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On My Way Home & A Question

June 29, 2014 at 9:30 am by Claudia

lastday-poster

Well, we did it – in only three weeks of rehearsal, including all the tech rehearsals and dress rehearsals. That ain’t much, my friends. What everyone involved with this production has worked together to create is nothing less than extraordinary.

I am very proud of my work on A Raisin in the Sun. Even more than that, I am terribly proud of the cast. They are doing such powerful work on that stage.

lastday-theater

The director has said that he thinks A Raisin in the Sun is part of a trilogy of great American plays that he would categorize as A Dream Deferred. The other two plays that are part of the trilogy are A Glass Menagerie and Death of a Salesman. I think he’s right. There’s an element of heartbreak in all three, of dreams that never quite come true. The title of the play is taken from a poem by Langston Hughes:

Harlem
(A Dream Deferred)

What happens to a dream
deferred?

Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore–
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over–
like a syrupy sweet?

Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.

Or does it explode?

—–Langston Hughes

The performance last night was powerful and gripping, tragic and funny. The cast party was great fun. I will truly miss everyone here. This is the push-pull of theater life. You leave home, travel to another town, meet new people. bond with them as you work together 8 – 10 hours a day or more…and then you leave. Both Don and I understand all too well the re-entry that has to happen when we return home. Part of you is home and happy to be there and part of you is still back there at the theater in that other town. It takes a few days.

My roommates have been terrific and I am so glad I had the chance to get to know them. Even with the lack of privacy that comes with sharing an apartment, we managed to bond and I’m happy to have the opportunity to get to know them.

I leave later in the day for the airport. Cross your fingers that all flights are on time!

lastday-house

I’ve entitled this: Dog Waiting To Be Let In.

Let’s change the subject for a moment.

I’ve been toying with an idea. My love of reading, books, bookstores and everything literary is well-known to all of the readers of this blog. I’ve been reviewing books for TLC Book Tours for at least four years. It’s been a challenge to craft an informative book review that, I hope, gives a strong sense of the novel without revealing too many details. It’s also been a challenge to write a review that is fair and honest and balanced. I like that kind of challenge.

I’ve learned a lot in the last four years.

Along the way, I’ve been contacted by publishers and authors who want me to review their books. I’ve mostly turned those offers down because of my commitment to TLC Book Tours. But now, with my Kindle, I am able to request and get galleys of new books because I am a blogger who reviews books. That’s very exciting to me!

So…here’s the question. Should I start another blog that is devoted to reading and books and reviews and bookstores and interesting facts about all of the above? I’d still review TLC Books here on MHC. But another blog would allow me the opportunity to explore all things reading in more depth, as well as provide a home for reviews of other books.

This blog is about so many different things and I like it that way. So I’ve been careful not to overwhelm it with too many posts on one subject. I try to vary the subject matter.

But a book blog? That would free me up to write about books about three or four times a week.

What are your thoughts? (I’m rather excited about this idea.)

Happy Sunday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: books, Chautauqua, On The Road, theater 77 Comments

Evolution of the Dollhouse – Part 4

May 16, 2014 at 9:01 am by Claudia

dhevolutiongraphic

During my first few years of working on the dollhouse, I concentrated mainly on three rooms: the living room, the den, and the bedroom. The spaces that would eventually be the bathroom and the studio/office were blank canvases. They’d been painted white, but that was all.

In fact, I dithered over whether the bathroom should be on the second floor or on the third floor. If it was to be on the third floor, the owner would have to run up two flights of stairs to take care of business. If it was on the second, she was going to have to go down a flight of steps in the dark for those nighttime bathroom visits. The memory of our rental when we first moved East and its bathroom off the kitchen (our bedroom was upstairs) steered me toward my final decision. Getting out of bed, going down the steps, walking through the living room and kitchen – all of this before we could use the bathroom during the night – was a pain in the tush. The third floor won.

dollhouse8

I decide to go with a vinyl tile floor instead of the wood floors that are in every other room of the house. I think I bought this sheet at a craft store that carried a few dollhouse items. As always, I made a template of the floor by tracing it on a sheet of paper and used that template to cut the vinyl.

The bathroom suffers a bit from corners that don’t join as tightly as they should, from irregularities that are the result of a sometimes poorly assembled dollhouse. So I had to work around these tiny and not-so-tiny glitches as I put the room together.

I knew I wanted beadboard in the bathroom, so the next big thing was to pick a wallpaper design that I liked. I went bolder this time, thinking that the owner might like a more striking pattern in this space – something a little exotic.

dhbathroom1

The house has a lot of pastels and this yellow wallpaper proved to be the perfect contrast. (It’s actually a bit darker than you see in the photo above.) It wouldn’t have worked if each wall was entirely covered with wallpaper, but the beadboard nicely counterbalances the pattern. I added a chair rail, as well.

bathroomcabinet11

The windows were trimmed out, baseboards and molding were added. One day, I decided that adding interior shutters to the window might be a good idea. The bathroom, kitchen and studio/office are long narrow rooms. The window wall in each of the rooms is usually the most dimly lit, since it is at the end of a sort of tunnel-like space.

dhbathroomshutters

I had become fond of the red flowers in the wallpaper, so I painted the shutters red. That was just the pop that the room needed.

faucetsdh

So when I found a sink/cabinet that was good for the space, I painted it in the same red (except for the top.)

fridaydhtoilet3

I had been on a hunt for a bathtub and toilet that looked somewhat realistic. I already had a bathtub and toilet that had flowers painted on them – these came courtesy of a bag of dollhouse furniture that Heidi found and passed on to me – but I hesitated about using them. The flowers drove me crazy. But I decided they might work in the meantime if I painted over the flowers, so out came some white ceramic paint. Just as I do in my real house, if at all possible, I use what I have.

mondhbathroomrug

I made the little chair from a tutorial and it seemed perfect for the bathroom. I just added the rug a couple of weeks ago.

