Saturday, March 26, 2011

Spring time in London!

Hello! I've got a lot of updates because I haven't written in awhile as I have been busy with midterm papers and work (there's that pesky "study" part to the whole study abroad experience- pity) so I will just back track by day by day, or at least the days that were interesting. Jumping right in:

Tuesday March 1, 2011- Edward II
Tonight my Shakespeare in London class went to see Christopher Marlowe’s Edward II at the Rose Theatre, which was Bankside’s first theatre in 1587. The theatre itself is on the site of the original, which was pretty amazing to think about as I was watching the show. The place was incredibly small and we were seated about 5 feet from the actors. It was all basically underground; behind the stage you could see the excavation site of the original theatre which was filled with water as they are currently working on it. They could not turn the heat on because of something to do with preserving the site but I thought that made the experience even cooler, no pun intended, well maybe slightly intended. The acting in the show itself was incredibly strong, especially for such a small production and I enjoyed the show immensely.

Wednesday March 2, 2011
Tonight my Modern Theatre and the London Stage class went to the performance of Woman in Black which was much scarier than I anticipated. I figured a play could not be anywhere near as scary as a movie but I very very wrong. The suspense they created through the use of light and sound was fantastic. I nearly had a heart attack in the bathroom at intermission when another woman opened the door too fast- we both jumped about a foot in the air then laughed about it after; nice to know I wasn’t the only one feeling a bit jumpy. I then had a whole conversation with another random stranger in the bathroom about our speculations about what would happen next in the show and how freaked out we were by it, something I take as a sign that the play was really getting to everyone, which was great. After the play I severely warned my roommates that if anyone made any sudden moves, choose to wear black or did not announce their presence before entering the room I was in then there would be hell to pay. Needless to say we choose to walk home in a large group.

Friday March 4, 2011-Sunday March 6, 2011- Visitor from Ireland
This weekend a friend of mine from Stonehill (Maura Kelly for those of you who know her) who is studying in Galway, Ireland visited me so I got to play tour guide in London. On Friday night we went and saw The 39 Steps which was pretty funny. It was more slapstick type humor and was not at all what I expected it to be, but it was funny and we had a good time and the tickets were cheap! God I love student discounts.

Saturday we went to all the big touristy spots like the London Eye, Houses of Parliament, the Globe Theatre and Trafalgar Square. That night we did a ghost walking tour of London in the area around St. Paul’s cathedral. Our guide was wearing a giant black cape when he came over to meet us which I took as a promising sign the tour would be good. It was a nice blend of the history of the city with entertaining ghost tales and was only 6 pounds. We then went to a 50’s style bowling alley for milkshakes which was entertaining as everyone was dressed up. My favorite: a group of women wearing the Pink Ladies jackets from Grease.
Changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace

Melanie, the Stonehill intern who works at the British Museum, got me two free tickets to see the Book of the Dead exhibit which was great because today was the last day it was open (thanks Melanie!). The Book was not actually a book but a large collection of spells and scrolls and there were explanations all about the Ancient Egyptians views about death and the afterlife. To be honest my knowledge of the subject came solely from the movie The Mummy which I am unashamed to admit is one of my all time favorite movies/guilty pleasures. Despite the fact that Brendan Frasier was not there I still enjoyed the exhibit, even more so because it was free. We then went to Brick Lane to check out the markets. They had every type of food from every nationality imaginable. I was not brave enough to try Ethiopian and stuck with the tried and true Chinese food, but I will work my way up to it eventually!

Tuesday March 8, 2011- King John
Tonight my Shakespeare class went to Twickenham to see King John. First time on the overground train. The show was not terrible... but definitely not one of my favorite Shakespeare plays, which makes sense because it was a history which is not my favorite genre. A few of the actors had to ask for their lines, which I have never actually seen happen before in a professional production. It didn’t detract too much from the performance on the whole. I did feel bit bad because it must be awful to forget your lines, but they all carried on admirably even after making mistakes.

