Wednesday, November 6, 2013

I wonder if people wear so much black in New York because it's easier to submit to the shadows and add texture to the background that to walk unabashedly in vibrant, cold, inescapable limelight. Myself I always feel a little more adventurous in something bright, but somehow safer swathed in the purples, blues, and blacks of early bruising.

I've been searching for inspiration from everything these days, it seems. A few weeks ago I found myself watching - but hearing more -the lovely patchwork of a brand new opera, a work in process of Two Boys for the Met opera. It's unlike anything done before, and it's composer is thirty two. At the Q and A he seemed so consumed by his creativity that every nuance of his personality and physical mannerisms bursts forth in fits and starts. There's also a very real possibility that his frenetic genius is fueled as much by drugs as by some sort of divine enthusiasm for music... It's better though if his eccentricities are just genuine testaments to the fount of novelty he has to offer.

I think about how people manage to do old things in new ways a lot. I feel like that capacity is what generates the ever shifting landscape of our time. The newest inventions generate the most excitement and clamor ... such that the past's foundations are eclipsed and embarrassed.   Then Life posits an old jazz legend - at whom I marvel for the front man career he's generated from an affinity for the standing base. His suit is older and ill fitting, but that's hardly his fault. I imagine his tall spider like frame is challenging to suitably drape. And then the way he plays his music and his eight piece, jazz band. My favorite thing is that his eyes are never open. Not even when he directs with his forceful index fingers. His ears though, I envy to imagine what his ears are hearing. From my meager experience all I know is that he and his friends have figured out the answer to some secret that melts away the stress of expectations and the decay of age. Somehow his hands are effortless, strong, and young, despite the overarching sense of fragility in his every move from the wrists up. And his all female cello chorus of four; they're old enough to be my grandmothers, but doing what they must love makes them smile so you see the giddy school girls they had to have been decades ago. You can't take their eyes of them, but still are only spectators to their bliss.

I imagine most people long for the ease of companionship and joy in one's work and colleagues that Robert Cole and his colleagues have mustered  I certainly do. In the same moment I acknowledge  the challenge of asking questions and searching for answers in performance is that while it is the sum total of hard work, it is by no means a full reflection of the obstacles that were overcome before the pinnacle could be reached.  I remind myself of that reality in my teaching, practice makes improvements but not perfection. Sometimes imperfections are in fact vastly more useful to making progress with the human condition.  I endeavor not to register so deeply that feeling of disappointment when I feel I wasn't able to get to that one child who seems to orbit outside my reach.

It's our lives as these orbiting bodies that I at times find so exhausting. There's good in it too; sometimes you bump into another one of those humanoid planets that frequent the streets and are pushed further along your own path, but then again, sometimes you're stymied and forced to a stop by forces seemingly beyond your will to bend or master. I suppose it's all in the service of progress.


Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Lights, Glamour, Action

In today's version of the Wonderland chronicles...

I awoke early so that I could spend some time creating a more presentable iteration of myself than usual. After all, it's not every day one gets to take one's classroom (of home schooled tweens) on location to a fashion show on Fifth Avenue.

Working for Wonderland has certainly been a testament to the value of the strength of weak ties. After pulling some strings, my charges and I got into today's demonstration of Bergdorf's new evening wear collection. I had almost forgotten how intense the women and men who work in fashion can be. They really don't smile much! Remarkably, the tiny humans seemed entirely nonplussed by their lavish surroundings (they noted the handsome, taciturn champagne + water bearer in the corner and were quite resourceful in routing out what food was available to them).

The youngest is a burgeoning little fashion designer in his own right. We started talking about the progress of the current garment he's working on (there is white leather and pink vinyl involved) and he immediately caught the attention of two fashionistas across the way, who were bursting at the seams to hear more about the youngest fashion designer they had ever met. It was a fantastic opportunity for him to practice the talking points for his line (keep in mind, he's 11), and I was impressed with his ability to carry himself in conversation with women nearly twice .... thrice?... his age.

