If you're here looking for anything relating to The Drowned Man or, in the future, any other similar things, I'd like to direct you here:
Shutters Open
I've written so much on the subject that it seems kind of strange to keep it all here, mixed in with old ramblings and the occasional bit of news, all decorated with a theme that doesn't really have any connection to it. So I'm spinning all of that material off to its own home. This blog will remain, in case I ever have anything else I feel like posting on it, but immersive theatre stuff can now be found at the tumblr above. For instance, my final show recap, for the final show, #33, is already there. And when I finally get the revised LEGO Temple Studios completed, that's where you'll find it.
Sunday, July 27, 2014
Sunday, July 20, 2014
My Time at Temple Studios, Part 32
Show #32
Saturday, July 5: 9 pm
Saturday, July 5: 9 pm
Here we are, at the final normal performance of The Drowned Man.
With only the finale remaining afterward, this would be my last
chance to see the show in a pure form. Having been run through the
emotional wringer at the early show, I stepped through the red
shutters in a state of complete uncertainty. Had the earlier
experience primed me for some sort of insane emotional collapse? Or
was I, for lack of a better term, all cried out? And who was I going
to follow, anyway? I had already done my farewell loops with nearly
all of my most important characters, with only Romola and Drugstore
Girl remaining. I ruled Romola out because none of the Romolas I had
initially imprinted on, the ones who meant the most to me, were still
playing the role. Lily Ockwell and Sarah Sweeney are both very good,
but I had seen them both fairly recently. Drugstore Girl was a possibility, though, but I tend to run
very hot and cold on them. It very much depended on the casting.
Fortunately, the casting was in my favor – Sonya Cullingford was on
as the Drugstore Girl, for one last time. That was my third loop figured
out. But what to do until then? It took some excited waving and
gesturing from a friend a little farther back in the queue to point out to me that, in reading the board, I had skipped over something very
important: Marla Phelan would be playing Dolores. Marla was the one
exception to the “revisit and say goodbye” strategy I was
employing. She had been my favorite from Sleep No More, and I very
much wanted to see her perform in The Drowned Man – but thus far, I
had only been able to catch her Dust Witch, which. . . well, it's not
the same as watching someone play Wendy or Dolores. Given the
choice, I would have much preferred Wendy – but Dolores would
certainly do. That's my first loop figured out. Second loop?
Ah, hell, second loop could work itself out when the time came.
Having somehow managed to get into the first lift for the first time
that week, I bounded out of the lift into an empty basement and
legged it back up to the ground floor. I burst into the Ornate
Bedroom to find an unusual sight – two (former) Sexy Witches lying
in bed together, chatting quietly. That would be Marla/Dolores and
Stephanie Nightingale as the PA. I watched them for a bit, slowly
edging farther and farther away from the bed as I got more and more
uncomfortable with my voyeuristic posturing. Finally the music
changed and they rose, ready to begin the show in earnest. The PA
departed almost immediately, while Dolores wandered over to the couch
and hung out there, subtly posing and strutting, until Marshall
(James Finnemore) arrived.
Thus began their sexy frolicking, the narrative equivalent to Mary
and Dwayne's car dance. It definitely took on a different tone with
a young Dolores – they seemed to be a bit more evenly matched,
rather than the slightly predatory overtones that colored the scene
when Dolores was played by an older actress. To be honest, it also
made it feel a little more traditional – when Dolores is the new
hot young thing in Marshall's life, it's easy to write off his
motivations for the affair as just that, rather than the more nuanced
explanations you tend to reach for with an older Dolores (star-struck
admiration, being out of his depth in relation to her advances).
Before long the PA returned and interrupted things, preparing Dolores
for the initiation. I followed her downstairs, and due to the direction we entered from, I wound up watching from the exact
opposite side from my usual spot, looking back at Stanford from over
Frankie's shoulder. It's kind of a funny coincidence that both times
I wound up watching the scene from this side, it happened to be Adam
Burton's Stanford who was on, whereas I've only ever seen Sam Booth's
Stanford perform it from his perspective. Perhaps that helps to
explain why I've always harbored a bit of sympathy for Sam's
Stanford, while Adam's seems like more of a monster to
me.
