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The good news is that, after writing the plays, hearing them read, hearing them read three million more times, hearing little snippets of them read over and over, seeing them staged, seeing little pieces of them staged over and over, repeat and rinse as needed, there are still moments that raise the hair on my arms. You get so numb to what's happening that it's almost impossible to gauge how it will feel to an audience exposed to it fresh and finished. I think it's going to work. I think. I think, I think, I think....
No. I guess. And hope. But I don't really have a clue. We are in grand mysteryland, and only performance will tell. As one of the characters in "Wet Paint" says: "It's a ritual. I think you have to experience it for it to have meaning for you."
Or something like that. Maybe she says "weasels ate my rowboat." I can't really remember. I know at some point last night, someone was talking about butchering an aardvark, and I'd swear I hadn't written that. I kind of like aardvarks.
Does any of this make sense? Hell no. Which I think is exactly the point: when you die, it's all dark, you're confused, you can't see, and then there's a tunnel of white light, and you follow it, follow it, until it's right in front of you, everything white, all the world white, blinding, encompassing light....
And you realize you're staring up at a lighting instrument and the lamp has burned a hole in the gel.
Steve
1 comment:
Don't harrass ME, you blitering Aardvark... It's kinda got a ring to it...
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