April 30, 2022

Tara Said So

 My friend Tara recommended I visit Kew Gardens, which I wasn’t consciously aware of (I mean, it shows up in Regency novels on occasion, so I vaguely knew it was a place - but not a NOW place, you know?), so I went. First I had decided to go to Oxford, since I haven’t been (and I was already aware of it as a place), but I woke up all nervy and angsty and did not get out of bed in time for the planned train to Ye Olde University Towne. (The trains run every half hour, but meh.) I was already having A Day, and I kind of just wanted to hole up and do nothing, but also the sun was shining and Sunday it’s supposed to rain and I really should do SOMETHING and Kew Gardens had a student ticket rate and FINE, I’ll GO.

I’m very glad I did.

It’s not as good as Longwood Gardens (someday I’ll come back!) and it probably wasn’t as good as it will be when more of the flowers are out, but it is green and sprawling and the weather was wonderful and boy howdy, did I WALK, and I will recommend that the students go on a weekend (cheaper train fare) when they need to get out of the city. Definite mood booster, and I should sleep well tonight! (Yeah, whatever, Ambien [generic version]. You’re only here because the doctor said so.)

Anyway, 18,000+ steps later:


Kew as in ‘cue’, but with a ‘K’.


There are some pilots out there ALSO enjoying the weather and having a great time.


If you can’t find pyramidal topiaries in a British garden, where can you?


This tree came from China and is a million years old (or a few hundred, give or take), and nobody knows why it started growing sideways like this. But they supported the roots with bricks and keep adding steel poles to hold up the branches, and it keeps right on flowering every year. There’s a lesson here, I’m guessing.


The Hive is an artistic representation of what it’s like to be in a beehive, as the park has this whole thing about bees and pollinators and all that good stuff. This hive hums and buzzes (there are speakers) and it has lights that respond to the vibrations of an actual hive somewhere on the grounds (not pictured). It was trippy, there is video.



This Monkey Puzzle tree looks like velvet from a distance, and feels like cactus IRL. DO NOT TRY TO CLIMB. (Just saying.)



Cupid in the Queen’s Garden behind Kew Palace, which is really just a big house King George III and Queen Charlotte liked to hang out in (at least until he was tortured, er, “treated” for his physical and mental illnesses there, NOT COOL) and it was still too small for the entire family of 15 children. Yeah, you read that right. They have the black horsehair chair Queen Charlotte died in, still draped with a ribbon so no one else will sit in it. Except you know someone HAS, right? Some idiot teenager with their first summer job got bored between tours and totally rebelled and moved the ribbon and sat down and freaked out and did not take a selfie because this was before cell phones. Possibly waaaaay before. Anyway.


The Brits really are surprisingly cool with the whole Hamilton thing.


I just thought this tree was neat.


THEY HAVE A BAMBOO FOREST. Y’all, if they can grow bamboo in the UK they can grow it anywhere - we REALLY need to be using bamboo (and hemp!) for all the things.


Snack break -  first in-country Crunchie bar! It was delicious.


Okay, but going on the treewalk meant going up all those stairs first. I hate stairs.



I talked myself into it. Other people were there, which made it less fun (including other tourists who couldn’t read the signs telling them to stay on the left - Americans!) and it will probably be amazing in 20 years when the elevator they are just now starting to build has been refurbished and all the trees have grown up further and it LEGIT feels like you’re in a massive tree house. It’s been a garden space for a solid 200+ years, what’s another 20? (Yes, the walkway is metal grating, and you can see through to the stuff below. No biggie.)



There’s a tower-style pagoda (because of course there is) and it has dragons (because of course it does). I did not even THINK about talking myself into trying to climb this one.


See? Dragons.


I call this picture “Work in Progress”. The statue/puppet/art piece should be pretty cool when it’s done, at least. (I’m guessing I’ll always be a dork. *shrugs*)


I made a beeline (heh) for the Waterlily House, and then left as quickly as possible. It was muggy in there. But real waterlilies!