It's not all rainbows and sparkly things with this lot; sometimes I think they're not aware that there is actually a difference between full voice and a stage whisper. At a few intervals during the show, I had to field loud (seriously, quite audible) comments that the models looked anorexic and needed cheeseburgers. One girl even pointed and remarked with disgust that a model needed a pedicure and that her toes were weirdly shaped. It would have been funny, had I not been a bit appalled by the sheer audacity (and lack of social awareness) displayed by my little flock.

Of course, we eventually settled down into a semblance of silence so that the show could begin, but the bizarre otherworldly study of human interaction provided by the environment was not lost on me. I don't envy the children their position in the heights of privilege and opportunity... for the most part they bear it well, but in the deepest recesses of their hearts and minds, I have begun to see that they are nearly paralyzed with fear that they'll let their parents down by somehow managing to NOT be extraordinary by the end of this year.

In the mean time, I'll be soldiering along, doing my best to instill values and teach lessons designed around the formulation of an open minded perspective and a strong moral compass. That's the dream!

Though my current job feels like performance of an entirely new variety, I haven't completely forsaken my love of performing in more traditional venues. Getting back into theater, tap, and voice classes in the past two weeks has felt like being alive again. I didn't realize how much I'd miss it!

More from Wonderland soon...









Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Down the Rabbit Hole

After disappearing for eight months at sea, I have returned, relatively unscathed. My new furniture is built, my clothes are unpacked, my land legs have returned, and all is almost right with the world once more.

Sadly, I've had to put dancing and auditioning on the back burner. I hit the ground running with a new job that began even before I finished my contract with Norwegian. There's a lot of performance involved, but I'm on a completely new type of stage...


While out at sea, a mysterious little white rabbit of a head hunter found me and offered me a job running a homeschool for a family here in New York. Supplemental tutoring is one thing I've been quite good at for many years, but designing and implementing my own curriculum? Hiring my own staff? Overseeing an educational model based in exploration to nourish a love of learning!? I was SO on board.




Yet, as often happens in life, I neglected the whole look before you leap paradigm. I've been back in the city nearly a month, and it's only today I've realized that I've been living almost primarily in an alternate universe, where mad tea parties are a real thing, except the tea is hand brewed by an 11 year old burgeoning chef, and instead of a door mouse, there's a hypoallergenic Dori dog. Instead of a rabbit hole, I've got a portal that looks remarkably like the front door of a gorgeous four story brownstone somewhere in Chelsea.


It's true, I can't go back to yesterday, because I was a different person then... but we may very well be all mad here.


Saturday, March 2, 2013

Updates!!

Well, I've made it to Florida and rehearsals are in full swing!!

My new roommate (aft; a fierce singer girl) and our Aussie dance captain (fore)

Photo: When your dance captain and your roommate decide to throw down. Where all nights should begin and end.

My favorite post work hangout aka new age non-drug muscle relaxant

Photo: The best part about the end of a nine hour day of dancing

We work nine hour days (officially, which does not count the three plus hours we spend reviewing material together once we're back home and technically "off the clock"). If we're lucky, we have one day off every six days.

A typical day starts at 6am when my roommate (or rather her alarm) wakes me up to work out before our 7am call time. Then we head to the rehearsal studio, where we have a physical/dance warm up for a half an hour (including a killer abs section to Little Mix's "Stereo Soldier," with which I am absolutely obsessed). After that, we have a vocal warm up for thirty minutes with the musical director before we work from 9-12:30 to run segments of music, learn/review choreography, and get the shows on their feet. Then we get lunch, then we're back for the next four-ish hours.

Working for a cruise line has definitely necessitated some adjustment after working for the Met, which doesn't start rehearsals until at least 10am and operates under union sanctions (the most critical to my happiness is the Met's consistent breaks and the greater flexibility in schedule afforded by the occasionally - shall we say - uber involved and engaged opera diva). After spending two weeks in Florida on my feet in character heels nine hours a day without those luxuries of rest periods to which I had grown accustomed, I truly comprehend and value what a union can offer.

