Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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You are here: Home / Archives for red sox

The Den

October 9, 2013 at 10:07 am by Claudia

leaves

I spent much of yesterday raking up leaves. We had a big, scary storm come through on Monday and the high winds knocked ¾ of the leaves off the sugar maple. Then we grabbed the tarp, raked them onto the tarp and took them up to the woods to become mulch. Most of the leaves on the flower beds stay there, protecting the plants and doing their thing to help the soil. Of course, raking at this time of year is endless, but the front yard is definitely looking better than it did.

I’m late getting this post up because we stayed up until 1:00 am watching the Red Sox/Rays game. Oh lord. It was endless and frustrating as Boston couldn’t seem to get anything going for most of the game. I found myself yelling at the screen more than a few times. After the Rays scored a run and maintained that lead for much of the game, somehow the Sox managed to get three runs up on the scoreboard and they won. They will play either the Detroit Tigers or the Oakland A’s for the American League Pennant. If it’s the Tigers, it will be a bit tough for me as they are my hometown team and I grew up watching them.

One of you asked to see the newly acquired lamps in a larger photo of the den. Let me say right off that the den is notoriously hard to photograph; it has a lot of windows and it borders the porch with its deep overhang. So, light? A problem. But I grabbed my camera and came up with these.

den1

The den is a smallish room (every room in this house is small – the house is less than 1200 sq. ft and that includes the uninhabitable basement) and it’s sort of packed with furniture. But we hang out there a lot. I blog in that chair. Evenings find us sitting side by side on the sofa, more often than not with Scout taking up half of the sofa and Don and I crammed into the other half. What’s wrong with that picture?

The window blinds were here when we bought the cottage and, so far, I’ve been okay with them. Lately, I’ve been thinking about some sort of curtains. But curtains are my other source of frustration, right after lamps. We’ll see what I come up with.

den2

We’ve had the sofa for about 17 years. Would I like a new one? Yes. But it’s hanging in there with the help of a slipcover.

den3

The blogging chair is vintage – we got it in California. It needs to be reupholstered but somehow there is always something else that is more pressing on the budget front. So I use this IKEA slipcover which doesn’t quite fit but is cheap and easy to replace when I subject it to one too many coffee stains. To the right of that china cabinet is the television. You don’t need to see that, although sometime I’ll show you the cabinet, found at auction for $5 and repainted and ‘aged’ by me.

Like everything in our home, the furniture is used, recycled and reimagined. I bought that beautiful old china cabinet when I first moved to San Diego. It used to hold my collection of vintage Fiesta. The ottoman has a wicker base and we got that in San Diego, as well. I got the green table at an auction for $20. The coffee table was found in an antique store for $10. The vintage wire laundry basket was a Craig’s List find for $50. Well worth it. The white table was purchased at Heidi’s antique shop when we first moved to the cottage. The screen against the wall was a find in San Diego (it’s from our Craftsman days – I tied some strips of fabric to the rods) and the painting over the sofa with my favorite frame ever was an auction score for $15. We’ve had the rug (originally from Pottery Barn) since we first moved out east. That would be 12 years ago. The floor lamp on the left side of the sofa is vintage, we found it in San Diego. The glass shade was found separately. Everything, except for the initial investment in the sofa, was very inexpensive.

My little desk (found on the street and not pictured) is in the corner and there is a vintage sheet music cabinet (found at auction for $25) just inside the entrance to the den.

While the living room has lighter McCoy Pottery-like-sherbety-colors, the den is predominantly red, cream and tan, with a splash of green. It’s a very cozy room at any time of year, but it is especially so when the weather turns cold. Now you can see where I work each morning. With coffee in hand, I step down (it’s sunken) into the den, Scout following. We arrange ourselves, my girl and I, in our respective places; yours truly in the chair, Scoutie in the ‘tunnel.’

I’m there right now.

Happy Wednesday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: blogging, decorating, den, red sox, Scout 67 Comments

Plays, Books & Baseball

September 14, 2013 at 9:31 am by Claudia

unfurlingzinnia2

A coolish Saturday, thank goodness. The weather broke yesterday and the apartment is a much more tolerable place to live. No, the A/C hasn’t been fixed yet, but someone did come by and a new compressor has been ordered. It’s a heat and A/C unit, so I, knowing nothing about these things, wonder if the compressor is needed for the heat as well? If so, I feel that all my nudging on getting this unit fixed will benefit the next occupant of the apartment, most likely someone in the cast of A Christmas Carol.

program

We’re officially into preview performances now. La Dispute has had two previews with audiences. Tonight, Macbeth begins previews. Previews are performances with an audience that occur before the official opening. I think that each of these plays will get a total of eight previews. While a play is in previews, rehearsals still go on in the afternoons – tweaking of the staging or the lighting or the sound happens, sometimes things are reblocked, actors get notes from the director and me and everything is finely tuned so that by the time the plays officially open, everything is about as perfect as it will ever be considering theater is a live, never-the-same-way-twice, medium.

