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Posts Tagged ‘London theatre’

London in August

Thursday, May 16th, 2013
An August picnic in London's lovely Green Park

An August picnic in London’s Green Park

Lately we’ve been asked quite a few times about visiting London in August. What is the weather like? What is there to do? There seems to be a myth that London shuts down during the month of August like many big cities in France and Italy. But precisely the opposite is true about London! August is one of the best times of the year to visit London because of the fun outdoor events, absolutely lovely weather and the rare chance to visit sights like Buckingham Palace that are only open during the late summer.

And the weather … well, it’s just about right in August! While Paris sizzles and Italians are burnt by the Tuscan sun, August temperatures in London peak around the 70s with temps over 80 a rarity. Now that’s perfect weather for sightseeing or picnicking in the park. Here’s a look at a few of our favourite summer events and reasons to visit London in August!

 

Buckingham Palace Summer Opening

Nick Ansell/AFP/Getty Images)

See the beautiful State Rooms at Buckingham Palace during the Summer Opening

You’ve seen the Changing of the Guard. You’ve admired the stunning carriages at the Royal Mews. But have you toured the exquisite State Rooms at Buckingham Palace? Every summer the palace’s nineteen State Rooms are opened to the public for two months. Visitors have the chance to discover the lavish rooms and experience the royal lifestyle while touring these important rooms that are still very much used by The Queen and the Royal Family for entertaining guests during state and ceremonial occasions. These rooms are full of history as well as incredible works of art that can only be enjoyed during the Summer Opening. This year the State Rooms at Buckingham Palace will be open from:

27 July -31 August  2013
Open daily 09:30-19:00

1-29 September  2013
Open daily 09:30-18:30

Find out more and book your tickets online here.

 

Film4 Summer Screen at Somerset House

Summer Screen Somerset House London

Popular outdoor film screenings at the Somerset House in London

One of London’s most popular open-air film events of the summer happens in the stunning 18th-century courtyard at the Somerset House. With a giant screen, full surround sound and a fun summer atmosphere, the Film4 Summer Screen presents 14 nights of cinema in London with an eclectic mix of romance, comedy, thrillers and classics. Stay tuned to the Somerset House website for the release of the 2013 summer calendar … grab a blanket and head to Somerset House Summer Screen this August!

 

Peter Pan: The Never Ending Story World at London’s Wembley Arena

If you’ve seen the statue of Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens and know that the author JM Barrie used to stroll through the park then you know the strong connection between London and this classic children’s book. Peter Pan: The Never Ending Story is a spectacular £10 million remake that brings movie quality backdrop images, Cirque du Soleil acrobatics and imaginative choreography to the Wembley Arena in London from August 21st to 26th, 2013. Fun for the whole family … or perfect for the kid in you that has never grown up! Find out more about ticketing here.

 

West Side Story

West Side Story Sadler's Wells Theatre London 2013

West Side Story at Sadler’s Wells Theatre in London. Photo by West Side Story, London – Image by Nilz Böhme

Theatre and dance lovers will want to book their tickets now to see West Side Story at Sadler’s Wells this summer. One of the greatest musicals of all time, the original Broadway classic with Leonard Bernstein’s famous score will surely be one of the hits of the season! West Side Story comes to London’s Sadler’s Wells Theatre in Islington this summer from August 7th to September 22nd  2013.

 

The Sound of Music in Regent’s Park

The Sound of Music Open Air Theatre Regent's Park

The Open Air Theatre in Regent’s Park presents The Sound of Music this summer!

Stroll through the beautiful Regent’s Park before settling into your seat at the Open Air Theatre to be transported to another time and place with their summer production of The Sound of Music. With timeless classics and a gorgeous setting, this is one summer show we don’t want to miss. The Sound of Music will run from July 25th to September 7th, 2013. Visit the Open Air Theatre website for more information and to book your tickets online.

