First page of the broadway cares equity fights aids archive.
one cigarette
Posted by jessica on Oct 28, 2009 with No Comments
in Funny Stuff, Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
as A Chorus Line, anti smoking campaigns, broadway cares equity fights aids, Canada, cigarette, dumb joke, fan mail, friend joey, Joey, part, Sheila, show, smoke, story, theater/tour
in Funny Stuff, Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
as A Chorus Line, anti smoking campaigns, broadway cares equity fights aids, Canada, cigarette, dumb joke, fan mail, friend joey, Joey, part, Sheila, show, smoke, story, theater/tour
Tonight I was backstage signing posters for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids when my friend Joey told me I had to read something. I made some dumb joke in response and he reiterated that I really had to read it.
Okay, I will, I said nonchalantly, most of my energy going to making that large J followed by a lot of squiggles and the even larger L followed by yet more squiggles. Yes, my signature needs work. But it’s not work I like to do, not when there are 100+ posters a pop yet again staring me in the face.
But Joey was not taking no for an answer, Now. You need to read it now.
Well I’m busy doing something for people with AIDS, what are you doing? After informing me that he had already signed those posters and done his part, I decided to humor him and read what had gotten his attention.
I present: fan mail.
Well not exactly fan mail, I guess.
Okay, not even close.
Here goes…
To Whom It May Concern:
I am a 29 year old female who loves attending your Broadway through Canada productions. I was appalled to smell cigarette smoke during “A Chorus Line” during the Saturday, October 17 show in the afternoon. There were comments coming from one of the actresses during the show saying she needed a smoke break, but then she didn’t leave the stage so I figured that was it, and it was just part of her character. But then a while later she lit up on the stage.
In today’s world of anti-smoking campaigns and the fight against cancer, I was surprised that she didn’t just “act-out” the smoking, but that she actually “smoked” a real cigarette. The part that disturbed me the most was that we were sitting in the 4th row of the mezzanine and we could actually smell the cigarette smoke a few minutes later.
I realize that it’s one cigarette and no, one cigarette isn’t going to kill me, but the point is that we should be allowed to attend these performances in a smoke-free environment, right?
Then they had the nerve after the show to ask us to donate money to some of their charities–one of them being for cancer.
When my friends and colleagues asked me how I liked “A Chorus Line” I didn’t tell them about the actors, dancing, or singing. I told them about how I was at the NAC and I could not believe that I had smelled cigarette smoke during the show.
So there it is. Yowza. I can maybe see where she is coming from, and I don’t know–perhaps somebody she loved passed away from lung cancer, making any smell of smoke instantly give her a visceral reaction that encompasses all.
Or maybe she just doesn’t get the idea of story.
Of characters that make that story come to life.
Or of the fact that we are depicting a story that involves dancers in the seventies and let me tell you, a lot of them smoked. In fact, a lot of them did a lot more than smoke and the fact that one lone cigarette (which is herbal, by the way, and if anyone cares at all) made it into a scene is pretty tame in comparison to what could be there.
Not that I am saying that cigarettes are cool or good for you or that I am buying them for my nieces and nephews for Christmas. No, I actually hate the smell too. But this cigarette is a part of Sheila’s story. She’s a stressed out, jaded, aging dancer who’s talking about the business and how precarious it is. She lights up. Because it’s part of her character. It’s what Sheila would do.
Therefore the actress who plays Sheila does it.
See, story–any good story–is not just about perfection or always making the right choices or how one day you baked a cake and then walked your dog, though those are two perfectly lovely things to do and if you ever want to bake a cake for me and then invite me to walk your dog, I am totally in. But story involves conflict. It’s creating scenes that are memorable. Sheila lighting up during the alternative scene–actively portraying her need to de-stress in what is supposed to be the great conflict or climax of A Chorus Line–makes sense. And obviously, it’s memorable since it’s the freaking only thing this young lady even mentioned to anyone who asked her about the show: that cigarette.
Even the Bible is totally offensive in some places. Because it tells a story of humans and let’s face it, we mess up. A lot. But, it’s memorable. It’s not tame-not at all–but it sticks, because the stories talk about everything, the good and the bad, making it authentic. It tells about the screwing up and the grace that comes afterward.
And well, the cigarette? It’s a part of the story that we are telling every night.
And no, the point of the cigarette is not that we think everyone should smoke because shriveled lungs are so cool; the point of the cigarette is to show that Sheila, like all of the rest of us, is scared. Worried about the future. Wondering where the next job, the next paycheck will come from.
And honestly, simply talking about it is something, yes; but there’s power in showing it.
And come on, ONE cigarette at the very end of the show made her forget about the hilarity that is SING?!?!
Okay, just joking.
But seriously, a lot of other good stuff goes on during that two hours; I have a hard time believing it was all trumped by that cigarette. It must have been the fact that it was herbal–those things pack a punch.
Fletch and how I met Mckmama
Posted by jessica on Jun 22, 2009 with No Comments
in Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
as broadway cares equity fights aids, digital communication, doctor, fletch, mckmama, Minneapolis, orpheum, show, son, Stellan, sweet son, theater/tour, thoughts/life, Wisconsin
in Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
as broadway cares equity fights aids, digital communication, doctor, fletch, mckmama, Minneapolis, orpheum, show, son, Stellan, sweet son, theater/tour, thoughts/life, Wisconsin
First things first.
Last night and tonight there is a man named Fletch staying with us. He is an actor-turned-law-student who is currently bicycling cross country to raise money for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids and happened to meet up with us while we were here in Minneapolis.
No, I didn’t know him before yesterday.
Yes, one of my roommates did.
Vaguely.
He is nice, though, and if you want to donate to his cause you can go here.
If you don’t want to donate to his cause but would like to know what the man looks like who is currently sleeping wedged under a large window right outside my bedroom door, you can still go here.
Oh, and I met a blogger celebrity today.
Like, for real.
How did I meet Mckmama, you might wonder?
Well, it turns out that the doctor who takes care of her sweet son Stellan is a big fan of theater. He came to see our show here at the Orpheum and apparently raved about it–or so Mckmama said. Anyway, from a few comments I had left on her blog as well as the picture of our cast with her son’s name that I had sent to her blog, she put two and two together that I was in the show that this doctor loved so much.
So she tweeted me.
That’s right, I said tweeted.
For those of you who don’t know what twitter is, just trust me that it is yet another form of digital communication and I find it pretty fun, actually.
Anyway, Mckmama asked me to email her, said she needed to talk to me.
Now she is quite literally famous within the blogosphere, so I was a little star struck to get that tweet…Turns out that she wanted to know if we could put our heads together for her to do something special for her son Stellan’s doctor.
I offered to get a cast poster, have all of us sign it, with a special message for the doctor of course and bam! she swung by the Orpheum after my first show today and we did the drop.
I even got to see Stellan. Who looks incredibly healthy and is glowing with joy.
So that’s how I got to meet Mckmama. I’ve loved reading her blog for a long time and prayed for her son often, as well.
You never quite know what life is going to bring, do you?
Now on to Wisconsin tomorrow…


