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A Wondrous Evening

June 22, 2012 at 9:18 am by Claudia

Oh my goodness. It is such an amazing experience to see my friend, this lovely, talented person, perform on Broadway. I have to keep telling myself it’s just Jim – the guy from Texas who auditioned in front of my friend Rick and me for a place in the graduate acting program. The guy we accepted into the program, knowing he was the real deal. In a program such as ours, you spend hours and hours with the students, in class, onstage, in rehearsal rooms, at parties. By the time they graduate, you know them very, very well. That’s the nature of a professional actor training program. (And why I have so many former students as Facebook friends!) Jim’s class was the last class that I taught at the University of San Diego/Old Globe Theatre MFA program. That class traveled to London together in the winter of their last semester and I was the faculty advisor who got to go along. Everyone had different plane reservations on different airlines. Jim and I ended up traveling together on Virgin Atlantic and laughed ourselves silly. I am crazy about him.

Anyway, the enormity of his talent shines through in this production of Harvey. What a wonderful performance – honest, funny, sweet and true! Not one false note. While I was watching him, I had the realization that this was my friend Jim, but I could be watching him on any stage – the Old Globe, the MFA theater on campus – it just happened to be on Broadway. The entire cast was excellent and lovingly brought this wonderful old play to life again.

As seems to be the norm in my life, I had an adventure on the way to the performance. My bus, which normally would take about an hour and a half to get to Manhattan, took almost 3 and a half hours. Curtain was at 7 pm and at 6:30 the bus still hadn’t gone through the Lincoln Tunnel (which runs under the Hudson River to Manhattan.) I was in a panic. I had no idea what was holding us up but I was sure I was going to miss the curtain. I had Don call the box office and tell them to hold my ticket, I emailed Jim to tell him what was going on, and I sat there on the bus watching the minutes tick by. We finally got into the bus terminal at 6:50. The theater is 12 blocks away from the terminal. In the midst of 95 degree heat and rush hour in the Theater District, with not one available taxi in sight, I speed walked those 12 blocks, reached the theater and sat in my seat by 7:04 – just as the lights went down.

Whew!

It was worth it. I’m so proud of Jim. We had a wonderful time together after the show, chatting in his dressing room. I adore him.

Here’s where I realized just how popular he is: as we were getting ready to leave the theater, I saw a long barricade, stretching down the block. On one side of the barricade, 4 or 5 people deep, were fans waiting to see Jim. The line stretched down a long city block. They had been waiting in that heat for almost an hour; we had been talking away in his dressing room for quite a while. We said our goodbyes right before he hit the stage door and then I watched as cheers erupted when Jim followed me out the door. He has to sign autographs after every performance. And there were a lot of people there. His entire life has changed. But he hasn’t, thank goodness. He is still the same thoughtful, funny, serious, kind man I knew 12 years ago and know now. I’m proud to call him my friend.

Teaching can be enormously gratifying. Seeing my former students excel at what they do for a living, what I helped train them to do, is a blessing that fills my heart with joy.

Happy Friday.

Filed Under: Broadway, New York City, teaching, theater 35 Comments

Where I teach

March 16, 2009 at 9:16 pm by Claudia


I thought I’d share a few photos of the University Campus – very near my office window. This is where I taught for 8 years and where I have returned to teach this semester. The University of San Diego is situated on a hill overlooking the Pacific Ocean and Mission Bay. Its very pretty and the buildings are all designed in the same style. No ivy covered walls here. I used to live down the street from Harvard and I think I prefer that look – but it is very beautiful here and nicely landscaped. The above photo is the view I have as I walk toward my office. The building at the very back is the Studio Theater and it also functions as a classroom space.

This is one of the many archways running between classroom buildings. I think it is especially lovely.

One of the many stone benches scattered thoughout the courtyard.

The Studio Theater – this theater is for the MFA student productions. They also perform on the stages of The Old Globe which is in another part of town.

This is the courtyard very near my office. It certainly is a nice place in which to work, isn’t it?

A view down the main road of the University.

There’s more to the campus, of course, but this is my little area. This is where I spend most of my time during the week. But only for 3 more weeks. Then classes end, and everything moves over to The Old Globe and the Summer Rep. Hope you liked our little visit to campus!

Filed Under: teaching 8 Comments

Random Thoughts

February 11, 2009 at 9:04 pm by Claudia


I have nothing profound to share with you today, but then again, I’m not sure if I’ve ever said anything profound on this blog. Maybe I have. I’ve been busy – teaching, coaching, doing prep work for classes. I have just learned I have to work on yet another show this week and I am waiting to hear what dialect the director wants me to coach. Sometimes I feel like I am juggling a lot of balls and not doing such a great job of it. The thing about teaching, at least for me, is that some days it seems to be effortless; everything goes smoothly, the students are attentive and calm and I seem to breeze through the day. Other days, it is like pulling teeth; one has to deal with emotional students, tired students, giggly students (yes, even at the graduate school level – of course, this is acting school so there is a bit more leeway for shows of emotion), or I am tired, or cranky or dehydrated. It can be exhausting. Yesterday was exhausting. Today was better. Tomorrow I have a faculty meeting, teaching and work in the evening on “The Greeks”.

Saturday is Valentine’s Day and I am far away from my sweetheart. But we’ve been through this before. The fact is that we tell each other we love each other several times a day – every day is Valentine’s Day!

I know I have blog readers from Australia and I am so saddened and horrified by the fires in your country. My heart goes out to you at this terrible time. Words always seem woefully inadequate at times like these, but I send my love and prayers to you and yours.

Filed Under: coaching, teaching, valentine's day Leave a Comment

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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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