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The Tree Saga

December 13, 2021 at 10:06 am by Claudia

Wouldn’t you know it? We had a Christmas tree saga.

We got going early yesterday morning and drove to the nursery where I buy my plants and where we buy our tree. Every year. We’ve been buying trees there for 16 years. Usually, we get a tree during the second week of December, though during Covid and lockdown, we got one earlier because we needed the lights and cheer. So, my point is that buying at this time is nothing new to us. Still a couple of weeks away from Christmas, but not last minute.

We drove to the nursery and I commented that there weren’t many cars there, which was unusual. Then we parked. And stared at a completely empty tree lot. “Where are all the trees?” I said. I briefly though they might have moved them to another part of the property. But no, there was nothing.

When we went inside to ask what the heck was going on, they said they ran out. There is apparently a shortage of trees this year, which a lot of you probably know about, but I’ve been in a filming bubble and had heard absolutely nothing about it. We were stunned. We’ve purchased even later than the 12th and there were always scads of trees on their lot. They suggested we go to another local business  because they still had a few trees left. When we arrived there, all they had were Douglas firs, not Frasier firs, which is what we always get. I’m not a fan of Douglas firs – the branches aren’t very strong – but we were panicked, so we bought a small, but wide tree. Put it on top of the car, took it home.

It wouldn’t fit in our stand.

Evidence:

The hole in the bottom of the tree had been drilled off center and it wouldn’t stand up. We knew we were going to have to get another kind of tree stand, so after a bite to eat, we were back in the car on our way to Lowes. When we pulled in that parking lot, we saw people carrying trees to their cars, so, instead of buying a stand immediately, we headed to the trees. They had a fair amount remaining and they were Frasier firs. We grabbed one, bought a new stand because this tree didn’t have a hole in the bottom, and drove home with yet another tree on top of the car. The first tree is now in a zinc bucket full of water and Don has secured it to the porch. We’re going to put lights on it this afternoon.

The second tree.

Not to mention, we went to our storage facility to pick up all the bins full of ornaments and forgot one of them, so we’ll have to go back there tomorrow and get the missing bin. We will decorate the tree tomorrow.

All of this was exhausting simply because I was already very tired, as was Don, who spent two whole days cleaning the house in preparation for my return, bless him. So today, except for putting the lights on the porch and the porch tree, we’re taking it easy.

We watched Alien  last night, one of our favorite movies.

Zoe. Elena carved her face beautifully. The eyebrows! The worried look! (She reminds me of me as a little girl. My hair was the same color, but longer, and I had the bangs and the worried look.) All my girls have their own individual look, down to the lips and nose and eyebrows.

My caption for this photo (on my Blythe IG account) was:

“Sophie (on the left) remembering that wonderful month when she was an only child.”

I get it, Sophie. I get it.

Note that I cut Maeve’s bangs. They were too long

The entire time I was gone, I had very little time to read. I did read one book – Louise Penny’s latest. In fact, I finished it on my last day there. I loved it, but wish I had had more uninterrupted time in which to read it. As it was, my experience was a choppy one. I don’t know that I think it’s her best, but every book she writes is excellent and powerful and full of humanity. And it’s really silly to try to pick out her best when every one of them is a gem.

Okay.

Stay safe.

Happy Monday.

Filed Under: Blythe dolls, books, Christmas, Louise Penny, Zoe 20 Comments

Sondheim, Mysteries & The Girls

November 27, 2021 at 9:44 am by Claudia

Photo: NY Times

I don’t even know how to write this. The fallout from being thoroughly exhausted is that words don’t come to me as quickly and easily as usual.

This man and his music and words meant everything to me. As most of you know, I started out in musical theater and it remained a major part of my life as an actress and performer for years. The American Musical – everything about it – is something I’ve studied over the years. There’s not much I don’t know about its growth over the decades or those composers who influenced and made their mark on American Musical Theater.

