Great smokers
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And the greatest of them all, FDR...
Nubar Gulbenkian who was driven around in specially adapted London cabs, proudly saying: "They tell me that you can turn it on a sixpence - whatever that may be."
NJS
NJS
Opera Carmen, by Bizet
First Act (well...before the ban)
Metropolitan Opera
First Act (well...before the ban)
Metropolitan Opera
How nice (even for a non-smoker)
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Marcelo:
Smoking on stage is not necessarily what it appears to be. It's a no-no for the fire department, as are lighted candles on stage. It all has to do with the 1903 Iroquoi Theatre Fire in Chicago. During a soldout performance, an arclight exploded and the stage curtains caught fire. Someone in the audience yelled
"Fire!" The audience panicked and rushed for the doors. Over six hundred patrons died in the inferno, most of them unable to escape through the lobby because the doors opened inward rather than out. It was a stampede that left blackened corpses crushed in piles. Others tried to get out through windows, which were locked tight.
That horrendous incident changed how theatres are built and operate, not only in America but all over
the world. Doors must open outward for egress, a show doesn't open without being certified by the Fire Chief and routinely inspected for being up to code during its run. So the smoke you see in a live production of Carmen is usually powder being blown by the actors rather than inhaled, and candlelight is nothing more than a flame-shaped frosted lamp that teeters back and forth on a battery-driven candle.
JMB
Smoking on stage is not necessarily what it appears to be. It's a no-no for the fire department, as are lighted candles on stage. It all has to do with the 1903 Iroquoi Theatre Fire in Chicago. During a soldout performance, an arclight exploded and the stage curtains caught fire. Someone in the audience yelled
"Fire!" The audience panicked and rushed for the doors. Over six hundred patrons died in the inferno, most of them unable to escape through the lobby because the doors opened inward rather than out. It was a stampede that left blackened corpses crushed in piles. Others tried to get out through windows, which were locked tight.
That horrendous incident changed how theatres are built and operate, not only in America but all over
the world. Doors must open outward for egress, a show doesn't open without being certified by the Fire Chief and routinely inspected for being up to code during its run. So the smoke you see in a live production of Carmen is usually powder being blown by the actors rather than inhaled, and candlelight is nothing more than a flame-shaped frosted lamp that teeters back and forth on a battery-driven candle.
JMB
Thank goodness this is not the case everywhere in the world!
Thanks for this. One has a most vivid impression the singers are actually smoking on the stage. After all, in this opera the whole plot turns around a cigarette factory. More recent performances of Carmen might well opt for the introduction of some additional sotto voce lines warning the public about the potential risks of this opera.Jordan Marc wrote:Marcelo:
Smoking on stage is not necessarily what it appears to be...
JMB
Lord Castlerosse, gossip columnist for the Daily Express (and his Lhasa Apso), who once declaimed: "What's the use of being a Viscount if you can't live on credit?"
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Binks will have a new home in about a month's time. He is moving with Bates to Hilditch & Key.storeynicholas wrote:Bate's Binks. It used to be a cigarette; now it is a cigar:
Dame Daphne du Maurier-Browning (I can imagine where she and her husband would have told them to stick the smoking ban) -ooo000OOO:
NJS.
NJS.
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