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Wednesday 20th August 
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Nelson's Column
August
Getting Behind the Iron Farce 20th August 2005
We want more flops in the West End
I missed it! The biggest show in months, and it completely passed me by. When I left for Tuscany, Behind the Iron Mask was simply a terrible, terrible musical, getting some of the worst reviews anyone could remember. By the time I returned, it had been a major theatrical event, drawing in crowds of giggling fashionistas to the deserted auditorium to giggle at the awful songs, heckle Three Degree turned I'm A Celebrity contestant, Sheila Ferguson, and generally provide a bit of light relief for the poor actors forced to say those dreadful, dreadful lines. Much quoting of the play’s most celebrated exchange ("Why do you wear the iron mask?/ Don't ask!/ What is your name?/I'm insane!") has ensued.

The worst ever play in the West End was, famously, The Intimate Revue. While Behind the Iron Mask struggled on gamely for two-and-a-half weeks, this little gem didn’t even make through a single performance. Its big selling point was the insanely elaborate props and scenery. Each ten minute sketch was followed by a twenty minute set change, and as the public jeered, the actors began forgetting their lines. When midnight approached with seven long scene changes still to come, the remaining audience members filed out and the panicked actors cut to the finale. It’s achieved legendary status, and people who attended the first and only night apparently dined out on the story for years.

Twelve months ago, the West End was declared to be dying. Audiences were down, theatres were broke, and a show like Behind the Iron Mask (or, indeed, the Intimate Revue) would have been greeted as a disaster. Now, however, we have Billy Elliot, Guys and Dolls, Mary Poppins and The Producers, four shows with such robust appeal that even the events of 7 July have barely caused a tremor in their box offices. The West End is in good health, and can shake off a few failures with impunity.

And what that means is that we’re in a position to really enjoy some terrible theatre. What I want to see is something that can rival Springtime for Hitler – the musical-within-a-musical in The Producers – and create a genuine hit through sheer unintentional hilarity. Lines like "I’m in mask, don’t ask, don’t ask…. I’m in a cell, don’t tell, don’t tell," came close, but I think we can do a whole lot worse.