Wednesday March 9, 2011- UNBELIEVABLE
Ok this is the story I am most excited to tell because I still can't really believe it happened. Here's the tale: Today at my internship we had a very interesting guest speaker in the course I am auditing, Responding to Terrorism. He is the superintendent of the London Metropolitan Police and the head of the Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear division. He talked about the challenges the police face when dealing with terrorist attacks, particularly CBRN attacks and was able to explain how the command structure for an attack worked and who was responsible for responding to what. After the presentation Brooke (my supervisor) invited anyone in the class who was interested to come out for a drink at a pub nearby and ask the superintendent any questions they liked. About five of us ended up going out afterwards and I ended up sitting next to him, which brings me closer in the story to one of the best moments in my study abroad experience thus far: We were chatting about books and movies and how I was enjoying my time in London and the conversation somehow came to how I was taking a Shakespeare course. I mentioned that I had visited the Globe for a tour but was disappointed because I would be unable to see a show there because their season did not start until after I left. At this point he said something to the effect of “I do not mean this inappropriately at all but as it so happens I am on the board at the Globe and have an extra ticket to see a performance of Macbeth there tomorrow night. My friend could not come at the last minute so if you would like the ticket you are welcome come.” (!!!) Apparently there was an event where thousands of UK schoolchildren were allowed to come to the Globe for free to see Macbeth, which was playing for a few nights, and tomorrow was the last night. A chance to go to the Globe and see Macbeth for free- unbelievable!!! He gave me his card at told me to meet him in the foyer at the Globe tomorrow night.

Thursday March 10, 2011- Macbeth at the Globe
Tonight was incredibly exciting because I got to see Macbeth at the Globe Theatre! I was a bit nervous because: 1. I was going with the Superintendent of the London Metropolitan Police 2. I had just met him the night before. 3. He is a good friend of my supervisor’s so I really wanted to make a good impression. I found that all nervousness was needless as he was a perfect gentleman, very interesting to talk to and knew a lot about Shakespeare and the history of the Globe. (And for all you nasty minded people it was NOT a date, as I have already been accused of, he's older than my dad and a friend of my boss's so keep your minds out of the gutter folks) He told me stories about doing the security for the Globe when the Queen came to a show and how they basically had to take it all apart to search for bombs. He also is working on the security for the Royal Wedding and the 2012 Olympics. He said everyone involved wishes that Paris had got to host the Olympics instead of London because it is the biggest security nightmare they have ever had and he plans to retire the day after it is all over. The show itself was great and I especially enjoyed it because it was mostly school kids who got very in to the performance, which was wonderful to see. Though they kept “awwwing in sympathy when Lady Macbeth was breaking down, so I think they missed the point that she was totally evil but that is ok at least they were in to it! The actors and production team really played up the action in the show by having soldiers repelling down on the stage and pushing their way through the crowds and performing elaborate fight scenes. The supernatural bits were fantastic as they had so many great effects. It was very interactive and, of course, at the Globe! One of the coolest things they had was two body bags on the stage at the beginning, which you kind of forgot about when the soldiers came on and dragged them to the side and then did their lines. Then the witch comes out and does the whole "When shall we three meet again" speech and the two bags sit up! I almost screamed and all the kids did, the witches were in the body bags the whole time and all zombie-esque which was fantastic and freaky. But wait- there's more! As if seeing Macbeth wasn’t enough I found to my surprise I could also go to the after party! I basically felt like the English major equivalent of Cinderella the whole night. Free champagne, all the actors in the play milling about and apparently a bunch of British celebrities according to one person I talked to- not that I knew who anyone was but I guess that is alright; you can’t get nervous if you have no idea if the person you are talking to is famous or not. The party was where the exhibit in the Globe is and I got to go in again and see the exhibit, though this time with a free glass of champagne- too cool. All in all an INCREDIBLE experience, I still can still barely believe it happened. It is all the more incredible because it occurred because I just happened to sit next to and chat with the guest speaker from class that day who just happened to be on the board at the Globe and just happened to have an extra ticket for a show that was ending the next night and I just happened to mention I was studying Shakespeare- CRAZY world!

Friday March 11, 2011
Lindsay and Tara visit! I took them all around today and boy did we WALK. Everywhere. The Globe, London Eye, Houses of Parliament, Trafalgar Square, Leicester Square, British Museum, National Gallery, Buckingham Palace, St. James Park… needless to say my feet were ready to fall off by the time I got home but it was a great day full of general merriment and jubilant jubilesquing. It is finally starting to feel like spring in London and it was sunny and gorgeous. That night we went out for Indian food, which I love, and it was nice to be with friends from Stonehill when I have been away from there for so long.


