Matching pastels and thongs on the bridge to the South Bank...
Well, after an afternoon of people watching on Green Park (a popular thing to do when the weather is fabulous) it seemed silly to stop...
Monday, April 16, 2007
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Bar bitches...
Saturday night we checked out the latest new bar in Soho - Profile - which is a real venue for the online Gaydar brand. The venue certainly has had a bit of money thrown in it and there is loads of orange decor and mirrors. Alas it was too popular on Saturday night and with the odd bar layouts it took forever to get a drink. Maybe it was all the minor celebrities there that caused all the fuss... I am not sure who they were but I was informed they were lurking about amongst the rest of the non-entities...
Anyway a novel thing about the bar (apart from the free internet access) is a text messaging system where you can send text messages to a series of screens across the venue. Apparently irony is lacking with whoever approves these messages. My text "Ad is a cocksucker" was not posted on the grounds that it was rude and offensive. A couple celebrating their civil partnership engagement and looking for a spit roast in a local hotel did however make the grade. Well maybe they were looking for one Soho's finest rotisseries... Who can tell these days?
Anyway a novel thing about the bar (apart from the free internet access) is a text messaging system where you can send text messages to a series of screens across the venue. Apparently irony is lacking with whoever approves these messages. My text "Ad is a cocksucker" was not posted on the grounds that it was rude and offensive. A couple celebrating their civil partnership engagement and looking for a spit roast in a local hotel did however make the grade. Well maybe they were looking for one Soho's finest rotisseries... Who can tell these days?
Scenes from Gielgud Theatre stage door Saturday 22:19
Stage door Johnnies (and Jills) waiting for Harry Potter to appear from Equus...
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Saturday, April 14, 2007
Overheard at the gym Friday
Dude 1: You know, she's pretty lucky having you... Living where she does in the middle of nowhere... Surrounded by sheep and cows...
Dude 2: Yeaaaah....
Dude 1: Like, who else would go out with her?
Dude 2: Yeaaaah....
Dude 1: Like, who else would go out with her?
Monday, April 09, 2007
Overheard on the Tube Monday night...
Guy: You fancied that guy didn't ya?
Girl: Gehorf he was all o' twenty
Guy: Didn't ya! didn't ya!
Girl (looking in Paul's direction): Shh I think that guy over there can hear us...
Girl: Gehorf he was all o' twenty
Guy: Didn't ya! didn't ya!
Girl (looking in Paul's direction): Shh I think that guy over there can hear us...
Scenes from the Royal Academy Monday 15:20
Great views, great location... Probably a bit drafty... I wonder if the RA would consider renting out their Jericho installation...
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Sunday, April 08, 2007
Movies: Sunshine

Murphy looking all wistful...
With all the flat hunting that has been taking up my time in the past few weeks I have not had the chance to see any theatre. Such a shame as everytime I write something about the theatre I get at least an extra person reading this site. And I have been informed that my site ranks up there on Google when you type in Elaine Paige's Tits so that gives me good theatre cred surely...
Anyway, I did manage to catch the film Sunshine on Saturday. It is part 2001 A Space Odyssey, part Alien and part Stargate. But anyway, Cillian Murphy even looks a bit like Sigourney Weaver (and conjures up a little of Jaye Davidson as Ra in Stargate too).
The plot involves a mission to restore the dying sun. It starts off slowly and maintains this pace throughout. Some people have told me they felt the film was boring, pretentious rubbish but anything that plays homage to 2001, while throwing in some strange weirdo alien being that has had a bit too much sun can't be all that bad. There are some nice themes of morality and religion that play here as well...
I could have done with less fight scenes and a little more ambiguity. Although the ending with its shaky camera and distorted effects is so ambiguous I took to guessing how it actually ended... Hmm maybe I should go to the theatre. At least you can see what is happening there...