Oh, and Tuscany was lovely, darlings, thanks for asking.
Hip-hopera
Rap, hip-hop and rude boys have infiltrated almost every part of society and now it seems opera is the latest genre to under go a bit of a gangsta revamp. The new version of Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutte coming to Glyndebourne in March will see the setting of 18th century Naples substituted for the car park of an inner-city London council estate. Rap and gangster slang replaces the customary Italian trills and librettos in a bid to usher youthful generations into the opera scene. With a shed load of bling-bling, a tattooist who fits nipple rings and a couple of drug dealers the young are bound to sit up and take notice.
Fame Academy on Le-Market
Many of us know it as the place where talented teens warbled their way to fame, but the Fame Academy mansion also lays claim to being the biggest gaff in London, next to Buckingham Palace. Next month, the posh Highgate pad goes on sale for a cool £32 million. A mere snip! The Grade-II listed, neo-Georgian landmark boasts just 25 bedrooms, 12 bathrooms, three kitchens, four tennis courts, a billiards room, a library, a sauna and a gym. It’s definitely fit for royalty. Long before Lamar’s languid tones lifted the rafters, the Queen herself graced the ornate ballroom many a time. With neighbours like Boy George and George
Michael, whoever forks out for the place is guaranteed a gay old time.
Musical Snooze on New Booze Rules
Seven out of ten owners and managers of small venues were found to be unaware of the need to reapply for their licenses as part of the government’s overhaul of drinking and entertainment laws. Most appear to have simply given up on the complicated and expensive application process. Great news for those who don’t want distractions during their 24-hour drinking binges.
July 2008
24th July
Sandwiched Out
17th July
The Show Ain't Over 'Til the Fat Lady's on Page 3
June 2008
26th June
Love All at Wimbledon
16th June
Miller Puts the Heat on Tennant
May 2008
27th May
Booze Banned on Buses
20th May
Same Again?
April 2008
23rd April
By George
11th April
Back to the 80s
March 2008
28th March
How do You Solve A Problem Like Medea?
20th March
Flight Fantastic
February 2008
20th February
Dark, Satanic Turnmills
6th February
A Diamond in the Drink
January 2008
21st January
People Wanted for Plinth
14th January
Boo! Hiss!
December 2007
28th December
Tate That - A Hirst for Art
20th December
Christmas Shopping
November 2007
27th November
Mind the Gap
26th November
London On A Tray
October 2007
26th October
Leaving the Station
14th October
The Sky's the Limit
September 2007
26th September
The Play Within A Play
19th September
Fashion, Frocks and Celeb Shocks
12th September
Saying Tanks for the Mammaries
August 2007
24th August
Heathrow under Siege
17th August
Gormless
10th August
Losing Face
July 2007
24th July
Are We Reaching Boiling Point Yet This Summer?
13th July
Red Ken versus Blonde Boris
June 2007
22nd June
Last Orders at the Fag Machine
11th June
London the Musical
May 2007
21st May
What Lurks Beneath
10th May
The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of
April 2007
27th April
London’s Walk on the Wild Side
20th April
Stand Behind the Yellow Line
13th April
Like Water for Chocolate
March 2007
23rd March
So, Another Magazine
16th March
Avoiding iContact
February 2007
23rd February
Sex and Art...
16th February
C-Charge Protest Fails to Bring Down Government
9th February
Live Earth London
January 2007
26th January
A Vote for Shilpa is a Vote for Britain
18th January
Carriage on up the West End
December 2006
29th December
Food for Thought
22nd December
A Poisonous Marketing Campaign
15th December
In for a Penny, In for Five Pounds
November 2006
17th November
Big Department Stores Leave Santa Out in the Cold
10th November
Failing to Save the World
October 2006
27th October
Frozen Prawns and Melting Icecaps
20th October
Predatory Pelicans and Happy Woodland Folk
13th October
Hope at last for east end of Oxford Street
September 2006
16th September
Lite the Blue Paper and Stand Well Back
9th September
Of Poles and Twiglets
August 2006
25th August
Free Fares For the Fat and the Fashionable
11th August
London Friendly
4th August
Archway To Organic Heaven
July 2006
21st July
London - Celebrity Frat House
7th July
Out of the Galleries into the Streets
June 2006
23rd June
Mayors, Nightmares and Marias
16th June
Downright Rude in Paris and London
9th June
Enter the Inferno
May 2006
26th May
Curvaceous Border
12th May
Vegging Out
April 2006
21st April
The Camden Crawl
17th April
Down the Pan
13th April
I Want to Break Free
9th April
Big Brother seems to have been left in a bar somewhere
7th April
Don't Box Me In
March 2006
24th March
Political Correctness Reaches New Heights
February 2006
24th February
A Stadium's Tale: Cup Final Goes West
17th February
Modern Musicals are Rubbish
10th February
The City-Side Alliance
January 2006
20th January
February Sales
20th January
Moby Sick
13th January
Glass Half Full
3rd January
Three Cheers for the Tube Station Workers
December 2005
22nd December
January Bites
16th December
A Remarkable Year
November 2005
25th November
And a Partridge in a JCB
11th November
Driving Miss Sadie
4th November
Spam, Spam, Spammity-Spam, Shakespeare, Zorro, Chico and Rasputin
October 2005
28th October
Trick or Treat?
21st October
We Don't Mind a Little Delay...
14th October
Final Resting Place for Young British Artists
September 2005
16th September
Just a small urn for me, please barman
9th September
DRINK! DRINK! DRINK!
2nd September
The Free Tenor
August 2005
30th August
Samba Rhythms Breaking Out All Over The Stadium
20th August
Getting Behind the Iron Farce
10th August
Mystery Play is No Sell Out
July 2005
29th July
Moving On From 7/7
22nd July
Get loaded in the park
15th July
Victoire!!
June 2005
24th June
New Balls, Please
17th June
The End of an Unsightly Era
10th June
The Hooded Law