TT: Two on the road
Mrs. T and I departed Florida's Sanibel Island with the utmost reluctance on Saturday morning. We then drove across the peninsula to Miami Beach, had lunch at Joe's Stone Crab, made our way to Coral Gables, and checked into the Biltmore Hotel. In short, we reversed the first half of our itinerary of
three
years
ago
, leaving out the part where I then went from Miami to
New York
to
San Francisco to San Diego
to
Kansas City
to
Chicago
to New York to Connecticut to
Lenox, Massachusetts
. I'd forgotten how much travel I packed into that marathon. The thought of it makes me shudder now, even though it was fun--mostly--while it was happening.Things are different this time around. On Tuesday we're driving up to Winter Park, and I'll be flying back to New York on Wednesday to see Wit , Look Back in Anger , and the DiCapo Opera Theatre's production of Gian Carlo Menotti's The Consul , after which I return to Winter Park and stay put, more or less, until the end of February. That's kid stuff!
From the (admittedly narrow) point of view of a drama critic, one of the most convenient things about the Biltmore is that
GableStage
, the company that I came to Coral Gables to see, is in the same building as the hotel, meaning that it's a five-minute stroll from our hotel room to the lobby of the theater. I can think of a number of other hotels that are unusually close to a major regional theater, among them San Francisco's
Hotel Diva
, but the only other company in America, so far as I know, that shares a roof with a first-class hotel is the Milwaukee Repertory Theater, where Mrs. T and I saw
The Norman Conquests
six years ago in the middle of an eyelash-freezing cold spell. It was nice enough not to have to go outside to get to the theater, but this is even nicer.While we're always glad to be at the Biltmore, we already miss Sanibel and can't wait to arrive in Winter Park, where I plan, among other interesting things, to conduct a public conversation with Pat Metheny and roll up my sleeves and write three chapters of Mood Indigo: A Life of Duke Ellington. Time and inspiration permitting, I'll also try to get started on the first draft of my next opera libretto. Today, though, I'll settle for writing the second half of Friday's Wall Street Journal column, a review of the show that Mrs. T and I saw last night at the Biltmore, after which we'll have breakfast and pay a visit to the pool.
See you around, somewhere or other.
Published on January 23, 2012 05:00
No comments have been added yet.
Terry Teachout's Blog
- Terry Teachout's profile
- 45 followers
Terry Teachout isn't a Goodreads Author
(yet),
but they
do have a blog,
so here are some recent posts imported from
their feed.