There are ten animal statues representing 10 different support factions for Queen Victoria, and there are pretty fascinating. They include a unicorn for Scotland, England’s crowned lion, and even a ‘yale’, which is apparently a legit mythical creature (mythically legit?), for the family of Henry VII’s mother, Lady Margaret Beaufort. They’re lined up along the front of the Palm House, which I did not go into because I decided I didn’t want to be in a sub-tropical space or that close to that many people. (Sunny day in the UK? There were a LOT of people out strolling, picnicking, wrangling screaming children, etc. Good times.) Also, since I didn’t go into either of the massive greenhouses, I have an excuse to go back later. Win!

I got back after 5 hours out in the fresh air and sunshine, picked up groceries, and did nothing else. I was going to watch a movie and/or read for next week’s classes, but, nope. I’m blaming jet lag - which is going quite well, considering - and taking my pill (last one?), and going to sleep. Rain forecast for tomorrow - may sneak in another park (there’s a Japanese park nearish by that I didn’t know about) after church. And then Shakespeare and class prep. For sure.


































All of the Travel, None of the Glory

  All in all, it was a fairly undramatic travel day(s), which is just the way I like it. I hadn’t slept well the couple of days before leaving, and then didn’t sleep much at all on either flight, so it also ended up being a ‘dealing with bouts of woozy’ couple of days; but that’s why I planned to get in a few days early. Catching up via naps!


Dallas Fort Worth airport. I mean, if your airport doesn’t have a crazy-castle-thing, is it even real?


Dramatic lighting. Thanks, crazy castle thing!


View from the waiting area. (Nothing clever to say.)


I was just struck by how much the clouds looked like dirty cotton candy.


Made it to London, found the Heathrow Express. Did I mention my suitcase handle broke at the very top of the trip? Because it did. And it was a pain.


Did a pretty good job of matching the decor on the train.


Another pan chocolate, this one marginally better and totally British. Chillin’ (literally, it was cold) outside the Hyde Park Chapel on Exhibition Street. They had agreed to let me stash my luggage there until I could check in to my AirBnb. It was nice - I freshened up, stored all my stuff, and tried not to think about hiding in a classroom and sleeping on the floor. 


I walked the neighborhood (honestly, to keep awake) and found the three places the study abroad students in our group will be staying. Also found this random display of restored cars in one of the mews that included this Bentley.


Spent a minute in Hyde Park (the actual park) sitting on a bench near a group of schoolgirls practicing four-way cricket (I KNOW. For real.) and catching up on a few Marco Polos. Walked past the Albert Memorial, which is not dramatic or elaborate AT ALL.


Wanted to get out of the chilly-ish air and keep sitting (while hopefully not falling asleep), so I headed for the Victoria & Albert Museum because it is free and full of interesting things. Didn’t help - I kept trying to doze off standing up. Was surveyed by an employee on my experience, which I totally went along with even though I had nothing substantial to offer because talking to someone kept me awake and I still had an hour before I could head to my AirBnb. Will go back to the V&A, hopefully on the regular, and take things in a bite at a time.


Not a bad view to wake up to, eh? I held out as long as I could, meaning I fully planned to stay awake until 8-ish and then pop a (prescribed!) sleeping pill, but I made it to about 2:30. I met the Airbnb hosts, vaguely thought about showering or finding some food for later, washed my face, and lay down for a nap. Five hours later I got up, had a snack, puttered around a little, tried to read, (did not leave my room - it has an en-suite bathroom! Woo!), took my pill (to keep me asleep during jet lag turnover) and went back to bed.

It is currently 9AM - I decided to go to Oxford today, then decided that was too much work; I think I’ll go to Kew Gardens instead. If I can get myself up and showered and past wanting to take a nap, that is.

