“The salt, if you please.” Yevgeny asked this of Dmitri Petrov without so much as an upward glance from the gruel upon his tray, his face swollen with forlorn disappointment. Dmitri glared across the table towards him. Sharing a bunk with Yevgeny was eating away at his soul.
A fine thinker, Dmitri Petrov hailed from a family of locally popular folk musicians based deep within the tenements of St. Petersburg. His parents a staple in the local bars and music venues so prevalent in their part of the city.
He had been deported to Nerchinsk for his questionable editorial leadership the University newspaper—the last few articles published before his incarceration had decidedly anti-Imperialist sentiments and one article even went so far as to lay out social and economic alternatives for Russia. He was promptly expelled, interrogated, and upon his interview with the authorities, sentenced to eighteen months of disciplinary servitude.
Dmitri Petrov was what many who knew him would describe as a premature curmudgeon. In the time the men had known him, none had ever seen him laugh. Life was serious business for Dmitri Petrov, and being convicted for treachery was no laughing matter. A shy and overly serious man of extraordinary height, he was clearly descended from the prevailing Scandinavian people in the northern part of the country; and it was precisely this shyness, seriousness and towering physical measurement that made him, above all other qualities and skills, a truly exceptional cellist. He held a different reverence for music than did his parents, preferring a musical quality of the classical variety perhaps too refined for the folk-based roots he grew up absorbing from his family.
The instrument had made the journey with him, and, though worn and very nearly useless, he continued to nimbly extend his fingers to the ragged hourglass at every spare opportunity, far preferring to retreat into the instrument’s company rather than engage with his fellow men. Education, politics, family and Russia herself be damned; the cello was his first, his only, love.
"There you are old man!" Dmitri tossed the salt across the table in a haphazard and aggressive fashion.
“Goodness Mitya!” chimed the aging Yevgeny, mouth full of an indeterminate and overcooked root vegetable (all the better in their mushiness for the old man’s failing teeth), “Do ease up!”
Here was the voice of petty thief Yevgeny Ashenko, the elderly bunk-mate of Dmitri Petrov condemned by Nicholas to penal servitude in Siberia after a series of ineffectual disciplinary wrist slaps (he was not, as it turned out, a very good thief).
An aging prisoner, messy, forgetful, Yevgeny was what one could only describe as dear. The men loved to laugh with him for he was constantly full of good humor, and caused them all even more delight for he was most likely the root of Dmitri Petrov’s consistent ill temper which the men also found most amusing.
However, for Dmitri Petrov himself, who bore the brunt of Yevgeny’s ‘bright ideas,’ nifty schemes and endless idiotic enthusiasms, Yevgeny, though ‘dear,’ was, in Dmitri’s estimation, nothing more than a frustrating and completely useless imbecile. Yevgeny’s popularity flummoxed him, and only irked him further.
Dmitri played Bach suites. He had been the editor of the University newspaper. Yevgeny had the intellect of a cornhusk. While Dmitri was reading smuggled political pamphlets, the letters of Engels and the poems of Pushkin, Yevgeny was watching snow melt in his hands. And while Dmitri pondered social reform and existential meaning Yevgeny pondered absolutely nothing.
During the days Yevgeny would accompany Dmitri everywhere, constantly sharing fleeting thoughts with him about just about anything. Every once in a while he would look like he was about to say something terribly important and smart and Dmitri would get very hopeful; merely to then impart things like “kasha is preferable to potato because it is chewy rather than mushy!”
It was pathetic.
At night, Dmitri would stare at the ceiling and dream of ways to escape the company of his bunk mate, and while he slept he dreamed of cafes, study halls, chamber music and scores of people to talk to; only to wake to a snoring Yevgeny, mouth agape, face pressed to his pillow with abandon, his fetid breath wafting right up into Dmitri's nostrils.
And Yevgeny was constantly trying to impress him. That morning Yevgeny had come right up to Dmitri before breakfast with a child-like glee slapped across his face, hands hidden playfully behind his back. He shook with excitement, eyebrows up, grinning ear to ear.
“Close your eyes.”
“No.”
“Close them, please! I have made you a gift. It is a surprise.”
“Yevgeny, I haven’t the time for this.”
“Come along Dmitri Petrov, please… for an old man…”
Dmitri could feel a migraine beginning. He wrinkled his nose. He groaned. He capitulated. “Fine,” he agreed, “but make it quick old man, it is nearly meal time, and more importantly people may see!”
Yevgeny opened his hands wide, “Open!” he cried.
