The piece worked

Well, I’m glad I did it.  The piece worked.  A couple of people said “it was beautiful”.

I had, let me see, I think 10 different bags plus two umbrellas, a big one and a child size one, shirts on hangers in plastic and a plant in a cup.  Within the different bags I had specific props as well, like the cupcake fixin’s.

It’s a prop heavy piece.

The costume worked.  The makeup worked.  The music worked.  The props worked.

It worked because it was on a real stage with lights.  I love stage lighting.  It does half the work for you.

I would be willing to do it again. 

I want to work on stages with proper stage lighting.

This is not a clown piece that can be done at the edge of a street festival or in a mall.  

I did “a piece for the theatre.”

It’s something I want to work on some more.

That’s a good thing.

High Heels and Lawyer Pants

 

I just got home from rehearsal at the Producers Club.  I had to take my kid with me, bribing her with the promise of a McDonald’s Happy Meal in Times Square if she was good.  She only disrupted once, when she was running up the aisle and fell and scraped about 5 inches of her shin.  There was no blood, but there will be a bruise and there were tears.  My clown piece is about multi-tasking and living for somone else–like my kid who interrupted my rehearsal with her injury and her tears.

On the way home she asked me;  “Why are you wearing high-heels and lawyer pants?”

I think I got the costume right!  I am trying to look like a professional woman.  The clothes I chose for my costume in browns and blacks are from my own closet and the outfit I put together is similar to the clothes worn by the mothers of my child’s classmates who are lawyers.  The only clown makeup I’ll have on is a small circle of red glitter on my nose and a clear rhinestone under each eye.  Other than that I will wear normal stage makeup which for a small house is just street makeup a little thicker and a little darker; foundation, lipstick, eyeliner and mascara.

This piece is for the Emerging Artists Theatre (EAT) Laugh Out Loud Festival.  I am in tomorrow’s lineup. 

I feel much better about it now, after rehearsal, than I did last night and this morning when I didn’t know if I was going to be able to work on the piece any more at all.   I was preoccupied with my parents arrival tomorrow evening to the  point of wondering if I should back out of the perfomance so I could be at home to greet my parents when they arrive and let them into the apartment.

The key I sent my parents so they can let themselves into my apartment when they come from the airport did not arrive and will not arrive because of the holiday weekend.  There were multiple phone conversations about contingency plans involving neighbors, the landlord and possible going straight up to mid-town to either watch my piece or to sit in a hotel lobby because that’s where people with luggage can feel most comfortable (at least I do).  But, my parents would rather wander around my neighborhood in Brooklyn because it is less populus and they were here once two years ago.  They want to hang out in the diner, but our local diner closes at 5:00pm.  They will be less comfortable in the pub and I fear they will go with their luggage for just a short time and then sit on our stoop for a very long time.  Please don’t sit out on the stoop with your luggage in the dark.

 Last time they were here my dad started to take out his wallet on the steps of the Museum of Natural History and I said “Dad don’t!” and the homeless guy went away and then kept circling back to curse me as we ate our ice cream.  I felt like a terrible person.  But, I also didn’t want my dad to take out his wallet in his slow Midwestern way in such a touristy place where pickpockets and muggers scope out potential victims.

 By the way, my cell phone was lost–OR STOLEN–last Wednesday.  I had to take out my credit card and pay full price for a new phone because I didn’t have phone insurance.  I used it twice walking down Montague Street right after I sent the keys to my parents from the mailing store.  Somone must have seen it fall out of my pocket and instead of saying “hey lady you dropped your phone!” as I would have done.  They picked it up and kept it.  I know because as soon as I realized it was gone, I started calling it from pay phones.  The first two times I called it rang and rang and then went to voice mail.  The second two times I called, it went straight to voicemail.  So somebody picked it up.  And that somebody kept it.  And that somebody turned it off.  They could have answered and told me where they were and I could have met them and gotten it back.  I was still within blocks of anywhere I could have possibly dropped it.

When I was on the phone last night my mother kept asking me specific questions about where things were and what are the names of the cross streets and all I could say was, well I don’t know, I can google it and call you back.  She’d say no I didn’t need to do that.  I was braced for it this time.  

