I’m not organized but one of my mommy friends is:

I met Erja when our daughters were both in the playgroup at Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church in Fort Greene.  At the height of our friendship her kids were 3, 8 and 13 attending three different schools.  That seemed to me like a really difficult way to go about having and raising children.  (Though of course all of it is only temporary.)  At the time, I couldn’t imagine…

She reminds me of my mother.  Calm.  Oragaized.  I miss her.  We lost touch when our daughters went to different public schools.

Anyway…

She is apparently very successful now that all of her children go to school all day long:

Organization Woman: Lifetime spent in Brooklyns spaces, places leads to career

I am not technically savvy enough to function in this culture

A couple of weeks ago, I was on the Fort Greene Kids List, which I haven’t checked out in possibly years.  The Husband did something so the posts go directly into a file, because there are so many, and I never have to see them unless I open the file.

Well, I was on the Fort Greene Kids List looking for a babysitter and I came across a call for submissions for some kind of performance showcase in the fall called Expressing Moms.

I immediately composed an e-mail.

But…

I didn’t submit it.

I wanted to imbed, or link to, or whatever to the a video of me performing at the Emerging Artists Theatre Laugh Out Loud Festival last spring and also some photos from the thing I did at the New York Clown Theatre Festival in October.

But…

Whatever supports the video took it down off of the internet because of the background music, Jimmy Durante singing “Make Someone Happy”  and I didn’t know what to do about that.  I didn’t know wether to send the video without sound, in which case it’s on a disk somewhere and I don’t know without assistance how to make that to be somewhere to link to from an e-mail.

And also…

I had photos from the show in the fall.

But…

I just had the disk with about a hundred images and I supposed some stranger would only be able to appreciate one or at the most two.

The Husband has been busy…

I have been busy…

Today after a couple of weeks have passed since the initial impulse to submit…

I sent an e-mail inquiry without any imbeds of photos or video or links there-to…

and got a reply…

Today…

They have just finished casting the New York show…

But, 

Keep in touch!

Too bad for you…

Aghhhhh!

I suck.

Actually they said; “You would be a very unique act!”

still…

I suck.

OK I don’t suck…

But my technological skills suck.

They really do.

Really!

I never trained for the 21st century.

Neutral Mask and the epic struggle of a 3rd grader against her homework

I felt so good, stretched out, open and exercised after two days in the studio with Dody DiSanto who taught a Neutral Mask Intensive here in New York this weekend.  An inspirational teacher, she is considered by many to be the best neutral mask teacher in America.  It was a class filled with two dozen adults, working actors, some recent MFA grads, other mid-career professional performer-creators with their own companies and several teaching artists.  

An Alice in Wonderland down the rabbit hole experience.  I was in a beautiful empty studio with a wood floor and wall of windows in the middle of Manhattan.  Serious barefoot theatre professionals in  dark clothing moved and watched  with rapt and respectful attention as each in turn put on the mask and performed a set of actions embodying individual and universal experience in the cosmos followed by  a subway ride  home to my 8-year-old writhing on the floor in a concentrated attempt to get out of doing her homework.

I felt like part of a community in that Chelsea studio, and the greater New York theatre community, and the network of physical theatre artists in the United States and the world-wide physical theatre community of people who are familiar with the work of Jaques Lecoq.

And then it was over.  Cell phone open talking to The Husband;

“How was the soccer game?  How was the day?”

“We’ve had a good time together since the soccer game this morning.”

“There’s a Whole Foods near the studio.   I’ll pick up some prepared food and we can have a nice quiet dinner when I get home and get ready for the week.”

“That sounds great.”

“How’s My Kid doing?”

“The TV’s off and the she is reading a book.”

 “Oh, I’m so glad.”

And so I came home,  after shopping at “Whole Paycheck”, with my wealth of roast chicken, salmon salad Nicoise, fresh baked bread and wine ready to enjoy the circle of my small family.

I don’t know how the evening fell apart. I thought I would just get the table ready  for dinner while The Husband and My Kid ducked into the other room to quickly get her homework out of the way so we could all relax and enjoy each other’s company.

Half an hour later, The Kid emerged from the bedroom and flung herself onto the floor in agony.  She could not write!

I reminded her that she had told me previously about something that happened with her friends at school that she had intended to write about.  

No.  No that was not it.  That was not possible.  That could not be done.

She said she was stupid.  She said that we hated her.  She said that she wanted to die.  She hit her forehead against the floor.

She would not touch pen to paper.

I told her we were all waiting for her to do this one thing so we could eat dinner together as a family.

An hour later as the clocked ticked towards bedtime, in the interest of moving forward, I ran a bath for my stinky little athlete.

The bath revived her and she insisted I stay with her, to help her brainstorm story ideas and allow her to throw a wet ball at me.