 

Open Air Cinema at Kensington Gardens

Orangery Kensington Palace London

Visit Kensington Palace and stay for the Open Air Cinema from August 1-3, 2013

August is a wonderful time to visit all of the parks and gardens in London and Kensington Gardens is one of our favourites! Enjoy visiting Kensington Palace, a real working Palace, explore the gardens and in the evening pack a hamper picnic and enjoy a good flick with the Open Air Cinema at Kensington Gardens. On August 1st you can catch the always popular Top Gun, on August 2nd the latest James Bond blockbuster Skyfall and on August 3rd the classic Casablanca. Set up in the gardens by the Orangery at Kensington Palace, this is one lovely spot to enjoy cinema under the stars in London!

Image Credits: Picnic in Green Park by Kate Gardiner, Buckingham Palace State Rooms from Beacon Radio, Summer Screen by Ian Nichol, Orangery at Kensington Palace by leeno

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Pride and Prejudice in Regent’s Park this Summer

Wednesday, May 15th, 2013
Regent Park Spring Flowers London Zoe F Willis

A spring stroll through Regent’s Park in London

Gosh, what a glorious Early May Bank Holiday we have had here in London None of that A Foggy Day (in London Town) nonsense from the likes of Ella Fitzgerald et al. It’s been properly sunny, mild and as a result the city has become simply one of the delightful places in which to amble. In the world. FACT.

But where to amble? There are so many parks but my tip top favourite is…

… cue drum roll…

The Regent’s Park.

Between 1809 and 1832 the architect John Nash (1752-1835) – mastermind behind the Regent Street development that runs south to north through Piccadilly and Oxford Circus – designed the 400 acres and planned many of the striking neo-Classical terraces and properties that flank the park.

Regent's_Park_1830

A Map of Regent’s Park in 1830

Today Regent’s Park is also home to London Zoo, lots of sports fields for those of an active persuasion, an Open Air Theatre (of which more later) for the culture vultures and many a floral and bucolic pathway if leisurely strolling is more your thing.

And so let me unleash some suitably summery and floral images for your delectation. Get ready to “oooh”, “aaaahhh” and start completely replanning your own garden. Move over rambling country garden style. Formal is BACK.

Regent Park Spring Zoe F Willis

Elegance and spring colors at Regent’s Park

 

Regents Park Spring Zoe F Willis 4

Tulips galore at Regent’s Park

 

Regents Park Spring Zoe F Willis 2

Relaxing in the sunshine in Regent’s Park

Right and now you’ve had a moment with all that loveliness, get ready for something else that will make you feel a bit hot about the collar. You remember the Open Air Theatre I mentioned earlier? Well, they’ve a packed summer programme that includes To Kill a Mockingbird, A Winter’s Tale, The Sound of Music and…

…Wait for it…

Pride and Prejudice.

Pride and Prejudice Regent Park London

Pride and Prejudice in London’s Regent Park … coming this summer!

Weeeeeeeeee! Let there be jubilation in all things Jane and Austen! Let there be Elizabeth Bennet in an empire line dress! Let there be oh-so-handsome and moody Mr. Darcy in a frock coat! Let there be emotional highs, lows and moments of exquisite social awkwardness getting in the way of true love before…

Darcy and Bingley

Mr. Darcy and Mr. Bingley looking dashing on horses

… well, I won’t give away the ending for those of you who haven’t been privvy to the greatest love story of the past two hundred years, but let’s just say it’s AMAZING.

And you’ll get to see it all in the beautiful surrounds of Regent’s Park in the summer from June 20th to July 20th, 2013. What more could you ask for?

Crazy for You, Venue 2011 #2. Photo David Jensen

The Open Air Theatre in Regent’s Park. Photo: David Jenson

And finally, you want a quick taster of what might be on offer? Fair enough. Here’s London Perfect’s Pinterest board of Frock Coats and Swooning Ladies. We’ve a Darcy or two on there that should set the tone. See you in Regent’s Park this summer!