There are touches I still need to add: a shower curtain, some necessary accoutrements like a toilet paper holder, and a towel rack. I’m thinking of adding a dressing table, as well, because there’s quite a gap between the sink and the back wall of the room.

A word about trim: Dollhouse websites and catalogs have all sorts of trims available. You will need to trim out the interior of the windows and doors, as well as the moldings and the baseboards. Make sure you measure accurately before you order. I always order more than I need because, let’s face it, mistakes happen.

I went for a specific, consistent look for the windows and doors inside the dollhouse.

firdoors2

Here you can see the look I was going for. I love the corner blocks because they suit the style of the house and, more importantly, they eliminated the necessity for cutting mitered corners! I’ll save that for the next house.

dhrenovationdenwallpaper

Here’s a look at the same materials used to trim out the windows.

A quick story: I trimmed out the windows when I finished wallpapering each room. Then I went about the business of adding furniture, etc. I was sure that part of the process was over and finished. It wasn’t until much, much later that I looked at the open doorways that exist between rooms and had a smack-me-upside-the-head moment.

I hadn’t added any trim to the doorways. It hadn’t even occurred to me that I should.

Something about them had always bothered me and I felt like an idiot when I realized what I had (or hadn’t) done. Yikes. I got to work on that right away and the difference it made was enormous!

More in the series next week.

Several of you are about to set out on a dollhouse renovation or are about to build a dollhouse. I’m so happy for you! If you have any questions, send them to me. I’ll do my best to answer them and if I can’t, I’ll try to point you in the right direction. I think a question and answer post would be fun and informative.

A final note: I just read that one of my favorite authors, Mary Stewart, died yesterday at the age of 97. In my teens, I devoured every one of her romantic suspense books. I loved The Ivy Tree and Nine Coaches Waiting and The Moonspinners and The Gabriel Hounds and This Rough Magic. Her heroines were always smart and savvy and sophisticated. They smoked cigarettes in those days where it was the cool thing to do. There were references to Shakespeare and poetry and Greek mythology sprinkled among the chapters. Not only did I (a diehard romantic) love the stories, I learned a lot as well. She didn’t dumb down her writing, but expected that her audience was entirely capable of following her metaphors and references and intricate story lines. I have many of her books in my permanent library. She also moved into a different genre when she wrote a series of novels centered on Merlin that were highly successful.

Thank you, Mary Stewart, for hours and hours of reading pleasure. What a difference your stories made to a young girl moving through her teenage years. Rest in peace.

Happy Friday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

Tagged With: DIY, dollhouse, Mary StewartFiled Under: books, decorating, DIY, dollhouse 38 Comments

Making A Reading Journal

March 31, 2014 at 8:16 am by Claudia

In the not so distant past, I mentioned here on this blog that I regretted not keeping a record of all the books I’ve read. It would be such fun to look back at my records and track my reading patterns and what I liked and didn’t like. I have a friend from back home who is a voracious reader and has kept a notebook with detailed descriptions of his reading journey for years. Imagine how many notebooks he has filled!

So, this year I’m keeping a little reading journal.

It’s a quick project. I started by looking for an attractive notebook of some kind. I didn’t want anything big – just a small journal I could keep on the table next to my blogging chair. (There are actual Book Journals that you can buy, but I didn’t like the ones I saw. They included too much extra information to fill in and I felt restricted by all of that.)

bookjournal

I picked up this smallish notebook at Target for $1.99.

bookjournal2

Then I added a label (also from Target and found in the dollar bin) with my not-very-inspired name for the  journal.

bookjournal5

I do not like my writing. May I just say that? After years of taking hurried notes on actors’ performances in rehearsals and in the dark of a theater, my handwriting has devolved.

Anyway, it’s a simple list. Just the title, author and a quick mini-review. It could be much more detailed, of course. You could add things like how long it took you to read the book, how many pages, publisher, some sort of rating system, plot, etc.

Since I started this at the end of March, I had to try to remember everything I’ve read since January. It’s pretty accurate, though I may have missed a book or two. (There’s more on the next page.)

bookjournal4

I’m sure some of you already do this. But I’m a late bloomer, remember? Better late than never!

Maybe you’d like to keep a reading journal? We could compare notes at the end of the year. Wouldn’t that be fun?

Yesterday, I mentioned watching His Girl Friday on TCM the other night, starring Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell and Ralph Bellamy. Every time I see Ralph Bellamy, I think of Don. Don had a recurring role on L.A. Law years ago. He played a district attorney named Russell Spitzer. On one of the episodes, he represented a character played by…you guessed it…Ralph Bellamy. So Don, lucky duck that he is, got to spend several days on the set sitting next to Ralph Bellamy, who regaled him with stories of making movies and old Hollywood and all of the actors he had worked with during his amazing career. He was an awfully nice man.

On a side note: Not long after I met Don, Ralph Bellamy came up in a conversation and Don told me about that experience. And I remembered seeing that episode when it first aired. Little did I know that the guy who played the district attorney would one day end up being my husband!

Happy Monday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: books, DIY, Don, reading 38 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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