After the bath there was renewed energy for the activity of avoiding writing at all costs.  The cost paid was the family dinner.  The Husband went ahead and served himself and began to make his own preparations for sleep and the week ahead.  He had spent the entire day with her from the 9 am soccer game until evening when I got home.  From all accounts it had been a good day involving a victorious game, a pizza lunch and a trip to the bookstore.  

He told her he was disappointed that she had promised do her homework when they got home and here she was not doing it.  She heard, “Daddy hates me!”

She wrote many notes, using many pieces of paper, describing how she was stupid and despised by her parents.  She then shaped these paper notes into balls and airplanes which she threw at her mother and father scoring direct hits  This was meant to prove how helpless and incompetent she was. 

And yet, she would not  touch pen to paper to transfer a single word from the brainstorming session that took place in the bathroom while she lay in a warm tub dictating ideas to her secretary-mother who dutifully wrote them on the whiteboard for her. 

Thoughts crossed the mother mind such as;

“When I was a kid we didn’t get “real” homework  until 6th grade, perhaps my child, and by extension most 3rd graders ought not to do it.”

 “Is this what President Obama means by turning off the TV and helping kids with their homework?  If it is, I don’t think I love him anymore.”

 “If this is how much time we educated professionals have to put into getting our kids to do their homework at all–quality and quantity be damed–what hope is there for a single mother of several children who works two minimum wage jobs to “help” them with their homework?” 

Evil tired hungry frustrated mommy offered to write a note to the teacher excusing My Kid by explaining that she was unable to complete her assignment due to emotional immaturity–It worked.  The text was written–however brief.  Food was eaten including My Kid’s first taste of banana cream pie which I had brought home for desert but in the construction of the piece became the finale of the text.

The child’s mood was light as air.

Mommy read her a fairy tale by “Hans Christian Anderson”.  She closed her eyes and fell fast asleep with a smile on her face.

THAT KID played us like a violin!

On stage, I can only aspire to the kind dedication, focus and control over an audience that my 8-year-old kid employs on her parents in an attempt to get out of doing her homework.  

Pure clown.

Adora Udoji gave up her co-host job to stay home with her new baby

For the last several weeks whenever “The Takeaway” on NPR “with John Hockenberry and Adora Udoji self-identified, the substitute co-host was introduced and it was explained that Adora Udoji was home with her new baby.  

Well.

This morning it was announced that she would not return.  Last week she informed the NPR producers that she would not be returning.  

It’s a really tough decision and I’m sure she had been agonizing over it for weeks.  She probably cringed or cried or felt a cold knife through her heart every time she heard her name and job title on the radio.  How could she go back there to a job that metaphysically doesn’t exist for her in the same way that it did before she had a baby in her arms.  Of course she could.  Of course it is possible.  Of course it is done every day.  BUT IT IS HARD!  Not hard like waking up in the morning and having a stressful commute. LEAVING YOUR BABY TO GO TO WORK IS HARD LIKE CLIMBING MOUNT EVEREST .

Women are high altitude mountain climbing expedition strong every day.

Family and work. It’s not an either or choice.

On the way home from a political fundraiser for a local dad running for political office, talk turned to how much his wife had to do to pull together the event on short notice.

The Husband said of the politician dad, “He wouldn’t be possible without her.”

Moments later, my mind returned to a conversation during one of the breaks during the mask workshop I’m taking this weekend.  Ensemble companies were being discussed one their merit and why some had disbanded.  Mid-career women, one part of a small self-producing company another who had written her thesis on ensemble theatre were discussing a well known group that had fallen apart “after they all had babies”.  A passionate young man broke in to say a variant of “If people want to create that kind of art they shouldn’t have families.”  

Not until I was on the way home did I think to myself, firemen still get to have families, police officers still get to have families, mountain climbers have families,  even that strange French man who climbs buildings like Spiderman, has a wife and kids.   Why are performing artists who generate new work expected to devote their lives to to their practice while at the same time doing without the family that for many people is the primary reason they get out of bed to go to work each day.   Only priests and nuns are held to such a vocational standard.

White Noise

Tonight I went to White Noise, a clown show, piece of art, by Jef Johnson at Theatrelab. Unfortunately I saw it on the last night of the run, so when I say it was fascinating and definitely worth seeing, it’s too late. Tonight was the last night. I thought because I go to his labs and am interested in his technique that I would go two or three times during the two weekend run. But I didn’t. I was lucky to get there tonight. I’m glad I did.

Golden Nose Awards

Yes, the New York clown community has its own awards show. Flying under the radar at the Krane Theatre on the Lower East Side, last night, individuals in street clothes, were publicly acknowledged for their contributions to the art form of clown.

