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On the Road: Making it Cozy

January 21, 2016 at 8:55 am by Claudia

1-19 readerscoffeetable

Can you tell a reader lives here? This coffee table is the perfect size for stacks of books, a vase of flowers, remotes, a Kindle, and a radio.

Those flowers are no more, but they lasted about a week and had a lovely scent. They’ve been replaced by this bouquet of alstromeria:

1-21 alstro

I was in my friend Charlie’s apartment yesterday. Charlie is one of the finest actors I know; I worked with him several times at the Old Globe. He’s playing Friar Laurence. We walked home together from rehearsal and he wanted to introduce me to his cat, Joe. Joe is a gorgeous black cat with green eyes that Charlie rescued. What an affectionate boy he is, too. I stroked his head, even though I’m not supposed to as I’m allergic, but I couldn’t help it, he was so sweet.

Anyway, I noticed that Charlie also had a vase full of flowers on his windowsill. See? Actors know. Flowers make a difference. I also find what individual actors and staff do to make their temporary digs their own fascinating. In the case of Charlie and the rest of the cast, they’ll be here twice as long as I will, so it’s even more important for them to make things homey. A thrift store afghan covered the sofa, where we found Joe happily nestled into a corner. Maps functioning as art were hanging on the wall. Candles (another must) were on the counter. Charlie had moved the desk and the dining table to new positions that worked for him. The ottoman/coffee table had been moved against the wall and Joe’s heated bed was positioned on top. It was very, very cozy. It’s such a wonderful peek into the person living there. Theater actors, especially, are adept at making something temporary cozy. Charlie and another actress in the company, my dear friend Kandis, went to thrift stores when they first arrived to find little touches that cost next to nothing, but make their digs more like home. (I told Charlie I want to go along next time they go thrifting!)

Having lived in so many apartments and very, very small ones at that, moving every year when I was in grad school, moving twice while I lived in Boston, twice while I was in San Diego, twice since we’ve been out on the East Coast, as well as 10 week, 5 week and six month long jobs out of town, I am also an experienced ‘adapter.’ I can transform a room in no time. I’m not bragging, truly. It’s a skill you have  to learn if your environment is important to you and if you need to feel ‘at home’ quickly. I’ve mastered it. Charlie has mastered it. Most likely, every actor I know has mastered it in his/her own way, even if what is done is minimal. It’s still what makes that person happy while on the road.

A friend of mine used to do national tours of Broadway musicals and she had a list of things that she had to have : a throw or a large scarf, scented candles, framed photos of loved ones, music. She would insist on having her hotel room changed if she didn’t like it. She would demand – nicely – what she needed. You have to do that if you’re trying to live as normal a life as possible while living out of a suitcase.

It’s so important to be able to come home after a long day of rehearsal or after a performance and feel like you’re in your safe and cozy place. You’re home.

Seeing all of Charlie’s touches made me think I should hang my quilt. I just might do that today.

I’m almost finished with In the Dark Places  by Peter Robinson. He’s a very good writer, but the book has been slow going for me. The pace itself is slow, a little too slow for my taste, but mostly it’s been slow going because much of the storyline has to do with slaughterhouses/abbatoirs and descriptions of that, to me, absolutely horrific process.  As a vegetarian, you can imagine my reaction. I’ve had to skip over huge paragraphs because I simply couldn’t stomach them. One of the characters is also a vegetarian and her reactions to it all are much like mine. Frankly, I think anyone would have trouble with what goes on there, meat eater or vegetarian.

I’m making myself finish it. It’s a good book, but even taking the slaughterhouses out of the equation, I’m not so entranced that I want to read the whole series. Good writing, good plotting, but it isn’t grabbing me.

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My cup from Blue State Coffee – I think it’s meant to be a latte cup, but I used it for my hot chocolate yesterday. It’s perfect.

More one-on-one coaching today, which I find very satisfying. I get to know the individual actors and we get to explore the text together.

Weather report: We might only get a 3 or 4 inches…or if the track changes by as little as 50 miles, we’ll get walloped. The jury is still out.

Happy Thursday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: books, decorating, On The Road, reading 24 Comments

Checked Out for My Reading Pleasure

January 17, 2016 at 8:03 am by Claudia

Today is the last day of our first week of rehearsal. Tomorrow is the day off, and then we’re back at it on Tuesday. We finish up table work on Act Five, then Darko has another commitment, so I will do some one-on-one coaching. It will be a long day, but a good one.

I’m not going home this week. I knew this would be an intense week for me and driving  home would take a chunk of time that I don’t want to give up on my only day off. I have to go grocery shopping tomorrow and run some errands, as well as just plain take it easy.

1-17 library

I made it to the library yesterday morning. After getting a new library card, I checked out the new releases, which are housed on a series of curving shelves just inside the front door.

1-17 books

They have everything, including many books I’ve recently read as eGalleys. They’ve just been published and they’re already on the shelves. It’s a treasure trove for an avid reader. Careful to not let my reading eyes get too big for my stomach, as it were, I checked out four books.