Following the initiation, Dolores was given the script for her new
role as the Grandmother and stormed off. I have to admit, this
scene gave me some pause – I wasn't really buying her crying, and
coming this early, when I hadn't really gotten to see much of what
she could do otherwise, it worried me somewhat (fortunately, things
got much better very quickly). Amusing side note – when she
crumpled up the script and dropped it down the stairwell, it joined a
pile of similar scripts from the early show, which hadn't been
cleaned up in between. I guess this wasn't really the first loop,
after all.
Back upstairs, she changed into her red dress and moved out to the
deserted Studio 4 to film a scene that never seemed to fully
materialize. When I said things got much better very quickly, this
is what I meant – she sold the hell out of this whole sequence,
which was actually pretty fresh to me. Since it was a Dolores solo scene, I
hadn't caught it since my first show. With her slightly softer,
slightly higher voice than the others, she seemed that much smaller
and more alone as the scene wore on and she began calling out for
Stanford, or anyone really, to reach out to her. Then she began her
ascent to the Doctor's office, which was absolutely harrowing.
Stumbling and spinning, her eyes searching vainly in every dark
corner for someone to help her, Dolores kept trying to recite her
lines, clinging to them like a rope thrown from shore, each time
failing to reach the end. As we climbed the stairs, the words fell
apart in her mouth, and the dialogue slipped further and further into
incoherence – until the final stretch, running down the hallway
past Studio 5, she was reduced to a horrifying, wordless shriek.
Somehow, in the middle of all that, I actually started feeling some
sympathy for her – so full credit to Marla for managing that.
My sympathy didn't last long – soon she'd received her magic
injection from the Doctor (Sam Booth) and was restored to he former
self: Dolores Grey, eminently watchable but fuly unlikeable.
Incidentally, they christened her rejuvenation with a deep,
passionate kiss, well beyond anything I'd seen other Doloreses and
Doctors do. I don't know if it's a Marla thing, or Sam thing, or
something about the two of them together, but when I think about it
alongside Sam's Stanford Frisky Corridors (in comparison to Adam's),
I do feel a bit of amusement at how these sorts of things seem to
keep working their way into his loops.
The next stop was the orgy, which I finally managed to stop getting
emotional about – it's the orgy, no more, no less. Once most of
the characters had departed, I followed Dolores into the Anteroom,
where Alice (Pascale Burgess) transformed her into the Grandmother.
This was another instance where Marla's strengths really shined
through – her physical transformation, the posture, the breathing,
the movement, was absolutely stunning. If you'd walked in at that
moment, you'd never have guessed who was under the mask and coat.
She worked her way back up to the bedroom, where the PA ultimately
strangled her, tearing the mask off. Here's a moment where having
such a young Dolores was a tremendous asset – when that mask came
off and I saw her face emerge, it actually shocked me, even though I
had watched that face disappear under the latex only a few minutes
prior.
After her usual start-of-day banter with the PA, Dolores headed off
for some “filming” in Studio 2, which really meant playing around
with Frankie and Marshall. It's funny, after nearly ten months since
I had last seen this scene, there I was, catching it for the second
time in the same night. When it rains, it pours. Watching this
entire sequence of scenes – the trio outside the caravan, the birthday
party, and the “date” in Studio 4 – was very interesting to me.
This was the very first time I had seen it as someone who had any
idea what was going on (the last time I saw it was, again, my very
first loop at my very first show), and I suddenly realized just how
much it had colored my perception of Marshall, even though I had
forgotten most of the details. My reaction to him had been troubling
me a little bit for some time now, but this provided an explanation.
