Tidy Tidbits: Arts & Video

SUNNY ISLES

We made a brief trip south this past week to visit some very good friends who spend about two months on Captiva.  Captiva and its larger, more commercial neighbor, Sanibel, are lush with greenery, crowded during this season, and strung out between a bay and the Gulf of Mexico.  Pretty great venue for escaping winter’s grip and wiggling your toes in the soft sand.

We enjoyed a relaxing 24 hours which included a stroll on the beach, browsing the Tuesday farmers’ market for breakfast pastries, and dinner at The Mad Hatter.  This popular restaurant was packed with diners and the food was fabulous.  From tasty Caesar salads, we advanced to rack of lamb, black truffle dusted dayboat scallops, and gulf snapper in a stew of cherry tomatoes, artichokes, and little neck clams.  It was a memorable visit!

CULTURE NOTES

The Global Affairs lecture this week was a winner with former U.S. Representative Mickey Edwards speaking on the topic, “Does the Constitution Still Matter to Us?’  The Chief Penguin and I had heard him several times in Aspen and found him thoughtful; he delivered again.  Later in the week, we were at a Sarasota Orchestra concert.  Michael Balke, a young German guest conductor, was very good and seemed in sync with the players, but we were underwhelmed by violinist Midori’s performance.  We didn’t particularly care for the Bernstein piece she performed, and she seemed disengaged from the audience.

ON THE SMALL SCREEN

Sticking to my daily treadmill routine requires an engaging series.  Here are the latest two I’ve watched.

Morocco:  Love in Time of War (Netflix)  

This series is set in the Spanish city of Melilla bordering Morocco.  The year is 1921, and the Spaniards are at war with the native Berbers.  It focuses on the dame nurses and the doctors who work in the Melilla’s Red Cross hospital.  The nurses, overseen by a stalwart duchess and friend of the queen, are from upper class families in Madrid.  Working in a war zone requires a level of stamina and flexibility they could never have conjured up.

The series is dubbed, and the dubbing takes some getting used to, but I enjoyed this slice of Spanish history and all the romantic entanglements between nurses and doctors.  Fiancés show up, engagements and marriages are tested, and all the while, injured soldiers continue to be brought to the hospital.  The duchess does battle with the colonel in charge of the base and even the queen shows up to inspect.

Love, Lies, and Records (Acorn)  

This British series takes place in the records office in Leeds.  (Apparently, people in England need to come in person to register births and deaths, something most Americans can do online.)  I liked this series but didn’t love it.  Some of it is funny as much of life in this office is chaotic and crazy in the most unprofessional way.  Interim registrar Kate Dickinson deals with a transgender colleague, engaged couples with immigration issues, and a distraught young widower.  In her personal life, she is torn between Rob, her longtime partner and father of her children, and Rick, her colleague and lover.  I watched it all, but don’t know that I’ll return if there’s a Season 2.

Notes:  Morocco image from Netflix, Love, Lies image from next-episode.com

Tidy Tidbits: Mostly Video

SMALL SCREEN

My Mother and Other Strangers (PBS)

If you missed this little gem from last summer, it’s worth seeking out.  Set in the village of Moybeg in Northern Ireland in 1943, it’s the story of a poor town invaded (not literally) by the presence of an American air base.  At the time, Francis Coyne is a rather quiet, but very observant, boy of nine or ten.  In voice-over, the adult Francis reflects on the events of the time and adds in what he only realized later.

His father is a farmer who also runs the local pub.  His mother is both school teacher and shopkeeper.  She deals in ration books and foodstuffs.  Life in the village is simultaneously unsettled or enlivened by the presence of the airmen; which it is  depends upon whether you are a kid who finds it exciting or an old-timer who hates having his life disrupted.  Francis’ mother, Rose, is attracted to Capt. Dreyfuss from the base and he to her.  He seems to offer the romance and poetry lacking in her marriage to Michael.

We’ve seen the first season, and given the way it ended, I feel sure there must be more to come.  Very nicely done!

Alias Grace (Netflix)

I read Margaret Atwood’s historical novel of the same name when it was published and remembered being impressed by it.  Atwood was involved in this TV adaptation and I’m finding it also well done and compelling.  Grace, in prison for committing several murders, has been taken up as a cause by Dr. Jordan, a young doctor of the mind.  She sits with daily interviews with him away from her cell and recounts her life before prison and the events leading up to the murders.  He is a patient, yet persistent, questioner, but also dreams about her.  She is seemingly demure, but with a very active, sharp mind, and attractive to boot.  The pardon committee has taken up her case, and Dr. Jordan is being pressured to finish his evaluation quickly, something he is loath to do.

Broadchurch, Season 3 (Amazon)

Broadchurch remains one of the best crime series I’ve ever seen.    Olivia Coleman and David Tennant as sparring detective partners, Ellie Miller and Alec Hardy, are excellent, but so are the supporting cast who play other members of the community, many we’ve come to know in previous seasons.   I like Broadchurch’s s more deliberate pacing (compared to some American shows), and I’m finding the handling of the rape victim and how she fares realistic and compelling.

LARGE SCREEN

Murder on the Orient ExpressLike most of my generation, I’ve seen the original 1934 film version of this Agatha Christie mystery as well as the more recent television series starring David Suchet as Hercule Poirot.  This movie, directed by and starring Kenneth Branagh, is good, but not great.  As one of my sisters noted, it’s slow to start out and then picks up a bit.  Branagh has some of the exaggerated mannerisms and fussiness of other Poirots, but there is less humor or fizz in this version.  It  has a stellar cast (Judi Dench, Michelle Pfeiffer, Olivia Coleman, Johnny Depp, Derek Jacobi, Penelope Cruz et al),  and I had completely forgotten the ending so that was a surprise.

READING UNDERWAY  

I currently have two books going.  One is Richard Holmes’ Footsteps: Adventures of a Romantic Biographer, and the other is Unfinished Woman, a memoir by Lillian Hellman.  Both are older works; Holmes’ book came out in 1985 and Hellman’s in 1969.  Holmes recounts several journeys he made tracing the paths taken by historic figures whose biographies he will later write.  Unfinished Woman is my pick for the January book group discussion here.  I first read it several years after it was published, and it’s a different experience reading it so many years later.  I am now older than Hellman was when she wrote it!  My opinion of her ramblings keeps varying as I make progress.  More to come on both titles.

Note:  All photos ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved).