So much to tell!
It's SO cold. I thought Spring was coming. There were little shoots on plants and I saw a couple of pink buds. It was getting warm: it even got up to 12 degrees a couple of weeks ago. But no! We're back in negative numbers again. It was so cold yesterday that there were patches of thick frost still on the ground at 5pm, where the sun obviously hadn't shone during the day.
Last week I had, well, a manic week. Surely not, I hear you cry! But strangely enough I had over-committed. I was playing in the orchestra for the Newcastle University Gilbert and Sullivan Society's production of The Mikado, which ran for 3 performances. It went quite well. Only one little incident really. On openning night we could hear the smoke machine going throughout the (5 page) overture. The curtains openned for the first number onto a cloud of thick smoke, so thick you could barely make out the actors. You can see where this is going? Yes, we were barely through the first page of the number when the smoke alarms went off! Luckily we'd been through the drill. Off we all toddled to the meeting point, while the fire brigade came and confirmed that it was safe to re-enter the building. Now, while this wouldn't be a problem in Brisbane in February, let me tell you that taking thinly clad bodies and instruments from a well heated environ to the open-air carpark in Newcastle in February is a completely different matter. It took another 3 numbers once we were back inside to get fingers working and instruments back in tune.
On Saturday evening I also played in another performance. Two of the PhD students I know had made a silent film and one had composed the music for it. It was being presented at The Sage on Saturday. They wanted me to play and Sergio wrote a part especially for me. So I spent last week in rehearsals for the film and The Mikado. It was going to be fairly tight doing both performances on Saturday, but as the musical director and the Mikado himself were both involved in the film as well, I thought it would work. The 23 minute film was being screened at 6:30pm and The Mikado started at 7:30. And the venues were only a 7 minute taxi ride apart.
Once again, you can see where this is going... Due to technical staff illness at The Sage, the film performance was delayed by half an hour! But they didn't tell the performers, who were getting more and more twitchy as the minutes ticked by. Once we finally played, it all went very well, and we were in that cab by 7:25! Let me just say that I've been sleeping a lot since then.
And guess what? I've agreed to lead the orchestra for Westside Story; rehearsals start this week and the show is on in the first week of March.