This is a weird mental place; I’d like to blame some of it on the jet lag, and I will, but I’m fighting between holing up and hermitting, and getting out to see and do. Thinking about the walking is exhausting (got my 12,000 steps and 5 miles yesterday!), but I know I need to get out and stop missing things. The battle is between “rest up” and “sleep when you’re dead”, and the winner has traditionally/overwhelmingly been “rest up/be lazy”, but I will drag myself out for breakfast. And if I keep on going from there I just might do something new AND take along some reading to prep for class. 

Gotta have goals, right?




Study Abroad (and At My Age, Too!)

 I’m off to London for six weeks - well, six plus-ish, since we’re counting the fact that I’m giving myself an extra five days to get over jet lag before the program starts. I’m weirdly nervous about this, and having the handle to my carry-on break as I was loading it on the security conveyor didn’t help. (Pro tip: TSA Precheck - or whatever equivalent we’re working with by the time anybody reads this - is 100% the way to go. 10/10. Highly recommend.)

It’s early, that whole thing about ‘get to the airport 3 hours before your international flight’ doesn’t actually apply when the first leg of your trip is a DOMESTIC flight, and it’s going to be a long day-and-a-half before I see a bed again. Let’s see how it goes!


*A pan chocolate to get me geared up for London. (They will be better in London.)
**My hair is currently purple, and I am defiantly holding on through the fade. Eyebrows are ON POINT.


***I’ll work on the photography on the trip.


February 21, 2017

Grown Up

It's probably time to stop reading high school-set YA novels when you find yourself nervous that the main couple won't work out their fake relationship before the end of the semester - and realizing the anxiety comes from the fact that she needs him in order to pass Calculus, and he needs her in order to pass English.

'Awww: Homecoming! Sweet. Kiss? Very nice. Now STUDY!'

#GetOffMyLawn

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December 03, 2016

Images

I've been recognizing lately that I have what I think is an unusual mental hang-up - rather than the mental state that believes a person is heavier than they are (leading/contributing to anorexia and such), I have the opposite. I seem to be of the firm (ha) impression that I am actually slimmer than I am. I look in the mirror, and, while not overjoyed, I feel like I look just fine. And then I see a picture of myself and am completely horrified. It's been happening with some regularity.

Just this past weekend I was at a family wedding, and a relative insisted on some 'headshots' of me. They posted them on social media yesterday. I had thought that I looked well - I had altered a dress so it fit better around my hips and belly, it was an excellent color/pattern that looked great with my eyes, and I had a cute new pair of shoes. Then I saw the pictures.

My sewing skills are distinctly lacking (and the hem definitely hit in the wrong place) - and in the pictures taken I looked tired, bloated, and - in one - thoroughly pregnant. In the mirror I can see my cheekbones. My face is round as an apple in the pictures. My hairstyle, which I generally like pretty well (aren't most of us constantly in some sort of 'growing out' phase?) did me no favors. The dress didn't match my eyes at all, if you can see them under the blobs of flesh, and everything is plump, puffy, dumpy, and, well - unappetizing. I've been telling people for years that I'm not very photogenic - and I've seen wonderful pictures of heavier individuals who are still very attractive and intriguing. Those pictures seemed to show clearly why no one is, or, in recent memory, has been, attracted to me - not only do I not look pretty, I don't even look interesting.

Cameras lie. Mirrors lie. Everything 2D 'lies' - it just can't show you what 3D eyes can. But pictures also remind us of what we did or didn't see, and since we spend increasingly more time online looking at 2D images on a screen, those images correspondingly increasingly come to represent, to present, the 'truth' of what we think we see. It's in some ways similar to the grasp of 'facts' that we are being told is the new reality: even if something is scientifically (factually) true, if enough people believe it isn't than it's not.

Isn't it better, though, for truth to come from the inside of something, from the knowing and being of something, rather than the deceptive appearance of something? I had a hard night, and a hard day, after seeing those pictures, and I have to remember that the truth of me is not found in the pictures of my face or body. I have to remember to keep finding myself interesting, even if no one else ever sees it. How could they, really? That's not what I look like.

