collisionwork: (GCW Seal)
So, the fact that I'm sitting here in Brooklyn writing my third post of the day, and not in Petey Plymouth on my way to Maine (as has been intended for weeks) is a sore point right now.


I had an appointment with my dentist in Maine (and I go to a dentist up there for a number of reasons, not worth going into now) for this coming Saturday, which would have involved some work that would have led to my teeth being completely fixed by the opening of Ian W. Hill's Hamlet on June 12. It was a pain in the ass to arrange this - my dentist was going to be out of town most of this week and I could see him either this just past Monday - which would have meant canceling three rehearsals, no way - or Saturday - which meant moving a 3 pm rehearsal to 7 pm that very day, and getting in the car after leaving the dental office and driving six hours from Maine to NYC to just make it to that rehearsal. But this was the only time I had free to handle this before opening, so I picked the latter, which then also became more of a pain and meant losing the only full cast rehearsal of the show that I could have before tech on June 11, as one cast member couldn't do the later time.

But it was important to me to have the teeth done (and several other people close to me felt it was important, too).

The dental office called yesterday and canceled the appointment - the doctor will still be out of town. "Maybe June 2nd?" Uh, no, won't work.

Which appears to make it a no go on getting my teeth fixed in time for the show. And means I moved everything around for no good reason and lost my only full cast rehearsal. Great. Just fucking great.

So I'm in a funk. I'm going to call the office back today and see if there's anyone there that can at least do the impression for the partial piece - the main thing that HAD to get done now - even if they can't do the other work. And if so, drive up tomorrow. If not, I'll just have to live with it.

Which will, at least, make things easier for me as Tech Director of the Pretentious Festival, as I'll have some more free time now to get in The Brick and clean and fix things up well for the Fest. The cast member who couldn't make it is going to try and see if she can get out of her conflict for the Saturday night rehearsal, but I'm not assuming she will (nor pressuring her; it's my own damned fault).

Dammit.


On the other hand, rehearsals are going wonderfully. I feel like I should go into them in a bit of detail, but I'm still so pissed off and depressed that it's hard to think straight about them. Working with Gyda, Jessi, Adam and Bryan last night at least kept me positive, while the work was going on. Afterward, back to feeling shitty and stewing in my own frustration, wanting to punch something.

It's getting easier. The world and tone of the production seems clearer to everyone, and we fall into it faster. Scenes we're working on specifically in detail for the first time come together faster, scenes we're doing for the second time just need a few runs and some tweaking (thus far . . . harder scenes are to come, again).

The character relationships get clearer and richer. Many are changing from my long-held conceptions as the world is filled out differently by the actors -- that is, the world of the play I've been picturing for many many years is staying the same, my specific view of Hamlet, but the way that world functions as a piece of drama is changing and being made richer from the inclusion of everyone now in it.

We've gotten to finally work on a couple of the scenes that were the first things that came into my head as to why I wanted to do this production. Notably, the Horatio/Hamlet scene between the graveyard and Osric's entrance and the finale and entrance of the English Ambassador. It's weird, having pictured myself doing the former scene with Rasheed for 7 years now, to be standing in a rehearsal room with him and having it happen, and happen pretty much the exact way I imagined it and wanted it to, with all the subtle little things going on underneath their words.


It was this scene, in a version of the play directed by a friend in 1989, that made me start thinking about the play as a director. That director, like me, has positive feelings about Horatio, but couldn't come to grips with Horatio just standing by while his friend Hamlet screws up so badly and heads pretty obviously to his own destruction.

His bold solution was to write a new speech himself for Horatio, explaining his motivations. Bold, yes, but . . . kind of cheating, to me. So, how to make the point work with the actual text? It came for me in playing another level to Hamlet's speech to Horatio about having no qualms sending Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to their deaths.

That is, under that speech, Hamlet is saying to Horatio, "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were my friends, and I loved them. But they betrayed me, and got in the way of my necessary revenge. So I killed them. You, Horatio, are my friend. And I love you. Don't get in my way, please."

And we did it that way and it worked like gangbusters. Nice to see a nearly 20-year old idea actually happening and working.


Which was also the case with the English Ambassador and the ending, which we worked with Gyda last night. It involves a very specific sound cue and a rather radical way of ending the show (though it's somewhat influenced by Ingmar Bergman's take on it, which played at BAM with, I think, Peter Stormare as the Prince) - one of the earliest, clearest, and most specific ideas I had about this production. We did it with the sound cue, and me standing in for Horatio, a few times last night, and it just kept reducing Berit and I to giggles with how perfectly it's going to work and do what I want it to. Oh boy, am I looking forward to having this in front of audiences. You have no idea . . .