Dmitri yelped. Yevgeny’s hands were filled with compost. “Do you like it?” he inquired proudly, “It is a little cello! I have fashioned it for you!”
“But it is made of compost, Yevgeny,” disgust was visible behind his thick spectacles.
“Yes! And it is a cello…” he paused, face aglow, “...for you!”
Dmitri, revolted by both the figurine and its creator, took it up all the same and placed it in his pocket if only to make the man go away.
Dmitri would complain to Anatoly; “Yevgeny is a numbskull,” he would say. But Anatoly would remain silent. He was of no use. Nor was anyone. They all loved Yevgeny. He was sincerity and positivity and light. Dmitri was a curmudgeon. They playfully scoffed him. “Oh how you two amuse me!” Grigory would say, laughing,” the way you carry on! One would never think you were the boy and he the old man! So very often am I delighted by his humor and your hatred of it!”
Dmitri couldn’t understand their devotion: Yevgeny was clearly assigned to his bunk to destroy him; he could see it in his idiot eyes! And the very fact that Yevgeny was the favorite with both his friends and with the guards was enough to give Dmitri a headache.
Before Yevgeny came along Dmitri may have been lonely. But at least things were quiet. No one ever bothered a curmudgeon for too long. After he came, Dmitri was still lonely. Only now his nerves were also frayed.
“How can you eat it?” Dmitri rebuked adjusting his glasses scathingly so as to emphasize the full power of his reproach. “It is seeped into our pores, it flakes from our scalps, we discover it in the pockets of our coats, the crevices of our very selves, it sloughs off into our beds!” and he shook his cap over Yevgeny’s food.
“Bah! Look here Dmitri! Mind your business! And here when I gave you my extra half a slice!”
“You are a halfwit,” Dmitri dismissed. He was in another ornery temper. One would think that after all the time they spent together Dmitri would come to like Yevgeny, but instead, he only came to hate him more.
“Come, Dmitri, leave the man and his tasteless food alone!” Mikhail entreated the men, trying to intervene and eat in peace.
The men shifted, exchanging looks, chewing through their amusement. For a moment all they could hear was the clanging of the spoons against the tin trays.
“The food tastes of nothing!” implored Yevgeny, unable to let it alone.
“Better of nothing than of salt, surely?” berated Dmitri once again, his voice raising.
Yevgeny had no response.
“You are a bore.”
“You are.”
“You!”
The two returned with renewed zeal to their respective tin trays, leaving the rest of them bemused and silent once again.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Master Class Announcement
Though this is not entirely new news, the official Playbill and Broadwayworld announcements were made today about the upcoming production of Terrence McNally's Tony Award winning play Master Class starring Tyne Daly as Maria Callas at The Kennedy Centre.
The production is part of Terrence McNally's Nights at the Opera, a five-week event featuring three of McNally's plays (The Lisbon Traviata featuring Malcom Gets and John Glover, and the premiere of a new world entitled Golden Age with Marc Kudisch and rebecca Brooksher) performed concurrently on three Kennedy Center stages.
Master Class will run March 25 - April 18, 2010 in the Kennedy Center Eisenhower Theater and will be directed by the incredible Stephen Wadsworth.
I begin rehearsals on 2 March in my nation's capital and literally, I am so excited I can hardly breathe. But I will breathe... from my diaphragm....
Labels:
Acting,
DC,
Kennedy Centre,
Master Class,
Opera,
Terrence McNally,
Theatre,
Tyne Daly
Friday, January 29, 2010
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
The LA Times
Enjoy this little feature on Carousel 2.0 and myself in
The LA Times.
It has been a total joy returning to my birthplace.
More on the entire experience to follow (after our opening tonight!)
What a surprise and what a homecoming.
The LA Times.
It has been a total joy returning to my birthplace.
More on the entire experience to follow (after our opening tonight!)
What a surprise and what a homecoming.
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Monday, January 11, 2010
Law & Order
I am the self-proclaimed doyenne of a few things. (I will now, with excessive pleasure, list these things in numerical points... as I am want-to-and-ever-so-fond-of, doing.)
1. Lists
2. Raspberry Jam
3. Peanut butter
4. The Piccadilly Line (though, technically, my friend and Dickens-of-a-accordion/concertina/piano-player-who-is-incidentally-in-the-film-NINE, Mark Bousie named me 'Doyenne of The Piccadilly Line'...much to my delight...)
and, I think we could safely say, that though I may not be the greatest living expert on, though someone may attempt to challenge my semantics, I DARE YOU to challenge my enthusiasm, my discerning pallet, my penchant for
5. CRIME DRAMA.
[*CHUNK CHUNK*]
And so, dear readers, it is with extraordinary glee that I announce to you my first-bitingly-exciting appearance on the crime drama to end all crime dramas. The ultimate, the epic, the one-and-only
LAW & ORDER.