 

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Zoë F. Willis is a writer and enthusiastic London resident. You can read more about her adventures and creative exploits at http://thingswotihavemade.blogspot.co.uk/

 

Image Credits: Regent Park Map 1830 from Christopher and John Greenwood’s map of London, Pride and Prejudice by the Open Air TheatreMr. Darcy and Mr. Bingley, Regent Park spring photos by Zoë F. Willis

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The Great Gatsby in London

Friday, May 10th, 2013
Charleston Dance

The decadence and glamour of The Great Gatsby is coming to London!

London is all of a flutter. In a “Roaring 20s,” Charlestony, sequined-fringe’d-flapper-dress sort of flutter. On May 16th Baz Luhrmann’s Great Gatsby will be released. Judging by past successes, like Romeo and Juliet and Moulin Rouge, his movie depiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s glamour and decadence on Long Island in the summer of 1922 promises to be a lush spectacle indeed. Just take a gander at the preview …

But what on earth has this got to do with London? Lurhmann’s an Australian and Long Island is ever so slightly closer to New York than it is Britain’s fair capital. Well, there are a couple of connections:

  1.  The character Gatsby affects an English accent in Fitzgerald’s book. That’s how cool us Brits were in 1922. The Americans wanted to sound like us. How flattering.
  2. The actress Carey Mulligan, who plays Gatsby’s love interest Daisy Buchanan, is not only English but is a London girl.
Carey Mulligan Great Gatsby

Carey Mulligan. Beautiful, brilliant and British.

Marvelous. With this in mind I would like to point out a couple of events of relevant interest to those of you in London.

 

The Great Gatsby at Brooks Brothers in London

On the off chance you’re shopping on Regent Street, THE hub of London’s West End Shopping district, do pop in to Brooks Brothers at 150 Regent Street. Yes, yes. I know they are American tailors of great repute and quality who dressed the great and the good of 1920s America, but they also dressed all the chaps in the upcoming Gatsby movie. And that includes the rather swoon-worthy Leo DiCaprio. Oh my.

Warner Brothers Great Gatsby

A swoon-worthy Leonardo DiCaprio in The Great Gatsby

And at the Regent Street store some of the dashing Brooks Brother ensembles in the company of some delicious flapper dresses worn by the actors are enjoying a small exhibition. Stunning, simply stunning. We sauntered along (or was it shimmied?) recently and here are a few photos to wet your appetite!

Brooks Brothers Great Gatsby Costumes London

Costumes from Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby on display at Brooks Brothers on Regent Street in London

 

Brooks Brothers Great Gatsby Costumes London

Of course there must be champagne!

 

Brooks Brothers Great Gatsby Costumes London

The elegance of the 1920s at Brooks Brothers

 

 

Northern Ballet’s The Great Gatsby in London

Should being in the presence of this sequined loveliness not be enough to sate your thirst for all things “Roaring” and “20s” then I suggest you pop along to Sadler’s Wells. May 14-18 the Northern Ballet are presenting a version of The Great Gatsby that will be a wonderful confection of traditional ballet and well, lots of “Roaring” and “20s.”

The Northern Ballet The Great Gatsby London1

Northern Ballet dancers in David Nixon’s The Great Gatsby. Photo Bill Cooper.

 

The Northern Ballet The Great Gatsby London2

Northern Ballet dancers Tobias Batley (Jay Gatsby) and Martha Leebolt (Daisy Buchanan) in David Nixon’s The Great Gatsby. Photo Bill Cooper.

The music, gorgeous costumes and David Nixon’s beautiful choreography bring Fitzgerald’s book to life in a seductive and completely entertaining way. Here’s the preview trailer to set the scene and tempt you even more!

Gosh. After all that I think it might be time to don the glad rags and get ready for a proper knees up at Prohibition, London’s premiere night of hedonistic decadence. Or maybe pin down the location of the pop-up speakeasy that is the Candlelight Club.

Either way, let there be champagne and vodka martinis. Hooray!

