Archive for the 'dresden' Category

Europe 2006 Travelogue

A TOC for my trip to Europe in May 2006

Chronological

  1. May 10 2006: Twas the night before Europe…
  2. May 11 2006: Money makes the world go round…
  3. May 12 2006: London airport… waiting for Lyon flight
  4. May 12 2006: My Entry To Lyon
  5. May 13 2006: Wandering around Lyon FR
  6. May 14 2006: Day of the show in Lyon FR
  7. May 14 2006: Seeing Alcina in Lyon FR
  8. May 15 2006: Lyon FR to Entrecasteaux FR
  9. May 16 2006: Day 1 in Entrecasteaux FR
  10. May 17 2006: Day 2 in Entrecasteaux FR
  11. May 18 2006: Byebye Entrecasteaux FR, Hello Marseille FR, and Goodnight Munich DE
  12. May 19 2006: Orlando in Munich
  13. May 20 2006: Munich DE to Dresden DE and Dead Man Walking
  14. May 21 2006: Dresden DE to Berlin DE
  15. May 22 2006: Day 1 in Berlin DE
  16. May 23 2006: Day 2 in Berlin DE
  17. May 24 2006: Goodbye Berlin DE, Hello London UK
  18. May 25 2006: Day 1 in London UK
  19. May 26 2006: Day 2 in London UK
  20. May 27 2006: Goodbye London UK, Hello San Francisco CA

By category
Lyon FR | Entrecasteaux FR | Munich DE | Dresden DE | Berlin DE | London UK | All Travel Posts

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May 21: Dresden DE to Berlin DE

We woke up, packed our bags, checked out, and stowed our luggage with the front desk. There was fun getting the bill sorted out:

  1. we had to get a refund on the internet service which never worked
  2. we had to get breakfast charges removed, since we didn’t eat any
  3. we had to get the room price adjusted, since they told us it was a free upgrade, then tried to charge the full rate anyway

Thankfully Roy is fluent in German so it was sorted out quickly.

Next was the train station to book tickets to Berlin - the train left at 2pm, so we had several hours to kill.

We headed to the Staatliche museum back in the theatre district. We were hoping for a proper breakfast at a restaurant/cafe inside the museum, but they weren’t serving until 11am. I settled for a carrot cake and cafe americano. It turned out to be a good choice… it was more of an orange bread than a carrot cake, and instead of a cream cheese frosting it just had a light glaze. The carrot decor on top was a tasty bit of marzipan.

The Staatliche is jam-freaking-packed with masterpieces. Rembrandt, Poussin, and even *the* Botticelli painting with the seriously over-exposed bored cherubs at the bottom. There were tons of interesting dutch things, which all have an interesting edge over the other crap. One painter kept doing “still life with…” over and over again. By still life, it was a table of freshly killed animals. There was always one or more dogs fighting with each other and drinking the animal blood, and almost always there was a monkey somewhere in the painting. Too funny. The other side of this heap was weaponry. Guns, knives, swords, armor, jousting poles, horse armor, children’s armor, spring loaded knives that you pierced with then opened to do massive damage. Oh the fun we had. It was really nifty.

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We had hoped to go to the Hygiene museum, but we were both a bit tired, and would only be able to spend about 45 min there. We opted for a beer and sausage before heading back to the hotel for bags, then on to the train station.

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Dresden is bleak. It was flattened during the war and rebuilt. It screams East Germany. It’s beautiful, but feels sad and worn out. There is obviously nowhere near the money Munich has, and it shows not just in the shops and streets, but in the public services, street cleaning, and transit. It’s also a tad overrun with tourists, even in the cold weather.

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May 20: Munich DE to Dresden DE and Dead Man Walking

Had breakfast in the funny little tea room of our hotel again this morning, then packed and headed out. Roy picked a hotel that was mercifully close to the train station, so we only had to walk for a block or so. I ran into a pharmacy there to check into heavier drugs for my cold. After we determined she spoke english I went right to it: “I need ibuprofen and something with pseuephedrine in it to dry my head out”… done and done. I also got some fisherman’s friend cough drops. Yay.

Then it was on the train to Dresden - about a 4 hour journey. Once again I am floored by the trains in Europe. Electric all the way across the country, and such a smooth ride. You don’t have to worry about bottoming out in the seats and cracking your tailbone going across a “pothole” like you do on Caltrain.

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Sadly the full kitchen was not available in the diner car, but there was the ever present beer and Spargle - Asparagus. Roy chose a stew thing that looked disgusting but tasted pretty good.

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I spent an hour or so continuing my quest to fix the blog entries, but gave up after my lunchtime beer. Since I am sick, and my roommate Monica’s single piece of advice to me was “Eat when you are hungry and sleep when you are tired”, I slept the rest of the way to Dresden.

It was wet when we got in, and definitely couldn’t decide if it was going to storm or clear up or do something in between… and it was *cold* which made me very happy, since I have been sweating through my clothes everywhere we go.

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Because it was raining and we wanted to hurry to the hotel and opera, we took a cab from the train station. The hotel ended up being a very large studio - a free upgrade - which was nice.

Sadly, no time to enjoy. I threw a sweater and jacket on to head to the opera - we took a cab again. Look at that sky behind the opera house.

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The opera was Dead Man Walking - in English. Finally an opera I could understand, and the German’s would be the ones paying attention to the subtitles. Utterly different from anything I have seen so far, this show was commissioned by the San Francisco Opera and was a wild success there. In Dresden it also had a very warm welcome. This was not the opening. Only at openings do the directors and designers come out for what is clearly a traditional booing.

The story line is approximately the same as the movie. Guy is on death row and loses all of his appeals. Throughout, Sister Helen tries to get him to own his crime. Eventually he does, then they needle-time. It’s a modern story line, though we wondered if it was a difficult translation for German’s who don’t have the death penalty. The show started with a 5 minute movie clip played on a scrim that shows the original crime, scored alternately by the opera and a soundtrack. Then the present day characters reveal themselves behind the scrim. Finally you get to the main set - a very complicated mechanical set that was sort of like a rubik’s cube that only rotated on one axis. Each side had three doors, and depending on the needs one or more of the doors on the face would open to revel stuff. Roy warned me before I came out that the show might not happen as they burned out a couple of motors trying to get it to work.

Roy’s connection here were three of the leads. Sister Helen was in his Madrid show (previous to Lyon), and he had also worked with De Rocher and his Mother at various times. We went out after the show with these folks. They were a very close crowd, and very warm. We ended up at a horrible place called The American Bar which had a 40 page drinks menu - including table of contents and glossary. I had a beer and ignored the bar and had a good time, though my cold was not going to give me much of a break again. THough we didn’t really want to leave, the place was outrageously smoky and we had to go. The cold air was delicious, but messed up my throat.

The Dresden opera, inside and out
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We got back to the hotel exhausted. We tried to get internet access, but it turned out to be mostly impossible. Roy was online long enough to book our Berlin hotel, then we hit the sack. I apparently snored very badly last night thanks to the cold. Thankfully he had some earplugs. I slept like a log.

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