So once again I'm planning an exercise program, and cleaning out my kitchen to stock with healthier foods. I've got to say, though - a third of a carton of Ben & Jerry's cleared my headache this morning, even as I was throwing away junk food.

And the up side to all of it - I will never have Trump or any of his supporters ever try to grab or hit on me, which is actually a huge comfort. Silver lining!

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November 09, 2016

November 9, 2016

Today at work I wrote a 'thank you' letter on the theme of 'peace on earth'.


It was incredibly difficult.


Painful, even.








2016 is the worst.


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September 04, 2016

Actor's Nightmare Vanquished (Mostly)

At some time or other, nearly everyone has a dream that they are thrust completely unprepared into an extremely uncomfortable situation. Maybe you showed up naked to school. Maybe you got to a meeting at work to give a presentation, and suddenly you worked for a totally unrelated company. Maybe you went to church and were handed a manual and told to teach the adult class with no preparation. (Okay, that one happens in real life more often than you think – it’s not such a big deal when it’s the kids, though.) If you participate in theater, you arrive backstage to find that you are going on immediately in a role that you have not rehearsed, and probably never seen the script. This is so common in the Arts field that it has a name: the Actor’s Nightmare. For all that a stage manager is technically supposed to be able to fill in for any role at the drop of a hat, this really doesn’t actually happen. (When it does, it’s part of a meta-theatrical play; see Noises Off.)

The closest thing to a real-life Actor’s Nightmare happened to me yesterday – and I survived.

(Dramatic, much?)

* * * * *

A few months ago I decided that I needed to get out of the house, needed to participate in theater again, needed to try to get back onstage, even. I auditioned for a Shakespeare festival put on by a local children’s theater; I had attended one of their Shakes festival plays in a previous year, but that was all I knew about it. The plays were to be Henry V and Taming of the Shrew; I knew Kate was a long-shot, depending on how old the casting went, and with almost no female roles in Henry I figured The Chorus was the only possibility. I couldn’t decide which way to go, so I memorized a monologue for each part.

At the audition I ran into a friend of mine, a girl I knew from a different theater who, coincidentally, also has short red hair. We were the only two in the audition group, and she had performed at that children’s theater before and was familiar with the directors and producers. She was asked to go first, and it was lucky she did – she auditioned with the Chorus monologue I had prepared! I followed up with Kate the Shrew, and I felt like we’d both done quite well. Turns out she was cast as the Chorus/Narrator in Henry V, while I landed the part of the Widow in Taming. (You’re not familiar with the part? No big deal – she has no name, just ‘the Widow’, and only shows up with six-ish lines in the last scene to fill a structural conceit. Nifty.)

The rehearsal process was… interesting: our director was a 70-year-old grandmother who just wanted Shrew to be ‘funny. For the kids.’ She had no concept that the content might be in any way problematic for a modern audience, and when I suggested a way to ‘flip the script’ so that things veered toward ‘girl power’ and away from ‘domestic abuse’ she looked at me blankly and then said she didn’t want to add any ‘layers’ to the play. (Because heaven forbid we should do anything to make sure the parents that brought their children to the theater ALSO enjoyed the experience and didn’t have to answer any awkward questions about content later.) The director did add a couple of walk-on bits for my character in the first act, and had me singing opera (badly, my contribution) in the second so that it wasn’t such a surprise when she showed up in the last scene. I would have found that a creative, fun approach, except that the director was also trying to re-create a production of Shrew that she had done who knows how many years ago. (That generally doesn’t work, FYI.)

Anyway, I learned my song and learned my lines and because my character was rather obnoxious and chasing after a younger man in order to re-marry I decided she had a nasally laugh and spoke with a Jersey accent. The director didn’t get around to blocking the final scene until a couple of weeks before we opened (and with every-other-day rehearsals that didn’t leave much time for run-throughs) so she didn’t hear my delivery until after I’d been working on it for weeks. She hated it, and wanted me to go British instead. Oy. Oh, and she also cast her 25-yr-old grandson in the part of the guy I was chasing; he was in another show and missed the first half of rehearsals, and decided on sight that he didn’t like me. At all. (He had also played that part in his grandmother’s previous production of Shrew, so he was able to pick up his lines and re-instate his character very quickly, which was nice for him.) He did everything in his power to avoid speaking to me, argued with me if I did make a suggestion, and has not once, to date, used my name. Good times.