Last time they visited I was humiliated by my inability to answer a single specific question–and my parents asked a lot of specific questions.  (I gave my family the Meyers-Briggs test once when I was still living at home.  I’m an INFP and my other family members tend to be ISTJ.  

Digresson:  Meyers-Briggs has 16 combinations on some continium of I or E (Introverted or Extroverted) N or S (Intuiting or Sensing) F or T (Feeling or Thinking) and P or J (Perceiving or Judging).  Basically all my information comes from feelings and impressions and other members of my family of origin get their information from actual facts.  Other than the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building, I couldn’t name any a single building on the New York skyline.  We had been in New York for several years when my parents finally came to see us and I thought I should know more.  I was mortified.  I couldn’t give them directions to the nearest Catholic Church (of course they wanted to go to morning mass…)  I could have showed them if we had gone out the front door and I could have pointed to the cross street at the end of the block, and bent my arm and pointed my finger in the way they should walk.  They would have come to the church, it is impossible to miss.  But, I didn’t know the specifics.  I didn’t know the name of the cross street for the church.  I didn’t know if the turn was left or right (without facing towards the street it is on and making the L with my index finger and my thumb to know which way is left).  Of course I don’t know North, South, East or West (UNLESS THE SUN IS ACTIVELY RISING OR SETTING) I don’t know how many blocks away the church is.   I have never counted (I never needed to I just see it every time I go that way).    Later in the visit when we were on a subway platform on our way to some tourist destination my mom asked innocently “Will we see such and such?”  I blew up.  “I DON’T KNOW!”  My mom was sad and I felt bad.  

I’m pretty sure I have some sort of learning disability.  Apparently I’m bright enough to have faked it all these years.  But, there are definite gaps and they have never gone away.

So I am a clown.

I have a show tomorrow.

Weaned at Gunpoint

From the Salt Lake Tribune:

 In its unanimous nine-page decision, the three-judge panel said the Department of Family and Protective Services Court of appeals ruling case was legally and factually insufficient and 51st District Judge Barbara Walther acted improperly when she ordered about 450 children to stay in state custody. 

    The court said the state failed in a mass April 17-18 hearing to prove any of its key claims that the sect’s beliefscommunal households or underage marriages put every child in the community “in urgent” danger. 

    “There is simply no evidence specific to [the mothers’] children at all except that they exist, they were taken into custody at the Yearning for Zion Ranch, and they are living with people who share a ‘pervasive belief system’ that condones underage marriage and underage pregnancy,” the court said. 

This is a story that disturbed me intensly when it happened over a month ago.  The State of Texas Child Protective Services accompanied by armed SWAT teams raided the Yearning for Zion ranch and took over 400 children into custody.

 

 This did nothing to ease my personal fear of the State of Texas and the people who love it (Present President included).

Years ago I saw a segment on 60 Minutes or 20/20 about a family in Texas of Middle Eastern ethnicity (who knows it’s Texas they may have been Greek or Italian).  Anyway, they lived in a small town and they were different (which in Texas means NOT CHRISTIAN).  Apparently the children were taken away from the parents because while at a public elementary school sporting event the older boy was in the father, carrying his daughter who was about 4-years-old at the time was seen to pat her butt.  The children were taken away by Texas authorities and the parents were accused of sexual abuse and it took them two years to get their kids back.  Unpleasant things stick in the mind and this story stuck in my mind and flashed across the television screen in my brain ruining occasions when I noticed my own daughters yummy butt which fit in my hand like a piece of fruit AND THE THOUGHT AND ACTION AT THE CORE OF MY BEING WAS MY BABY IS SO SMALL AND BEAUTIFUL NOW, YET SO MUCH BIGGER THAN SHE WAS, IN SUCH A SHORT TIME SHE WILL NO LONGER BE THIS SWEET SIZE.  Nope, no sexual feelings.  None.  Oh wait, I was a nursing mother that’s something they object to in Texas,  That was the thing that upset me the most.

