Rainy Day Prop Shopping
Feb. 13th, 2008 10:53 pmSpent the morning on the computer doing show stuff -- we're now finally fully cast for Harry in Love for August, that is me, Josephine Cashman, Walter Brandes, Ken Simon, Tom Reid, and Darius Stone. This is a hell of a cast and really great for the show and all parts, so I'm ecstatic there. More people in and sending schedules for the other shows, some people not in. Looking for others.
Then Berit and I went driving around Brooklyn shopping for props for the UTC#61 shows. Well, it was better than if we'd gone out in the snow yesterday, but not by much at first . . .
It turned out to be heavier rain than I'd thought (or dressed for, or brought enough umbrellas for), and after getting soaked to the bone walking around with Berit at our first stop on Coney Island Avenue, I wound up sitting in the car being bored and miserable and wet and waiting for her to find things at out next stop on Flatbush Avenue.
But then, we wound up at another stop on Flatbush that, for some reason, cheered me up - a big discount store that had a number of things Berit needed, as well as one prop I need for Harry in Love - an IMMENSE suitcase - that will also work for Cat's Cradle (EDIT - Wrong. It's for Hiroshima, my mistake). Nice big store, with lots of good things, cheap. Somewhere on Flatbush near Avenue N. By the time we got out of there, the rain had stopped, and we moved on down to the stop I'd been looking forward to, the hobby shop.
(hey, I built that Planet of the Apes model there in the foreground when I was a kid!)
This is at Michele's Country Craft on Flatbush, which is a hobby shop like I haven't seen since I was growing up, and which I'm not sure exists much anymore - plastic model kits (AMT, Aurora, Revell, etc.), Gayla kites, Estes model rockets, Corgi cars, plus lots of other craft things I was never interested in. Berit has gone in there for certain things before (she needed scale dollhouse pieces for Edward Einhorn's Unauthorized Magic in Oz toy theatre piece), and I just look at all the model kits - many of which I remember building, and which are still being marketed by the same companies in the same boxes (at much higher prices, of course).
There's a scene in Cat's Cradle that takes place in a hobby shop in the early-to-mid 60s, and a character is playing around with what we decided at a production meeting should be a plastic model. So Berit and I spent some time looking for a good "period" model to use.
I was really pulling for an official Revell Ed "Big Daddy" Roth car, with the Rat Fink character (I think it was the "Superfink" model), which came in an accurate-looking box, though actually the Roth ripoff models, the "Weird-Ohs," looked even more period . . .
Berit, however, noted that while these were the most "period" looking, they were also so distracting that audience members would be wondering "What the hell IS that he's got there?" rather than just thinking, "Oh, model kit, hobby shop" and paying attention to the scene. A very nice gentleman who remembered building these models in the early 60s (he pointed to his Vietnam Veteran cap and noted that by the late 60s he wasn't doing them much anymore) helped us look and we wound up with a good-looking car model that's also supposed to be painted in tones that scenes in this location for the play are being "color-coded." He grabbed us the correct color of Testors paint - the cement was, as it often remember it, behind the counter - and I thought that the paint bottle looked a lot smaller than the ones I used, but nope, I was assured, I was just that much bigger.
Then a nice drive out on the Belt to the lovely Gateway Shopping Plaza, right across from the landfill . . .
. . . which is the kind of place that friends and relatives from out of town are always surprised is in "Brooklyn, New York" for some reason. Sometimes we drive out a little into Eastern Brooklyn and, jeez, we could be in some small New England city, you'd never know the difference.
So we shopped at the Staples, the Home Depot, and braved the horrifying scents of Bed, Bath and Beyond, got more props (and I found a whole bunch of things to come back for later for my own shows this year), had dinner at a chain restaurant I'm too embarrassed and snooty to admit we did (we were tired and hungry), and came on home.
Berit's alternating work on some of the pieces now and relaxing with Guitar Hero II. I thought that I'd actually get to do the partial build on the model kit, but Berit's never built one and is interested in doing it herself (I think she's going to enjoy it, it's right up her alley):
Tomorrow, more show stuff as I can, and probably going to The Brick and hanging some lights for Penny Dreadful - oh, and it's turned out that Berit can't run this week's show because she'll be too busy with the props for Edward and Henry, so I'll have to be the board op struggling to know when the cues are. Ah, fun.
Maybe I'll wait till Friday on the lights . . .