Yes. I get interviewed by Anderson and Sisto. Yes. I am slightly nefarious and suspicious. But i couldn't possibly tell you anymore than that... I can only encourage you to tune in on Friday, January 15, 2010 at 8/7 Central on NBC to watch the episode entitled "Blackmail" and watch me and half of New York's Theatreland take to the screen and COMMIT SOME CRIME PEOPLE!!
We filmed on 15th street between 7th and 8th, near to Union Square. My call was at 8am to report to my "honey wagon," check in with the Second assistant, then report to hair and makeup.
I got some coffee from the breakfast wagon and settled into the trailer before reporting to Lisa and Leslie -- the hair and makeup ladies extraordinaire.
We chatted, (both were huge musical theatre buffs so there was a lot to talk about). Leslie went about curling the giant hair (of which I expressed mild...how should I put this...? --crestfallenness at the idea of a center parting-- but Leslie replied that it "had been specially requested"). I paused. I made a face that expressed something like this: "?!!" --I couldn't imagine anyone giving so much care to a minor character's hair parting, but there you go.
Lisa made me flawless and added a little cheek definition because I was concerned my face would look like a balloon on screen... especially with a center parting... she chuckled and said "absolutely, here you go darling," before making me promise to keep a watch on her love of "too much lip gloss" She paused and then looked very serious "...It's a problem..." she admitted, deadpan.
The "L-team" were totally gorgeous.
Half of The L teams asks me if I had cut my own hair.
I stared at them with a child-like look of guilt on my face.
"No..." I lied.
"Have you dyed your own hair too...?" she asked.
"....No...." I lied again.
"Don't do that. I mean the home dying thing. Fine. Don't tell me about it but fine. The home cutting thing? Never. Never ever. Don't do it again. Promise."
"...I promise."
Then "I'm Every Woman" came onto the iPod and we all danced and sang...
...Into the hairbrushes...
...At the top of our lungs....
Over and out.
* * *
Then of course you get shuffled over to "set." Not "the set."
No: to "set," reminding me poignantly of one of my favo(u)rite British-ism peculiarities: HOSPITAL. What is going on there citizens of the United Kingdom? What? "My uncle is IN HOSPITAL" versus., "My uncle is in THE HOSPITAL." Perhaps the "the" missing in "THE HOSIPTAL" has escaped to the second most delicious British peculiarity: "THE MENOPAUSE."
Perhaps this is a subject for another post altogether. That is, if I can avoid being sent TO HOSPITAL....
... Anyway...
This particular set was an actual apartment near Union Square. I was shuffled, the "look" (including the center parting) was shown to the director, approved of, and that was that. The next step was rehearsal.
A few minutes later I arrive on set surprised to see three freakish people that are dressed and look exactly like me, Anthony Anderson and Jeremy Sisto. This is "The B Team"-- the people who are on set long before you for the slightly duller roles of lighting, spacing, niggly production details. This made me realize I was part of "The A Team"... and I suddenly felt extremely cool.
Then Anderson and Sisto arrived. Fun times infinity. Sleepy, over it, not-at-all-certain of what episode this is; for it is, as I like to call it, an un-theatrical hour. They'll turn it on for the cameras, they care a lot about the quality of their work, but right this minute? They're asleep. And both totally adorable.
I am doing that thing I did with John Cusack-- pretending this is no big deal. Pretending I don't care, I mean, after all, please, neither of them is Jerry Orbach. But we make some nice small talk about England and how the food sucks and I embark upon the "HOSPITAL" thing mentioned above with Anderson. Sisto has found a magic eight ball and is entranced. He is lost to us for a moment before he put it down and spontaneously asks everyone on set who is Jewish. "Jews?" he exclaims raising his fingerless-gloved hand. Half the set. And me. Ahhh New York.
We rehearse the scene. The director and director of photography make choices about camera angles and shots. Sisto has his lines in his pocket. He returns to the eight ball. We all laugh about the twist in the storyline WHICH I CANNOT YET MENTION TO YOU BWAHAHA!
Then we break. "B team!" They call and they set everything up with the B team and we are swished away to get some coffee.