We finally got to the opening show – I was also participating in the morning show for the Festival (the potential subject of another, shorter though perhaps even more rant-y, post) and we’d had to come even earlier to get another tech run in before opening that show. Then the girls were in the dressing room, hair and make-up-ing and trying to make costumes work, and the director came in for a pep talk. She hugged me and gushed at me and told me I was the ‘Most Improved’. Quite frankly, I was a little offended (I’m still trying to let go of that, actually. That’s on me). Two masters degrees, 10 years coaching competition Shakespeare teams, no character direction from her until two weeks before we opened, and I was ‘most improved’ with my two-bit part and a scene partner who preferred that I not exist. Lovely.

Honestly, all of this has nothing to do with my ‘Actor’s Nightmare’ experience. I just wanted to get it all down so I’d remember how not to treat fellow actors, how to behave as a director, and how to think about the audience.

In the meantime, Brooke (red-headed friend) had been rehearsing with the Henry V cast. With rehearsals on alternating nights I didn’t see people from that cast if they weren’t also in Shrew. Brooke was heading up the Costume Repair booth at the upcoming Comic Con in Salt Lake, and I signed up to volunteer for a few shifts since it sounded fun. (Yep. NERDY.) We had initially talked about Brooke understudying for me for the one performance where I had a conflict (one of the other gals ended up doing it – Jana’s not as big as me by any stretch, but she is bigger than Brooke and so could fit in my costume and can sing). Brooke realized that it would be very difficult for her to handle her Saturday shows and her Comic Con responsibilities, so she asked me to cover for her for one performance of Henry.

I attended a rehearsal during tech week and the opening performance, taking entrance/exit notes and writing down any changes. I copied out the lines at least twice, as I’d read that hand-writing notes helps you remember things better. (I think it did help.) I even bought a prop old-school looking blank book to carry, so I’d have my lines and movement notes with me all the time to glance at between narrations. What I didn’t have was a costume or any kind of rehearsal time.

We had two weeks between opening the Festival and me performing in Henry V – with no more tech/dress rehearsals, I had nights free to work on lines and figure out what to wear. There was so much to stress about: older means ‘it’s harder to memorize’, I couldn’t fit into Brooke’s costume and didn’t have time or the contacts (or inclination, honestly) to find something similar in my size, and in looking for a different take on costume (plus book!) found a different take on the presentation. It was fascinating, and CRAZY. I went with all-black, with boots and a leather skirt to relate back to the guys’ costumes and leather pieces. The text lent itself to using the book really well. Brooke and I had talked through (almost) everything, and since the narrator never interacted with any of the characters from the play it looked like all was as well as it was going to be.

Holy cow, it was nerve-wracking. I performed the morning show, then performed in Shrew, and in between I was writing out lines and practicing the Shakespeare monologues. Then before Henry I tried to get onstage to walk through entrances and exits; I had about 8 minutes before I was kicked off for fight call. And then – GO; the first third of the first act I spent onstage, trying to be sneaky about checking my book for cues while making it look like I was following the action as if in a storybook, or something. Offstage, finally – breathe, and get ready to help somebody with an unrehearsed costume change. The big monologues were in the second act. For one scene I was a couple of seconds late getting on because I was checking to make sure I knew where I was entering from; and during another monologue I kept expecting things to happen while I was talking and nothing did. Turned out my final line was the action cue, and I didn’t know I just needed to push through. Ah, well. The last big monologue was the roughest; I had to switch out a couple of words I couldn’t quite remember, but I stayed on topic and carried on (which is HARD with Shakespeare!). The epilogue was a nice strong finish.

