The world's first cricket opera is dropped at silly point
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Your support makes all the difference.THE world's first opera about cricket, Madam Butterfingers, premiered in this space yesterday. In it, George, a flashy young batsman, is hoping to be selected for the England tour of India, while continuing his opening partnership with Marguerite, daughter of Sir Roland, head of the England selectors.
The scene resumes in the Lord's Tavern. Albert, a sullen middle-order batsman, has told George he doesn't stand a chance of being selected.
George: Oh, that may be what YOU want, Albert. YOU may think it's all right to stay at the wicket all day, heading for another boring draw. But it's not what the public want. They want flair, dash, risk, romance]
Albert: Then they bloody well ought to get Gone With the Wind from the video library and settle down in front of the telly.
Exeunt all, except Albert and his sidekick, Randolph.
Randolph: Do you think they really will pick George for the side, Bert?
Albert: Not if I have anything to do with it.
Randolph: But everyone knows he's going out with Marguerite, Sir Roland's daughter]
Albert: I know. And that's why I'm not taking any chances, I'm putting something in George's cricket bag, which, when it's found, will put the kibosh on his chances for ever.
Randolph: Lumme] What's that, Bert? A photograph of David Gower?
Albert: No, you blockhead. A bit of high-quality grass]
He sings.
It really doesn't matter
If a cricketing bloke
Should now and then have
The occasional smoke.
When you're not batting,
You can always get a fag
And go into the dressing room
For a surreptitious drag,
And drinking isn't frowned on
in fact, it's de rigueur
For a chap to down the pints
Until the world's a blur -
But a chap who lights up
reefers,
Or passes round a joint,
Well, it simply isn't cricket
And we just don't see the point.
Oh, backhand sums of money
Are food and drink to me
But I simply can't condone
Illicit LSD]
The scene shifts to the nets at Lord's, where George, unconscious of the plot against him, is practising his cover drive against the wily bowling of the off-spinner Ian. What is wily about Ian's off-spinning is that the ball doesn't spin at all.
Ian: Did that one turn, George?
George: Of course not. Why?
Ian: Just asking. Thought it might have hit a bump . . . Do you think I've got a chance of going to India?
George: Yes, but only if some newspaper sends you along as cricket correspondent.
Ian: That's not very nice.
George: It's a good chance to get your own back on people and settle some old scores.
Ian: I haven't got any old scores to settle.
George: Then you're the first cricketer who never had. Think]
Ian: Well, I do sometimes get rankled by the commentators who go on about the great days of spinning, and how Laker and Lock ran through the Australians . . . 'Give the ball some air]' they cry.
But it's not so bloody easy . . .
He sings.
I gave the ball a little air,
It fell to earth I know not
where,
But when I walked to the Gas
works End
I found it stuck in the neck of a
friend.
I gave the ball a little tweak
And felt it come back past my
cheek
And as it did, the umpire cried:
'It's not cricket, it's suicide]'
Alas, I can reveal no more of this opera until a very rich impresario gets in touch with me.
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