The Red Sox are playing the Yankees this weekend, and somehow their schedule fits into mine. I caught the beginning of last night’s game and got home in time to see the last three innings. (We won.) Today’s game is in the afternoon. Perfect. Sunday’s game is at 8:00 and since there are two performances of Macbeth tomorrow, I will take notes on the matinee and will be able to see the game. The actors don’t need notes from me twice in one day, believe me. That would be annoying.

brutaltelling

I just finished A Rule Against Murder by Louise Penny. I’ve started the next book in the series, The Brutal Telling. I know I have written about these books before on this blog, but I am simply blown away by Penny’s writing. What makes her mysteries different, what sets them apart from many other books in this genre, is her examination of the human heart. The characters in the town of Three Pines are featured in some way or other in every book. They have flaws. Sometimes those flaws are exasperating. But Penny, with true compassion and understanding, takes us on a journey of discovery. She knows that we are all damaged in some way; she uncovers the fears and pain and petty jealousies that we all have deep within us, brings them to the light and by doing so, sets both the characters and us, the readers, free.

Penny slowly and patiently weaves her stories; with intricate plots, with some things revealed and others yet to be revealed in another book. Not only is there the arc of an individual book, but there is an overall arc in the series. She does this so skillfully that I feel like a resident of Three Pines, that little town in Quebec. I care for those characters. I get angry at them. And, because of her key protagonist, Inspector Gamache, I learn to see them with compassion. To stop judging. To understand.

When I finished the book yesterday, I had tears in my eyes. I learned more about myself. I vowed to be a better person.

That’s powerful writing, my friends.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Tagged With: Louise PennyFiled Under: books, On The Road, reading, red sox, theater 22 Comments

What I Did On My Day Off

August 6, 2013 at 8:29 am by Claudia

tuesflowers

When you have just one day off a week, it goes by rather quickly. Hello Tuesday.

Yesterday I was a bit blue. I was missing my home and family and all of that. But it was a gorgeous day. Temps in the high seventies, not an ounce of humidity and sunny skies. Around about noon I packed my camera in my bag and visited the park. It’s just across the street from my apartment building. Lots of workers were sitting on park benches, eating their lunches. I’ve been to the park a lot during my stints in Hartford and, while it’s lovely, it wasn’t doing it for me on this particular Monday. It seemed as if I’d already taken all those photos. I wasn’t inspired to take any new ones.

How about a visit to the library? If you remember, I got a library card last time I was here. Hartford’s library is beautiful, filled with light, filled with people, filled with books and computers and art and a section to help those searching for jobs and more, I’m sure. I walked through the doors and saw my favorite thing spread out before me  – books. Not eBooks, but three dimensional books where you can turn an actual page, not a virtual one, where you can pick up a book from a shelf, leaf through it, read the dust jacket and think about checking it out. There’s an extensive ‘New’ section for both fiction and non-fiction.

Mindful that I already have some books here in the apartment and that I also have to review a couple of books that I brought with me, I limited my to-be-checked-out pile. But I swear, I’m like a kid in a candy shop there. The little library in my town is charming, but the selection would hardly be called extensive and most of the books I check out from there are ordered from some distant branch through the library system. Here in Hartford at this Main Library, oh my, the selection is pretty gosh-darned mouth watering.

tueslibrarybooks

All from the ‘New’ stacks:

1. A new novel from Susan Isaacs, one of my favorite writers. I’ve read every one of her books over the past twenty or so years. She is very funny. She writes great dialogue.

2. A new mystery from English author Simon Brett, part of his theater series featuring actor Charles Paris. I read most of this series years ago with great enjoyment and lots of chuckling. Brett knows the theater world in England very well and he writes a good mystery with tongue firmly in cheek. I was pleasantly surprised to see a new book in the series. In fact, I checked the copyright to make sure it was new.

3. A new book that I was delighted to discover, which focuses on the last interview ever given by the late, great, brilliant Leonard Bernstein. I’ve read most everything I could get my hands on about Bernstein, who is one of my musical heroes, so this little discovery makes me very happy.

On my way back from the library, my cell phone rang. It was the actor who plays Macbeth. (He, Lady Macbeth and I share a car.) They were going to Whole Foods, did I want to come? Since I needed a few things and thought this would be a nice chance to spend some time with them, I said yes. He’s a very talented actor and he’s also very funny. You know I like funny. I’m funny. Don is very funny. Nothing better than a good sense of humor, say I, so we bantered back and forth and had a great time.

tuessoup

Back to the apartment with some time on the computer and a delicious bowl of Cashew Carrot Ginger Bisque. Oh my heavens, this is one of my favorite soups. Love carrots. Love ginger. Love cashews. And before you ask, no, I didn’t make it myself. I did warm it up, however.

Along about 8 pm, after talking to Don more than a few times, I decided to re-join Netflix so that I could join the 21st century and have online access to movies, television shows, etc. The pickings on cable television here are limited. I’m not thrilled with most of the available programming. Don had urged me to join up because several of his fellow actors in Williamstown were doing just that. They would retreat to their bedrooms in the evening and watch something on Netflix or Hulu. It’s especially nice when you’re working out of town.

Since Netflix is having a deal where you get a month’s free trial, I went for it. I watched part one of The Girl Who Played With Fire (the Swedish version.) So well done. And I had the Red Sox game muted on the apartment television so I could keep an eye on the score. (They lost.) I’m liking this – it’s so nice to have options available while I’m on the road.

Long day of rehearsal ahead. Still doing table work for Macbeth. I’m happy to say I became more engaged in the process on Sunday. There will probably be another day of table work and then I’ll be able to start work with the actors one-on-one.

Happy Tuesday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: books, On The Road, red sox 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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The Dogs

The Dogs

Scout & Riley. Riley left us in 2012. Scout left us in February 2016. Dearest babies. Dearest friends.

Winston - Our first dog. We miss you, sweetheart.

Lambs Like to Party

Lambs Like to Party

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