A SPECIAL TRIBUTE
At approximately thirteen past two a.m. on the closing Saturday night of Oliver! (a musical production put up by Showbiz Queenstown) the Memorial Hall stage was covered… in cauliflower. There were also a few pieces of carrot, some very dried out and yellowed broccoli pieces, and one sad, floppy parsnip.
“Just look… at that stage,” said Fee, the woman who had played the role of Nancy.
“Yeah,” I replied in mock consternation. “I wonder who did…that.”
Scene: late Saturday, mid-May, 2010, but we had partied like it was 1999. The Queenstown production of Oliver! had commenced in a marvelous blaze-less blaze of glory, and the cast and crew had stayed up till dawn rejoicing with mini spring rolls, sauvignon, top hats, and fresh nostalgia. The confettied cauliflower had come from an impromptu celebratory food fight. We had taken the week old vegetables off the prop tray (no longer needed) and chucked them, delightedly, at our fellow thespians. It was certainly a night to remember, though with how much some of us had to drink, parts of it may very well have been forever forgotten.
As some of you may be aware, over the last two months I have been involved in Queenstown’s production of Oliver!. Starting in mid April, I jumped on board as the ‘assistant stage manager’ and spent my evenings attending rehearsals, learning choreography by mere osmosis, shushing children, and moving scenery (well, a chaise anyway). I had a very small part to play, but as they say, ‘there are no small parts, only small actors.’ (Whatever the heck that ever meant.) I’m no midget, but I did enjoy and complete all my little bits and pieces to help the marvelous musical machine run smoothly.
Let’s start at the beginning. From what I’ve heard, it’s a good place to start.
For the first few weeks I was a privileged observer. I drank a lot of the complimentary tea, sung along quietly during the group numbers (I got louder as I memorized) and smiled shyly but earnestly at any and all veiled quizzical looks.
It was sort of like this:
remember when you took dance class as a child? In the last fifteen minutes of class, all the parents would start congregating around the indoor class window, watching each pirouette with admiration and affection. Of course for me, this metaphor works a bit differently. Having never been a parent, I was watching a child I was, let’s say, babysitting take aforementioned lessons, grinning proudly as the wee one became a bona fide ballerina over time.
If you managed to follow that metaphor, hopefully you walked away with the point—those first two weeks of rehearsal were a beautifully illustrated story book for me, a story book I was perfectly content reading aloud to myself in hushed tones with a flashlight under my duvet.
And then it was sort of like this: remember when Bastian was reading the Never Ending Story aloud to himself in hushed tones with a flashlight under his duvet?
And then suddenly he’s… in it?
Once I was three weeks into the rehearsal process, I may have well been riding that floppy eared luck dragon. I quickly began to get to know not only the other crew members and production team (who were utterly delightful) but a good percentage of the cast. The milkmaid, a handful of hungry orphans, Mr. Percy Snodgrass, Bill Sykes and Nancy (the happy couple, may they rest in peace), all of London (the posh and the paupers,) the artful Dodger, Doris the budgie, and many more… all welcomed me into their world and began, in this order, to know my name, give me rides home, invite me out, and subsequently tease me for being a vegan and/or an American.
Flash Forward: The show had opened successfully and to wide, wild acclaim. As for me, I was having a marvelous week—the show was up and running, I was loving flitting about backstage, and the icing on the (ha) cake? My birthday was coming up on the 19th. Naturally, I was having a wee soiree, and naturally, all aforementioned individuals were invited. Other than hoping to see a fair amount of shining faces at my shinndig, I did not expect or require anything additional. On Wednesday, when my birthday came around, I was well-wished and sufficiently doted on, and considered the recognition of my birth a pleasant success.
You can imagine (or don’t, I’m going to describe it to you) my surprise, when, before the actors took their places, I was treated not only to a hearty rendition of “Happy Birthday” sung to me by the full cast and crew twice (it was repeated per the instruction of my friend Nick, who demanded, ‘Now, once more, with feeling!’), but to an extravagant chocolate/ sweet muffin/brownie birthday cake trifecta, decorated in pirate themed candles and accompanied by two signed birthday cards, one of which featured the famed Disney Princesses and sang, “Every girl can beeee a princess….” whenever I opened it.
I practically cried.
Out of happiness, of course, not because I had so desperately needed to hear I could be a princess.
Standing there, blushing and smiling like Miss America (and gazing lustfully at my cake) I recalled earlier in the day when Emily and Susan had asked me if I had received any cake on my birthday, because this was, clearly, a requirement for celebrations of this nature. No, I had said. I’m far away from home, and I’ve never had cake unless I was celebrating with my family. Because who was going to make me a cake if not my mom?
“See,” Susan said, jolting me out of the recollection with a knowing grin. “You don’t need to be with family to get birthday cake on your birthday.”
As far as I am concerned?
I was.
****
Alright, so, this isn’t my usual subject matter for my column here at this website. But I wanted to share my Oliver! experience with you, because even if you are never involved in a musical in a country not your own, the point I am getting at is this:
If you’re going to be in a town for more than two or three weeks, get involved with something. Everyone goes to the pubs. Everyone goes to the regular haunts. But have you gotten to know the real place you’re in? The real people who live there? What is their actual life like–the day to day? What makes this particular place special? Integrate yourself in some sort of community endeavor… the rewards will blow you away.
Don’t stick to the obvious. Don’t stick to the easy.
Stretch yourself, stretch your thinking, and reap the benefits.
Enjoy your week, fellow nomads.