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-   -   Stokebailey, solo live in Richmond & London. Later Paris, Rome, and Thessaloniki (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/stokebailey-solo-live-in-richmond-and-london-later-paris-rome-and-thessaloniki-1727927/)

kerouac Feb 4th, 2025 07:43 AM

Oh stoke, you are reconciling me with London...

rialtogrl Feb 4th, 2025 08:22 AM

I’ll be at the Orange Tree next week! It is definitely worth it to sign up for promotions (which happens automatically if you ever use the WiFi) as I got three nights for 210 GBP. One night was free.

I love Richmond. Not all Ted Lasso tours are so expensive. I went on one and it was not expensive. Maybe 30 GBP. I really enjoyed it. Learned not to buy the biscuits in the window of the shop on Ted’s street because they might be coming from Tesco and repacked!

I didn’t know one could order a child’s portion of a Sunday roast - thank you for mentioning this!

Coquelicot Feb 4th, 2025 04:11 PM

That photo of the night sky, the car lights and street light, and the red hat is absolutely fabulous. One of the best photos I've ever seen on Fodors, and that's saying something considering the many great photographers on here.

stokebailey Feb 4th, 2025 11:20 PM

Oh, kerouac!

​​​​​​

stokebailey Feb 4th, 2025 11:25 PM


Originally Posted by rialtogrl (Post 17631162)
I’ll be at the Orange Tree next week!

I didn’t know one could order a child’s portion of a Sunday roast - thank you for mentioning this!

The promotion didn't work the nights I was there, rialto, but I was glad it drew me there. Maybe you must appear to be a sweet little old lady to be offered the child's plate?

Coquelicot, thank you! I liked the way that one turned out. Happy accident.

stokebailey Feb 4th, 2025 11:32 PM

I saw the Royal Shakespeare Company production of Kyoto last night at @sohoplace. Devastating, hilarious, tragic.

I had almost decided I didn't have the energy, then rechecked a couple of reviews online: NYT called it 'thrilling,' and the Guardian said 'gripping.' What kind of fool wouldn't rouse herself for that? Especially since it's an easy #14 bus from Russell Square to Tottenham Tube station, practically next door.

It was thrilling and gripping. I can't discuss the politics of it here, but it's set in the distant past starting 1987 when global climate change talks began.

Monday I took a bus down to BFI South Bank for the 18:00 showing of Hard Truths. I like Mike Leigh, wanted to see something British.. The theater was mostly full, except around the edges. I've been to the Mediatique before, enjoyed bits of old films, and used to really like the movie star postcards you could get at the shop. Somehow those are gone, replaced by a smaller, more artsy selection.

The protagonist is an angry middle-aged black woman. Perplexingly angry. It's not a movie I liked in the usual, satisfying sense, but it has stuck with me.

Speaking of perplexing: getting out of the BFI building then back up to the bridge and bus stop. Once there, it is a cinch.

stokebailey Feb 5th, 2025 12:10 AM

Getting around:
Southeastern Express train took 19 minutes from Richmond station to Waterloo, including one stop at Clapham.
490 bus, per schedules posted near a bus stop, seems to go between Heathrow to Richmond station,. The tfl app also mentioned a two buses option including the Superloop. I like to stay above ground when possible.

stokebailey Feb 5th, 2025 12:51 AM

https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...19efa15a3d.jpg
Playing Mozart outside Tottenham tube stop, a hard way to make a buck.
https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...0f03184e34.jpg
The Kyoto set. Second balcony seat , just fine.

YankyGal Feb 6th, 2025 02:11 AM

Loving your report. Thanks for taking the time while you’re on your trip!

stokebailey Feb 8th, 2025 02:40 AM

Thank you, Yanky.

I find the Celtic Hotel's old fashioned atmosphere comforting. Most of the staff has been there for several years.

​​​​ For a small town person at heart, feels good to be recognized. The woman serving breakfast, for instance, has been there since before my time. When Hannah was getting her Masters at KCL, her dorm was just down the street, and she would sometimes come have breakfast with me. It's a student area, with UCL across the Square.

https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...e6583b5737.jpg
The lounge.
https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...bd72064f5e.jpg
You can get a full English breakfast to order.


I stopped in at SKOOB bookstore, downstairs on the north side of Brunswick Center. They have a fine selection of used and new books, including lightweight Penguin paperbacks good for traveling. The Tesco across from Russell Square tube stop fills with students searching for the best meal deal. Sometimes me. Handiest place to get the Guardian newspaper, too.


https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...b10654a39a.jpg
SKOOB

https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...6e9bdab0c6.jpg
The excellent Fortitude Bakehouse is in the alley just behind the Celtic, in the old Horse Hospital building.

yk2004 Feb 8th, 2025 06:50 AM

Enjoying your TR, stokebailey !