Before and after the show there was socializing at Phoebe’s bar on Bowery and 4th where there was the usual talk about upcoming shows and gigs as well as more discussion of the Swiss clown Dimitri and his family who just finished a run at the New Victory Theatre. There were random smart people digressions on topics as diverse as the Food and Drug Administration and the public education system. I saw Kevin Carr, stand-up-comedian/actor/clown for the first time since…some year waaaaaay back during the last century, when we were both in the same Clown College class in Florida. Adam Gertsacov, another classmate, from back in the day, who books his flea circus and other solo shows at community events and schools, was also there –slightly stunned that this was his first social night out with a bunch of clowns since the birth of his son six months ago.

Barry Lubin, better known as “Grandma” of The Big Apple Circus, presented Dick Monday and his wife Tiffany Riley, who were in town from their home in Dallas, Texas (where they relocated for a more affordable lifestyle after having kids) with the Clowns of the Year award for their work as the ensemble The New York Goofs and for their teaching of clown skills in New York City for over 10 years. They remain a vital part of the New York clown scene returning several times each year to teach and perform.

Hovey Burgess, a master teacher in the NYU graduate acting program received a lifetime achievement award for his work as a circus and clown historian. Everyone knows him because he goes to everything and he is acknowledged somewhere in almost every book about American clowns and circus published in the past 25 years.

Deven Sisler, just back from Haiti, accepted an award on behalf of Clowns Without Boarders, a volunteer organization that sends groups of clowns to areas of crisis all over the world, including refugee camps, conflict zones and territories in situations of emergency.

Very cute, very young Spencer Novich, a student in the experimental theatre wing of the NYU drama school won an audience choice award for his eccentric dancing character and mid-career professional Joel Jeske and Mike Richter, and Christopher Lueck received one for their act “Musique”.

But, mostly the evening was a celebration of people who embrace the art form of clowning.

“There’s no competition here, we’re all fighting to make a living,” said Dick Monday as he picked up his award: “This does weigh a lot and it will keep the credit card debt in one pile.”

Zing Zang Zoom

We went to see Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus at Madison Square Garden, last week, on Good Friday, when we Catholics are supposed to be thinking sad and sombre thoughts.

Oh well.

I hate Madison Square Garden! It’s an ugly inefficient maze of a construction made all the more tragic because the old Pennsylvania Train Station was torn down to build it. I never saw it, but I’ve seen pictures and read descriptions of it being even more grand and beautiful than Grand Central Station.

Anyway, Zing Zang Zoom was better than we expected from the poster which said to me (as an experienced circus goer): “Yikes, we left Winter Quarters without a headline act.”

I had pithy thoughts of circuses and life–but they are gone, victims of the Easter/lice chaos.

I watched energetic young clown Joy Powers and missed my physical youth as I willingly paid way too much for cotton candy, a plush elephant named “Asia” and a plastic pony shaped beer stein filled with ice and sugar syrup for my own little force of nature.

La Familia Dimitri

We took My Kid to see La Familia Dimitri at the New Victory Theatre in Times Square. I’m so glad we did. The Clown Dimitri, even in his 70’s is still charming and adorable and his offspring, all in their 40’s, are fit and accomplished performers with careers of their own who came together for this international tour were a joy to watch.

The Dimitri family alternated between hard-won skills and novelty gags without the shrill hard sell of so many American variety entertainers.

I know there is more support in Europe for this sort of thing which doesn’t take away from the fact that the Dimitris are an amazing family! Yet I wonder how much easier it must be for performing artists to develop in a country where there are grants and support. They have a chance to breathe and practice and learn new skills without quite as many worries about basics like health care.

In his own show, Lorenzo Pisoni talked about his dad falling wrong during one of his performances “and after eight months of chewing asprin finally going to the doctor and learning he had broken his back and it had healed badly”. How could someone who makes their living as a physical comedian let something like that go for so long, I imagine, unless he happened not to have health insurance at the time of the accident. Hmmm. That was a bad fall. Should I go to the emergency room or the doctor? No. If they find something they will want to operate and that can only lead to bankrupcy. Better not to know.

So Larry Pisoni doesn’t do his Lorenzo Pickle act anymore but the 72-year-old clown Dimitri of Switzerland is still going strong and all three of his children are performers and still making new work in their 40’s.

I also think of frumpy Susan Boyle, 47-year-old youtube sensation, who shocked the “Britain’s Got Talent” by having a beautiful singing voice even though she didn’t look like a 21-year-old supermodel.

Watching the Dimitri family play their instruments together between feats of circus prowess, I thought of how many hours they had spent making music together apart from the hours spent learning their circus skills while they were growing up and how rare it is to be able to build that kind of time into the hurried, penny and minute counting chopped-up, scheduled days that form the backbone of culture in which I am raising my child.