You see, I always blamed him more for the affair than I blamed Mary
for hers, even though in a very literal sense, he is much more
innocent – the forces manipulating him are out in the open, clear
for all to see, and when the moment of the final betrayal actually
comes, he has literally been drugged out of his mind, against his
will. Given that I also find Wendy more sympathetic than William
(though I think there's a legitimate argument to be made that
William, especially the Omar/Ygal versions, is much colder and
crueler to Mary even pre-affair than any Wendy is to Marshall) and
more sympathetic to Dolores than Dwayne (though I'm more sympathetic
to most of the greatest villains of human history than I am to
Dwayne), I was starting to wonder if I just subconsciously cut the
women more slack than the men. And I didn't love that explanation.
But no! There's a good reason why I didn't sympathize as much with
Marshall. It's all about that first sequence at the top of the loop
(up until the gift-giving), well before any of the manipulation
becomes overt. During that time, Mary has three separate encounters
with Dwayne, each time pulling away. There's a progression to the
seduction. The first time (the dance in the arcade with Faye), she
even walks out at the end, despite a bit of infatuation, specifically
because he starts to move on her. Marshall's seduction, on the other
hand, is one continuous event – once he meets her, he hardly leaves
her side, lingering for only a minute or two with Wendy before the
birthday party, which barely delayed his entrance. There's no fight,
no struggle, no resistance. He even wandered off with Dolores to
“keep this party going” immediately after watching Wendy get
humiliated, have a bit of a breakdown, and rush off to the Doctor's
office. No points for Marshall on that one – manipulation or no
manipulation, he clearly goes in with his eyes open.
Despite all that, I still managed to tear up ever so slightly during
the Studio 4 dance with the two of them. If you divorce it from the
context, it's an absolutely lovely, joyous scene, and that extended
instrumental break in “Past, Present, and Future” pushes all of
my buttons.
Soon Marshall was sent on his way, and Dolores and the PA had one
more scene together, where I realized that my musings about the PA's
jacket from two shows earlier were not entirely accurate. Even
without the use of the jacket, the PA's appearance does change over
the course of the loop – just more subtly. It's the pearls.
Complaint (well, sort of complaint) nullified.
Then there was just one final scene for me to watch – Dolores's
birthday meeting with Claude (Omar Gordon), the only other time in
the loop where you might feel some sympathy for her, if only because
Claude is so horrible here. Shortly after the scene started, a tall
woman moved in and stood right in front of me, which. . . why? I'm
sure I've stood in front of people before as well – there's no way
around it in this sort of scenario where you're constantly moving and
reshuffling, but to walk up to an already stable and situated block
of audience and then stand right in front? Geez.
Fortunately, I had a nice, short friend (Virna) sharing the loop with
me, and I was able to move behind her and have an unobstructed view.
Then the scene was over and I was adrift, with no idea how to spend
my partial second loop.
I decided to try the Seamstress (Annabeth Berkeley), who I had always
liked – but I found her locked away in a 1:1. So I moved next door
to the medical suite in search of the Doctor, but when I got there I
remembered that Sam's Doctor was on, and I had already done a loop
with him just a few days prior. Also, he was absolutely rammed. At
this point, I figured that time was too short to properly follow
anyone anyway, since I wanted to pick up the Drugstore Girl at the
hoedown. Instead, I set myself to wandering, taking one last quiet
look at much of the set. I looped around Studio 5, then the
Seamstress's workroom, and navigated through the clothing maze out
into town. I made a full circuit of the town and trailer park,
encountering shockingly few signs of life. Then I headed downstairs to the
basement, home to several rooms that you can only ever find while
exploring – no character ever sets foot in them. First up: the
pitch black projector room, which gave me a bit of a start. After
heading in, wandering to the back to check out the projector, and
heading back toward the door, I suddenly became aware that there were
at least a half-dozen other people in there with me, and they had
been there the whole time. It was certainly unsettling.
Next I wandered down the angry hallway, stopping off at the plinth
rooms and the red string room, then took a moment in the PA's office.
