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What’s the Best Play You Can See at the Divadlo ABC?

January 29, 2006 By Dana 3 Comments

If you answered Charley’s Aunt or Charleyova teta, we have the same taste.

I went to see Charley’s Aunt at the Divadlo ABC yesterday. What an evening! The first time I saw the play was in 1997. It was in the same theatre with the same main actors and I loved it no less yesterday than I did back then. It’s been almost 10 years since the premiere and the theatre was packed. Jan Hrušínský was irresistible in the role of the “aunt” and was clearly having a good time on the stage, laughing sincerely at some of the lines and situations and joking with the audience in the first row during his solo cigar scene. Lubomír Lipský who made the play famous in the 1960s and whose name is most often linked with the title role is now 82 and gives a great performance as Stephen Spettigue. I feel a little guilty for not having paid any attention to his character’s irritated monologue in a scene that was totally stolen by Otmar Brancuzský (playing Brasset) whose silent “background” performance made the audience roar with laughter.

I came out of the theatre in high spirits and with a smile on my face that didn’t fade until the beginning scenes of The Ring on television later that evening. Whoever puts together the program for Czech TV must have a unique sense of humor for scheduling a horror movie for 9 p.m. on a Saturday night. I watched until the end. Luckily, I didn’t have a problem falling asleep afterwards. My thoughts wandered back to “Charley’s aunt from Brazil, where the nuts come from”, and everything was fine.

A Day in January

January 24, 2006 By Dana 4 Comments

It’s been a while since my last blog post. Here I am, drinking my first cup of green vanilla tea (urgh, just the thought of it seems wrong, but someone somewhere on the web mentioned that they liked it, so I thought, well, let me try it) and thinking about what’s new. I’m not coming up with much. The winter is in full swing and we have finally been hit by the arctic cold that’s come from Russia. We’re not having -30 in Prague (those in the Olomouc region are) but the -13 all day yesterday was enough, thank you. I went out to shop and run some errands and about every five minutes I felt as if my face was going to fall off, so I had to duck inside somewhere to thaw. Before going out today, I looked at the thermometer and heard myself exclaiming excitedly: “Wow, it’s warm, only -7!”. I put on a lighter jacket, left my hat at home and felt pretty fine outside. Everything is relative.

I went to the library, found out there was absolutely nothing by Henry James on the shelves, and ended up borrowing what looked like a hundred year old copy of One Hundred Years of Solitude. Sounds like a good read for this weather and time of year.

From the library, I headed to the garden supply shop to inquire if they can help save the ailing rubber plant that has lived happily in our rented apartment until this past Christmas when its leaves suddenly started to turn yellow and fall off one by one. “Do you have a specimen with you?,” I was asked. “Umm, no, I don’t…,” I replied. “Ok, bring a specimen that’s at an average stage of deterioration and we’ll see what can be done.” So I have my work cut out for me. I have to pick out just the right specimen to take back to the plant doctor for analysis.

In the potraviny, I bought a package of figs. When I unwrapped it at home, I found that all the figs were rock hard, which renders them practically inedible. These are sun-dried figs from Greece, packaged in September and supposedly expiring next December. How can sun-dried figs turn dry? Too much sun?

I was so elated by the “comfortable” outside temperature that I decided to take the dog out after I was done with my errands. We headed to our favorite park, only to find it almost completely frozen over and therefore impassable to anyone not wearing skates. I remember experiencing the same situation in the same park in March of last year. I hope we’re getting it over with now in January and that March will, for once, be a proper messenger of spring.

Silvestr and After…

January 1, 2006 By Dana 1 Comment

Happy New Year! 2006 is here and Jeff and I are slowly starting to get used to the new number. Our Silvestr (the Czech name for New Year’s Eve) was mellow. We made chlebíčky and jednohubky (small open-faced sandwiches and canapés), which are required on a Czech Silvestr night, put out some leftover Christmas cookies, opened a bottle of wine and watched In America on DVD. A strange agenda for New Year’s Eve, I know, but we’re just not into the you-have-to-go-out-and-party (= pretend you’re having the time of your life, get drunk and be sick the next day) concept. Not anymore anyway.

Luckily the weather forecast I posted on Wednesday didn’t quite materialize and Saturday night was at a comfy two degrees below zero, so I hope it wasn’t too bad for those of you who spent the night out in Prague.

We toasted the New Year with a glass of red and watched the fireworks from our window. Our building seemed to be right in the middle of it all. It is now the evening of January 1 and we can still hear the occasional fire cracker go off in the neighborhood. Some residents are probably having a hard time accepting the fact that their yearly chance to blow off some steam and shoot into the sky for ten minutes is over for another year.

May 2006 be good to you all!

It’s Gonna Be a Cold One

December 28, 2005 By Dana Leave a Comment

Just got back from the holidays, which we spent in Northern Moravia. We had snow the whole time, so it was nice to have a white Christmas. We arrived back in Prague yesterday and there was no snow, but it started snowing last night and there’s now a fresh white cover on the ground and on the roofs. They’re predicting a heavy snowfall for today and tomorrow (it’s just getting going in fact!) and the temperatures are supposed to drop to crazy levels. If you’re coming to Prague for the New Year’s and plan to be out in the streets, you’d better carry a flask of rum with you. 😛

Here’s the weather forecast provided by Meteopress:

THURSDAY, Dec. 29
Low: -5/-8 °C
High: -3/-1 °C

FRIDAY, Dec. 30
Low: -8/-12 °C
High: -7/-3 °C

SATURDAY, Dec. 31
Low: -11/-15 °C
High: -4/0 °C

SUNDAY, Jan. 1
Low: -10/-14 °C
High: -7/-3 °C

MONDAY, Jan. 2
Low: -8/-12 °C
High: -6/-2 °C

Snow on Old Town Square in Prague
Old Town Square
December 28, 2005, 4:15 p.m.

By the way, the Christmas market on Náměstí Míru is gone. The square is bare and looks weird. The markets on the Old Town Square and Wenceslas Square are going to stay through Sunday.

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