benhewis.com
Me, Myself and Ibuprofen!
Me, Myself and Ibuprofen!
Nov 9th

Comedian Lenny Henry has been nominated for a London Evening Standard theatre award – for outstanding newcomer.
The 51-year-old has been cited for his Shakespearean acting debut in Othello, currently running in London’s West End.
Rachel Weisz’s work in A Streetcar Named Desire sees her up for the best actress award – renamed this year in honour of the late Natasha Richardson.
Enron, based on the collapse of the US energy giant in 2001, is up for best play, best director and best actor.
So is Jerusalem, a play about contemporary rural England that, like Enron, enjoyed sold-out success at the Royal Court theatre earlier this year.
In all, Royal Court productions or co-productions have generated 11 of this year’s nominations.
‘Particularly strong’
Sam West and Mark Rylance are recognised for their respective work in Enron and Jerusalem, both of which will have West End runs in the New Year.
Simon Russell Beale and Ken Stott – respectively seen in West End productions of Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale and Arthur Miller’s A View from the Bridge – complete the best actor shortlist.
Henry Hitchings, the Standard’s chief theatre critic, said the best actor category was “particularly strong” this year.
“When we had the discussion about best actor, there were lots of good names in the mix,” he continued.
Other familiar names in the running this year include Juliet Stevenson, up for best actress for her work as a violinist with multiple sclerosis in Duet for One.
The winners will be announced on 23 November at a lunchtime ceremony at the Royal Opera House, to be hosted by broadcaster Kirsty Young.
Nov 5th

Jude Law’s “spine-tingling” performance as Hamlet has helped turn the Shakespeare classic into a Broadway hit, with the production in the black and making money.
Producers of the latest interpretation of the play said that they have now recouped the show’s 2.5 million dollar (£1.5 million) costs in less than three months.
It follows rave reviews from New York critics after it swapped to Broadway following a successful West End stint.
Producer Arielle Tepper Madover said: “It’s heartening to see that Shakespeare can be a commercial success on Broadway, as well as seeing so many young audience members at the Broadhurst (Theatre) experiencing their first Shakespeare production.”
Law’s star quality has been credited with helping draw crowds to the production. But his portrayal of the brooding prince has also received plaudits. The day after opening in Broadway on October 6, New York’s notoriously hard-to-please theatre critics were full of praise.
The New York Times’s influential stage critic Ben Brantley wrote: “Mr Law approaches the role with the focus, determination and adrenaline level of an Olympic track competitor staring down an endless line of hurdles.”
Although noting that “the finer shades of feeling” were often missing in the 36-year-old’s energetic performance, the review was largely positive. “Mr Law’s undeniable charisma and gender-crossing sex appeal may captivate Broadway theatregoers who wouldn’t normally attend productions of Shakespeare,” the critic wrote.
Others were even more gushing in their praise. The New York Daily News’s Joe Dziemianowicz wrote that Law gave “a spine-tingling and richly layered performance” that made you “forget about his past roles and bad-boy melodramas”.
The Michael Grandage-directed production of Hamlet arrived at New York’s Broadhurst Theatre in October following stints in London and Denmark’s Kronborg Castle in Elsinore, the setting of the play.
Aug 15th
So here is the Eastern part of my tour:

Above is the smallest police station in the world! Or at least it used to be. Unfortunately it is now a storage cupboard which is not quite as glamourous, however it used to have a direct line to Scotland Yard and room to fit two prisoners in if they made any arrests during political demonstrations taking place in Trafalgar Square.