*
The thing is, so much has gone in to the production to get us to this point. More than even i have a conscious understanding of. To many viewers, Law & Order is a TV institution, a cops and lawyers serial crime show that's "maintained a remarkably high standard of quality for nearly 21 years" ... hm.
The primary goal in pre-production is to take the script and create a schedule where the production team can film an entire episode in under eight days. The first assistant and the crew go out in the company van with several other people and they choose the locations that will be in the episode. When we're filming, it is essential to make sure everything and everyone is where they are supposed to be at the right time to film as efficiently as possible.
It takes eight working days just to get the schedule together, to find the locations, cast all of the guest stars and supporting roles, have production meetings, wardrobe meetings, prop meetings, extras casting meetings, etc. Law & Order shoots about seven pages of script a day which is extremely fast considering that on a feature film, you average about two pages a day. Television in general works much faster (Soaps, of all TV, shoot at break-neck speeds, having to turn over an episode a day!) Most of the days average 12-13 hours. Mondays usually begin at 6:30 a.m., and Friday night can finish anywhere from 7 to midnight (Mondays are often very long and due to an extraordinary 18-hour day in Season 1, Law & Order Mondays that run long are affectionately termed "Black Mondays").
And of course, the star of all Law and Orders is New York City itself. They shoot in plenty of restaurants (the café we shot in had photographs of the entire canon of Law & Order casts on the walls, signed stills from specific episodes and all sorts of L&O memorabilia that naturally had to be covered up for our shoot!), apartments (my scenes were shot in an actual person's place that she rented out for the day!), office buildings, schools, government buildings (they sort of have a set up "camp" outside the city chambers). According to some of the assistants I spoke with, they tend to shoot about three or four days out of eight on their Chelsea Piers stage. They have space to build sets for each specific episode, so they've done it all: two level offices, high school locker rooms, the very famous courtroom, a funeral parlor, tons of motel rooms, prison cells and hospital rooms.
*
Back on set. We've returned from the break and are ready to shoot! We take our places (I'm lucky because all I have to do is sit-- there are no marks to meet on a certain line, no weird places to glance at, etc.), and the director quickly reviews what we're doing and off we go! They get the boys first (which, quite thoughtfully of the director, gives me a chance to sort of "warm up"), they rearrange and shoot me. They do close ups. Sisto screws up his lines, they do it again for him after he hits his head a few times.
We're done.
Between takes we are laughing something silly and they are going to town on their iPhones. That's a wrap. Lunch!
We report back to our trailers, eat, change costumes (this second of which is my actual dress), and then back ready to rock for scene number two.
It's the same story, perfectly nice but creepy identical people escorted away, shot decisions (more complicated due to key props, and a scene with a fair amount of movement in it), rehearsal, and shooting from every angle.
For this girl, for whom her head in many ways was in 'London Still,' it was a real trip.
I thanked the director, he thanked me right back, invited me to the office Christmas party, and glancing over to Aderson and Sisto I said,
"Bye boys. Thanks."
And in response... I got a double fist bump.
Magic.
Now, that is the kind of cool one expects from "The A Team."
*
I report back in two days to shoot the teaser... but I couldn't possibly tell you anything more about it... you'll just have to tune in and see for yourself.
*CHUNK CHUNK*
1. Lists
2. Raspberry Jam
3. Peanut butter
4. The Piccadilly Line (though, technically, my friend and Dickens-of-a-accordion/concertina/piano-player-who-is-incidentally-in-the-film-NINE, Mark Bousie named me 'Doyenne of The Piccadilly Line'...much to my delight...)
and, I think we could safely say, that though I may not be the greatest living expert on, though someone may attempt to challenge my semantics, I DARE YOU to challenge my enthusiasm, my discerning pallet, my penchant for
5. CRIME DRAMA.
[*CHUNK CHUNK*]
And so, dear readers, it is with extraordinary glee that I announce to you my first-bitingly-exciting appearance on the crime drama to end all crime dramas. The ultimate, the epic, the one-and-only
LAW & ORDER.
Yes. I get interviewed by Anderson and Sisto. Yes. I am slightly nefarious and suspicious. But i couldn't possibly tell you anymore than that... I can only encourage you to tune in on Friday, January 15, 2010 at 8/7 Central on NBC to watch the episode entitled "Blackmail" and watch me and half of New York's Theatreland take to the screen and COMMIT SOME CRIME PEOPLE!!