Saturday March 12, 2011
Dr. Rogers invited me over for dinner tonight, which was very nice of her. She lives in Putney which I really liked; it felt more like the country in the area where she lived even though we were still in the city. She made meatloaf, which I learned was an American thing because all the other people there were British and told me that she was the one who introduced them to it. It was delicious and great to have a taste from home. I never thought I would actually miss something like meatloaf- go figure.

Sunday March 13, 2011
This morning I had my first official English breakfast, which was delicious. I still find it odd that there are baked beans involved but I suppose if you can eat them for dinner why not breakfast… I also tried Black Pudding. Which I found out right before I took a bite was pig’s blood though it looked like sausage. To my credit I ate it anyways; as long as I didn’t think too much about what I was eating it wasn’t half bad! I guess we eat most of the other parts of the pig to put it in perspective so why not a little bit more... :S

Monday March 14, 2011
I am starting to realize that I have not really been talking about my internship at all with all the other exciting things going on so I will give a quick recap of what I doing there right now. I am still working on my final paper, which has ended up being a lot about the Psychology of Terrorism. I am examining terrorism from an individual psychological perspective and a group perspective. I have also recently become interested in the rhetoric of extremist groups, which cropped up a lot in my research, and asked Brooke if it would be acceptable to adjust my topic slightly to include all the new information I have found. She is very flexible and said that this is fine and that we would meet and talk about it in more detail next week. I am also still working on my Terrorist Profile which has grown to about 35 terrorists. I have one officey project where I am trying to scan all her papers and put them on the computer so she can have a paperless office so I've been working on that too. For the Responding to Terrorism course we have to do a group presentation on some sort of biological weapon and how we would inform the public about the threat. My group is doing a presentation about anthrax which I have been researching and found is actually pretty interesting. My portion of the project in particular is about the 2001 anthrax attacks in America and the lessons we can learn from that. I am not too happy when I stumble upon a picture of what someone with anthrax looks like because I am a bit squeamish but besides that I think it will make for an interesting presentation.
Tuesday March 15, 2011: Sherlock Holmes Museum

I got to go to the Sherlock Holmes Museum today at 221 Baker Street ("The most famous address in London") FOR CLASS! Life is good. It was a replica of what they think the house would look like based on the stories. Dr. Watson was sitting upstairs, who I was enormously disappointed to find was NOT in fact Jude Law, nor was RDJ present, but I guess you can't have everything in life. After that our class went to Regent's park which was really really pretty- sunny and spring in London!
Wednesday March 16, 2011: National Theater
Today during class we got to do a backstage tour at the National Theatre which was pretty cool. We saw behind the scenes of the set of Frankenstein, which was playing at the time, learned about the set, costumes, props etc. We saw the workrooms and how they were building the sets for the upcoming shows. Our guide was knowledgeable and nice and all in all it was a cool tour!

Tonight my Theatre class went and saw the play Frankenstein at the National Theatre, which was an adaptation of the novel. The set looks much different with light and sound then the empty stage did during the tour. All in all the show WAS INCREDIBLE. The effects were great- very cinematic, the stage amazing, the story was engrossing and they definitely went for the interpretation of the novel where humans made the monster evil. It was graphic, disturbing, enthralling and emotional and my classmates and I talked about it the whole 25 minute walk home which shows that we were affected. I think when you sit back passively and just observe something it clearly does not do much for you and when pressed to have an opinion you will probably respond "it was interesting;" when you can't stop talking, arguing and interpreting and feeling- then it is art.

