When I started my blog almost four years ago I was
not really sure what I was going to write but I knew That I had lots of Theatre stories to tell and just
started writing them down.
I thought I would just go back to the earliest show
I could remember, start from there and see where it would go.
With over 150 posts covering many plays I know that I have often said how any
given show was special and everyone had a good time working on it.
Not every play is extraordinary and back in April I
wrote about how working on some plays have driven me crazy at times.
But for the most part I have always enjoyed working
in Theatre and if I did not like it
why else would I keep doing it for over forty years.
My Blog does have a few loyal followers and I know
that people do read it from time-to-time, the stats page tells me that my Blog has had over 12,000 visits so far, but I was still
surprised to the reaction to my last blog post.
When I wrote about Picnic I said that I really
enjoyed working on it and that and I knew that it effected many of those people
who worked on it.
As it happened one of those who was in the play read
my blog and shared it on Facebook
with many of cast members and staff who worked on the play.
I knew that many of the actors from the play were
still friends and had stayed in touch and it was fun to read their posts and recollections
of the show, even those which may have differed from my own memories.
Not every show forms long lasting friendships, but that
production of Picnic did.
Four of the actors from Picnic would go on to work
together on a student production of Extremities which further strengthened
their friendship.
The play also caused many bruises for the actors.
Again, not every show will have long lasting effects
on everyone involved in it, but some do and that is what keeps us all coming
back to work on more.
Even if a given play turns out bad, it is in the weeks
rehearsals that bonds of friendship are forged.
When I worked summer stock back when I was in
college, the conditions where I worked were poor by most standards, but by overcoming
the lack of a well equipped shop with large power tools it gave me more self confidence
in my work with hand tools and the basic circular saw.
As I look back on all the plays that I have worked
on I have seen many relationships come and go.
I remember a couple who worked on several plays together
while in college and met up again a few years after graduation and are now
married.
Of course there are those couples who were madly in
love while in college and ended up married to others.
Life backstage is not that much different than the
rest of the world, but sometimes the pressures of working in Theatre can seem to magnify emotions.
I am happy though when I see those long lasting friendships
that I know started on a bare stage or rehearsal room so many years before.
What a treat to find this post more than six months after Gary offered it. Count me among those who can relate - and who still looks at a scar or two that takes me back to the Lab Theater.
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