* * *
We filmed on 15th street between 7th and 8th, near to Union Square. My call was at 8am to report to my "honey wagon," check in with the Second assistant, then report to hair and makeup. I got some coffee from the breakfast wagon and settled into the trailer before reporting to Lisa and Leslie -- the hair and makeup ladies extraordinaire.
We chatted, (both were huge musical theatre buffs so there was a lot to talk about). Leslie went about curling the giant hair (of which I expressed mild...how should I put this...? --crestfallenness at the idea of a center parting-- but Leslie replied that it "had been specially requested"). I paused. I made a face that expressed something like this: "?!!" --I couldn't imagine anyone giving so much care to a minor character's hair parting, but there you go.
Lisa made me flawless and added a little cheek definition because I was concerned my face would look like a balloon on screen... especially with a center parting... she chuckled and said "absolutely, here you go darling," before making me promise to keep a watch on her love of "too much lip gloss" She paused and then looked very serious "...It's a problem..." she admitted, deadpan.
The "L-team" were totally gorgeous.
Half of The L teams asks me if I had cut my own hair.
I stared at them with a child-like look of guilt on my face.
"No..." I lied.
"Have you dyed your own hair too...?" she asked.
"....No...." I lied again.
"Don't do that. I mean the home dying thing. Fine. Don't tell me about it but fine. The home cutting thing? Never. Never ever. Don't do it again. Promise."
"...I promise."
Then "I'm Every Woman" came onto the iPod and we all danced and sang...
...Into the hairbrushes...
...At the top of our lungs....
Over and out.
* * *
Then of course you get shuffled over to "set." Not "the set."
No: to "set," reminding me poignantly of one of my favo(u)rite British-ism peculiarities: HOSPITAL. What is going on there citizens of the United Kingdom? What? "My uncle is IN HOSPITAL" versus., "My uncle is in THE HOSPITAL." Perhaps the "the" missing in "THE HOSIPTAL" has escaped to the second most delicious British peculiarity: "THE MENOPAUSE."
Perhaps this is a subject for another post altogether. That is, if I can avoid being sent TO HOSPITAL....
... Anyway...
This particular set was an actual apartment near Union Square. I was shuffled, the "look" (including the center parting) was shown to the director, approved of, and that was that. The next step was rehearsal.
A few minutes later I arrive on set surprised to see three freakish people that are dressed and look exactly like me, Anthony Anderson and Jeremy Sisto. This is "The B Team"-- the people who are on set long before you for the slightly duller roles of lighting, spacing, niggly production details. This made me realize I was part of "The A Team"... and I suddenly felt extremely cool.
Then Anderson and Sisto arrived. Fun times infinity. Sleepy, over it, not-at-all-certain of what episode this is; for it is, as I like to call it, an un-theatrical hour. They'll turn it on for the cameras, they care a lot about the quality of their work, but right this minute? They're asleep. And both totally adorable.
I am doing that thing I did with John Cusack-- pretending this is no big deal. Pretending I don't care, I mean, after all, please, neither of them is Jerry Orbach. But we make some nice small talk about England and how the food sucks and I embark upon the "HOSPITAL" thing mentioned above with Anderson. Sisto has found a magic eight ball and is entranced. He is lost to us for a moment before he put it down and spontaneously asks everyone on set who is Jewish. "Jews?" he exclaims raising his fingerless-gloved hand. Half the set. And me. Ahhh New York. We rehearse the scene. The director and director of photography make choices about camera angles and shots. Sisto has his lines in his pocket. He returns to the eight ball. We all laugh about the twist in the storyline WHICH I CANNOT YET MENTION TO YOU BWAHAHA!
Then we break. "B team!" They call and they set everything up with the B team and we are swished away to get some coffee.
*
The thing is, so much has gone in to the production to get us to this point. More than even i have a conscious understanding of. To many viewers, Law & Order is a TV institution, a cops and lawyers serial crime show that's "maintained a remarkably high standard of quality for nearly 21 years" ... hm.
The primary goal in pre-production is to take the script and create a schedule where the production team can film an entire episode in under eight days. The first assistant and the crew go out in the company van with several other people and they choose the locations that will be in the episode. When we're filming, it is essential to make sure everything and everyone is where they are supposed to be at the right time to film as efficiently as possible.
