OMG it had felt AMAZING to lay my head down at the ripe old hour of 7:00 pm (2:00 pm Eastern Time!) the night before, and I almost felt rested, even, when I woke up at 7:00 am and decided that I'd rather figure out Tim's coffee maker than get a little more sleep.
Hallelujah, for I figured out Tim's coffee maker AND his TV, and by the time the kids were up and about I was two cups deep, eating cold leftover curry on Tim's couch and watching "Breakfast" on BBC One.
Plans for the day were as follows:
- 9:30 tickets for Westminster Abbey
- lunch at the Cafe in the Crypt under St.-Martin's-in-the-Fields
- National Gallery
- Trafalgar Square
- 5:30 tickets for Six at the Vaudeville Theatre
9:30 Tickets for Westminster Abbey
It might be interested to adapt this People in Christian Art lesson to make it more rigorous for AP Art History, and then have the teenager complete the stained glass activity. |
I was more interested in the burials than the memorials, so I didn't get a photo of Isaac Newton's nearby memorial. It's pretty great, though, with a relief sculpture featuring fat, naked babies doing science. |
I love that his equation is his epitaph. |
I found my man Chaucer! After going "YAY!" a lot and getting my photo taken, I was all, "KIDS! DID YOU KNOW THAT CHAUCER ISN'T BURIED HERE BECAUSE HE'S A POET?!?" And they were all, "OMG Mom yes we know he's buried here because he worked here they didn't have a Poets Corner yet in 1400 you've only told us this 4,000 times please stop now." And then I was all, "RIGHT! IT'S THE BURIAL OF SPENSER THAT GAVE THEM THE IDEA! LET'S GO FIND HIM!" |
Here's a 15th century stone screen blocking the shrine from the view of us poor folks. |
Can't see him past Henry III, either. |
He was only buried there until 1661 because that was when Charles II ordered that his corpse be disinterred and hung on a gallows and its head displayed on a pike. Lovely! |
Lord Byron! It's weird that they included his place of death on this monument, because he's not even buried there. He's buried in his family vault in a church in Nottinghamshire, as is his daughter and my heroine, Ada Lovelace. I would have LOVED to have gone to pay my respects, but it's a lot farther north than we went. |
The Coronation Chair is high-key gross. |
Lunch at the Cafe in the Crypt under St.-Martin's-in-the-Field
But we did get to eat our cheese sandwiches and steamed cauliflower on top of tombstones like I'd planned, so there was that.
National Gallery
I was surprised and thrilled to see Van Gogh! Real Van Gogh, even, and more immersive than Immersive Van Gogh! I guess I should have expected to find something of him there, but I hadn't, and I was delighted to tears to stand in front of his chair.
Tangent: The National Gallery website is a terrific resource for a homeschool art history study. You can download the artwork at a decent resolution for studying and making flash cards, and many of the webpages for specific artworks also include extra resources to build context and depth of understanding. The page for Sunflowers, for instance, also features a 30-minute lecture on the painting and Van Gogh's life--I've watched it, and it's great! I learned that Gauguin was a terrible person, and now I'm also pretty sure that he and Van Gogh were lovers. Like, *something* happened in that yellow house, and it sure as hell wasn't all in Van Gogh's head!
I immediately requested two of these books from the public library. Can you guess which two, lol? |
Trafalgar Square
It was a perfect day, with sun and blue skies and a light breeze to show off the mild temperature, just the way it would be every day of our trip. Every day, Matt or I would comment, boomer-like, on the beautiful weather, but we never seemed to jinx it, and my teenager was vocal about never getting the grey fog and gloom that her little emo heart had been promised.
5:30 Tickets for Six at the Vaudeville Theatre
Six at the West End was one of the dream items on my lifetime wish list, and now I've accomplished it!
2019 was a magical year for musical theatre, with Beetlejuice, Be More Chill, AND Hadestown all premiering on Broadway (along with my sweet little cinnamon roll of a terrible musical, Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief, bless its heart) and Six debuting in the West End.
I long to see all of them, but Six is the first!
The Vaudeville Theatre is a short walk from Trafalgar Square (my travel planning is, as always, a thing of beauty), and I was extra stoked that Six had an extra-early show on this day, because jet lag is real, y'all. But a 5:30 show meant that we could be cozy in our seats in the air-conditioned theatre by 4:45, have a drink of water and a leisurely time in the bathroom--
Notable bathroom signage |
--listen to the Tudor-sound covers of pop songs (after humming along absently to one harpsichord number for a couple of minutes, I asked my teenager, "Is this... Havana?" Reader, it WAS!)
Weirdest thing that happened on this day: We were sitting calmly in our seats waiting for Six to start. Some of us might have been quietly napping, even. Ever alert to Other People's Business, however, I was instantly awake and engaged when a very polite kerfuffle began a few rows ahead of us. A couple had arrived at their seats to find two people already sitting in them, and instead of making a fuss, had simply gone and told the usher.
So then the usher came back and asked the people sitting in the seats if he could see their tickets. Finding all this digital reservations and tickets and booking numbers and crap on my phone was a continual nightmare the entire trip, so I felt for the woman as she fumbled with her phone, but hallelujah she did finally manage to produce her tickets and show them to the usher.
And then the usher was all, "Ma'am, these are tickets to Back to the Future: The Musical."
To be fair, Back to the Future IS currently playing in the West End... but not, you know, in this theatre. Or at this specific show time. So then the usher and the people in the seats had a fascinating back and forth in which the usher tried, and failed, to ascertain what show, in fact, the people thought they had purchased tickets for vs. what they were trying to see. Did they buy tickets to both Back to the Future and Six but got the showtimes mixed up? Did they intend to buy tickets for Six but accidentally bought tickets for Back to the Future instead? Vice versa? Also, how had they even gotten into this theatre in the first place, considering you had to scan your tickets at the entrance? Did they have Six tickets that they scanned but then accidentally pulled up their Back to the Future tickets when they went to find their seats? Does the Back to the Future theatre even have the same seating arrangement?
None of this was resolved, and instead the usher managed to persuade the couple to leave their seats and come with him to figure it out elsewhere. And then the new couple sat down and to my knowledge, even though everybody heard the whole thing, nobody proceeded to gossip about it AT ALL. So I felt like I couldn't, either, but then it's pretty much all I talked about for the next week, and I'm still curious.
If you have any information, please leave a Comment below!
The production did a clever thing by announcing that you could take pictures during the encore song. I'd imagine it cut way down on bootleg photos during the rest of the show. |
- Day 1: We made it to England!
- Day 2: Westminster Abbey, National Gallery, Trafalgar Square, and Six
- Day 3: British Museum and Buckingham Palace
- Day 4: Mudlarks and Southwark
- Day 5: Natural History Museum and Victoria and Albert Museum
- Day 6: Pax Lodge, the Tower of London, and Afternoon Tea
- Day 7: Back and Forth by Boat to Greenwich
- Day 8: We Careen Our Way to Canterbury Cathedral and Dover Beach
- Day 9: Dover, Hastings, and a Holloway
- Day 10, Part 1: All the Giant Rocks
- Day 10, Part 2: Stonehenge, At Last!
- Day 11: To Avalon with King Arthur
- Day 12: Tintagel
- Day 13: In the Footsteps of Mary Anning
- Day 14: Homewards!
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