1-17 checkedout

Starting at the bottom:

• Home by Nightfall  – The newest Charles Finch. I’ve read most of the Charles Lenox series that takes place in London in the 1870’s. There’s one waiting to be read on my shelves at home, but I thought I’d grab this one and read it while I’m here. Wonderful series, by the way.

• The Fifth House of the Heart  by Ben Tripp – Ben lives in Los Angeles and is married to a former student of mine – both of them work in the entertainment industry. I’ve been reading about his latest book via Corinne’s FB posts. It’s not my usual genre, but it sounds fascinating, so I’m going to give it a read.

• In the Dark Places  by Peter Robinson – This is a mystery and an author I’m not familiar with but Louise Penny’s blurb on the cover: “Thrilling – brilliantly plotted, beautifully paced” was all I needed. Part of the Inspector Banks series.

• Murder on the Champs de Mars  by Cara Black – I’ve read several books in this Aimee Leduc series. This is the most recent, which will screw up my determination to read them in the order they were written, but heck – I’m saving money by checking it out of the library. Right?

I have two weeks in which to read all of these. And I have to finish my current read. Hmmm.

Don and Scout are doing well. I miss them terribly – the hardest time is in the evening, I think. That’s when I really feel it. But, we’re used to it. We adjust. And I’ll see them soon.

Happy Sunday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: books, On The Road, reading, Shakespeare, theater 41 Comments

Thursday Thoughts

January 14, 2016 at 9:32 am by Claudia

1-14 flowers

• I love my work. Especially when it involves Shakespeare – that, I think, is my favorite gig. Yesterday was a long day, but I was completely energized by it. Completely! We spent about four hours on table work, then Darko had to leave for another commitment. After lunch, I spent 90 minutes working with Romeo and then another 90 minutes working with Juliet. In each case, we started to go through their individual lines word by word, checking the rhythm, the stress, the pronunciation, and the meaning.

I’m a lover of words. I am a lover of Shakespeare’s words, which – to me – are deeply profound. So, to have the chance to work with them, to hopefully inspire the actors I’m working with, and, in turn, get inspired myself? Heaven.

Rather than being tired at the end of the day, I was flying high. What a gift that is. I’m very grateful.

1-14 quilt

• Recognize my quilt? There was a perfectly nice quilt on the bed when I arrived, but it was probably a tad too heavy for my taste. Besides, I’ve learned that bringing a quilt from home, in this case, one I made, makes things homier. I also brought a shawl/throw that I knitted several years ago, which lives on the sofa.

Bits of home brought to my home-away-from-home. Or as Don calls it: my Mary Tyler Moore Life.

1-14 sofaatnight

• Case in point: I came home last night, called Don, made some dinner and, after watching Jeopardy, decided there was nothing worth watching on the tube. I pulled out my Kindle and my current read, which was another book by Jane Casey. Snuggled in that throw you see on the sofa, I read and read and read until the phone rang a little after 10, which is normally the time I go to bed.

It was Don, wondering why he hadn’t heard from me. (We always call each other to say goodnight.) I told him I’d been reading and had lost track of the time. What did he say? “Look at you, in your apartment, reading for hours, leading your Mary Tyler Moore Life!”

I think he gets a real kick out of it. Never mind that my preferred place would be cuddled up to him on our sofa in the den. But, it is a luxury at this point in our lives to read for three hours uninterrupted. Scoutie needs a lot of hands-on care right now, so when I’m home, I rarely get to do anything without keeping one eye on her. Neither does Don. I’d rather be with her, but if I can’t, I might as well enjoy one of the perks of being away from home.

• In the blogging world: I see so many younger bloggers getting book deals  and not so many older bloggers getting book deals. I suppose it’s like anything in life, ‘young’ sells. I’m sure they’re thrilled and they should be and it’s all wonderful and I’m happy for them. But when I see their books as I’m out and about and look at the content or the advice or the tips…it’s always stuff I already know. I find myself shaking my head, thinking “There’s nothing new here!”

I suspect I’m not the target audience.

I suppose that’s also the way of the world. The older generation is wiser, simply because they’ve lived longer and learned the lessons that the younger generation is just now discovering. And when that younger generation ‘discovers’ something, it seems new and fresh.

But it isn’t.

I’m not a parent, but I imagine this is much the same thing that parents witness with their children. I’ve experienced it as a teacher. We can give them tips, tell them what we’ve learned, show them the way… but until they have that light bulb moment and discover it themselves, much of our wisdom and advice falls on deaf ears.

And, yes, of course I’d love a book deal, but in truth, I have no idea what the heck I’d write about! Anyway, even if I did have the ghost of an idea, I doubt it would fly in this world of younger-bloggers- turned-authors.

The same thing happens on television and in the movies; impossibly young and beautiful actors playing doctors, scientists and/or high-powered attorneys. Really? Older and wiser and experienced and whatever adjective you can come up with does have a place, but it’s very limited.

• Today: more table work, which is endlessly fascinating to me. I’m looking forward to it.

Happy Thursday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: aging, blogging, books, media, On The Road, reading, Shakespeare 40 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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