Mystery Pub: Stanley Tucci to play Greg Chappell in upcoming biopic

 


The Britannia at Norwood

 

The Britannia pub is by Adelaide’s most infamous roundabout. It was so unspeakably horrendous that its mere mention caused folks to shudder and shake. The final solution was, bizarrely, to build a second roundabout. This reminds me of the surgeon who says to a patient, ‘I’m sorry but the operation only has a fifty percent success rate.’

The patient replies, ‘Well just do it twice then.’

Twice a day for nearly eight years I drove through the Britannia roundabout.

In those 3,000 journeys I only saw one accident which is odd given back then it averaged a prang per day. There were plenty of near misses and times when motorists in front of me were paralysed by the challenge and didn’t enter the roundabout for what appeared as eternities. That one car headbutted a veranda post of the Britannia. The pub survived but I’m unsure about the vehicle.

When my ridiculous Nissan Exa was stricken with gearbox issues, I rode my bike through the roundabout during peak hour on the way to and from Marryatville High. For nearly a week. It was a decent haul from Glenelg. The roundabout was exhilarating if fraught.

Friday nights in a pub should be fizzing with energy and promise and with the extra frisson of Mystery Pub they mostly are. But 5pm on Saturdays can be a lethargic, twilight zone. They’ve saluted in the last at Flemington so the sports bars are barren and it’s too early for dinner and the kids won’t hit the town for hours.

The Britannia is mostly empty on Saturday for our Mystery Pub visit. Inside is stark and functional like a suburban café rather than seductive and intriguing and bursting with secret stories.

We claim a table with a Coopers Pale Ale (me) and a Padthaway white (Claire). I spy a brochure for the Repertory Theatre Company featuring the brilliant farce Noises Off. Unfortunately, the performance dates and ours don’t align. Claire says, ‘Poo.’

Otherwise, it’s been a rewarding week as I saw Wes Anderson’s Asteroid City, which in its metatextuality includes a documentary about a play within the nested narrative of the film. The sense of mise-en-scène is tremendous. Claire and I enjoyed an episode of Julia Zemiro’s Great Australian Walks and I continue to read Room with a View (upwards of a page a night before sleep) which is partly set in Florence.

Friday night we dined with dear, old Kapunda types (thanks for the soup, Trish and nice to see you Trev and Eleni). We discussed Stanley Tucci and his excellent series, Searching for Italy. Not only does our lovely friend Stephen look like him but their families are from neighbouring Italian villages. As a host Stanley is witty, curious and grateful (so is Stephen).

We also speak of the episode set in Sicily and Palermo. What utter privilege to know Italy and compare travelling tales. As always, Stephen and I chat about the Beach Boys and tonight dissect their wonderful, haunted song, ‘Heroes and Villains.’ I reckon Stanley might also be a fan.

He’s also in the great film Margin Call which explores the origins of the Global Financial Crisis. In it he plays a quantitative analyst who formerly worked as an engineer. Clearly bitter about Wall Street he delivers a monologue about the real, human benefits of a bridge he once built.

It went from Dilles Bottom, Ohio to Moundsville, West Virginia. It spanned nine hundred and twelve feet above the Ohio River. Twelve thousand people used this thing a day. And it cut out thirty-five miles of driving each way between Wheeling and New Martinsville. That’s a combined 847,000 miles of driving a day. Or 25,410,000 miles a month. And 304,920,000 miles a year. Saved. Now I completed that project in 1986, that’s twenty-two years ago. So, over the life of that one bridge, that’s 6,708,240,000 miles that haven’t had to be driven. At, what, let’s say fifty miles an hour. So that’s, what, 134,165,800 hours, or 559,020 days. So that one little bridge has saved the people of those communities a combined 1,531 years of their lives not wasted in a car. One thousand five hundred and thirty-one years.

As you can see, the gubmint should’ve phoned Stanley to fix the roundabout. After less than an hour Claire and I leave the Britannia. It’s quiet on the roads.

 

 

To read moire from Mickey click here.

 

To return to our Footy Almanac home page click HERE.

 

Our writers are independent contributors. The opinions expressed in their articles are their own. They are not the views, nor do they reflect the views, of Malarkey Publications.

 

Do you enjoy the Almanac concept?

And want to ensure it continues in its current form, and better? To help things keep ticking over please consider making your own contribution.

 

Become an Almanac (annual) member – CLICK HERE.

 

 

About Mickey Randall

Now whip it into shape/ Shape it up, get straight/ Go forward, move ahead/ Try to detect it, it's not too late/ To whip it, whip it good

Comments

  1. Daryl Schramm says

    Never had a problem with the first roundabout (first for me) back in the 70s. It was buggered up somewhat before the current two roundabout solution. Used to live on Kensington Road but the Britannia, for no particular reason, was one of my less frequented establishments.

  2. Thanks for that Daryl. I always found the roundabout a good solution as even around 8am I’d get through the intersection in a few minutes and used to wonder how many light changes it would’ve taken if that’d been the methodology.

    I didn’t see it but maybe someone has a story about the Magic Roundabout in the UK, near Swindon which is five mini-roundabouts in a circle. All I met over there had high praise for it. Traffic fetishism. It’s more fun than you think.

    Norwood is blessed with some great pubs and my favourite is the Colonist with runners-up ribbons to the Bath, Robin Hood and the Norwood, but, like you, reckon the Britannia needs a rethink.

  3. We live adjacent to Marryatville High so use the roundabout on a daily basis.
    The two roundabouts work okay from most approaches but coming from Kensington Rd on a morning can still be a bit ‘hairy’. When the opening comes you’ve got to be ready to floor it and take the gap. Regulars know the drill.
    Our nearest miss was actually on a quiet Saturday afternoon when leaving the city and some ‘tourist’ heading down Fullarton Rd didn’t give way. The lads drinking on the footpath tables got a kick out of it!

  4. Greg A – I recall watching the traffic merge and weave in Paris at The Arc de Triomphe which is surely the world’s most attractive roundabout. It was mesmerising and I reckon you could nurse a pint outside the Brittania and be similarly entertained. That’s a pub where there’s better entertainment outside than in!

  5. “Where is the guy from Wheelin’ West Virginia
    Why did he have to roam
    So far away from Wheelin’ West Virginia,
    Thousands of miles from home”
    Thanks to Stanley’s character the song doesn’t have to be “965 miles from Wheelin’ West Virginia”. Not sure how a guy from Brooklyn like Neil Sedaka came up with that lyric. Did the Brill Building have a guidebook to melodious US place names?
    Much to ponder.

  6. PB- apparently he wrote it when living in Australia during his ‘lean’ years. The country roads had taken him even further from West Virginia (or Brooklyn).

  7. Admit personally prefer the two roundabouts solution – likewise have never frequented – The Brittania much either

  8. Agreed RB. Traffic lights would be a disaster. Can’t be many spots in Adelaide where five busy roads intersect. I recall being in that part of town in the early days of google maps and the female robot having some difficulty pronouncing Dequetteville Terrace. She strayed into Kath and Kim territory but is better now!

Leave a Comment

*