Pic Post Sunday: Celebrating Life!

Random pics from a Dad, director, baseball fan, celebrating some good things on this beautiful Sunday!

Today, we had a great Easter! The kids had a great time hunting baskets and eggs this morning, the Easter Bunny did a nice job hiding things this year!
 


Speaking of Easter – Maggie and I spent Easter afternoon at the ballpark! 🙂
 

And… speaking of baseball…


I’m happy to be in rehearsals for the remount of Ernie at the City Theatre in Detroit.

This weekend, we had a great time visiting our friends Crystal and Steve, and I had to take a picture of these desserts that we made. Crystal did all the prep, making the mousse and homemade whipped cream and slicing the fruit, but Steve and I were given the task of putting them together – and this is what they looked like! Chocolate coffee mousse, lots of fresh fruit, shaved chocolate… oh man, now I want another one. Or 7.

Lastly… I worked with a great stage manager, Sam, this weekend on a project in NYC, and she came in with this shirt that made us all laugh, and I had to share it. (Warning – yes, this is a little risque. Skip it if that’s not your thing, but this type of humor is exactly my thing… and I suppose if you’re a regular reader of this journal, you already know that!)

Have a great week, folks, and whatever you’re doing this week, have fun doing it.

DUMBO…

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Spent a couple days in NYC working on the Otterbein University Senior Showcase, which went very well – they’re a very talented group and I’m really proud of the work they’ve done!

On Saturday I was in the DUMBO neighborhood of Brooklyn, seeing a show at St. Ann’s Warehouse with my friend Molly. DUMBO stands for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass, and as we were leaving the theatre on Water Street, I had to take this picture. Such a great view, and if you can’t make it out, that’s the Empire State Building framed in the bridge arch. Thanks for a fun couple days, Big Apple friends, now The Motor City calls!

Tomorrow we start rehearsals for the encore presentation of ERNIE, at the City Theatre in Detroit. I’m really looking forward to it! It’s been quite a week – opening a show in Williamston, then NYC for a few days, and now a fun project in Detroit right across from the ballpark as the MLB season starts, AND some time with my family this week!

Thanks, universe!

It never fails…

Listen up, young up-and-coming directors:

You will inevitably, when watching the final preview and your rehearsal hours are over, figure out a way to fix that moment/scene/beat change/transition that’s been bugging you for weeks.  And then, as you watch the show, celebrating the fact that you’ve figured it out, you’ll realize that all you need is another few hours of rehearsal and one costume change… neither of which you’ll get.  So you watch the show, and when that moment comes, you just imagine your improved version in place of what’s happening… and file it away to use at a later date. 

Theatre: Art with a deadline.  And that deadline can be pretty firm.

Wednesday Pic Post!

It’s time to share some more photos in this Commonplace Journal!  Wednesday Pic Post, here we come!  (Well, it’s after midnight, so it’s technically “Thursday Pic Post”, but who wants to be technical after midnight?)

We open “The Usual” on Friday.  Previews have gone well, the rehearsals this week have been a fun process of polishing, trimming, and a little adding (like a newly minted dream sequence).  We also made some small adjustments to the set, and some prop tweaks.  Here’s an example of the kind of props we were playing with:(This sticker and more like it can be found here!)

Why would we be using that?  Come see the show and find out!  If you come see the show, you may see this:

Until then, think about this…

If you’d like something else to think about, spend some time trying to figure out why THIS exists:

(Okay, truthfully – I really want to try it, just because I’m impressed that someone actually said “You know what my bologna needs? Mac and Cheese” convincingly enough for Koegel’s to say “Hey… Yeah, that IS what your bologna needs!”)

Instead of buying Mac and Cheese Loaf for my family last week, though, I set up a crockpot of yummy goodness to cook while they were all at school and work, so when they got home they found this sign:

(Since I’ve been making these crockpot meals more often, I have a feeling that “Songs From Inside A Crockpot” could become a recurring literary & musical theme in our house…)

And another Wednesday has come and gone.  Now… sleep!

 

Work and Play! Bullet lists, pictures!

