Dance, magic, dance

On Saturday, Carrie and I got gussied up and went downtown to the Fifth Avenue Theatre to see Edward Scissorhands: The Play.

Earlier in the week, Carrie’s barista had led her to believe that this wasn’t a play in the strictest sense, but more of a musical. So when Carrie and I sat down, we expected something along the lines of ‘all singing, all dancing’. It turns out we were only half right–this would’ve been far better billed as “Edward Scissorhands: The Ballet” or “Edward Scissorhands: The Interpretive Dance”. Which isn’t to say it was bad–just that it was surprising! For a while, my mind kept trying to reject it–“You are NOT arty enough to appreciate this, you are NOT arty enough to appreciate this” but when I shoved that part of me back, I found it truly enchanting.

It definitely made me wish I had seen the movie more recently, as I felt I would’ve appreciated what was going on more if I had a clear memory of the progression of the narrative. Still, the show did an amazing job of telling a story quite clearly without words, and it’s quite possible that it was an adaptation that was better served without words.

The scenes between Edward and Kim were breathtakingly beautiful; not only was it easier to focus on the dancing when there were only two people onstage instead of twenty or more, but it seemed that extra efforts were made with their choreography. Immediately before the intermission, there is a scene where Edward shows Kim the topiaries he’s made, and as they dance together, what initially appeared as set pieces came to life and started dancing with them. It was gorgeously done, but that didn’t stop the gigglefest between Carrie and I come intermission. “Oh mum, I’m so excited–I got the part I’ve always dreamed of playing–DANCING BUSH NUMBER THREE!” “It’s so cute, it’s like a little bush dinosaur!” “I’m going to sign programs with XOXOX, Topiary Lizard!”

Half the people around us were highly entertained by our little intermission show, and half of them were giving us the stink-eye. The girl on my right, in particular, who couldn’t have been more than sixteen, gave me the stinkiest stink-eye in the history of the world. But come ON now, it’s not as if I was talking/giggling/making jokes DURING the show, and it truly cannot be expected that I’ll be stifled for many hours running!

It certainly didn’t hurt my enjoyment of Edward Scissorhands: Dance-O-Rama to note that the actor who danced Edward had an amazing ass. I think I missed a decent portion of the action just because I couldn’t take my eyes away from his hindquarters. It’s ok, though, as when you’re staring from a distance, it just appears that you are a VERY attentive theatre-goer.

Many, many thanks to Carrie for taking me to this show-I truly enjoyed myself, and I don’t think I could have enjoyed seeing it nearly as much with anyone else.

This theatre review brought to you due to an emotard post I had made a while back. If this is the sort of birthday gift one receives because one whines about one’s friends being too busy, I’m going to have to be an emotard more often.

 

The honey tastes sweeter when you anger the bees

On Friday I decided to throw caution to the wind and drive to Portland to see Mike, against my better judgement regarding the condition of my car to make such a drive. It went remarkably better than my last trip to Portland to see him perform, as there was no torrential downpour to cause me to skid across the road.

I found Dante’s without too much trouble, and gave hallucinas a call as soon as I pulled into a parking lot. She wasn’t home, so the best I could do was leave a message and hope she got it before I left the city.

Dante’s was a really nice venue–good atmosphere, plenty of seats, eager-to-please staff–if I lived in Portland, I could easily see myself spending a lot of time there. Incidentally, it was one of the places where the Comedians of Comedy recorded part of their DVD; I recognized it the second I stepped inside.

The people there were very friendly, and I got to chat with quite a few before the bands started performing. After the first set, I saw I had a voicemail–Relish had called and said she wasn’t going to be able to make it out, but that her couch was open to me, should I need a place to crash.

Mike’s show was even better than the previous evening, though personally a majority of that had to do with the absence of the Most Annoying Couple In The World. Again, I got to spend some quality time with him afterwards, but cut it a bit short as it was already 1:30 and I knew it would take me approximately 2.5-3 hours to get home, and I was already starting to drag.

In retrospect, I should’ve taken Relish up on the couch offer, as my lids started to get heavy the second I got back onto the highway. It didn’t help that I absolutely, positively did NOT want to stop at a rest stop. The reason behind my resolve was due to a movie I had rented a few days earlier–a french family drama (A Ma Soeur), which I felt was fairly decent…up until the point where they are all senselessly murdered/raped at a rest area. No purpose to it, whatsoever. When I watched it, I thought surely it was a dream that someone was having, and that they’d wake soon, but the scene kept going and getting increasingly uncomfortable to watch. Now I knew I couldn’t go to a rest stop because even if I tried to get some sleep, it would be fitful and in my mind I’d see someone with an axe coming at the windshield the whole time. I also remembered all too well the semi-prophetic, mostly terrifying dream/reality thing that happened the last time I slept in my car.