It takes eight working days just to get the schedule together, to find the locations, cast all of the guest stars and supporting roles, have production meetings, wardrobe meetings, prop meetings, extras casting meetings, etc. Law & Order shoots about seven pages of script a day which is extremely fast considering that on a feature film, you average about two pages a day. Television in general works much faster (Soaps, of all TV, shoot at break-neck speeds, having to turn over an episode a day!) Most of the days average 12-13 hours. Mondays usually begin at 6:30 a.m., and Friday night can finish anywhere from 7 to midnight (Mondays are often very long and due to an extraordinary 18-hour day in Season 1, Law & Order Mondays that run long are affectionately termed "Black Mondays").
And of course, the star of all Law and Orders is New York City itself. They shoot in plenty of restaurants (the café we shot in had photographs of the entire canon of Law & Order casts on the walls, signed stills from specific episodes and all sorts of L&O memorabilia that naturally had to be covered up for our shoot!), apartments (my scenes were shot in an actual person's place that she rented out for the day!), office buildings, schools, government buildings (they sort of have a set up "camp" outside the city chambers). According to some of the assistants I spoke with, they tend to shoot about three or four days out of eight on their Chelsea Piers stage. They have space to build sets for each specific episode, so they've done it all: two level offices, high school locker rooms, the very famous courtroom, a funeral parlor, tons of motel rooms, prison cells and hospital rooms.
*
Back on set. We've returned from the break and are ready to shoot! We take our places (I'm lucky because all I have to do is sit-- there are no marks to meet on a certain line, no weird places to glance at, etc.), and the director quickly reviews what we're doing and off we go! They get the boys first (which, quite thoughtfully of the director, gives me a chance to sort of "warm up"), they rearrange and shoot me. They do close ups. Sisto screws up his lines, they do it again for him after he hits his head a few times.
We're done.
Between takes we are laughing something silly and they are going to town on their iPhones. That's a wrap. Lunch!
We report back to our trailers, eat, change costumes (this second of which is my actual dress), and then back ready to rock for scene number two.
It's the same story, perfectly nice but creepy identical people escorted away, shot decisions (more complicated due to key props, and a scene with a fair amount of movement in it), rehearsal, and shooting from every angle.
For this girl, for whom her head in many ways was in 'London Still,' it was a real trip.
I thanked the director, he thanked me right back, invited me to the office Christmas party, and glancing over to Aderson and Sisto I said,
"Bye boys. Thanks."
And in response... I got a double fist bump.
Magic.
Now, that is the kind of cool one expects from "The A Team."
*
I report back in two days to shoot the teaser... but I couldn't possibly tell you anything more about it... you'll just have to tune in and see for yourself.
*CHUNK CHUNK*
Labels:
Crime Drama,
Filming,
I like to make lists,
John Cusack,
New York,
Television
Monday, January 4, 2010
The Russia Diaries: 12 August - The Young
"You're sixty years old. Medicine won't help."
- Anton Chekhov
- Anton Chekhov
* * *
We sigh, concede to return next week and walk around the beautiful river bank, taking in the setting sun, the extremely, demonstratively affectionate couples snuggling on benches, the dogs, the ducks and babushkas all sitting still as anything, lost in thought.
We buy cold drinks and head back to the car, ready to pack up and head for the train station, The Red Arrow, and for our sojourn to St. Petersburg.
On the way home, Vadim tells us his children and Emanuelle will be in Petersburg at the same time. "Perhaps you could met?" he suggests, "though it is a very large city and they will all be at the disco..." he grimaces. "I worry for them," he admits, "and... how I envy them."
The lost time. Lost opportunities. That is a theme with Vadim. In Irina one can clearly see the Russian characteristic of acceptance, of spiritual endurance.
But in Vadim it is another matter. Vadim knows of and cares little for the details of economic ideologies, but on a human level, thus far, he appears to be an individualist, and almost, one might say, somewhat ashamed of it.
"Nastia..." he sighs, "Nastia signed up for fashion school in Milan and got on a plane by herself at 19. She doesn't even know what that kind of freedom really feels like to the likes of me. Communism is a distant shadow of her past, something she barely remembers. And why should she? Why?" And he is quiet for a long time.
We drive along. I wonder if he is thinking about the juicer. I wonder if he is thinking about Nastia's current Italian visa troubles. The day we arrived she had gone to the Italian consulate and been denied her student visa. It was a paperwork issue, and after Kit assisted Vadim draft an English letter clearing the whole mess up, everything was off with her student acceptance letter and all was well. But she returned home understandably distressed. And it was precisely this distress, this notion that world is her oyster for in many ways, it is; that was the thing that both amused and hurt Vadim. That, and of course, Emanuelle. And the juicer. And perhaps the notion that she is leaving not only his house but his world. The only familiar world he knows.