 

 Nursing toddlers and walking babies (under 12 months could stay with their mothers over 12 months and one day–straight to foster care)  Several of these children under 2, who had never been away from their mothers ended up in hospitals suffering from dehydration and shock after being taken away from their homes and weaned at gunpoint.  No kidding.  My child would have ended up in the hospital.  I was generally a very attentive parent, but once when when she was about 14 months old, we were going on a trip and the clock was ticking I put her in her crib and left her alone because I had to finish the packing and everything I needed to do before we left for the airport.  She never fell asleep.  She screamed for hours until I picked her up to carry her out the door because the car service had arrived.  She would have been one to cry to the point of dehydration.  The parenting books I looked at all address separation anxiety and how long separations must be worked up to over time and filled with love and other familiar adults (like grandparents).

 Even if the danger of sexual abuse the Texas authorities were concerned about existed, they could have addressed it by taking all the girls over 10 or 12 into custody.  These are large children, they read and write and speak English fluently, posess the ability to debate even…

I can’t bend my mind around the thought processes of Texas authorities who decided the best way to protect these toddlers from marrying too young and becoming pregnant teenagers was to send in SWAT teams and wean them at gunpoint.

Gypsy on Broadway

I saw Gypsy on Broadway today!

OK I think I myself was completely warped by playing “Dainty June” in a UM Summer Stock production of Gypsy.  My  New York stage clown friends frequently try to get me to stop being “ON” in front of an audience and I realize now there was some feeling of sucess in playing that cartoon vaudeville child that still worked at RBBCC and that I still cling to in some clown situations.  I went to Clown College there was something about it that worked better than anything else I had ever done…

I’m not “Dainty June” anymore, I’m “Mama Rose” now!

Even last night at Clownlab, an exercise and I started doing a spot-on imitation of Sally Anne Howes as the “Music Box Doll” in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang–and I just stopped for no reason–it was just an improv game.  We were just supposed to be action figures–whatever that meant–I started out as “Wonder Woman”.  Whatever the exercise was meant to be it became a send up of ’70’s toys and movies.   It wasn’t like I was auditioning for a play a someone else…

Something about not having permission to be…

This performing thing is complicated…

No wonder my child is not interested…

Patty LuPone was incredible today

Also

Boyd Gaines, who is married to someone I went to high school with, is absolutely charming

I was wondering who the hyper-energetic-girl-I-knew/mare-at-the-starting-gate, has turned into to be married to such a charming man  It must be worth a drink or a coffee to find out.

I am aware of their plays.  I wanted to see Contact at Lincoln Center, but I had a baby and there was that 9/11 event that constricted movement and enthusiasm.  My friend was in The Country Girl and Coram Boy both of which closed before I got around to seening them.  I really meant to seee Twelve Angry Men and really really regretted not seeing it after I had to spend two months of my life as a juror on a Brooklyn murder trial.

I have had no contact with her since we first were moving to New York and my sister got her sister to give her e-mail to me and we corresponded about strollers appropriate to the city.

Tonight,

A dinner at Tratoria Spagetto in Greenwich Village between the church and the fountain.  I love the “Lady and the Tramp” eating spagettiI aesthetic of the place.

The husband’s former co-worker who moved back to India and lives in Bangalore, his wife and daughter.  We have much hope for their classes to exchange letters–“Wow you live in a totally different country, but you have the Disney Channel too!!!! OMG”  Also the husbands former boss and socially ept wife–when will we organize joint vacations???  There are posibilities…

I lost or had stolen my cell phone today,  had to pay for a new one to keep myself and my life in the same place, a future essay I owe this blog about the evils of sharecropping in cyper-space…

.  

