Tradition, tradition, tradition has been my mantra at
Christmas for the past 30 years. The whole day was meticulously planned,
stockings, church, luncheon, crackers, pudding, The Queen’s Speech, walk the dog, wash
up and make tea, presents (in order of age, youngest to oldest) and collapse, either with a board game or Downton Abbey, according to how much
energy we had left. Suggestions that we could change the tree decorations or
have presents in a different corner of the drawing room were met with outcry,
and the only variation that was allowed was whether we went to Midnight Mass or
morning service. That depended on the vicar – we were put off one vicar forever
once when she preached about how the animals gave gifts to the Christ Child,
and said that the fox brought ‘cunning’. Not exactly a commendable quality for
the Son of God! Thereafter, we avoided her, and opted for more heartwarming fare.
Hitherto, my usual Christmas Day
All this came to an end forever last year when we finally sold
the family home and left the high, steep hill with the magnificent views and
huge garden that had become too much to care for. This year, my parents are
camped in a tiny cottage while they renovate a town house, my sister
is comfortably ensconced in London and I am in California.
Not quite the place I would have predicted for me, for whom Christmas Day means
snow and Boxing Day means hunting, but I intended to embrace every American-flavoured moment.
The incomparable view from our old home
Our whippet, Eddie, enjoying the snow in the orchard
Christmas began in fine, traditional style, however, with
Midnight Mass at Grace Cathedral. This glorious cathedral, set atop Nob Hill on
the other side of Huntington Square to the palatial Fairmont Hotel, is modeled on
Notre Dame in Paris and its splendid great doors (currently being restored) are
copies of Ghiberti’s gilded Gates of Paradise on the Baptistry in Florence. Its
soaring interior is fluttering with colour at present, with 20 miles of ribbon
hanging from its vaulted roof in Graced
with Light, an installation by Anne Patterson created as part of the 100
Years of Music celebrations that mark the anniversary of the foundation of the
Choir of Men & Boys. The choir in question was in fine voice on Christmas
Eve, as was the magnificent Æolian-Skinner organ and the orchestra under the
aegis of conductor Canon Benjamin Bachmann. The music of the Prelude was
succeeded by my favourite carol, O, Come
all ye Faithful and the 2,200 strong congregation gave due credit to the
wonderful words. It was an uplifting service, with all the ceremonial niceties
performed to a turn, and a lovely ‘homily’, as the address is called here, from
the Dean, the Very Rev. Dr Jane Shaw, on the subject of music and its power for
good. I felt I could almost have been back in Worcester Cathedral at home, but
for the American accents and the odd verse of a carol that was slightly
different – occasionally, a line was altered and I did a double take at the
order of service. But the joyful atmosphere was the same, and I felt
Christmas had truly arrived.
Grace Cathedral from my privileged seat in the Quire,
courtesy of my great friend, verger Charles Shipley
Full of comfort and joy: me and my friend Shannon
I spent Christmas itself staying in a friend’s house while
he was away, and felt a little glum at the prospect of waking up on my own with
no stocking. But I needn’t have feared – on hearing that I was to be alone, a
great friend presented me with my very own stocking at Midnight Mass, which
turned out to be full of goodies from England. Skype condescended to work
perfectly, so I was able to watch my family open their presents and share all
our experiences just as if we were together, and it was soon time for a walk in
Buena Vista Park with Chad Jones, one half of my Christmas dinner hosts and author of Theater Dogs, a blog about Bay Area theatre, and
his beautiful dog Fanny. After so many years in the countryside, it did seem
strange to be in a city on Christmas Day and seeing other people (not to
mention smelling waves of marijuana smoke in the park), but very sociable.
Looking towards the Golden Gate Bridge - not a bad view for December 25
Me with Chad and the adorable Fanny
A
superb dinner of roast beef, done to a turn by host Todd Stein and carved in enormous slices that
none of us had any difficulty finishing, was followed by a stroll, in fact, an
amble, to a nearby house that had been imaginatively, and relatively tastefully, decorated for the season, complete with skiing Santa Claus. Before
the pudding (cheesecake, lemon slices and pear and apple crumble), I introduced
everyone to the fine old tradition of crackers. Astonishingly, none of the
assembled company had ever experienced the delight of paper hats, terrible
jokes and strange plastic trinkets. I’m not entirely sure they’ve been
converted to them, but ancient conundrums such as ‘Why did the tomato blush? Because he saw
the salad dressing’ did raise a few chuckles. Back home, sated on the sofa, I watched
The Queen’s Speech, thus ending a very memorable day.
Making an effort for the season!
Me with my wonderful hosts,
theatre critic Chad Jones and chef extraordinaire Todd Stein
Hitherto, Boxing Day has always been spent hunting, but this
year I had to be content with the alternative tradition – a Big Walk. On a
sparkling clear day, I climbed to the top of Twin Peaks, the highest point in
San Francisco, and gazed out at a view that encompassed the whole of the Bay, the
glittering towers of the Financial District, the spear of Market Street thrusting
towards the Ferry Building, the rich red of the Golden Gate Bridge and the blue
Pacific Ocean with the Farallon Islands, California’s Galapagos, on the horizon.
The Sutro Tower radio mast atop the Twin Peaks is frequently shrouded in fog,
but no wisp blurred the view that day, and I sat writing my diary and basking
in warm sunshine until the shadows grew long.
The Sutro Tower, free from even a hint of fog
A certain red-painted bridge from Twin Peaks
The day ended with a homely flavour – a full English
Christmas dinner with turkey, roast potatoes, Brussels sprouts, proper gravy
and all the trimming with friends of mine from the cathedral, one of whom, Lesley Hay, a
newly arrived canon, is British, and a superb cook. She had preached on Christmas Day itself, to a record congregation of 1,000 people. Back in England, she worked with Simon Hart at the Countryside Alliance, so you can imagine that we have plenty in common! Proper Christmas pudding
and brandy butter crowned a superb meal, and it was wonderful
to smell the unmistakeable aroma of basted turkey and chestnut stuffing. The
lights atop the Golden Gate Bridge, glimpsed from the windows, were a twinkling
reminder that I was in the glorious city of San Francisco, the setting for a
truly wonderful Christmas 2013.