Saturday night quotes

“In dwelling, live close to the ground. In thinking, keep to the simple. In conflict, be fair and generous. In governing, don’t try to control. In work, do what you enjoy. In family life, be completely present.”
-from the Tao Te Ching

“It is not enough merely to exist. It’s not enough to say, ‘I’m earning enough to support my family. I do my work well. I’m a good father, husband, churchgoer.’ That’s all very well. But you must do something more. Seek always to do some good, somewhere.”
-Albert Schweitzer (German medical Missionary, Theologian, Musician and Philosopher. 1952 Nobel Peace Prize, 1875-1965)

“Many men can make a fortune but very few can build a family.”
-J. S. Bryan

Thursday thoughts

Only a couple more weeks of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Abridged left at the Williamston! If you’re in the area, stop out and see the show that Don Calamia of Encore Michigan said had him “laughing pretty much non-stop throughout the performance!”

Tonight Mark Buehrle of the Chicago White Sox pitched a perfect game. 27 up, 27 down. That’s an amazing thing! Check out the story here!

Tonight we took the kids to see the new Harry Potter movie, and they loved it! Well, Maggie loved it – Max was a little saddened by some events (which I won’t reveal here) even though he knew they were coming, since he’s read the book! Still, good time was had by all!

This link was posted by my pal mary919, and it’s really wonderful: National Health Care: What are we afraid of?!

With one show running for a few more weeks, but our next show not going into rehearsal until September, it’s an interesting time at work. LOTS of prepping for what’s coming up: big renovations to the restrooms and the heating/cooling systems to the theatre and lobbies, a season launch party, and a very exciting fourth season of plays at the Williamston Theatre. Even though those things are all a little ways down the calendar, it’s NOW that all the prep happens, and it’s fun but also a huge list of things to-do, which makes my to-do list look like it’s NEVER getting smaller! When I do have a good day, though, and knock a big handful of things off of it, it’s very fulfilling!

The other thing that this time in the calendar is letting me do is SEE some theatre, which has been wonderful. Coming up this week, I think, are trips to see shows at the Michigan Shakespeare Festival and the Windsor Fringe Festival – looking forward to both!

Monday morning miscellaneous!

Teaching some theatre workshops at a camp for young people today – this has been a yearly gig for several years, and it’s always a lot of fun. Spending the day with my friend Michelle Held playing theatre games and doing scenework with students excited to be there! Fun!

I’m loving all of the press coverage of the 40th Anniversary of the Moon Landing. What an amazing thing. And I love listening to all the conspiracy crackpots saying it was all faked! Hah! Those are the same folks who said Milli Vanilli couldn’t sing their own songs. (Wait… What?)

A Picasso closed at Performance Network yesterday – I was very proud to be involved with that fine production!

This week will be a lot of prep work for next season. Looking forward to it!!

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Life Quotes

Not a shred of evidence exists in favor of the idea that life is serious.
-Brendan Gill

Learn as if you would live forever, live as if you would die tomorrow.
-Mahatma Gandhi

Life is far too important a thing ever to talk seriously about.
Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900), Lady Windermere’s Fan, Act I

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All the people all the time…

It’s all about balance.

I had, interestingly enough, two separate discussions today about “picking a season”, about how a theatre chooses the plays that it will produce.

I thought that it was interesting that it came up twice today because we’ve also been discussing feedback from our patrons at the Williamston Theatre about the current show, and while most of it has been wonderfully enthusiastic, appreciative and supportive, there have been some folks that don’t like the madcap, slapstick-ey style in which the show is written (and produced).

And that’s okay. I enjoy feedback from our audiences, and I also find it a little fascinating.

The fascinating thing, for me, is how completely contradictory the responses can be. Earlier this season we had audience members tell us how much they enjoyed the heavy drama of The Effect Of Gamma Rays On Man-In-The-Moon Marigolds, and tell us they wanted more of that kind of play. And we also had audiences come out of that show tell us that they enjoyed it, but what they really wanted to see was something lighter, more comedic, more escapist. And it wasn’t just a couple of folks, either – both camps had a lot of folks giving up feedback!

And thank goodness.

Like any of the performing arts, what we need is an audience. An audience who cares. We can make plays all we want, but if we don’t have folks there to see it, what’s the point? And so, getting feedback from them is vital. That’s why we have preview performances, and why staff people hang out in the lobby after shows to chat with patrons and season subscribers. That’s why we enjoy phone calls and emails telling us what folks liked, and what they didn’t like!