We also did a couple of Polonius clan scenes last night - the farewell to Laertes and Ophelia telling her dad about Hamlet acting cuckoo. Better and better and better. I think I'm kinda happy with this (I'm never happy with anything, especially in rehearsal; it's always a compromise, and I'm a miserable bastard, but I think this will work).


So, good, thinking about what's working has cheered me up considerably. Okay, onward, bad teeth or not . . .

collisionwork: (hamlet)
Just had two front teeth pulled.


Not so terrible. Everyone has horror stories about tooth-pullings, but apart from the emergency one I had done at Kings County Hospital (I can still viscerally feel that one being wrenched from its socket) mine have been . . . well, not a breeze, but not as bad as having a cavity filled, as far as I'm concerned. This makes six teeth taken out of my head, only two of them wisdom teeth (I'm getting the last two wisdoms out later this year - I'm trying to get my front teeth fixed prior to Ian W. Hill's Hamlet; I might make it).


The problem with the pulling isn't so much the pulling, as the sheer annoyance for a day afterward . . .



Goo goo ga joob!


Ah, yes, the wonderful gauze in the mouth! GOD I HATE IT!


So, I'm trying to get these two teeth (not quite symmetrical, one is next to one of the very front ones, the other is two teeth off, by a canine) replaced for the show. Even if I don't though, I can tell already that my smile looks better and acceptable without the two blackened stumps that I had in there. I'm having two other teeth (next to the pulled ones) fixed on Thursday, which will remove some large stains and discolorations, so things will look better all around.


I spent most of my time in the chair today going over my lines in my head, at least for the first couple of scenes -- with Claudius and Gertrude, then the monologue, then with Horatio, Marcella, and Bernardo. I have barely studied my lines since I've been up here, and that was a big part of the plan in coming up, but the time between appointments has been somewhat filled with helping my mom out on some Spring cleaning, which she really needed done. I should be able to spend all my free time today through Thursday on the script, though.


Still, being in the chair focuses the mind greatly -- while Dr. Dheeraj Pamidimukkala (nice guy, good work) was snapping, twisting, and pulling the buggers out, I was pretty well able to get through the entire sequence, including the "Oh, that this too too solid flesh--" speech, with almost no blips in my head. I tried it out loud in the room between the two pullings, as they gave me time to rest, but it sounded a little too odd:


Ohhh, dhat thiss too too tholid fleth would melllt,
Thaugh, ahnd frisolth itshelf into a doo--



I was worried it would get stuck in my head that way and I'd spend a lot of rehearsals holding back giggles, so I stopped.


So today is script work and biting down on gauze. Nice.

collisionwork: (flag)
I had an eye exam this morning, early, to start the process of getting contact lenses. I didn't imagine I'd be walking away from the doctor, actually wearing lenses.

I'm almost 39, I've been wearing glasses as long as I can almost remember, and I've never seen clearly without them. I've never driven, shopped, or typed without them. Now I have and am. It's an oddity and a wonder. Everything looks so different.

I'm going to be walking around looking like I'm on some serious hallucinogens for a while -- I think the doctor and assistant were quite amused at my wonder; they said I looked like a little boy on Christmas day.

I feel like one.

On the bad, well, not-so-bad-but-not-great, side, the "slight" red/green colorblindness that was detected in me the last time I was checked for it (by my pediatrician, Dr. Hecklau, when I was pretty small) is indeed -- as Berit will be filled with smuggery over, I'm sure -- something more than slight now. Not that much (got that, Berit?), but, as the doctor said, "just a bit more than slight."

So from now on, when Berit and I are arguing if a gelled light is showing red or orange, she gets the final call.

I also have one grey and one blue contact (without prescription) to check and double check on which one I want to go with for the "Hamlet" colored lenses. Currently, I'm leaning to the grey.


So, a quick random ten; I have a dental appointment in 40 minutes:


1. "Ebony Affair" - Betty Wright & Timmy Thomas - Why Can't We Live Together - The Best of Timmy Thomas

Sweet soul music. Thomas writes oddly for the genre in some strange way I can't quite define - just a bit "off" of standard. So, a little more interesting than a lot of other soul.


2. "Sook Boo Ga Loo" - Bobby Rush - Soulin' vol. 4

And more soul. It's a groove morning.

Good song, but it's got that thing going where you name as many places in a song as possible, in an attempt to insure sales of and/or crowd reaction to the song in those places. There's got to be a pithy name for that little lyrical trick. I was trying to come up with one in the car yesterday after hearing one of these, and couldn't do it.

Oh, right, that wasn't the exact same kind, that was the bit where you name as many great bands or musicians in your own song to try and get a reaction by leeching off of them (eg; Arthur Conley's "Sweet Soul Music," which drives me nuts). Yesterday's song was Wayne County & The Backstreet Boys doing "Max's Kansas City," which names about every good punk band from '73-78 in it. I forgive it a bit from Wayne - it's just his (now, her) style . . .