 

 

 

 

Wake up-pack lunch-take the kid to school-come back home pack a case with costumes and props-take train to Times Square-rehearse at the Producers Club-take the train to Lower East Side-eat a bagel-meet the family-my kid goes to Japanese-My husband and I take advantage of the time and go to pub across the street to talk through the week:  Tomorrow-I-am -going-to-see-the-matinee-of-Gypsy-we-will-have-dinner-in-Greenwich-Village-with-our-friends-from-India-and-his-former-boss-and-wife-my-Kid-has-a-field-trip-on-Thursday-and-I-may-have-more-studio-time-Friday-the-kid-and-I-will-go-on- the-Girl-Scout-campout-My-husband-will-fly-to-Seattle-Saturday-my-parents-will-arrive-in-New-York-on-Tuesday-but-not-in-time-to-see-my -perfomance-on-Tuesday-maybe-husband-will-return-to-New-York-on-Thursday-The Kid-will-make-her-First-Communion-on-Saturday-(I-still-need-to-make-dinner-reservations)-The-Kid-will-have-a-Japanese-Closing-Ceremony-on-Sunday-On-Monday-my-parents-will-return-to-Montana-and-my-husband-will-start-his-new-job…

After sushi after Japanese we all walk down 14th Street.  They take the train home to Brooklyn and I go to Theatre Lab for a Clown Lab.

my piece, campout, parents coming

I didn’t work on my piece at all today, but studio time is scheduled for tomorrow.  I did start putting possible props and costumes into my carry-on rolling suitcase.  I want everything I need to fit into that one case.

I’m cleaning in preparation for my parents visit next week and packing in two different directions.  I’m getting ready for my clown piece (to be performed a week from tomorrow as part of the Emerging Artists Theatre ‘Laugh Out Loud’ festival), and packing for the Brownie Girl Scout campout this weekend (I’m one of the parent chaperones–I fear two days and nights in the cold rain trying to motivate 7-year-olds to do chores).

 The clock is ticking and most of my waking hours are spoken for this week.

 

 

 

 

A neighbor is on NPR

In the bedroom cleaning and listening to NPR on the radio, going through old papers and magazines and filling clear plastic bags with recycling.  Doctors Without Borders is mentioned and I realize I recognize the voice, the husband of a mommy-I-know from the playground, playgroup and school, the father of one of my kid’s friends.  We live in New York.

This morning I took the Kid to church, we ended up not sitting through Mass but instead going upstairs to the classroom where my Kid’s First Eucharist teacher and a teenage assistant were helping kids to create hats for the Philip Neri Picnic.  Apparently he was quite a joker, as one of the priests said, explaining how he created a picture of the saint winking.  The kids put cutouts of Phillip Neri on cut paper plates and added ribbons and marker drawings and words.  What they made looked like a cross between a Bishops hat and Minnie Pearl’s Easter bonnet.  Whatever.  There was a funny hat competition at the picnic.

At the picnic my kid and her friend ordered “off the menu” getting hot dogs without buns.  They rode the pony twice and had their faces painted.  My kid was a bunny.  Her friend asked for a venus fly-trap.  “That lady didn’t even know what a venus flytrap was!” This kid’s face was painted with something that looked to me like a purple poinsettia.

Walking home from St. Boniface we passed the afore mentioned “famous” father with his wife and kids.   They were on the way to the train and asked if we’d been to a different neighborhood family’s birthday party, because of the painted face and ribbon covered craft in my hand (the Philip Neri hat).  They were on their way to New Jersey to see friends.  We have our own friends in New Jersey to see this week if it works out– a former co-worker of my Husband.  They’re not in the area long, just a stop along the pilgrimage from India to Disneyworld

I was disappointed that my kid did not want to go see the STREB SLAM show in Williamsburg.  That was the afternoon plan I had in mind.  I miss going to STREB once a week for her to take her classes with the fabulous Fabio.  When My Kid got on the FirstLEGO robotics team STREB went out the window.  Also  My Kid didn’t like the commute.  But STREB was an important part of our lives from her first class when she was 3-years-old.  There was a fantasy–what kind of cool modern dancers would these kids who started at STREB at 3 would be as teenagers.  (check out my husband’s blog for his pride over my baby raising her geek flag.)  Sigh.

There is a clownlab I could go to tonight.  I don’t know if I will be able to make it up to midtown by 7pm. My husband and kid haven’t eaten.  That’s important.  The kid hasn’t done her homework yet.  AND we are still cleaning and getting rid of stuff.  The husband is amazed by how much paper there is to go through, paper, mail, bills, un-read books and magazines since his job situation went into transition.  The transition, still not over, has been going on now for 8 months!  We are worn out.