But what is work and what is not work? Is it work to dig, to carpenter, to plant trees, to fell trees, to ride, to fish, to hunt, to feed chickens, to play the piano, to take photographs, to build a house, to cook, to sew, to trim hats, to mend motor bicycles? All of these things are work to somebody, and all of them are play to somebody. There are in fact very few activities which cannot be classed either as work or play according as you choose to regard them.
– George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier

Work and play.  It’s been a crazy busy week full of both of those, which is why I haven’t posted for a week!  So much good stuff going on!  I’m in a bullet-points mood, let’s do that…

•Preview week of The Usual  went great.  The show is quirky, funny, sweet, and audiences are laughing with us!  A couple more rehearsals tomorrow and Wednesday, final preview Thursday, and we’re officially Open!

Joseph Zettelmaier as Kip, Leslie Hull as Nancy, in "The Usual"

•Today is my 18th Wedding Anniversary.  I don’t know where all those years went, but time flies when you’re having fun!  Also, Jeanne Caselli is awesome, and I’m the luckiest guy on the planet!

•This weekend, I got to see my kids perform in Seussical, the Dr. Seuss musical, for the Chelsea Area Players Junior.  They were cast opposite each other, as the leads: Horton the Elephant and Gertrude McFuzz, and they were amazing.  I’m so proud of both of them, and I’m not ashamed at all to admit that at the end of Act I, when they sang their gorgeous duet together about being alone in the universe, and searching for love, there were a lot of weepy eyes in the theatre, and mine were two of the weepiest.

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•I saw the finale of Game of Thrones.  I’m WAY behind on this.  Listen, next time something this awesome comes on HBO, somebody tell me.  I still won’t have HBO, but I can bug people who do to let me watch it at their houses.

•I learned a TON about Shingles!  Have you heard about this?  It’s a crazy virus thing that adults who had Chicken Pox can develop!  Neat thing I learned: Apparently the Chicken Pox virus never goes away, but just goes dormant in your nerve cells!  Well, occasionally it decides it’s done being dormant, and it comes back as Shingles, a whole different medical thing that attacks nerve cells and muscles and skin tissue!  It’s crazy!  I love learning new things!  I also, unfortunately, learned that it’s really, really, surprisingly, painful.  So, that was a fun couple of weeks.  And by “fun” I mean things like “not fun” and “how many of these vicodin did the doctor say I could take at a time?”   The good news is, now that I’m “recovered”, the muscle pain shouldgo away in the next few weeks.  Or not, we’ll have to see.  PS – do not Google images of “shingles”.  Do not.  No, I’m not kidding, go do something else that’s not that.

•I start rehearsals for Ernie soon.  This remount is going to be a lot of fun, I’m looking forward to getting back to The City Theatre and working with the Ernie gang again!

Sunday Night Quotes: Artistry and Inspiration

It’s been a long week, but a good one.  I’m getting closer to being healthy again, which is nice, and we just finished tech week for The Usual: A Musical Love Story, which is a lot of fun!  (And despite the fact that I keep calling it a sweet, quirky little musical , it’s pretty BIG in a lot of ways, which meant that tech week was a busy, challenging, fun and rewarding process!)

It’s interesting though, I was asked a couple different versions of the question “You’re really doing a musical comedy about a romance between nerds?”…  And my answer, of course, was YES!  I think folks are thinking pocket-protector-wearing tape-on-glasses and pants-hiked-up-to-waist nerds, in a very typical “Revenge of the Nerds” fashion – and I can see where they’d get that, but it’s the 21st century!  Nerds are in!  Geek is chic!  The old definition has gone out the window, and those nerds of the past have grown into adults with real world lives and problems!  I mean, it’s a musical with songs about computers from the 80’s, sex toys, being a geek and Switzerland!  What’s not to love about that?!  But sometimes folks want to hear WHY?  It sounds SILLY – Isn’t it theatre? Art? Where’s The Message?!  (Capital M, trademark, glowy halo around the word, and a gentle rolling timpani playing as you say it – “The Message!?”)

So, I often find myself struggling to give a good explanation about the “Why” when it comes to “Why did you pick this play over that?” or “Why on Earth would you do THAT one?”.   Often, the answer that I really want to give is simply “It spoke to me”.

I avoid that answer more often than I should, I think, and I think it’s because it’s a more “touchy feely” answer, and less quantifiable to many people, but the truth is that it’s often the biggest, simplest reason.  I don’t often refer to myself as an “artist”, but I am one.  The people I work with are artists, what we make is art, and there’s an art to doing it well.  And, I think, one of the constant truths of art is that when it works it DOES speak to you, and often in ways that are hard to define.  (One of the big challenges of what we do is to MAKE ourselves define it, through the process, as clearly as possible, so that we can excavate it off the page and breathe life into it on the stage.  Sometimes, though, it’s just a gut feeling:  “This moment works better like this” or “That moved me.  The other way didn’t”.)  And, of course, there’s no way of knowing if the fact that something spoke to ME is enough to make it speak to others, but you take the risk and you build it and share it because, well, that’s what artists do.