So I drove straight home from Portland. At one point, a car in front of me slammed its brakes–I snapped to, hit my brakes, and hit my turn left turn signal to avoid an accident, only to find that there WAS no car in front of me. And also, that there was a state trooper on my left. I mentally prepared myself to be pulled over, but for some reason, the cop passed me, got into the far right lane, and exited. I expected him to come screaming up the onramp behind me, but apparently this cop had bigger fish to fry.

The really scary thing–the trip was about an hour shorter than it should have been. It seemed like an incredibly fast drive; I’d look up and 30-40 miles had passed in the blink of an eye. This points to two things: 1)Alien abduction, which only exists in the pages of the Weekly World News, and 2)I was sleeping behind the wheel for a large portion of the trip, and was apparently speeding an insane amount as well.

It’s scary to think that I could’ve easily killed someone or died behind the wheel out of pure stubbornness. Next time, I’m taking the couch, or risking axe-death, rather than taking the lives of other people on the road into my careless hands.

A vision in flannel.

This year, Amy’s birthday fell on Valloween. I’d already RSVP’d to the Valloween party, but I told Amy I’d spend a few hours doing whatever it was she wanted to do–she wanted to go to the Missing Players show at Waldo’s. So she got very dressed up–5 inch heels, skirt, boob shirt–while I put on my flannels, sweater, and wiped off my makeup ala Annie Wilkes.

A few months ago, Amy and I went out to dinner, and since we both ordered different things, and BOTH proclaimed that it was the most delicious thing to ever hit a plate, we fed each other bites. I saw a couple nearby watching us very intently, and the female half, with sweatpants tucked up underneath her voluminous bosom, mouthed the word ‘lesbians’, while the male half, watching with his mouth open, just nodded.

The above is merely context for this sentence: I never felt more like the butch half of a lesbian couple with her than when we went out on Saturday. She towered over me, the 8th and as-of-yet-unspoken-of dwarf, Flannel.

After two hours of feeling like the most conspicuously dressed person there, I said my farewells and drove to safetymonkey’s place. Valloween was in full swing, though it seems like most people didn’t put a lot of thought into their costumes–not that some of them weren’t still cool, but they didn’t fit well into the ‘love and murder’ theme.

This was evidenced by the vacuous blond gazelle chick that World of Warcraft Guy is now banging out running up to me squealing “I’m TINKERBELL! *world’s most annoying giggle*”.

I had a number of thoughts hit me simultaneously, and while I’m not happy that this sort of thing happens to me often as it makes it difficult to spout withering comebacks when you’re sputtering words from multiple thoughts at once, but for once it saved me the social awkwardness that comes with immediately saying something nasty to someone in front of her 6’3″ boyfriend. These thoughts involved “Wow, I guess the Burning Crusade isn’t as good as everyone says it is”, “Since when is a fairy with a missing chromosome a character class?”, “Squeal in my ear again and I’ll send you back to never-never land, and all the clapping in the world isn’t going to bring you back”, and “GOD DAMN IT why did I not bring a sledgehammer?”

Now before you comment with “See? It WAS an appropriate costume choice!” I would like to mention that all I wanted to do was hobble her, not murder her. So there.

Not many people ‘got’ my costume; I expected to do a lot of explaining but was completely unprepared for how many people would be entirely unfamiliar with the source material, aka the greatest mangled-love book/movie ever. “The rain. Sometimes it gives me the blues. When you first came here, I only loved the writer part of Paul Sheldon. Now I know I love the rest of him, too. I know you don’t love me, don’t say you do. You’re beautiful, brilliant, a famous man of the world and I’m… not a movie star type. You’ll never know the fear of losing someone like you if you’re someone like me. I have this gun. Sometimes I think about using it. I’d better go now. I might put bullets in it. “

AMAZING. Too bad for most people I was just the girl not wearing a costume, with a flannel shirt and bobby pins in her hair.

Monkey and Justin are starting up their Sunday BBQs again soon, when it starts to look like the weather might hold. I’m definitely looking forward to it–sitting out under the stars in the warm summer air while talking with my friends is one of my favorite parts of the season.

Next post: A scintillating girls’ day out!