Some things: I had been so nervous about the Henry director not approving of my costume and/or my approach to the character because it wasn’t what they’d rehearsed – and for the first time, he didn’t attend the show. (Which is fine, directors shouldn’t feel like they have to attend every show once it’s open – I was just so nervous and then it all worked out so well and he wasn’t there!) The Shrew director is also the Artistic Director for the theater; she had been there for Shrew (and came in to the dressing room to annoy me afterwards – I feel bad about that too, but I was so nervous! And hungry!) and also for the first time didn’t stay for Henry V. I finally had a performance, an un-rehearsed performance no less, that I was really proud of, and she didn’t see it! SUCH a weird emotional roller coaster day.

Note: I happen to be a really good cold reader. Give me a scene or block of text, and I will immediately make a strong choice, incorporate movement and interactions with other characters, and just go for the delivery. I think that’s a big part of why this worked – it was very much like an extended, metally-prepped, cold read... that was at least mostly memorized.

The fallout was that while it had been intensely nerve-wracking, it ended up being quite satisfying. The Henry cast was quite impressed (or, at least, very supportive and complimentary – it was relatively rare to have other actors on stage when I was narrating, so unless they were listening for cue lines backstage there wasn’t much of my performance for them to experience. Still, they were lovely). Remember my scene partner from Shrew? The 25 yr-old who thinks he’s all that and a bag of chips? (A reference he is far too young to get.) He is in Henry and served as the fight choreographer. Did a great job with the fights, truly, and is definitely not as good an actor as he thinks he is. Somewhere near the middle of the second act he walked past me backstage and said, ‘Good work, girlie.’ Yes. GIRLIE. Still no name. It was a good thing he was moving and that we were still doing a show or he might have gotten slapped. After the show ended he followed that up with, ‘Really good work. Y’know, except for Harfleur – by the time you got to the ‘gunner’ line we were all rooting for you!’ (That had been the scene where I was expecting battle-prep to be happening under my lines, and I was a little choppy because I was trying to give them time to get onstage. Unnecessarily, as it turned out.) So maybe it’s genetic in his family to say something intended to be complimentary that ends up being condescending?

Note to self: never follow up a compliment by pointing out the one thing you think they did wrong.
My parents came to see the show, and they were amazed. They hadn’t realized I’d be narrating the whole thing, and they really liked my performance. (And I’m not even qualifying that with ‘…because they’re my parents’.) As I left the theater (still in costume, because – why not?) I walked past one of the actors and his family, and they stopped me to give me kudos too. They were very nice, seemed really impressed. I looked at the actor (Cole, I think his name is) and laughed, ‘Should we tell them?’ and he replied, ‘Nah. Just savor it.’ Smart kid. Good actor, too.

* * * * *

So, there it was. I worked through a show with energy and, apparently, charm – had no catastrophes even though I was expecting at any point to forget lines since there was no muscle memory for them, and even found a look that worked with my character choices. And none of the artistic staff saw any of it. (One of the ushers, a super-nice long-haired boy, told me my outfit was 'adorable'.) Ah, well. I’ve been walking around for the last 24 hours randomly realizing ‘I really can do hard things’ and recognizing that that experience was more of a performance rush than anything I’ve done in Shrew or the morning Shakespeare show. I don’t want things to be that stressful – when learning a part, especially at short notice, always start with the hard monologues FIRST! – but I would love to someday play the Chorus in Henry V for a whole run.

That was the closest I’ll (hopefully) ever come to a real-life Actor’s Nightmare, and we all made it through with the performance intact.

And now I wish there were video, or at least pictures, just to prove to myself that it really happened.

* * * * *


I did trip and fall during Shrew, gauging my kneecap and shin, so maybe I’ll just take a picture of my purpling leg to prove I was truly there. Nothing like bruises to demonstrate you’re living the actor’s life… or so I’m told!

Talk about your falling turtles... Watch out!

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