The light I
turned to was artificial.
There were drums
and you called
me the devil but that’s OK
because for
just a second, I didn’t have to be me anymore.
I got to be
someone else with other problems
that I didn’t have to deal with.
I got to be
free.
I was allowed
to get drunk on my words
without fear for who was watching.
I didn’t have
to think about disappointing you
because
onstage, you don’t exist.
There’s a
whole other world that you don’t know about
and I call it Rehearsal.
Everyday from
three to five, I get murdered then come back as a ghost,
I murder kids, I get betrayed,
I watch a
bloody play unfold every day and I would’ve been corrupted,
but I stopped confusing one story
for all stories.
Out here the
only black and white belongs in the script:
no hero, no villain, just words and
acting.
Onstage, success
means to fail better.
So, if you
can't handle the drama,
get off the stage;
Leave it to
the people who know
that Commedia del Arte means Professional Actors,
not Comedy of the Arts.
Leave it to
the people who can list off Greek gods and Shakespeare plays;
Leave it to
the people who have heard the Origins of Western Drama
more times than a kid has heard a
bedtime story-
Leave it to
the people who are brave enough to rip out their hearts
and hold it out for you to beat with
a stick
because onstage, we are
trying to find something beautiful.
So, the next
time you see me onstage,
look really close,
because this
is what I look like without all the walls and barriers:
This is
who I am.
Look past the
characters and the plot,
look past the
fact that Tyrell kills two innocent children
and just watch the way she walks.
Look at how
she holds herself:
how she leans back,
how when she smiles
the tip of her tongue
taps her top teeth.
Watch the way
she bows before King Richard:
she loves to be big and grandiose.
She speaks
slowly,
savoring
the words because she loves the way they sound.
This character,
Tyrell can be cut seamlessly from the play.
You can turn out the lights on the
two scenes she has,
but between her
lines, backstage between scenes, and during intermission when I was still
changing costumes,
I wrote her a backstory.
The lights always
come up on character who was somebody’s daughter.
The ability to
cry onstage isn’t the mark of a good actress;
It doesn’t mean we’ve been possessed
by the devil.
We just found
ourselves in the character
and we cry because, in context, we
are sad.
Acting is not a
career,
it is not art or a message.
We are not humans
telling humans how to be human.
We just want to tell you a story.
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I really like where this is headed, but I feel like it needs refinement. I'm just not sure where... I feel like cutting from: "So the next time you see me onstage" all the way to "Savoring the words because she loves the way they sound".
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I really like where this is headed, but I feel like it needs refinement. I'm just not sure where... I feel like cutting from: "So the next time you see me onstage" all the way to "Savoring the words because she loves the way they sound".
That's okay. I wanted to cry today
ReplyDeleteThis is gorgeous. I love everything about it.
I like a lot of this, but I also think that a lot of this is too literal without being specific enough. The second and third stanzas (and a bit the second to last and even a tiny bit the last one, too) are, to overstate for dramatic effect, almost pontificating, it feels. It's like you're telling the reader "look at how much I know" instead of "look at how much I feel." Then in that stanza you're thinking about cutting (don't you dare!) you get lost in the details of what goes on - the little things - and it becomes so much less about telling us things and that makes it beautiful.
ReplyDeleteAlso I think okay>OK, visually.