This isn't about the juicer or the boyfriend or the fashion school. It isn't all about her growing up. It is more about an uncertain and unfamiliar world. For her, for him, for everyone. It isn't simple. And yet, in truth, it is.
"And Arkady?" he continues, laughing loudly, "Arkady is a born businessman! An entrepreneur! He owns a flower shop with his mother on Tverskya! He renovates old cars, races them, and sells them! He is studying for his doctorate in science! Everything he touches turns to solid gold!" He shakes his head, smiling. Confused perhaps, but proud. "And did you know he knows everything? And, by the way, he is always right. He won't stop talking until you agree with him! Where would Arkady's place be in Communism? They are so lucky and so... ignorant..." he sighs. The Young.
They all nod. And it is in this moment when I truly feel that I am Arkady's age. No. More than that. Not only his children's age, but I feel the weight of his vision their auspiciousness. As they nod, I join, but my nod is a vow not to waste the opportunity that is my life, nor the gift that is my freedom.
The young and the old.
I wonder.
I wonder if it is always the same.
Friday, January 1, 2010
Friday, December 25, 2009
California Christmas
Excellent.
I think the best way to start off when meeting new family members is to chase two of the teenage cousins over the fence because you have mistaken them for "hooligans."
Yes.
That sounds like a really quite fantastic way to start...
I think the best way to start off when meeting new family members is to chase two of the teenage cousins over the fence because you have mistaken them for "hooligans."
Yes.
That sounds like a really quite fantastic way to start...
Thursday, December 24, 2009
That's what Christmas is all about...
This is the first Christmas I will ever have shared with my mother's family (of my recollection-- that means-- as an adult).
When I arrived on Tuesday evening the reunion was commonplace and touching.
"Hi Uncle Bill..."
I said it in a way that somehow communicated the following:
Hi there. I haven't seen you since Hawaii-- which translates to-- I haven't seen you since we were all there in Kauaʻi, which was three weeks before your father died, which was, incidentally, about 6 months after my father died. That was a very odd Yin and Yang experience in paradise that involved not only an extremely high stake family reunion, but also an incident of sun poisoning, a peacock imprisoning me in my hotel room, and, most touchingly really, a voyage "out" where you and I got away to get ice cream and you extolled the virtues of butter pecan. That was the last time I saw you. That was over 8 years ago. Hi. Hi there. Thank you for letting me crash in your house for the holidays while I feel a wee bit existentially lost.
Then a sweet and sort of awkward hug (I find all non actors give what I consider to be "sortofawkwardhugs" but perhaps that is another essay...)
Followed by:
"Merry Christmas. Thank you for letting me stay."
He looked at me a moment through his large, thick glasses;
"Are you my niece?" He stared at me hard.
"Um, yes," I replied.
"Then this is your house too."
And suddenly I felt very, very much at home.
* * *
Tonight, while Victoria is already celebrating Christmas morning on the beach, and all of London is fast asleep, while New York is just tucking themselves in; Mom and I will be with her family in Southern California-- baking, eating, laughing, getting to know one another. It will be different, yes. But often, different can be illuminating!
And so, while I marvel at a supermarket called El Super, while I gawp at palm trees and piñatas and corn husks and fireworks(?!!) and chili mango and jalapeños; while mom and I are busily preparing a variety of foods both familiar and un; while I enjoy the odd sortof-to-reallyawkwardhug with various "brand-new" people, while I re-pack my warm weather clothes; it is clear that this year, the most important Christmas gift of all will be the gift of what feels like a new family. (Now that is what I call Christmas magic...)
And now, to conclude, the clip that never gets old.
Linus explains what it is all about.
Happy Christmas All. x
When I arrived on Tuesday evening the reunion was commonplace and touching.
"Hi Uncle Bill..."
I said it in a way that somehow communicated the following:
Hi there. I haven't seen you since Hawaii-- which translates to-- I haven't seen you since we were all there in Kauaʻi, which was three weeks before your father died, which was, incidentally, about 6 months after my father died. That was a very odd Yin and Yang experience in paradise that involved not only an extremely high stake family reunion, but also an incident of sun poisoning, a peacock imprisoning me in my hotel room, and, most touchingly really, a voyage "out" where you and I got away to get ice cream and you extolled the virtues of butter pecan. That was the last time I saw you. That was over 8 years ago. Hi. Hi there. Thank you for letting me crash in your house for the holidays while I feel a wee bit existentially lost.
Then a sweet and sort of awkward hug (I find all non actors give what I consider to be "sortofawkwardhugs" but perhaps that is another essay...)
