Two and a half days in New York City is like a month in Binghamton. We crammed in so many things. A Top Ten Lifetime Meal in a very fancy Mexican restaurant, walking the Highline, bookstores, museums, hipster cocktails, all that happened before we even got to the main event - Death of a Salesman, on Broadway.
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| Us experiencing the sensory overload of Times Square on our way to the theater. |
Top billing was Nathan Lane as Willie Loman, and obviously he was very good. But Laurie Metcalf as Linda Loman, and Christopher Abbot as Biff, I can't stop thinking about their performances. Linda Loman could easily be a harridan, a sad victim of the false promise of capitalism to American masculinity. But Metcalf played Linda with power, sometimes taking her to Lady Macbeth-like heights, then laying her open with soul-scouring emotional honesty. The production was dark, the set looked like an abandoned subway station. Lines, scenes, and timeline switches layered quick-fire on top of each other, then slowed down to spare moments that let us absorb the impact of it all.
Then, oh my goodness, then! We met Laurie Metcalf. She reads Michael's crossword blog and when she heard he was coming, she emailed and told him to come to the stage door after. I have never ever been to a stage door before. We walked past the lines of theater buffs waiting behind the sidewalk barrier, a man had Michael's name on his list and we went through the narrow back stage areas, waited, literally in the wings, and then Laurie Metcalf came out, with her little dog, and Michael talked to her and I may have said some things too, but who knows if I made any sense. (Okay, I know. I know that I did not make sense.) Laurie Metcalf was as delightful as you'd expect, more so, actually, given she'd just buried Nathan Lane. Then she had other people waiting to see her, and we said bye and went back outside. Two blocks later we stepped from the craziness of Broadway into the dark blocks of the Diamond District then wandered across a behemoth digging up the surface of Fifth Avenue and spewing it into a truck.
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| I guess they can't exactly repave Fifth Avenue during the day. |
The next day we had breakfast in an Australian cafe half a block from our hotel and took the most crowded train we've ever experienced back up the Hudson to where we'd left the car at the Beacon train station. Hudson River bird count included a bald eagle clutching a fish, a kingfisher, maybe an osprey, many cormorants, a swan, a heron, plus geese and ducks galore.




