It’s late.  I’m rambling, and I’m sleepy, but from a great week of working with great people on something I love.  I never know if a show is going to please audiences as much as it pleases me, or if every experiment is going to turn out to be a giant success or an exercise in weathering public disapproval.  What I do know, is that when I read something, if it speaks to me, I have to pursue it, and then I always hope to share both the creation of it AND the final product with people who I HOPE get as excited about it as me!  On the way home tonight I was thinking about that, and realized that I needed some quotes about it!

Art is man’s expression of his joy in labor.
-Henry A. Kissinger

The essence of all beautiful art, all great art, is gratitude.
-Friedrich Nietzsche

Art is the unceasing effort to compete with the beauty of flowers – and never succeeding.
-Gian Carlo Menotti

The work of art may have a moral effect, but to demand moral purpose from the artist is to make him ruin his work.
-Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Art is what’s left over after you’ve defined everything else.
Michael Vitale

Links to things that are worth knowing about, and some rambling.

The final voyage of the (real) U.S.S. Enterprise

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Hey, Doctor Who fans! If you haven’t seen the online game, prepare to waste a lot of time with your favorite Gallifrean, exploring the “big ball of wibbly wobbly timely wimey…stuff!”
Doctor Who: Worlds In Time

Um… Living in the future is cool, but… Didn’t we learn ANYTHING from Jurassic Park?!
Extinct Wooly Mammoth To Be Cloned

This is a neat resource – the top 50 Drama Games. Possibly useful for workshops with young people, rehearsals, classroom settings? Worth checking out: Drama Games

My friend Dawn just recently introduced me to the Commonplace Book, which is a thing I immediately fell in love with and, as much as I wonder what exactly this online journal that I keep should be, this concept spoke to me very much. Filling pages with a variety of things related to the individual goals of the writer: things they want to share, to learn about, to remember, to ponder… I like this idea very much. It, for whatever reason, speaks to me more than “keep a blog about theatre” does. Maybe it’s because, in some ways, it’s what I do already – I write about the theatre, my family, baseball, sci-fi, news articles that move me, a whole hodge-podge of things. Often I’ve thought that maybe that’s not a good idea, because I see so many specialized blogs and online journalists that adhere to the “focus on a topic or you’ll lose your core readers” philosophy. Well, I don’t know that I have “core readers”, to start with, and I’d much rather share things that move me in one way or another and, hopefully, get feedback from folks who read it about what THEY think.

So, who knows, maybe the idea of a commonplace journal is just me giving myself permission to explore what I want this to be! If so, I’m going to start with this quote, which I just read recently and loved, because it’s about being in charge – as someone who helps run and guide a company, it’s a topic that I think about often.

When in Charge, Be in Charge (Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., US Army)
While Patton certainly championed it, the concept was not unique to his mind, nor to the military. If you have the honor and burden of being in charge – of a family, a team, a business unit or serving coffee, do so. Don’t waste people’s time and your life with milquetoast behavior. You are going to take the hit for outcomes, good or bad. This does not endorse domineering abusive behavior, however. Step up, be authentic and responsible – to yourself and to the forces of the universe that put you there.

That section came from David Kanigan’s blog, Lead.Learn.Live. – which is definitely worth reading if you’re interested in that stuff.

Monday’s Miscellaneous Things

Playwright and all around neat guy Joseph Zettelmaier has a new website! Check it out here!

My alma mater, Eastern Michigan University, has a magazine, and I was honored to be interviewed for it recently!

Click the pic to go to the magazine! You can find the article on page 30.

Good Lord, I look so serious in that picture.  I’m pretty sure I was counting, in my head, the days until the next episode of “Fringe” was on TV.  (Speaking of which – man, what a good show!)

Here’s another take on Theatre and Social Networking.  I’m not a fan of the so-called “Tweet Seats”, which surprises some folks since I love my gadgets.  (I think there’s a time and place, and in the middle of a play isn’t that place, usually.)   I do think, however, that there’s a blend of technology and theatre that will work, I just don’t know if we’ve seen it yet.  This video has a different twist on it – thoughts?