Then it was up the staircase and out into Studio 4 again. I took
the exit toward Studio 2, and there I paused for a bit longer, taking
a seat on the bench and enjoying the silence in that vast, open
space. Having a little time to think, I took note of the fact that,
apparently, the early show had not keyed me up for crazy emotional
breakdowns – I felt pretty even and calm, back to peacefully
enjoying things. Part of me was a little disappointed – the early show had
been such a satisfying experience. But on the other hand, how long
can you continue in that state before it wears you down completely?
Eventually that little voice in the back of my head, the one that
always tells me I'm going to be late to the scene I want to see and
therefore always makes me early, started getting louder and louder,
and I left for the Horse & Stars. There, Andy (Rob McNeil) was
just starting his dance to 24 Hours – I was actually not that early
after all. I settled in to enjoy his bar-strutting and
rafters-swinging, then grabbed a spot at what I considered to be the front
edge of where the audience should stand for the hoedown. Once again,
my experience and judgment with regard to where we should stand for
the big setpieces and everyone else's did not coincide, and another
layer of rather tall people slipped in front of me just as the dance
began. Example #74 of how I never seem to learn.
Ah, well.
As planned, I followed Drugstore Girl out of the hoedown,
watching her hang out in the Saddlery and change shoes. As I noted
last time I followed her (by that I mean Sonya as Drugstore Girl), I love that she doesn't seem to have a
problem with Faye (Miranda Mac Letten) and Miguel's (Ed Warner)
tryst, the way so many others seem to. She just shook her head,
smiling, and said “Faye Greener.” Moments like that almost make
me wonder if maybe she has a bit more understanding of things than
some of the other characters – does she remember, deep down, seeing
Faye pass by over and over again?
She also took a look at the note the Grocer (Jesse Kovarsky) gave
her, which was the longest version I had yet seen: “We must be
perfect or we will be trapped inside the gates forever. --your new
friend.” Then she emerged into the arcade, had an awkward
conversation with Tuttle (Edward Halsted) about the blood (or is it
paint?) on his hands, ending in a surprisingly sincere sounding
invitation to stop by for some lemonade, and returned to her
drugstore. After settling in behind the counter for just a moment,
she pulled out the first of several magic red lemonades – but there
was a twist. After pouring it, she added a shot of vodka as well. I
could already tell that this was going to be a fun loop.
Then Andy arrived, had his brief moment with her, and ran out,
knocking over the postcard rack. Interestingly, he provided the
third unique pronunciation of Drugstore Girls' name (Kade) that I had
come across. He called her Kay-duh, rather than Kay-dee or (the
correct one, in my estimation) Kah-duh. Drugstore Girl glared at the
spilled cards for a moment, then leapt upon them, scooping them up
into a pile as quickly as possible. I refer you back to my write-up
of show 24 if you want to know exactly how much I love that she deals
with them in that way (short version: a lot). She wasn't fast enough
to prevent one of the white masks from jumping in and helping,
though. I also wound up picking up an errant card and dropping it
off back on the rack, unnoticed.
Normally I'm a “sit at the counter” sort of guy, but I felt like,
having already done a loop with one of Sonya's characters earlier in
the night, it might be prudent to hang back slightly and let others
have a turn up there. So I wound up in the second row of masks,
watching as the guy who sat front-and-center helped her
sort the postcards. I seem to find myself oddly entranced by hand
activity – there was that time with the Dust Witch's hand shadow,
or when the Seamstress kept trying to make eye contact with my while
creating a charm, but my eyes kept drifting down to where she was
threading the loop. Thus, without realizing it, I kind of wound up
staring at the postcards. When I realized that and shook myself out
of it, I looked up to see that the Drugstore Girl was looking at me.
She quickly turned her head, and I swear I saw a hint of a smirk, or
a chuckle, pass her lips. Because of course I was going to show up sooner or later.
Eventually she grabbed a jelly baby and offered it in one of two
closed fists to the card sorter. Guess she was out of loaded coffee
mugs (and in fact, she never did put out a jelly baby in a mug
throughout the rest of the loop). He guessed wrong, but she gave it
to him anyway. Then she pulled down her script page, the one given
to her by the Grocer, and looked over it. I was surprised to see
that several lines were underlined, and that an additional sentence
had been added: “She skates over with lemonade.” How very odd.