Scenes from a street in SW8 Tuesday 17:38
One of the joys of checking out new properties (as I will be shortly moving) is finding strange and interesting new streets, full of rubbish and debris... I passed on the property in this street... The search continues...
Film: Wrestling with Angels

Tony Kushner and composer Jeanine Tesori
Earlier this week I caught the documentary Wrestling With Angels which was a brilliant snapshot of the life of one of America's great living playwrights and liberal political activists. It captures the period of Kushner's life from September 11 2001 through to the presidential elections in 2004. During this period it traces the filming of his major work Angels in America (by HBO), a book with Maurice Sendak, an opera and the musical Caroline, Or Change. The film ends with Kushner's attempts on election day to ensure that people get to the polling both.
You leave the movie with a sense of wanting to go out and do something to change the world. Although given the outcome of the 2004 election, you are inclined to wonder what is the point... Definitely the best movie I caught at the film festival. One to look out for on the film festival circuit...
Bartalk...
Paul: Eww, that man with the beard who keeps smiling at you has missing teeth...
Adam: That's okay, I quite like gummy bears...
Adam: That's okay, I quite like gummy bears...
Sunday, April 01, 2007
Scenes from an over-engineered office Thursday 16:23
I was in a meeting room on Thursday and after going "What the f---" managed to take this little memento... I think they are sitting in water but it could be that stuff hairdressers sit their combs in...
Friday, March 30, 2007
The art of Feedburning...
Adding Feedburner to my site has unearthed some interesting things about who reads my blog. For instance if you search Google using the following terms my blog is (apparently) of assistance:
- Nearest IKEA store to Finsbury Park (but I prefer John Lewis!)
- Catherine Naglestad Tosca Covent Garden 2006 (fair enough I did write about that)
- Paul Lange Australia address (who the fuck is that?)
- BFI Southbank (fair enough I have been there a bit in the past week)
- THE RISING BALLAD OF MANGAL PANDEY (there's no need to shout!)
- Testicle torture Daniel Craig (what?)
- Hampstead Heath gay exact location (what am I George Michael's personal assistant?)
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Scenes from BFI Southbank Bar Wednesday 23:22
Perhaps one has stayed too long at the bar when they start putting up the chairs around you...
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Movies: Only Connect / Bermondsey

How many cheap jumpers can one take in an evening? Well I guess it was the 1970s... And it was Bermondsey...
Wednesday evening I caught a double bill of 1970s television movies at the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. I was dreading the experience thinking that it would feature a lot of cheap woolen knits and moaning about socialism. It did of course, but the treat of the evening was catching the 30 minute play Bermondsey which was described in the programme as Brokeback Mountain in a south east London Pub.
It was a bit more sophisticated than that, and told the story about a love triangle and how the wife and gay lover conspire to keep a man from running off with his mistress. Written by Sir John Mortimer and filmed in 1972 it was definitely a cut above the usual fare that is served up at these festivals. There was plenty to talk about over post cinema drinks at the smart new bar at the BFI Southbank (not that an excuse was really needed for that anyway)...
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News: Tube skis
In a slow news day like today, police are warning people not to attempt to recreate the stunt of skiing down the Angel Tube escalator, which is the longest escalator on the tube network. The video below was recorded over a year ago which means that it is too late to prosecute under railway by-laws. Filmed with just a helmet camera, it captures the 1992 station refurb quite nicely I thought...
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Scenes from the Southbank Monday 18:03
The evenings are getting longer...
A series of plantings of pansies along the Southbank is commemorating the murder of David Morley in 2004.
A series of plantings of pansies along the Southbank is commemorating the murder of David Morley in 2004.
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Movies: Le Long Weekend

Scene from "Eating Out 2". That is Adrian in the centre... Guy from American Idol and Rebekah Kochan are either side...
