WHAT MAKES ACTORS TICK?
"Fascination with actors shows no sign of abating.
The public still, it seems, longs to know as a journalist
put it to Alec Guinness on his first visit to America,
what makes them tick.("I wasn't aware that I was
ticking, " Guinness replied.)"
Simon Callow, reviewing The Method, in The New York Review of Books (August 18, 2022)
**
NOEL COWARD TRIES TO DO A GOOD DEED
"...there's the story of the actress who religiously
attended every audition for every show he (NOEL COWARD)
staged in London. Each time she sang a few songs, never
with indication of improvement and always went away
empty handed. After this had been going on for several
years Coward started feeling sorry for her and determined
that he would find something for her to do and eventually managed to come up with a part that matched her rather
limited talents. "I'm very happy to tell you that at last
we have something for you," he told her enthusiastically
after walking from hi seat to the edge of the stage to
break the good news.
Oh, no, Mr. Coward," replied the lady, "I don't take
parts, I just audition," and swept out of the theatre
with magnificent dignity!"
Richard Brier. Coward & Company (London:Robson
Books Ltd.,1987)
**
ON T.S., ELIOT’S IMPROBABLE TITLE FOR A PLAY
“I’m in a rush at the moment. Off to Edinburgh tomorrow, where my new play (‘The Cocktail Party’ Is the name of it, but that’s only what I call it in order to entice the public – the esoteric name is ‘Upadhamman samuppada,’ but nobody would promote a play with a name like that). Well, we’ll see.”
T.S. Eliot in a letter to Djuna Barnes (August19, 1949)
ON GOING TO SEE A BROADWAY SHOW
NYC theater-goers know,
As do the Bengal Lancers:
“You pay your money
& you take your chances.
*
SHOES ON STAGE
“Sometimes all it takes is a pair of shoes to connect
an actor to a role. They can’t be any old shoes, of
course. They have to fit both the feet and the
personality.
“When Lynn Redgrave was preparing to play a
middle-aged department store clerk in the British
playwright Alan Bennett’s monologue ”Miss Fozzard
Finds Her Feet,” the footwear that helped the 60
year old actress bring the role to life was a pair
of slim-fitting T-straps she picked up for $20
at a Payless Store on 57th Street in Manhattan.”
Stephen Holden in The New York Times
(April 20, 2003)
**
THE ART OF TERRIBLE ACTING
I wonder how many modern theater goers remember Effie
and Addie Cherry, better known as “The Cherry Sisters”?
The sisters, who died in the early 1940’s, set standards
for bad performance that may never be surpassed. They
often had to sing and dance behind a net so that they
would be protected from all the fruits and vegetables
that spectators would hurl at them. When Effie Cherry
died in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on August 5, 1944, the
Associate Press reported: It was at Hammerstein’s
old Olympic Theater in New York that the sisters’
gypsy skit, their stock entertainment throughout
the years related in song and gesture the fate that
was worse than death. It was supposed to have been
treated to a fruit and vegetable shower by customers
who came to see their act because it was so
fantastically bad, although Effie always denied
the story.
In spite of the ludicrous nature of their
Gypsy act, Effie and Addie Cherry managed to pull
down as much (and sometimes more) as a thousand
dollars a week, and that was in an age when a
thousand dollars went a lot farther than it does now.
**
DOUBLING, TRIPLING, etc.
“William Davidbe related in his Footlight Flashes
that during his strolling days in England when
companies were small, he had on the same evening
done duty for Polonius, the Ghost, Osric, and the
First Grave-digger; and Edwin Booth remember Thomas
Ward dying in the sight of the audience as the player
king, and being dragged from the mimic stage by the
heels to enter immediately at another wing as
Polonius with a cry of ‘Lights! Lights! Lights!’
Laurence Hutton
Curiosities of the American Stage (NY: Harper
& Brothers, 1891)
**
NEW YORK CITY AS STREET THEATER
“On the street nobody watches, everyone performs.”
**
“ Street theater can be achieved in a store, on a bus,
in your own apartment. The idiom requires enough actors
(bit players as well as principals) to complete the
action and the rhythm of extended exchange. The city
is rich in both. In the city things can be kept
moving until they arrive at point. When they do,
I come to rest.”
Vivian Gornick. Approaching Eye Level. (Boston:
Beacon Press, 1996
**
STAGE NEWS FROM ALL OVER
I am cast to play a part
In the drama of my own life,
But why was I
Given only a walk-on role,
& why have there been
No rehearsals?
Louis Phillips
9 thoughts on “BITS & PIECES OF A MISPLACED LIFE: THEATER”
The moral of all these bits & pieces? — keep on auditioning and take the part when it’s offered to you, even if it is just for a walk-on and even if there won’t be any rehearsals.
The moral of all these bits & pieces? — keep on auditioning and take the part when it’s offered to you, even if it is just for a walk-on and even if there won’t be any rehearsals.
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JUST WHOM AM I AUDITIONING FOR? And no,I shall not play the nurse in
Romeo & Juliet.
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do you mean “for whom am I auditioning” ?
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YOU ARE RIGHT. Thank you.
Of course, it could be neither a WHO nor a Whom?
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Maybe there were rehearsals… if reincarnation is true.
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Aa the king of Laconia said: IF
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Did the Cherry sisters, by any chance, leave an estate behind at their deaths?
Sent from my iPhone
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No, but they mentioned that you were the inspiration for going into show business.
They used the suggestions you made on their compoaitiins.
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i.e. compositions.
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