Stephen Sondheim’s influence cannot be understated – his work, the risks he took, the way he embraced and welcomed change. He wrote difficult rhymes, witty lyrics, heartbreakingly beautiful music – sometimes highly complex, sometimes simple and gut-wrenching. He started out as a lyricist, working on A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Gypsy, and West Side Story. But he could do it all, and he knew he could do it all, so eventually he struck out on his own, writing both music and lyrics. I have been in love his work from the moment I first heard the Original Broadway Cast album of Company. (Years later, I was in a production of Company.) I listened to everything he wrote over and over: Follies, Sweeney Todd, A Little Night Music, Sunday in the Park with George, Into the Woods, Passion, Assassins – and on and on.

His mentor was Oscar Hammerstein, a family friend. Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma changed the course of the American Musical. Years later, Sondheim would change it as well.

No one did it better. There will never be another Sondheim.

My opinion: The musical theater of today, with a few exceptions, is bland and boring – ridden with pop music and pop lyrics. It takes no risks. One musical blends into another musical that morphs into another musical. They’re all interchangeable. I have no desire to see any of it, with the exception of Hadestown and the current revival of Company. Half of the shows on Broadway are juke box musicals that should be playing in Las Vegas, not on Broadway.

Sondheim never talked down to his audience, never chose the lowest common denominator. His music and lyrics demanded a ‘thinking’ audience. He challenged us. He made us think about the human condition. He was brilliant.

Others will follow – Lin Manuel Miranda is also changing the American musical and doing it brilliantly. He also challenges his audience – in a new way. Hamilton remains one of the seminal theatrical experiences of my life.

But there will never be another Stephen Sondheim.

I was lucky enough to coach a play he wrote – a murder mystery – while I was at the Old Globe. I met him. I watched him work. I was completely intimidated by his mind and his brilliance, of course, but I am grateful beyond words that I met him and was in the same room with him over the course of the rehearsal period.

Rest in Peace.

_____________________________

I went to The Mysterious Book Shop yesterday.

I’ve written about it before on this blog – a true wonderland for lovers of mysteries – and I am one of those people. I got a couple more Simenons, the new Julia Dahl, and another book I’ve wanted for a long time. Otto Penzler, the owner of the shop, is a longtime collector of first editions and rare editions of mysteries and detective novels. His collection was vast – he auctioned most of it off a few  years ago – and he wrote a book about his adventures in collecting. So I got that. Kathy, you’ll be happy to know I finally used the gift certificate you gave me over a year ago! Thank you.

Then I went to Whole Foods and got a few things. It was cold and very windy here, so I made my way home as quickly as possible.

The girls got a change of clothing:

Gosh, they’re adorable!

Stay safe.

Happy Saturday.

Filed Under: Blythe dolls, books, bookshops 24 Comments

Congestion-Head

October 20, 2021 at 10:12 am by Claudia

The puzzle I’m taking with me to Brooklyn. Perfect, I think, as The Strand is one of my favorite bookstores. I was heartened to see that the New York Puzzle Company has some new New Yorker puzzles for this year. I was worried that I had already completed all of the puzzles I found interesting and they are my favorites to work on.

Good news for the coming winter!

I’m under the weather today. Whether it’s allergies or sinus, I’m not sure, but the sneezing continued for most of the day yesterday and I’m constantly blowing my nose. I slept about 8 hours last night – something that is a rarity these days – so that helps. I ended up taking yesterday off and I’ll do the same today so that I can get this thing out of my system sooner rather than later. Better now than when I have to be on the set!

I finished The Lantern Men  yesterday, mostly because I felt like crap and stayed in my chair reading. I have the latest Elly Griffiths arriving today. It’s in hardback, but the hardback (I admit it, I got it through Amazon) is priced the same as a paperback. And all of you fans know that she has a new one coming out next year, right? Good news!

Don is running errands this morning – I need some soft Puffs because my skin is very sensitive and blowing my nose continuously makes my nose and face red, some cough drops, some Benadryl, that kind of thing. And some sugar-free chocolates, my one and only food indulgence these days.

Okay. I’m going to rest.

Stay safe.

Happy Wednesday.

 

Filed Under: books, bookstores, jigsaw puzzles 36 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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