TDudette Feb 8th, 2025 04:00 PM

Splendid TR, stokebailey. That was a huge Yorkshire pudding! And thanks for a new word, pollarding.

stokebailey Feb 11th, 2025 11:06 AM

Aw, thanks, yk and TDud.


stokebailey Feb 11th, 2025 11:45 AM

Duplicate

stokebailey Feb 11th, 2025 11:50 AM

Traveling alone has benefits. You can do what you feel like doing, or bail out if things prove not as much fun as you thought. A disadvantage comes if you don't quite know what you feel like doing, and don't have anyone to nudge you.

The day I saw Kyoto, I felt at loose ends. Started to go to the Royal Maritime Museum, changed my mind. Regrouped, walked over to the British Museum in the afternoon. I love that museum and all it offers, and I love seeing masses of people from around the world. What I don't love is massed humanity between me and the art.

I wondered for a while, looking for a folding stool, then wandered another while looking for something to sketch. Indecisive and overwhelmed. I made a bad sketch of an Assyrian lion, then I
​​​​​ made the mad decision, still carrying the stool, to buy an Egyptian cat postcard for a friend's birthday. The jostling, the seekers after souvenirs. Soon it was closing time, and we were herded to the exits.

I still had a couple of hours until curtain time, wasn't hungry, didn't want to go to a pub. Luckily, the wonderful L.Cornelissen art store down the block was still open. It restored my soul, mostly.

stokebailey Feb 16th, 2025 06:22 AM

Speaking of crisps:

https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...f87c02497f.jpg
https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...55c8e55e82.jpg
They sell these in Rome. Called crinkle chips in the Italian ingredients, made in Milan, they are above average. Amusing packaging a plus.

stokebailey Feb 16th, 2025 06:46 AM

I had too few full days in London this time, and trying to optimize them might have made me more scatterbrained the previous day.

First stop, Arôme Bakery in Covent Garden.

https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...b53232dab6.jpg
This was not my day to try something new, though their honey French toast is said to be the thing.
https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...ecdf464468.jpg
They make an almond croissant that you can take away and eat all day.


I have been rereading Patrick O'Brien's most excellent Aubrey/Maturing series, full of 19th century British warships, so I devoted my last day to a Thames Clipper to Greenwich and the Royal Maritime Museum. I like to relax and see London from the river, and it is a fine Museum.

https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...8e3e63b2ef.jpg
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...206eea769e.jpg

So-called Traitors Gate. Queen Elizabeth I passed through here, and so probably did a few of my ancestors who backed the wrong sides.

The front of the Maritime Museum is undergoing construction, so I tried walking up along a drive on the right side. That didn't lead to an entrance, but it did go past a RN burying ground. Near the fence, there was memorial to a man who would have served during the Napoleonic wars, then died a lieutenant in middle age. The Master and Commander books tell you what a melancholy position that was, never to be made a commander or a captain.


https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...2c8ed92f31.jpg

stokebailey Feb 21st, 2025 11:00 PM

https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...ebbac75dee.png
I'm still live, but in Thessaloniki on the tail end.

In London, it was impossible to get away from this former footballer, advertising underwear and his abs in different poses. He's justifiably proud of them, of course.

Even in Paris, there was a massive photo along the Left Bank of the Seine.

https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...0e68b6c061.jpg
Echoed here at the excellent Archaeological Museum in Thessaloniki. This represented a breastplate, not tattooed flesh, and shows the enduring appeal of a toned belly.

bilboburgler Feb 22nd, 2025 12:30 AM

The Aubrey sagas are interesting and based mainly on the true life story of the amazingly named Captain Courageous.

Patrick ( not his real name) born and raised English decided, late in life, that he was Irish. Which you can see sort if happening in the books.

stokebailey Feb 22nd, 2025 01:16 AM

Thanks, bilbo. I'll have to look into Captain Courageous.

This time through the books, I kind of skim the sea battles.

The evening after Maritime Museum, I headed down to the London Coliseum for ENO production of Marriage of Figaro, my favorite. Lucky to get first row balcony seat and admire the ornate upper decorations. An unusually dressed young couple made their own dramatic entrance to a box.

https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...b9dbbce244.jpg



Delightful and creative production. The set is a white wall with four white doors; during the overture the players fling them open, then closed, at dramatic beats, Just clever, surprising, played for farce. Same set throughout, except when it elevates to be walked under.

https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...b401d45725.jpg
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fod...58306184b7.jpg

. Modern-ish costumes. A fun evening, culminating in the touching finale.

Down a short hill to the Strand, good old 91 bus,
and back to Russell Square.



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