All has been quiet over the past few days as I have been taking a few days off work and just enjoying springtime in London. I have also caught a couple of screenings at the London Lesbian and Gay Film Fest at the newly refurbished BFI Southbank
On Sunday it was a collection of shorts filmed in Britain, but it really should have been called Made in London. Most interesting of the films was one called Le Weekend which featured an irritating and sexually ambivalent Frenchman (is that a tautology?) who also is a film maker. The premise is that he comes to London to do a film school assignment and ends up wandering around central London with the help of a friendly (and rather fit) local. It all ends in tears (sort of) but in the meantime there are some great locations of Soho and surrounding areas.
On Monday it was a charming film called Eating Out 2: Sloppy Seconds. Actually any film with Mink Stole in it can't be too bad. And it was a well made sex comedy about a gay man who pretends to be straight to attract the attention of a rather ambivalent man who happens to do modeling for their art class. This was a repeat screening and a lot of people commented on Sunday how Marco Dapper who plays this ambivalent man was rather appealing. Well it takes all sorts I suppose...
Friday, March 23, 2007
News: Abercrombie and Fitch
The new Abercrombie and Fitch store has opened as of Thursday and the signature features of a flagship store are there: low level lighting and two male store greeters with washboard stomachs (if you look hard they are in this photo from a Flickr user 8lettersuk).
A&F has been big here for a number of years (particularly amongst gay men) thanks to e-bay and online orders. Will be interesting to see if classic American tailoring with a twist now explodes across London... Particularly on Savile Row which is not known for its casual wear... Mental note: must get Fierce. Have run out...
Monday, March 19, 2007
Early week bar conversations...
Man in a bar: You have great teeth...
Paul: Are you a dentist?
Man in a bar: Uh... No...
Paul: Are you a dentist?
Man in a bar: Uh... No...
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Overheard on Old Compton Street Sunday
Man #1: Nooo, noo. I've had pills I don't want to eat anything!
Man #2: Aw come on...
Man #1: Nooo I've had pills...
Man #2: Aw come on...
Man #1: Nooo I've had pills...
Music: Thomas no Bryn and Susan no Sarah
You know you might be in for an interesting evening when the director for the Barbican addresses the audience before the start of the concert apologising for the every-changing line-up.
Originally it was Thomas Hampson and Susan Graham who were appearing in this concert with the BBC Symphony. In February it was announced Hampson was withdrawing for personal reasons (a curious euphemism up there with gardening leave) and Bryn Terfel was stepping in as his replacement. Curiously the Barbican expected loads of people to get rid of their tickets at this point and offered replacement. I held on to mine. Then on Friday came the announcement that Sarah Connolly was stepping in to replace Susan Graham. By this point I had lost all interest in the concert, but since I hadn't seen Terfel sing live I figured it was probably worth still going to see.
Terfel is a great performer and even in the circle row seat which had some unusual acoustics (you could hear the orchestra like it was beside you but the soloists sounded like they were in the bathroom) it was great to see. The programme was a bit of mixed bag, but given the ever-changing line-up I suppose one should be grateful the concert ever happened...
Originally it was Thomas Hampson and Susan Graham who were appearing in this concert with the BBC Symphony. In February it was announced Hampson was withdrawing for personal reasons (a curious euphemism up there with gardening leave) and Bryn Terfel was stepping in as his replacement. Curiously the Barbican expected loads of people to get rid of their tickets at this point and offered replacement. I held on to mine. Then on Friday came the announcement that Sarah Connolly was stepping in to replace Susan Graham. By this point I had lost all interest in the concert, but since I hadn't seen Terfel sing live I figured it was probably worth still going to see.
Terfel is a great performer and even in the circle row seat which had some unusual acoustics (you could hear the orchestra like it was beside you but the soloists sounded like they were in the bathroom) it was great to see. The programme was a bit of mixed bag, but given the ever-changing line-up I suppose one should be grateful the concert ever happened...
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Scenes from Waterloo Bridge Saturday 16:19
One fine day in March... Bare arms have now been spotted in London...
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