So nobody (meaning me) planned dinner and we went to Sushi D (the Kid’s favorite neighborhood restaurant) AGAIN!

Now we’re home.  The husband is shredding again (working in the computer industry as he does, he has a healthy lack of faith and insists on shredding anything that has any of our names and a code number on it– which is pretty much every piece of mail that comes into our home)

Going through a box of old magazines–I forgot that I subscribed to “IN THESE TIMES” out of spite after George Bush II was re-elected.  God, I remember the afternoon I spent sitting at the bar at the Cowgirl Bar and Grill on Hudson, when My Kid was in Pre-K at PS-3 in Greenwich Village, watching the election returns with tears running down my cheeks.  The bartender gave me a free beer.

Real Estate is on my mind.  The potluck First Eucharist event last night was at the home of a family of four that has a whole brownstone all to themselves.  At the picnic today I overheard one of the priests telling some people that the two white clapboard houses next to the church AND the two brownstones on the block don’t belong to the chuch but belong to him (Bruce Ratner???)  “He loves them.  He brought them here from other locations.”  (Bruce Ratner’s cabinet of curiosities–4 unoccupied houses on Duffield Street) OK I can’t even process that right now…

 

 

 

First Communion Potluck

OK, so it was a catered potluck that we went to tonight.  Who caters a potluck  Well, I would if I could…

A whole brownstone…

My kid was obsessed with the pogo stick and got up to 14 jumps, a household record apparently.

Someone named Kathy, the godmother of one of my kid’s First Communion classmates, knows a friend of mine from highschool in Montana, also named Kathy… (“Tell her ‘hi’ for me !’  ‘I will!’)  Others at the party had spent time in Missoula back in the day…

I played “Who Do You Know” at the party better than my husband who didn’t even try because he didn’t feel like he had to socialize because the event had nothing to do with his job. How come men don’t feel like they have to do this? Lots of my friends have husbands who, given the choice, would rather stay home.  Isn’t anybody else curious about seeing the inside of other people’s homes???

At the park in the afternoon the Kid and I ran into neighbors we hadn’t seen in a very long time.  It’s true, once the kids go to school, and to different schools we don’t see the people we used to see on an almost daily basis because we took our toddlers and preschoolers to the same playgrounds and chatted about potty training and language aquisition–and husbands, and junk food, and movies and assorted frustrations.  The kids are big now.  Aside from height, they look now the way they will look until puberty.  They have their own schedules, after school activities, lessons, obsessions.  At the party tonight the kids segregated themselves into groups of boys and girls.  They didn’t used to do that.  Sigh.

 

Hello world!

I spent yesterday in and around Times Square.  I enjoy getting off the subway and walking past Birdland to the Producer’s Club for a few hours of studio time with some clowns.  It makes me feel as if I am part of it all no matter how low the level at which I do my work.  I am still doing it.   In the diner afterwards we talked and I was reminded of the book Art and Fear and the object is just to keep doing the work.  If you produce a lot of work then it follows that some of it will be very good.  Conversly if you produce little or nothing the chances of proucing good work must be slim to none.

Waiting to meet the husband and kid at Toys R Us Times Square (when my kid was a toddler she thought Toys R Us WAS Times Sqare– and if you asked her what part of New York she liked best she could be counted on to say Times Square) I saw the toys for the new Pixar movie.  I’m in love with WallE and Eve.  I know I’m going to start crying from the opening credits and cry through the whole movie.  But, I digress.

Took the Kid to New Victory to see IJK physical perfomers from France.  A tight show.  Gotta love the geometry and juggling. I aspire to a tight show that can play the New Vic and the international children’s festivals like the one in Seattle.  It seems realistic now.  An old friend (actually the director of the show my husband and I were working on when we met) is now among other things the Producing Director for the Seattle International Children’s Festival. 

We ran into Pre-K classmates from our PS 3 days at the theatre.  That family is now at the Neighborhood School in the East Village.