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You are here: Home / Archives for Don

Day Twelve

March 25, 2020 at 10:54 am by Claudia

I thought you might enjoy this shot that Don took of his studio. It gives the impression of a very tall window and the view outside. I love this picture.

• Yesterday, I witnessed a car pulling into my neighbor’s driveway. Two young people – teens – emerged from it and walked to the front door. There was no social distancing. They knocked on the door and someone, I assume it was one of our neighbor’s kids, opened the door, whereupon all involved hugged each other and went inside.

Are you kidding me? I was dumbfounded by this apparent lack of concern for any of the rules put into place by our Governor, by the government, or, for that matter, science and facts. I told Don and he was stunned. What is with people?

• I didn’t do any work on the dollhouse yesterday. I needed a break. Using the trim or not using the trim was discussed in some of the comments yesterday. In the case of almost every dollhouse I’ve ever seen, we’re talking gingerbread trim. Remember that my intention for this house is not that. It isn’t a Victorian house. It’s meant to be my version of a Cotswold cottage, which is why I am spending hours upon hours making stones for the exterior. I’ve done a lot of research and I rarely, if ever, see a Cotswold cottage with any decorative trim. The beauty of those cottages lies in their simplicity. Truth be told, I eliminated much of the decorative gingerbready trim on Hummingbird Cottage – my first dollhouse rehab. There is one section of  the remaining trim that I’ve never been happy with but removal was too complicated and potentially damaging, so I left it.

I’m not a dollhouse historian – some builders out there make everything to period and the intricacy of their designs is incredible. I so admire them. But I do like to make my houses more real than are the standard dollhouses I see out there, which are designed, remember, for children. It’s also why I’m a stickler for scale.

Now, if I was going to do a Chautauqua-like house, and I loved those Victorian cottages and took scads of pictures of them when I was working there, then I would wholeheartedly embrace gingerbread. But it would have to be to scale and often, the trim included with a kit is not.

Anyway, I think some more stone making is in order today. Back at it!

• Reading Eight Perfect Murders  by Peter Swanson and last night’s feel-good watch was Field of Dreams. I love that movie.

• Heads up: I have a book review scheduled for tomorrow.

• Yesterday, we lost the great playwright Terrence McNally due to complications from the coronavirus.

Terrence wrote the books for Ragtime, Master Class, Kiss of the Spider Woman, Love! Valor! Compassion!, The Ritz, Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune, Lips Together, Teeth Apart, The Full Monty, and many others, including the book for Anastasia, which is why I have this photo of us together. He wrote about the AIDS crisis, he championed plays with gay characters. He wrote beautifully and from the heart. He won multiple Tony Awards for his work.

I am honored I had the chance to work with him, both in Hartford and on Broadway. We chatted about food, about becoming vegetarians, about when we quit smoking and about our mutual friend, Jim Parsons. In fact, he had someone take this picture of us so he could send it to Jim. He was a kind and good man.

He was a lung cancer survivor living with COPD and that he was taken by the coronavirus is so breathtakingly sad. He was 81.

Don was in a production of Lips Together, Teeth Apart  right before I met him and it remains one of his favorite experiences in the theater. Terrence had a way with words that was unmatchable and his death is a tremendous loss to the American Theater.

And they can’t even dim the lights for him on Broadway.

Happy Wednesday.

Filed Under: Anastasia, dollhouse, Don, miniatures, theater 79 Comments

Day Nine

March 22, 2020 at 11:01 am by Claudia

I happened upon Don staring down into his studio this morning.

This may be the best gift I’ve ever given anyone. He truly loves it and talks about it a lot, much more now that we have it downstairs in the living room. He even took photos of it the other day to send to our friend in San Diego. He considers it his most valuable possession. That warms my heart.

This sparked a conversation about moving the Folk Art house to a slightly different place in the kitchen, which, after a lot of back-and-forth, turned out very well. I’d take a picture now – I tried – but there’s too much sun pouring in those windows at the moment. Not a bad problem to have, of course. Hopefully, I’ll get a photo later today and share it with you tomorrow.

As I said, it’s sunny, but it’s cold. And guess what? We’re getting snow tomorrow. Thankfully, it will turn into rain eventually and it will disappear in a day or so. We’re not going anywhere anyway, so bring it on.

We took a short drive yesterday, just to get out and see the world around us. We didn’t leave the car, but we drove around our little town and into the neighboring (and bigger) town. There were  far fewer people out on the streets, though we were dumbfounded by the sight of the seasonal ice cream stand being open for business with a gaggle of young people clustered together at the window. Are you kidding me? The more we thought about it over the course of the day, the angrier we got. These are the people who are dangerous at this point – to themselves and others. What the heck are they thinking? Answer: They’re not  thinking.

I finished The Sisters  this morning. It was absolutely wonderful and endlessly fascinating. I’m still in a non-fiction mood, so I’ll look at my TBR pile and find something new to read. I worked on the dollhouse the day before yesterday, adding more stones to the exterior. I didn’t do it yesterday because I was so tired, but I’ll be back at it today. Maybe I have a finished exterior to show for this Self-Isolating-Stay-In-Place-Social-Distancing  time in my life.

Our feel-good movie last night was Hoosiers. Heavens, I love that movie. It’s pitch-perfect on every level. We rented it on Amazon Prime even though we own it because our DVD player isn’t working. Anyway, we hadn’t seen it together in a long, long time and we loved it.

We’re hanging in there on Day Nine. How are you doing?

Happy Sunday.

Filed Under: dollhouse, Don, miniatures, social distancing 107 Comments

A Sunny and Warm Sunday

March 8, 2020 at 10:32 am by Claudia

So sorry about the lack of a post yesterday!

I woke up in a very dark mood. That happens rarely. I couldn’t shake it and it followed me throughout the day, though it was less intense as the day went by. I was still going to post, but Rick and Doug stopped by unexpectedly and by the time they left, it was too late.

My mood is much improved today.

After Rick and Doug left, we went out to a late breakfast at a local eatery and the woman next to us decided to talk to us about the coronavirus. Didn’t ask her to. But she did. She has apparently worked in some way on previous outbreaks, though she’s not a scientist. Anyway, she went on and on and on and on, until she finally left. Don and I looked at each other. Too much information. And it all happened right before we were going to eat. I couldn’t decide whether she was slightly off or just a zealot about it. She was obviously very intelligent. Anyway….we could have done without that little pre-breakfast talk.

It’s going to be in the high fifties today and it’s sunny. Huzzah! Tomorrow? Even warmer. I am not in the throes of spring fever, but I would be lying if I said I wasn’t looking at photos of gardens and thinking about beginning the big cleanup outside. It’s way too soon to do it, but maybe in a couple of weeks?

I finished Year of the Monkey  by Patti Smith and started in on the The Hypnotist  by Lars Kepler, a book that has cropped up on Instagram posts. I needed a mystery/crime novel and this will hopefully fill the bill.

I don’t think this has ever happened before, but Don was talking in his sleep last night. No words you could recognize, but he was having a conversation, that’s for sure. I happened to be awake and I don’t mind telling you I was fascinated by it. He would mumble something and then there would be a pause while he listened to the response and then he would respond. Sometimes he was asking a question. His voice was quieter and higher than usual and it felt like he was younger, like he might have sounded as a young boy. There was a vulnerable quality to the ‘conversation.’ I felt very protective of him.

When I told him about it this morning, he said that he had been having intense dreams and they involved his brother, so it makes sense that he sounded younger.

It was darned sweet.

I don’t know what we’ve got going for the day ahead, but I imagine we’ll do something.

Happy Sunday.

 

 

Filed Under: books, Don 42 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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