The thing is, though – you have to accept that you’re NEVER going to please everyone all of the time. Attempting to do so will drive you insane, and result in bad art.

What we can do, though, is try to balance the season. Balance the style and content, the topics, the cast size, the budgets and the hundred other considerations that go into season selection. We, like every theatre, work to find our own balance – the mix of plays that says “Here’s what we want to say, and where we want to go. We hope you’ll go along and enjoy the ride with us!”

Recently we’ve gotten some great reviews, a lot of folks calling and writing to say how much they’re enjoying our current silly comedy – a show designed to be lighthearted fun. A show that ran for 6 nearly sold-out weeks at Tipping Point theatre before we moved it to WIlliamston. And we’ve also gotten some polite patrons saying, in essence, “It’s fun, but we’re glad not all the shows are like this… it’s a little broad and loud for our tastes”. And that’s fine – it IS broad and loud; that’s the style, that’s the script.

We also got a few emails from the gentleman who insisted that I be fired, due to what he perceives as my lack of commitment to seriously exploring the human condition (or something like that, I’m paraphrasing). Those emails disappoint me – not because I’m worried about being fired, I’m not – but because it appears that he missed the first two installments of our Voices From The Midwest series of original works exploring life in this part of the world, as well as the beautiful Leaving Iowa that explored family, growing up, and fathers and sons. Maybe he missed the rich subtleties of Lanford Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize winning script Talley’s Folly that explored the lives of two very different people following World War II, or the searing drama of the afore-mentioned Effect of Gamma Rays… So the questions become “Is our balance off?” and “Are we getting our message across cleanly enough?” and “Is our audience happy with this ride we’re taking?”

Those are the questions that theatre staffs all over the country ask themselves every single season.

Sometimes, it’s just our best guess. Either way, there is no getting around the fact that there IS a balance, and striking it is important. All of our balances will be different – and that’s okay.

I believe in a mix of serious and levity, a mix of defined and abstract. I want plays that are about people, and not issues, and I want those plays to be a mix of serious, ridiculous, subtle, blatant, quiet, loud, thoughtful and thoughtless. For the folks who want all heavy drama and no laughter, I respect your opinion but wouldn’t want to live in your world. For the folks who want all sunshine and smiles with no introspection, I respect your opinion but believe we must regularly look closely at the world around us and inside us.

And that’s my balance. Do I achieve it? Sometimes. Do I revise it? Often. But there it is. That’s what I strive for, as an artist. (Yes, I said it. I rarely do but, damnit, sometimes it’s the right word.)

Balance.

It comes down to that a lot in life, doesn’t it?

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A silly morning

To commemorate my wife and I going to see the Harry Potter movie in an hour, I got up this morning, put on some big black glasses, drew a lightning bolt on my head and rode around the house on a broom shouting “Expelliarmus!” and calling the dogs Hedwig and Buckbeak.

This, of course, was purely for my wife and kids, but the best part was that Maggie had a friend spend the night, so I think they’re both emotionally scarred for good now. Bwahaahahahahaaaa! Evil Dad strikes again! 🙂

Friday night

It’s almost 2am.
It’s been a week since I updated my LiveJournal. I can’t remember the last time I took a week off from it! I’ve missed it.

I’m lying in our tent, my wife and kids asleep on either side of me. There’s a nice breeze, but it’s building. In the distance I can see lightning, hear some thunder moving our way – we’ll probably have rain soon.

That’s okay. We’ll stay dry.

It’s a beautiful night. Vacationing, visiting with family. Some fun cards this evening: my father and I soundly trounced my wife and mother in a euchre tournament. We read Harry Potter books, Jeanne and the kids made Friendship Bracelets. The Tigers won.

I checked in with folks at Williamston Theatre – the performances went well yesterday and today. Got some good news regarding a grant for the theatre – very exciting.

And now, thanks to the magic of the iPhone, I can take a minute and record this great night. From my tent in the woods, a nice night of balancing being both Dad, and the Artistic Director. This week I’m definitely tipping toward the Dad side of the scale… And I’m okay with that. Soon enough I’ll be busy with other things. Soon enough these beautiful sleeping kids beside me will be off and busy with their own things, and Jeanne and I will wonder where the time went.

So, for tonight… I’ll listen to the wind, and my family sleeping, and enjoy the rumble of the thunder in the distance. Soon it’ll get loud, and they’ll wake, and it’ll get exciting as the rain falls.

Rain or not, though, it’s a beautiful night.

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