 

_____________

Zoë F. Willis is a writer and enthusiastic London resident. You can read more about her adventures and creative exploits at http://thingswotihavemade.blogspot.co.uk/

 

Image Credits: Charleston by Yva, Carey Mulligan in The Great Gatsby by Warner Bros., Leonardo DiCaprio in The Great Gatsby by Warner Bros., Brooks Brothers photos by Zoë F. Willis, Northern Ballet’s The Great Gatsby

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Discovering London – Covent Garden

Friday, April 12th, 2013
Covent Garden Piazza London Perfect Vacation Rentals

Explore London’s popular and fun Covent Garden neighbourhood

Around just about any corner in London you’ll find layers upon layers of history to discover. Just take Covent Garden, which today is one of London’s liveliest areas with outdoor cafes, stylish shopping and entertainment – from the Royal Opera House and all the theatres to the energy and fun of street performers and buskers. As ruins from Roman Londinium are being uncovered nearby in the City, the area that is now Covent Garden was also home to a Roman settlement in the 1st century AD. The name Covent Garden comes from the Middle Ages when about 40 acres of what is now the busy West End of London looked quite different. Think vegetables … and a lot of them! This are was the large garden for the Abbey of St. Peter at Westminser. That is, it was the Convent Garden, which over time became Covent Garden. The Abbey’s gardens were an important source of fruit and vegetables in London, and the area has been associated with markets ever since.

The idea of Covent Garden as a flower and fruit and vegetable market was immortalized in the 1964 film My Fair Lady, which depicted the poor flower girl Eliza Doolittle in Covent Garden. While it wasn’t filmed in London (although the stage version premiered at Covent Garden’s Theatre Royal Drury Lane in 1958!), this clip from the movie is the perfect prelude to a historical and present day romp through Covent Garden.

And it’s just so perfect because Covent Garden sits at the heart of London’s Theatre District, with the Royal Opera House, Theatre Royal Drury Lane, Adelphi Theatre, Wyndham’s Theatre and so many more important theatres located nearby. You might be wondering just how this Medieval vegetable garden became so elegant and home to the theatres and beautiful buildings you see today. Even though you likely wouldn’t suspect it, we’ll have to ask Henry VIII. In 1540, King Henry VIII dissolved all of the England’s monastic properties and handed over a large chunk of Westminster’s veggie patch to John Russell, the 1st Earl of Bedford. Not a bad transaction since the property stayed in the same family until 1918!

Covent Garden circa 1720 in an engraving by Sutton Nicholls. St. Paul's Church is on the left.

Covent Garden circa 1720 in an engraving by Sutton Nicholls. St. Paul’s Church is on the left.

All was well and good with the vegetable growing until the fourth Earl of Bedford decided to do a bit a building. In 1630, he commissioned the very fashionable architect Inigo Jones to build houses on the land that would be appropriate for gentlemen of the finer class. Thus elegance enters the history of Covent Garden for the first time. Inigo Jones had travelled through much of Europe and was inspired especially by the large piazzas in Italy. Curious to bring this grand Italian design to London, Jones built the first open square in England. It was, quite naturally, a smash hit! The central area of Covent Garden is still referred to as the “Piazza,” so now you know just how it got its Italian name. Thanks, Inigo!

Royal Opera House Ballerina Covent Garden London

The Royal Opera House and famous statue of The Young Dancer in Covent Garden

Despite the elegant homes, Covent Garden has always been known for two things – the markets and entertainment. As early as 1642,  the great London chronicler Samuel Pepys described the first Punch and Judy shows in Covent Garden, which were popular through the 18th and 19th centuries. In 1663 the Theatre Royal on Drury Lane was founded, and it is impressively the oldest functioning theatre in London. The rest is theatre history as more and more important theatres opened and the area became the home of the many actors and performers.

St. Paul’s Church has watched over all the comings and goings in Covent Garden’s Piazza. Designed by Inigo Jones and built in 1632-2, it is known as the actors’ church, and inside you’ll find numerous memorials to actors and writers. Step inside and the church offers a peaceful moment away from the energy and excitement of Covent Garden. The gardens behind the church are a popular spot to rest and enjoy a bit of natural beauty.