The National Theatre is right on the Thames and I had some time to kill before the show so I took a few pictures at night- here is one of my favorites!
Friday March 18, 2011: English National Ballet
Alex, another girl in the program from Clark, interns at the English National Ballet and had free tickets to see their performance of "Black and White," which was basically a collection of different dances from different performances the had done it the past. They were amazing and the music was beautiful. And ballet dancers are solid muscle. I went with Alyssa and we chatted with a nice Irish lady who was sitting next to us. She thought we were Canadian because of our "soft accents." Beats the kid who in Ireland who thought I was from Long Island (tad offended, especially because he was American and should know the difference!). All in all cool show!
Thursday March 24, 2011: Comedy Show

Laura got free tickets to a comedy show at the Shaftesbury Theatre called "Comedy Rush" where there were 60 comedy acts in 60 minutes and was nice enough to bring Melanie and I along so it was a Stonehill girls night out! Each comic had one minute to make us laugh, some did it better than others :) All in all it was pretty funny- I have yet to discover what "British humor" means when someone says "oh that is just the British sense of humor;" do we have an "American" sense of humor? I don't think so- I think things are funny or they aren't... but anyways good night!
Saturday March 26, 2011: Brighton!

Today I was up bright and early to catch the train to Brighton! Brighton is a famous seaside town on the south coast of England (in East Sussex). The day started off cloudy but the sun came out eventually and it was very nice! I went with Hannah, Melanie, Christine, Alyssa and Laura and had a great time. We explored the random shops and side-streets where we found a little flea market selling all sort of random things. Then we went to the Royal Pavilion (which we didn't go in, too expensive) then a free museum that had the most random collection of stuff but was cute. Then it was down to the ocean!!! What I learned: the beach there isn't sand but rocks. No in the sense that sand is techincally rocks but actual rocks. Couldn;t be too comfortable to lay on but the beach was still pretty crowded for a not-that-warm-but-still-nice day! We had fresh fish and chips (french fries) for lunch and ate at a table that was basically on the beach- it was delecious!. Then we walked to the pier which had an amusement park on it. There were free chairs so we grabbed 6 and relaxed (or napped allegedly in my case) in the sun for awhile before exploring the rest of the pier. More exploration of the shops then it was back to the train station for the 1.5hr ish ride back to London. Long day and great day- glad I went! Rocky beachFish and Chips!
Royal Pavillion

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Budapest!

This blog is going to be really long but I saw SO MUCH this past weekend because it was the long awaited trip to Budapest, Hungary! For starters here is a map so everyone can see where Hungary is since I had no idea, just the vague "Europe-ish" so if you know, great if you don't no shame!
I joined a Travel Club through the International Student House, which is an organization in London that gets really good discounts on trips for International Students. This trip had 12 students on it and was a mix of nationalities: there were students from India, China, Sri Lanka, Uganda, Uruguay, Turkey, Canada, Germany and Malaysia. It was an awesome opportunity to meet new people and a unique experience because I realized I have never been in a situation where I was the only American student. On Friday we all met at the ISH house on Great Portland street at 5:30am and went to Heathrow. Our flight was 3 hours long and we got into Budapest around 12. We were met at the airport by someone from our hostel "Happy Flats." The hostel was actually really nice, nothing like the horror stories you hear and no bedbugs I am happy to report! I shared a flat with three other girls from the program. After dropping off our stuff and getting a quick bite to eat we went on a 3 hour bus tour of the city, which I learned was actually divided into “Buda” and “Pest” which are divided by the Danube river and we drove through both. The city is amazing and beautiful and even though it was freezing I had a great time exploring. That night we had a group meal and tried some traditional Hungarian food and I learned that the Hungarians are fond of very large portions, cream, cheese and lots of sauce. They are famous for their paprika so I tried chicken paprika and some sort of traditional noodles that was delicious!
Saturday morning we ate breakfast early then headed to a local indoor market filled with fresh fruit, veggies, butcher stalls, fish and upstairs they had all sorts of souvenirs.



