The sporadic ramblings of Emily C. A. Snyder - devoted to God, theatre, writing, and much randominity.

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Location: New York, New York, United States

Host: "Hamlet to Hamilton: Exploring Verse Drama" | Founder: TURN TO FLESH PRODUCTIONS | Author: "Cupid and Psyche" "Nachtsturm Castle" & Others | Caitlin O'Sullivan in "The Ghost Ship" (Boston Metaphysical Society)

Monday, August 11, 2008

A Momentary Fandom

Beyond really briefly....

I saw the American Idol 2008 tour Saturday and Sunday in Worcester, MA and Manchester, NH respectively and would like to mention a few highlights:

  • Go crew! Every time running crew brought on a mikestand or a guitar or a bottle of water I was cheering them on. Did a splendid job getting everyone from set to set. Particularly on Sunday, when...Timmy, I think?...ran out when David Cook's guitar snapped a string one verse into "My Hero." DC didn't miss a beat, walked over to stage left where Timmy was already entering with a second guitar which DC decided he didn't want and finished out just singing the song - and freed from a guitar, running and skipping the length of the stage. Good times. Go crew!

  • Go back-up vocalists. I swear - I would happily watch them! They had made up these great dance steps for various songs, or they'd gently sway to ballads, and then they totally got into "Bring Me Back to Life" and always with a really genuine smile, terrific vocal range and textures, just fabulous. The musicians were all great, with the main synth guy breaking out a horn at one point. I'm always astounded at the subtlety it requires for accompanists to do their job. Thankless tasks which I hope they are properly thanked for.

  • Saw the show from the stage right side, fairly close on Sat. and then faaar away on the other side of the court (behind the tech - and watching them edit the LCD screens live - v. interesting to guess whose angle the director was cutting to - it became a game) on Sun. Alas, only brought camera on Sunday - BUT!

  • Managed to get there early and actually get a few pictures and, really, best of all - and the whole POINT of all - to tell those few I saw how very very good they were. I hope people DO tell them what a good job they're doing - beyond just all the screaming and whatnot. (Although I am very happily guilty of having almost no voice right now due to screaming. Screaming with my soft palate up, but still....) On the line, I was able to tell Brooke, Archie and David Cook how well they are doing. All three are def. my tops for commanding the thousands there. Very good sets. But natch....

  • David Cook was BORN to do this. We overuse that phrase, but to see someone in the role that was meant for him, doing the thing he was built to do - incredible. His performances were different each night - completely new - "Billie Jean" on Saturday was THRILLING with high glory notes, and on inbetween eighths ("Her schemes AND her plans") he'd go up. But on Sunday he took a much more melancholy approach, going down into low runs and then other midrange keens and complicated ornamentation. Just incredible. He's so VISIBLE on that stage. My ONLY complaint was that (on Sunday, anyway) I was able to see the giant LCD screen behind him and I wanted it OFF because David Cook didn't require anything but himself, a mike, a guitar, and the audience. Truly, this is watching a legend in the making.

  • Right, so I'm off early tomorrow to frolick with Kristen in New Jersey with a trip to the City and at least seeing Central Park and seeing whatever sight strikes our fancy. It's been too long since I've done a NYC run, but that wouldn't compare but that it's been too long since I've seen my darling Krissytina in the flesh! Happy day and much conversation, I am sure!

  • Finally, I swears it is not photoshopped....



    Mood: Sleepy but contented
    Music: "I want much more than this provincial life!"
    Thought: As much as I am looking forward to (potentially) acting in Much Ado About Nothing this upcoming semester at Emerson, I realized (actually due to the AI concerts - waiting in line gives one opportunity to reflect) that I really, really don't have a desire - or let's say the insatiable desire - to be the one on stage. I am very glad to be the audience of one, to be the gateway between who the actor IS and who he PLAYS, to guide and to tell story and to move audiences - all unseen. Oh, I so badly want to do theatre in...elsewheres. But to direct, as I am directing now, that is - for the whole person, not just for the 9-5ness of a job. Theatre, the arts, should never be a job. Lord save us from drudgery in the performing arts! Theatre should breathe. And to breathe, the actors must be alive - soulfully alive, vibrant, soaring and thrilled to be doing what they are doing. I fear that "professional actors" will be soulless - will be at a point when they no longer love their own art. I fear that, if I do work with them, they will not allow me to breathe life back into them, as it were. But then I think, no one began in the arts because they hated it! To work with actors, to reawaken them to the world, to give them room to love their craft again - and by doing so to tell GREAT stories that in turn awake the audience - oh, I want to be doing THAT. But more. For more people. Elsewhere calling. Call me, I come!

  • Saturday, August 02, 2008

    Dizzy with Worldbuilding

    So, for whatever reason, after coming out of a rather disturbing dream this morning (the type that are real or convincing enough that although you're tossing and turning you can't wake up), and being gratefully sent on an errand and inheriting long-term loan furniture from Johnny (God bless Johnny), which I've no idea where I'll put but plan on finding a home for somewhere...I felt the urge to write The Sable Valentine - specifically from Luce's perspective.

    The joy of TSV is that one can sort of pick up anywhere and jot out a few letters or journals or newspaper articles and then stick it away for another bout of inspiration (or at least the desire not to deal with dreams and new pieces of furniture). The difficulty with TSV is that because it's overlapping and intertwining strands...it's frakking convoluted. Fortunately, I've written myself up roadmaps (since this is a mystery) so that I can see who's doing what at what time and where they intersect and where they don't and who must be where when doing what. Unfortunately, I've written up these maps...and they boggle the brain.

    It's all very cool. If I piece it together right, it will be fantastic and mucho fun. And I want to write it right. It's nice to give myself holiday to write - I've been on "Must clean this now before I become distracted and it ends up getting settled" mode this past week. Mostly as a distraction from a lack of distractions.

    Buuuuuut, I finally watched Becoming Jane (eh - I like James McAvoy and all men should be made to wear britches and well-tailored coats - yum for early 1800 fashion!) which I rented from Blockbuster. And then discovered that I had bought. Already. And never watched. I need to clean and organize DVD's etc. better. Oy! But amused oy! :)

    Anywho, in watching that - a very NON-Jane-like movie (boxing! ladies of the night! scandal!), I was reminded of how much I love and miss TSV and how I'd love to go into that world again and write for Theophilus Snow (such a great heroesque character!) and Giselle and what Luce thinks of Giselle the time they first meet and with Luce, of course, we get more Snow and how nice, too, to learn more about Delphine and her mother and perhaps see more of Poppy Gleck who is simply wonderful and who knows what other characters will pop up and now I remember that Poppy has a nephew and I'm not sure I wrote his name down in the Files for my Sanity file which is eleven pages of eight point font listing all the names of streets, numbers already used, names of everybody who's named (which is a LOT) as well as various information about cities, cultural salutations, mythical creatures, etc. and which is added to every time I write.

    I just ran across this and it seems a fine way to catapult myself back into the world. From Giselle's book, from her Uncle to her Aunt (who are her guardians).

    From Obadiah Greene to his wife, Evangeline
    Put in the Box of Ignominy

    Evie –
    I’ve given Giselle leave to go to the opera tonight with Snow.
    Please do not poison the soup.
    – Obadiah

    Mood: Excited
    Music: The Count of Monte Cristo
    Thought: I do love writing. Even when it's convoluted.