That said, I'm surprised and happy that I seem to be able to live up to the challenge! The first few days were pretty rough, and I can't remember the last time my entire body wasn't sore or covered in bruises, but as each day passes I get stronger, the millions of steps of choreo root more firmly in my brain, and the forty plus songs (especially my solos - eek; PLURAL) begin to register in a more supported place

(Dramatic aside: that last bit has required some effort. Doing these musicals, which are essentially nonstop simultaneous singing and dancing, is akin to what I imagine delivering the State of the Union live without moving your upper body, while your lower body is running at a 6.5 speed at a 45 degree incline on a treadmill would be like).

As Saturday comes to an end, I lament the end of an amazingly relaxing day off (I've never felt that I really deserve those days off before taking this contract, and wow do I relish them when they are here).

Next week should prove interesting. Our five-girl cast for Shout: The Mod Musical has been sans an Orange girl for the entirety of the first week we spent learning and blocking and running the whole show. Orange gets in from London late tonight, and we'll be working every day from Sunday to Sunday in order to catch her up. It's going to be a BEAST of a seven day work week, during which I will look forward to this yumminess I prepped tonight, and to Monday, March 11th, my next most glorious day of rest.

Photo: Gluten free pasta primavera for the next few lunches. #everydaywehustlin'

Until next time,

A Broadway Baby

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Things move forward

It's official! I've accepted an offer to be a principal singer-dancer on Norwegian Cruise Lines. It should be fun. 8 months of an itinerary that spans the Caribbean, the Mediterranean, Panama, Vancouver, and Alaska.

There are some things in my life right now that aren't going exactly as I'd like... but I am appreciating the reality check amidst all my gratefulness and joy.

A good friend sent me Monty Python's "always look on the bright side of life" as the perfect reminder not to make the less awesome cards that life occasionally deals us too seriously.

In three weeks, I will be in Miami rehearsing and getting ready to head out to sea!

Woot!

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Art, love, truth

Art is so intimately close to love and truth. That realization is perhaps what I am most grateful to have discovered over the past three years. An artist's job is to use their love to occupy your attention for as long as he or she can, and if that artist stumbles upon some helpful truth in the endeavor, well, that's the dream. Perhaps in that desire to connect, to support, to share, to dream, therein lies the unique opportunity we all have to keep each other moving forward.

Lately, I've been thinking a lot about the things that really matter. Incidentally, intention work as a dancer, singer, and actor has been the ideal catalyst for that kind of thought. What motivates us to do what we do, to be who we are, to keep fighting for what we believe in despite all indications of futility? It must be some ennui, our spirit, our nature, that intangible, inexplicable thing we all have in common, which manages to keep us moving forward no matter the obstacles or stressors.


I want people around me who thrive on their passion, who tell me the truth, even if they know it may not be the popular thing to say. Life is this push pull. The relationships I enjoy most are those when people are committed to something, no matter what that thing is. There are people whose encounters are more like volcanic eruptions, whose love, truth, and art explodes like some incredible drum roll of hundreds of tightly round timpani drums before the cymbal clash that signal majesty in the making.


Sometimes fit between people and people or people and employment or people and life calling  is no good. It becomes obvious and irrevocable. Looks fade. Things fall toward Mexico and/or stop working. What matters is a person's substance and how true they stay to what matters most. When something matters, you fight for it. That's the most important push back sort of affirmation of our existence that we have.


Miguel [Angel Ruiz] has some interesting thoughts on the nature of self love and the nuances of functional relationships. In his philosophical prose piece the Four Agreements, he posits the value of committing to the following, which I think may help lead you where you want to go:


1. Be impeccable with your word

2. Take nothing personally
3. Make no assumptions
4. Do your best, always

There are times when I have difficulty with all four, to be perfectly frank. But every day is another day. Also, I am pretty impressed with anyone who endeavors to be better. I like the Ruiz idea that "You don't need to justify your love, you don't need to explain your love, you just need to practice your love. Practice creates the master." When you find the right job, the right friendship, the right relationship for you, there's this instinctual knowledge and feeling that it's right. In the mean time you'll be doing all this practice in self love to get yourself ready for the great love of your life.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Working Through Some Things

You'll tell me of these frustrated dreams
Constructing a world where all you seek to achieve is futile distraction 
vagabonds accost us on subways
Life cuts your phone out of your jeans' back pocket and
Scores your heart with wasted possibilities

To cope, you cleanse your pallet with well balance liquids and smooth over the rough edges of an existence so desperately desirous to be made unique

That is where a love lives.
In errant moments lost in alphabet bars
In shared dreams, witness to the singularly soulful promise of a few eager fingers interlaced with a few other equally eager fingers.