After the market came the best part of my trip:to Szechenyi Spa Bath which was AMAZING. Budapest is famous for their baths and I can see why after this experience. There are all sorts of natural thermal water springs under the city, which they use for their spas. There are plenty of baths in the city and the one we went to was a huge place with about a dozen thermal baths inside and one large outdoor thermal bath. We soaked for hours outside which was a neat experience as it is winter- the mad dash in a swimsuit and flipflops from the pool to the door was invigorating to say the least. I also paid a little extra for a very reasonably priced massage and learned that severe language barrier + little clothing + different cultural conceptions of modesty = a few awkward encounters. My masseuse spoke very little English and I obviously speak no Hungarian. She didn't leave when I was supposed to get undressed like they do in massages I have had in the past and the most awkward moment came when she told me to sit up during the massage so she could do my shoulders (no shirts in massages remember) I didn't move and didn't really know how to say "Um, beg your pardon?" in Hungarian so I just went with the old communication barrier stand-by and stared at her blankly. She sighed and asked "You American?" "Yes" I replied. "You speak English?" "Yeah..." "You not understand sit-up?" Well, ok then! What am I supposed to say to that when my Hungarian is non-existent... so what the hell, when naked in some random back room at a spa in Budapest do as the Hungarians do.



Fun fact about the lions on the bridge: the sculptor forgot the tongue so everyone laughed at him. Our guide said he then drowned himself in the Danube but he was joking about that. I think. We finished Saturday off with more traditional Hungarian food for dinner at a restaurant where we got cheated because we were tourists I'm pretty sure. When I tried to order a glass of tap water (water was safe to drink there) I was informed they did not have tap water. I refrained from sarcastically asking if they had 1. A cup. 2. A sink. But ended up buying expensive bottled water because we had no choice but the food was delicious so I was slightly mollified.
Sunday: In the morning we went to the Castle Labyrinth, which is located beneath Castle Hill. It is a maze miles long of tunnels and huge underground rooms that were originally intended as cellars and bomb shelters. There were reproductions of cave paintings all over the walls and the barely lit passageways reminiscent of an Indian Jones movie made for a creepy and interesting adventure.


Flash makes everything seem brighter, but it was very dark and we kept getting turned around and lost.





This fountain underground was not water but wine!!! With a sign saying DO NOT DRINK.

After the labyrinth we went to the National Gallery and checked out some Hungarian paintings.

National Gallery

View of Parliament and the Danube
After that we had some free time so a few of us went to the House of Terror, which was an incredibly sobering experience. A museum now, in 1944 the building was the “House of Loyalty,” the headquarters of the Hungarian Arrow Cross Party- the Hungarian Nazis. Then between 1945 and 1956 the building was home to some notorious communist terror organizations. The exhibit displayed the stories of the atrocities committed by both the Nazi and Communist regimes that devastated Hungary. I watched videos of the heartbreaking testimony of survivors and made my way through a series of disturbing exhibits, ending the tour in the basement of the building that was full of cells and torture rooms where prisoners were held and executed. Not the most cheerful experience, but an amazing one nonetheless. After dinner some of us chose to brave the cold and head down to the Danube to see it at night, which was totally worth it! After the walk we then got drinks as a group at a pub near our hostel and I had a great night getting to know the people on my trip.
Danube at night
Monday: Sadly it was our last day in Hungary so we sought to make the most of it and see as much as possible before our flight that night. The larger group split into about three groups since there were different things we wanted to see and my group went the largest synagogue in Europe located in the Jewish quarter of the city. We went on a tour which was very informative though pretty hard to understand (I though we were on the wrong one at first but then realized the guide was actually speaking English, just with a VERY heavy accent). We learned about the tragic history of the Jews in Hungary during the Nazi occupation which just felt so much more real there than in a textbook. There was a beautiful metal memorial in the shape of a weeping willow with the names of each of the victims inscribed on the leaves that was particularly poignant. On the tour I got the shock of all shocks when I met a girl (Hannah Rosen for those of you who know her) I know from the English Department at Stonehill! She is studying abroad in France and was just in Budapest for the weekend and neither of us knew the other was visiting the city. Small world and amazing coincidence that we both happened to be on the same tour at a synagogue in Hungary at the same time!
Memorial close up
Memorial

Inside the Synagogue


Synagogue from outside
Hero Square in the city center


One of the many amazing views of the city



St. Mathias church, which we got to go inside of.
We had to cut the trip to the synagogue short because we were rushing to do a tour of Parliament, which we were disappointed to find was not doing tours today because of a special event. So we got lunch instead! After lunch we returned to the market we had visited the first day for souvenirs and then it was back to the hostel and then the airport for the trip back to London. All in all it was an amazing experience: I had some great food, visited some beautiful places, had some once in a lifetime experiences and meet some wonderful people!