Followed by:
"Merry Christmas. Thank you for letting me stay."
He looked at me a moment through his large, thick glasses;
"Are you my niece?" He stared at me hard.
"Um, yes," I replied.
"Then this is your house too."
And suddenly I felt very, very much at home.
* * *
Tonight, while Victoria is already celebrating Christmas morning on the beach, and all of London is fast asleep, while New York is just tucking themselves in; Mom and I will be with her family in Southern California-- baking, eating, laughing, getting to know one another. It will be different, yes. But often, different can be illuminating!
And so, while I marvel at a supermarket called El Super, while I gawp at palm trees and piñatas and corn husks and fireworks(?!!) and chili mango and jalapeños; while mom and I are busily preparing a variety of foods both familiar and un; while I enjoy the odd sortof-to-reallyawkwardhug with various "brand-new" people, while I re-pack my warm weather clothes; it is clear that this year, the most important Christmas gift of all will be the gift of what feels like a new family. (Now that is what I call Christmas magic...)
And now, to conclude, the clip that never gets old.
Linus explains what it is all about.
Happy Christmas All. x
Thursday, December 17, 2009
The Little Match Girl
Sometimes the very best Holiday gifts, are the ones handmade, and from the heart.
Let me know what you think, and stay warm!!
The Little Match Girl
Let me know what you think, and stay warm!!
The Little Match Girl
The Little Match Girl
Monday, December 14, 2009
Sleeping
When I think back on this time, I think I will recall that for so very much of it... I was asleep.
Perhaps that is how it is with pain: hibernation.
A chrysalis of sorts forms around us while we heal.
Or change.
Or both.
That is not shameful. It is not weak. It is necessary.
But I'm preparing to tear away the barriers of that sleep now.
I want to wake.
I've passed through a door.
I've marked a single, charcoal line upon the ground and contemplated crossing it.
I ready to burst through.
Yes. I'm ready.
...
Now, reader here is a preface: I don't often share on this blog in this candid a manner, but I feel the need.I know that many of you visit and know me not at all. You have shared the work, you have associated with "Act 3 Al." I have never attempted to use this blog in any manner of emotional ventilation, I have put forth every effort to protect and respect those with whom I share my life, many of whom already have very public lives as it is. This is not a tabloid. And venting is what a journal is for. The details are unimportant, the revelations are.
That is what this is: a revelation. I would be denying the journey if I did not mark it. This is too magnificent to keep to myself. And I am done hiding my light under a bushel.
There are several things I can say out loud.
So much I can face I didn't know or couldn't see before.
I looked in the mirror and I saw the Self of a young woman terribly disrespected and my insides churned.
Things like:
- I didn't have any respect for my Self.
I never really did. (Self respect is like a muscle, if you do not exercise it, it atrophies).
- And that led to a monsoon of other unhealthy behaviors. That's over now.
Standing up for yourself is allowed. It is, in fact, tremendous.
No more dressing to hide,
No more allowing away.
No more.
No more capitulation.
No more valuing everyone else above myself until that Self is a shell.
No more apologizing for being.
No more.
No one will walk on me. Intimidate. Bully. Strip away. Burgle.
No one will rob me of my trust.
Or of hope.
The professional arm was strong while the personal arm withered.
No more.
- Sometimes.. in fact... often, change is good. Change is great. I can embrace change. I can bear hug it and lick every last fleck of change sauce from the plate of life. (Mmmmm change tastes like parma rosa sauce).
- I am shocked by the force of a decade-and -a-half of built-up rage. Absolutely astonished. I must possess some sort of rage storage helix inside me...
- This is the end of the Dad cycle. (Well, what do you know?)
- I don't need a home, home is right here [touches her heart]
- That thing I hoped would end with high school... college... real life.. is never over. It is all the same. It never ends. Stop waiting. And this knowledge sets one free. Hooray. Adjust.
- and perhaps, most importantly of all...
... She broke my heart.
She did.
It cracked in half.
I loved her.
I loved her more than anything.
And that is what still smarts.
And probably always will.
I am certain I can adjust to that too.
Take part in life Dear reader. Do not shirk away from the world, take part in it. Do away with good enoughs and happy enoughs and fines. I am no longer ashamed to say I wish for more. No. I demand more. Of my Self. Of this finite, beautiful time. It is too brief and too special to be wasted on the parasitic, to be squandered on despair.
So here we go...
...the charcoal line...
____________________________________________
... Good morning.
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