. The café of philosophers.

Dijon edited (24)

Dijon (104)           Dijon (106)

We have a very good cup of coffee and feel deeply intellectual.

Having followed the chouettes, now we follow a different route, in the north of the town. The highlight for me is the trompe l’oeil on the wall with a stature of Garibaldi. Garibaldi assisted Dijon in the 1870 war. Dijon Place Garibaldi

It is time to go. Just before we leave we buy mustard – by way of small gifts from Dijon – but we bought them in Monoprix (a cross between Sainsbury’s and Waitrose). We could have bought them in Paris. Although perhaps not the oddly flavoured ones – mustard with Cassis, mustard with curry …

For our final lunch we sit in a local park – the Park Darcy – named after the man who had first devised the method of underground reservoirs to bring water to the city. There is a pretty waterfall splashing into a pond.

Dijon edited (39)

We have a ham and tomato baguette. Several people appear to have visited Mr Wok – a nearby establishment – and are skilfully wielding chopsticks. A friendly dog jumps into the water, then comes over to us and shakes itself vigorously. My trousers suffer. And so, in a small damp way, do I.

It is time to go back to Paris.

Dijon (68)