3. "Leader of the Sect" - The Downliners Sect - The Definitive Downliners Sect: Singles As and Bs

Oh, ew. This is a 60s Brit blues/R&B band that never really got too big. Most of their stuff is quite good, but this is a "novelty" kind of number, not really based on "Leader of the Pack," but lyrically close and with a similar spoken intro (done, by these English kids, for some reason in overdone "Snagglepuss" voices, for crissakes!).

Short, though. They still play really well.


4. "Burning Burning" - The Bunnys - Sixties Japanese Garage Psych Sampler

Another great hard crazy Japanese garage-rock single. Hard fast and nasty, with oddly sweet vocals, then some vicious screaming.


5. "La Via Della Droga" - Goblin - Roma Violenta: La Cinevox Si Incazza

More groove, but from a bunch of Italians scoring a horror film or thriller, probably some time in the 70s. Classic track I'm not all that familiar with - similar to their scores for Argento and Romero, but a little funkier and able to work outside of being just for a film score. Great bass and guitar work.


6. "Stingaree" - Charlie Musselwhite - Alligator Records 25th Anniversary Collection

Good little blues. Just voice and guitar.

Which is nice. As good as it is that Alligator Records produced and released so many records for Bluesmen who had been forgotten (and screwed by the record industry in the past) through the 60s on, I find a lot of their recordings a little too produced and slick. This is clean, but not slick. There's a difference.


7. "Flower" - Liz Phair - Exile in Guyville

And speaking of unslick. At least soundwise.

Liz unpacks the dirty mouth in a great track from that first album that we all fell in love with, then forgot about, for the most part, a few years later.

The album is still great, and this track, which could sound incredibly forced in its sexual forthrightness, and doesn't, is still one of the highlights.


8. "Steppin' Out" - Paul Revere & The Raiders - Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era

"Hey Joey, it's a nugget if you dug it!" -- Lenny Kaye to Joey Ramone at one of Joey's birthday parties at Coney Island High right before Kaye and the house band played a medley of "Pushin' Too Hard" and "Jessie's Girl."

And here's a nugget and I do duggit.

Last night, though, I heard one of my favorite once-obscure songs, "Knock, Knock" by The Humane Society, used in a light beer commercial. That's . . . oh, god. I know it's because people like me are working in ad agencies now, but jesus, still . . . a light beer commercial!?


9. "Dance We Me, Henry" - Georgia Gibs - Back to the 50s 03

Silly 50s kitsch novelty music that I like having as a changeup in the iPod, and a reminder of what was going on in the actual hit parade as rock 'n' roll was rising out of the stew.


10. "Take It Off" - The Genteels - Las Vegas Grind!

And here's a chunky part of that stew. A nasty little instrumental from a band that doesn't live up to its name.


Okay, off to the dentist. Back later with cat pictures - I have more new ones.

collisionwork: (Great Director)
Okay, so by popular demand (which, in the case of this blog, means one request, hi MS!), I rushed to get together the photos of "The Hamlet Makeover, first steps."


That is, the first tryout of my - perhaps deeply misguided - attempt to go a reasonable blond to play Hamlet. Why I feel so determined to make this change for this character, I don't know - nothing to do with Scandinavian-ness or tradition, I just don't feel right the way I look for the part. But I needed help, help that came from an unsettlingly excited fiancee.


Yes, Berit was very excited at getting to play with me for hours on end like one of those Barbie Styling Heads (she gathered the implementa, calling "Makeover time! Makeover time!" in a high voice a la Gypsy from Mystery Science Theater 3000, more than slightly-creepy, really). [*UPDATE BELOW]


And within a few hours, this transition had become a reality:


IWH 2007 Standard
IWH in Red #2


An effective enough transformation, it seems. Yesterday at the deli across from The Brick, where, like most groceries we go to regularly, the people behind the counter all assume Berit and I are married (and we don't bother to correct them), the cashier looked back and forth between Berit and I, then asked her, "Your husband's younger brother?" Omar, the sandwich-maker, called to Berit in mock-annoyance, "Whaddya do to my customer?!"


Good. That's good. Still, not quite there yet.


And we went through a bunch of stages on the way, just for fun, which you can see after the cut.


Are you actually interested? More photos in here . . . )

*UPDATE: Berit disputes almost every word of this, saying the only part she was at all excited about was seeing the "pencil 'stache" and that I make it sound like she was jumping around the place like a loon. Okay, I exaggerate a bit, maybe, but I stand by feeling a hair unnerved by what I perceived as being a subject for someone's unholy experiments. She disputes most of this note as well: "Am I going to have to start my own blog? Anyway I had a Barbie Styling Head and it gave me nightmares!"

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