St Paul's Church Covent Garden London

The peaceful interior of St. Paul’s Church in Covent Garden – designed by Inigio Jones in the 17th century!

The open space was perfect for performing, but also for … yep, you guessed it … holding fruit and vegetable markets! After the Great Fire in 1666, which destroyed many of the markets in the east end of the city, Covent Garden once again became one of the most important sources for fruit and vegetables in London. The central area of the Piazza was eventually tidied up and covered with an iron and glass structure, which was designed by Charles Fowler in the 1830s. Additional markets were established in the area surrounding the Piazza, which served as a market area until 1974 when the market moved east. In the 80s Covent Garden was transformed into the shopping, dining and entertainment area that we love today.

Covent Garden Outside Street Performers

Enjoy dining outdoors or watching the street performers in Covent Garden

Covent Garden is still synonymous with entertainment and markets, which is the fun of this part of London. Take a stroll around the Piazza today and you’ll find street performers, musicians and artists all ready to entertain. Soak up the sun at an open-air cafe or hit the markets to do some shopping. The Apple Market is dedicated to handmade arts and crafts and it’s located right in the center of the covered area of Covent Garden. Along each side you’ll find wonderful shops to explore, from clothing to gourmet food stores and British specialties.

Covent Garden Shopping and Dining

From handmade to classic London and familiar favourites in Covent Garden

Stroll through the covered market areas of Covent Garden to see all the little shops on the upper and lower levels. If you need a break to rest your feet, there are plenty of little restaurants and cafes in the market – and nearly always entertainment of some kind!

Covent Garden Shopping Restaurants London

Tons of shops and restaurants to enjoy in Covent Garden

The streets around Covent Garden and the Piazza are just as colorful and fun. Many of the names reflect the history of the area, including King Street, Charles Street and Henrietta Street, which were named for King Charles I and Queen Henrietta. Floral Street, Long Acre and Neal Street are particularly fine for shopping. You’ll find classic British pubs interspersed with familiar names. Keep a lookout for the Lamb & Flag pub on tiny Rose Street near Covent Garden, which opened its doors in 1623 and is the oldest pub in the area.

Neal's Yard Shopping and Dining Covent Garden London

Colourful Neal’s Yard is a Covent Garden favourite!

One of our favourite spots int he Covent Garden neighbourhood is the riot of colour in Neal’s Yard. This little spot is tucked away near Seven Dials, but it’s well worth seeking it out for the brightly painted buildings and the cute shops and restaurants. If you like natural products, stop in Neal’s Yard Remedies for lovely organic skin care products, aromatherapy and natural health care products.

Walking along the shopping streets is fun even if you’re not a big shopper. There’s just such a vibrant energy to the Covent Garden area. If you love the classic double decker buses and riding the Tube in London, stop in the London Transport Museum just off the Piazza. They have a wonderful gift shop that we pop in every time we’re strolling through the neighbourhood.

London Transport Museum Covent Garden Gift Shop

Discover the history of London’s iconic public transportation like the Tube and those charming double decker red buses at the London Transport Museum in Covent Garden

If you would like to stay near all the excitement and fun of London’s West End and Covent Garnden and yet enjoy a tranquil apartment setting, our Eden studio rental near Trafalgar Square is a great choice! It’s set on a quiet street between the Thames and the Strand just a short stroll from Covent Garden. Catch a theatre show in the evenings, stop by a local pub for a pint and enjoy the atmosphere of Covent Garden all just a few minutes walking from the Eden!

London Vacation Rental Near Covent Garden Eden

Enjoy a stylish stay in the Eden studio rental near Covent Garden

Enjoy a visual stroll through Covent Garden in this fun video that captures some of the most iconic spots and experiences of this lively neighbourhood.

Find out more about what to see and do in Covent Garden by visiting our Covent Garden neighbourhood guide. We hope you’ll enjoy discovering this vibrant and fun area on your next trip to London!

 

Image credits: All photos by author, Covent Garden engraving from 1720, Covent Garden video by Another Flow of Time.

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