Two Apple Stores, Much Waiting!

Two months ago, I was sure of my plans for today: get my second shingles vaccination at Pharmaca in downtown Los Gatos. I wasn’t looking forward to it, but it beat the alternative.

But last week, Apple announced its fall line, including the Apple Watch Series 5 with an always-on display (finally!). I ordered one for pickup this afternoon at the Apple Store in downtown Los Gatos, a two-minute stroll from Pharmaca. Everything was falling into place.

Of course, Apple also announced the new line of iPhones, with cameras that really appealed to me. And last year, I’d bought my iPhone XS Max on the iPhone Upgrade Plan, so upgrading was a no-brainer.

Except that I’d moved my phone from T-Mobile to Google Fi, and upgrading required being a customer of one of the Big 4 carriers. I checked with T-Mobile to see what it would cost to return to them, and the answer was “too much” (the call wasn’t a total loss, though, because we were able to add free Netflix to Diane’s account).

But I had found a second way to upgrade – Apple was offering a decent trade-in for my old phone, so I could buy the new phone outright and use the trade-in to pay off the balance on the Upgrade Plan.

By the time I figured all of this out, the delivery window had slipped into mid-October. Life is like that.

But today, Apple sent me yet another email to encourage me to upgrade. For some reason, I opened it instead of deleting it, and then I clicked the “Find a Store” link and specified the phone I wanted (256GB iPhone 11 Pro in Space Gray, SIM-free).

Much to my surprise, the Apple Park store had phones available for pickup today!

Instead of getting a shingles shot, I spent the afternoon in lines at not one, but two Apple Stores. Picking up the watch in Los Gatos took about 45 minutes; picking up the phone in Cupertino at Apple Park took about 90 minutes.

And when I came home with my trophies, Diane told me that Pharmaca had just called to remind us to get vaccinated.

Maybe tomorrow.

Summer Theatre Notes

Diane and I have always enjoyed going to plays (in fact, one of our first dates was to see the RPI Players perform “Sweet Charity”), and we’re lucky to live in a place that offers us many opportunities to do so.

So far this summer, we’ve seen seventeen plays (and will see another on Sunday, with a high probability of an additional play or two next week).

I’d be foolish to write to write reviews of all of them, but I do want to point out a few of the ones which I thought were especially good and which are still playing. So let’s go to the theatre!

We saw the entire season (11 plays) at Oregon Shakespeare Festival. It took two visits. The first trip was in early June with Road Scholar (the class included 3 plays, and we added five more for a total of 8 plays in 6 days). We made a point of scheduling all of the outdoor plays for that visit to minimize the odds of fire-related cancellations. The second trip was a few weeks ago to pick up the plays that weren’t open in June – and I’m glad we didn’t try to see any of the outdoor plays then, because OSF had to move them to a much-smaller indoor theatre because of the Milepost 97 fire in Canyonville, 80 miles north of Ashland.

OSF’s season continues into October, and I can recommend all but one of the plays – Alice in Wonderland was disappointing. The music and costumes were good, but the characterization was limited, and I just couldn’t bring myself to care about what was happening on the stage – it was just a pack of cards, after all.

On the other hand, I found Mother Road, Hairspray, Between Two Knees, Indecent, How to Catch Creation, and Cambodian Rock Band to be thought-provoking, well-acted productions with something to say about society and how different groups interact. I’d recommend any of them without hesitation (though Mother Road and Between Two Knees are the weakest of this group).

The Shakespeare plays were all well-done and worth seeing; La Comedia of Errors was a very different take on Shakespeare!

We’ve already signed up for Road Scholar’s Ashland experience next year and hope to see the entire season again.

We’re season-ticket holders and supporters of three local theatre companies – none of them have the resources of OSF, but they produce great theatre.

City Lights Theatre in San Jose is currently performing Cabaret based on the original 1966 production. There’s a lot more story than I remember from the previous versions I’d seen – the music was there, but the story took priority. The similarities to what’s happening today were clear (not blatantly pointed out – but there to see) and chilling.

Earlier in the season, we saw their production of Silent Sky, a Lauren Gunderson play about the first female computers/astronomers at Harvard. I’d seen the play before, and thought that City Lights did a very good job with it.

We’re already signed up for their entire season next year.

Silicon Valley Shakespeare has two plays in rep at Sanborn Park in Saratoga through August: Macbeth and The White Snake. Their Macbeth was much crisper than OSF’s – we also got to see it from the front row, unlike our seats in Ashland! We haven’t seen The White Snake yet, but will this weekend – it’s an adaptation of a Chinese tale.

Earlier in the season, we saw SVS’s free “Shakespeare in the Park” production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and it was a lot of fun.

Again, we plan to go to their season next year – but they won’t be selling tickets for a few months.

Lyric Theatre started out as the Gilbert and Sullivan Society of San Jose, and they still do at least one G&S play every year. This summer, their “Discovery Series” presented the very first G&S, Thespis; it posed a special challenge because the original music was lost a century ago!

Lyric’s productions feature huge casts, wonderful costumes, and great music – we always have a good time there, and we’ve bought next season already.

I know 3 Below as the home of ComedySportz, but they show movies and put on other shows, too. We saw Disenchanted, a musical purporting to tell the truth about the Disney princesses – it was an enjoyable evening, and the songs were well-crafted.

And that’s the summer theatre report – so far!