After a moment, she added yet another sentence: “Enter 'Grocer'
with ANSWERS.” Then she looked up, and the Grocer walked in.
Oh my.
This was very, very exciting, on several levels. For one, it was a
new development – she definitely had not done it back in May. Any
time I stumble across some new example of the constantly evolving
nature of the show, it pleases me very much. More importantly,
though, it was a particularly fascinating change. It opened a whole new can of
metatextual worms. By changing the script, was she causing things to
happen? Was it some vestigial memory of previous loops slipping out,
allowing her to predict events? It put me in mind of the excitement
I felt the first time I ever saw the Grocer's script, and realized
just how tenuous the town's connection to reality actually was.
But best of all, it made me love the Drugstore Girl even more. It
made perfect sense that Sonya's version – the proactive,
questioning one – would find a way to make the script work for her,
or at least explore the possibility. She had taken the best part of
her character, the thing I loved most about her, and brought it to a
whole new level.
My excitement was short-lived, though – she wasn't really in
control of anything, and the Grocer's answers would not prove to be
helpful. They ran through the scripted scene (and I noticed that
Sonya waited until she had the full instruction before throwing salt
over her left shoulder – some of them jump the gun on that one).
The Drugstore Girl made one last stab at defiance, stealing the
script and triggering a brief scuffle, but the Grocer ultimately put
an end to it with a desperate“We have to be perfect,” which
somehow managed to be hyper-aggressive and gentle all at the same
time. It was a very compelling argument – if he'd said it to me
that way, I would have sat down at the table and started throwing
salt over my shoulder as well, despite knowing where it would lead.
They acted out that final scene multiple times, the Grocer demanding
“again” after each one, growing louder and more frantic each
time, until finally he dragged Drugstore Girl to her feet and managed
a bit of a smile. “Perfect,” he said, before sending her over to
the phone, and this time I understood that she didn't take the script
with her of her own accord – he gave it to her, not to provide
answers, but to instruct her.
Once Drugstore Girl was dead(?), he dragged her out to the middle of
the floor, an act which still turns my stomach every time. He left
her with one final, chilling comment: “That was your greatest
performance ever. You were perfect.”
Within a minute or two, Harry (James Traherne) arrived, and
woke/resurrected Drugstore Girl. She stumbled over to the table and
found the Grocer's note, staring at it as if she could almost
remember what it meant – basically, the same thing she did with the
lipstick glass last time I saw the scene. Then she grabbed some
woman for the 1:1 and disappeared into the phone booth. I was, of
course, committed to the loop, so I just pulled up a barstool and
occupied myself with perusing a school composition book that I found
on the counter. Before long, she returned – which was a relief,
because there was not much of interest in that book. Let's just call
it authentic and leave it at that.
Then, unexpectedly, Dwayne (Luke Murphy) pounded on the door, causing
me to leap out of my seat. Even in my other loops, he torments me. Drugstore Girl watched him run off, then
quickly poured a glass of lemonade (with vodka, of course). She took
three straws and headed outside with it, where she found a rose on
the ground. She stood by the rose, sipping lemonade and looking
coquettishly at Dwayne while he danced, until Faye and Mary (Laure
Bachelot) arrived. That was when the purpose of the three straws
became clear, as the three women circled around and drank lemonade
together. Faye's face – well, let's be fair, it was Miranda's face
– when she realized that she was not just drinking lemonade was
priceless.
Then Faye and Mary rushed off to dance with Dwayne, and Drugstore
Girl returned to her Drugstore, rose in hand. She set it on the back
counter, and I realized that all along, Dwayne had been delivering
the roses that she takes to the finale. Such a tiny, useless
realization, but still kind of cool.
