Sunday, November 28, 2010
Observations
Friday, November 26, 2010
Movember
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Santa's Little Helpers
Monday, November 22, 2010
Grand Opening
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Being Bad is Good
Ok, so I must admit. I thoroughly enjoyed being booed. In fact, I'll have to rank Queen Evilynn as my second favorite role behind Rizzo from Grease. I felt a little pang of guilt when I made several small children scream in fear, but that feeling dissipated quickly enough.
The show was a success and everyone did a super job. Katie played her bit as a sausage with as much veracity as she does with everything. Every performance had their own small hiccups, like opening night. Muddles, the silly son (played by a woman) of Queen Evilynn's cook, Clarissa (played by a man), enters the stage on a child's scooter. She is supposed to ride around stage then pretend to crash backstage. She slipped off the scooter and really crashed into the curtain. The audience wasn't sure if it was part of the play. I was standing backstage and saw the entire accident. When she stood up, I knew she was hurt. She held her jaw for a few seconds, shook the stars from her vision and proceeded with the scene. The show must go on. Thankfully, the enormous bruise on her chin, which swelled up right away, wasn't visible to the audience.
Of course, a show of this type has a pie-in-the-face routine. Muddles is on the receiving end, but had been plotting to even the score with Clarissa. Saturday night's show, we all knew it was coming, even Clarissa. The timing had to be perfect or Clarissa could dodge it. The timing was perfect and Muddles nailed Clarissa. Again, the audience wasn't sure if that was part of the script or not. I dodged a misshap of my own making. During my song, I jump onto a couch and sing a verse. It started out as a 'Tom Cruise jumping on Oprah's couch' kind of jump. However, when I put on the dress and heels during the final dress rehearsal then attempted the jump I just about went bass-ackwards over the back of the couch. I opted for a safer mount.
We had a cast party at a local restaurant, Blue Marlin, which is frequented by most expats. I'd never seen it so crowded. Everyone from the show was still in their stage makeup and costumes. I'd been warned I would have to sing again. Sure enough, I hear the opening chords of my song and my name being shouted. For those few moments, I felt like Lady Gaga. The place was crazy loud with cheers and my ego was seriously inflated. But, Larry smiling at me was what I'd been waiting see and I saw it.
The costumes have now been packed away and my girls are glad to have "mommy" back. Even after a sixteen year hiatus from it, though, I do love the stage. Back to reality...
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
"On With the Show, This is It!"
Having children afforded me the opportunity to perform daily for them. I'd become a different character, complete with accent, every day driving them to school. We'd sing silly songs throughout the house. They now are quite adept at the "In what other movies has that actor played?" I have no one to blame but myself for their dramatic ways, and verve for center stage.
When I learned about the Suzhou Amateur Dramatics Society and their annual show, I thought, "What the heck? It might be fun to don the theatrical hat again". This year's production was 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarves'...Panto-style. What is Panto? A question I asked myself. Slapstick comedy, audience participation, men playing women and women playing men, all spun together with British humour was what I deduced. A genre I was not familiar with AT ALL. Oh, well, I auditioned anyways and was cast as Queen Evilynn, Snow White's stepmother (major liberties are taken with the story line, but the basic premise is the same). I am the villian. The villian! The one the audience boos and hisses at whenever on stage. Wait! I wanted the applause not the jeers...what had I gotten myself into?
For the past two months, we have rehearsed once a week for a couple of hours. Somehow, we managed to turn chaos into comedy...or at least I hope we have. I don't have any pictures yet. Tonight, the show opens. All three performances are sold out or close to it. Butterflies are in full force in my stomach. Larry has never seen me perform on stage. The only times he's heard me sing is kareoke and in church. This will also be the first performance my parents have missed. So, I'm dedicating my return to the stage to all them as I hope to make them proud...and not completely mortified.