New York Times just before the final Broadway show of Phantom of the Opera - and naturally, the "bereft" father dedicated it to his son.
Saying that he felt "wrong in my bones" to be discussing Broadway days after his son's death, he lamented: "Nothing's worse for a parent than the death of a child. "He began his essay with the words: "An apple a day, if well aimed, keeps the doctor away. "READ NOW: BBC's top presenters salaries unveiled as stars get redundancy lettersThe composer explained he'd been "speaking in P.
G. Wodehouse quotes" with his eldest son, as he attempted to distract him from the horrific situation at the hospice. "'Here's one for you,' said Nick, laughing.
He had surmised that, after bulletins from New York, his father, as Wodehouse might have put it, was less than gruntled," Andrew wrote. "Has anybody ever seen a dramatic critic in the daytime?
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