There is that enviable ease of living
Longed for by many
Achieved by so few
Punctuated by the clarity of earnest tears restricted by subzero temperatures and laughed out of substantiation all for an illusive sense of self preservation

Somewhere floating in lower Manhattan, there is a love held captive by the intimacy of the grasp of your forearm
A glance of pressure along the inside of my knee

Disguised by the clever capitulations of world weariness, disillusion, and poorly cloaked need.

There is where a love lies.

Someday you will show it the excellence of all it has been promised. There will be veracity sufficient to color a life and love hard won.

Until then, that opal moon beams soothingly over missteps and black bunches of balloons and siphoned expectations and waits for the day all is changed because the sun rises at just the right angle to dispel all doubt.





In that pocket of horizontal space between sunrise and moonsleep, inexhaustible, unafraid of dying, that is where a love lies.

Monday, January 14, 2013

Don't Sleep In The Subway

Is not only good advice ... apparently it's also a song!

What a DAY. I've been sparing with my posts because most of the past week has been focused on practicing the virtue of patience game (as per usual). On a whim, I submitted my headshot and resume for a dancer position on Norwegian Cruise Lines, thinking that I'd just go get a free dance class out of it.

Instead, they respond back asking me to prepare two motown pieces to audition for a featured singer in a new Broadway production that they will be creating for one of their ships. It's choreographed by greats like Rachelle Rak (of Chorus Line, Fosse & Chicago fame) and Tiger Martina, so it would actually be an incredible opportunity! They called me back on Friday, and again today (Monday) to sing more material, and later to dance.

While between auditions for Palace Theater in New Hampshire and NCL callbacks, I finally found out today that none of the four girls who were at the end of the Zorro audition have heard from the casting personnel, which could mean a whole host of different things. Ultimately, the most important of those is there's no telling when or if we'll hear, and this is not an industry that affords much waiting.

Got to the end, I think of the NCL callback and am off to bed a tired and quite fulfilled little puppy.

Cheerio!

Monday, January 7, 2013

Keep Calm and Do Epic Things

Despite some unpleasantness at the homestead, this week is off to a raging start and will be utterly consumed by rehearsals, performances, auditions, and resuming my regular tutoring client load. I worked out with my trainer this morning at 7:30am to make sure I could get to the Met on Time to start rehearsals as a cover for the new production of Parsifal, one of Wagner's last completed works. 

We're diving right in and already I can tell it is going to be EPIC. The incredible director Francois Girard has his very French head in the game. His team is so thoroughly prepared that it's a pleasure to watch them work. I seriously cannot WAIT to see the set design in person, as it looks promising.


According to his perception, "Parsifal is not just an opera—it’s a mission. At the end of his life, Wagner was trying to reconcile all the aspects of his spirituality. It’s a sacred piece in the history of music." —François Girard


Sign me up! 


In between rehearsals now, printing some sheet music at the Lincoln Center library for callbacks later this week. It's going to be one of those fly-by-the-seat-of-my-dance-pants sort of weeks. Can't wait!


Hugs,


A Broadway Baby

Thursday, January 3, 2013

All's Quiet on the Eastern Front

After the holidays and a brief respite before barreling back into performances, auditions, and clients, I find myself in need of a reminder of the benefits an attitude of gratitude can yield.

Thanks to the Scientific American, via friend Sonali, for the perfect opportunity to break my long absence.

The Scientific American: Accentuate the Positive
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=gratitude-map-invites-use