After a moment, Tuttle came in, and she greeted him by asking if he
was here for that lemonade. Which she invited him for during the
previous loop – see? Retained memory! Given how the rest of the
loop turned out, I'm really curious whether she always makes that
comment or whether it was part of the mounting series of alterations
that were being made for this final time through. I'll probably
never know – the only other time I followed Sonya's Drugstore Girl,
it was first loop, so Tuttle never came by.
He gave her one of those pinwheel wind toys in exchange, and I was
then treated to the longest, most awkward stare down imaginable. He
drank his lemonade. She stood on the other side of the counter,
slowly blowing on the pinwheel. He continued drinking. She
continued blowing. They both continued staring. He drank so slowly.
She blew just as slowly. . . but with mounting concern and
discomfort growing on her face. It was hilariously creepy. He
finally finished drinking with several large, loud slurps at the end
and she coughed out a relieved laugh. “Thirsty?” she asked.
I'm really not sure how either of them made it through the whole
thing without breaking down in giggles.
Once Tuttle wandered off, Drugstore Girl started taking note of her
customers. She has an interesting way of doing it – she looks up
with a kind of awed shock. How did that person suddenly appear
there? Then she retrieves the glass and the lemonade pitcher,
setting them out like an offering in front of her, a friendly, but
very timid and nervous smile on her face. It's as if she suddenly found a giant
bear sitting at her counter, and she's trying to appease it so it
will go away. She served first one lemonade, then another, then
another (all with vodka), each time seeming to think she was
finished, then seeing another customer as soon as she finished
pouring. It just kept going – a good five or six at least. The
mounting panic on her face was starting to get a little unsettling,
so it was quite a relief when she finally came to me and offered my
lemonade with a conspiratorial smile and an arched eyebrow instead.
We just barely had time to finish our drinks before Miguel and Andy
burst into the room for the gris-gris creation scene. Like last
time, I kept my eyes on Drugstore Girl the whole time, as I find her
reactions to the whole thing utterly fascinating. I commented before
that she seemed pretty excited and pleased by what she was seeing.
At the time, I debated about whether to include that observation,
because I wasn't entirely certain about it, but now I am – she is
totally into watching Andy struggle with Miguel. If anything, Sonya
has started playing that reaction up even more – the wide eyes, the
quickening breath, the smile that briefly and repeatedly slipped
across her face until she caught herself each time. . . there's nothing subtle about it. I'm not even
sure what it means, whether it's something to do with Miguel or just
the thrill of something crazy happening, but I love so much that
there's this extra performance going on in the back of the room while
everyone is watching Miguel and Andy run circles around each other.
Once Miguel disappeared into the phone booth (at which point I almost
thought Drugstore Girl was going to break into applause, she seemed
so delighted), we transitioned into the romantic phone booth dance,
which was absolutely lovely. It, in turn, continued out into the
street for a longer and more elaborate conclusion than I remember,
with Andy hoisting her up into the air above his head, spinning and
walking in circles for quite some time, swinging her up and down, but never actually putting her down. At one point he swung her in
my direction and I was dead certain he was about to drop her right on
top of me – but no. I have no idea how he managed it.
Eventually he did put her down and they headed in for Bulldog, which got me feeling a little sentimental again – the journey
through the twisting corridors, just as the instrumental break of “I
Love Marie” comes on is one of those little moments of magic that I
love so much about the show – tiny, unimportant pieces of the story
that stand out against the more important scenes purely by virtue of
their sheer, possibly accidental perfection.
Bulldog itself was wonderful as always, and I was unreasonably
thrilled to see the return of the teddy bear in the cabinet. Back in
May I saw the scene during a loop with Sonya's Faye, and she brought
a small teddy bear over to the kitchen cabinet when she and the
Drugstore Girl popped up inside, making it dance along with their head bobs. It was
the cutest thing ever. This time, she did one better, taking a much
larger, gigantic, fat teddy bear to the cabinet and moving its legs
and arms independently in a much more elaborate dance. It's such a
little, screwball sort of thing – it lasted for maybe 15-30 seconds
of the song, and I'll bet half of the people there didn't even notice
it. But to me it was the best part of the whole number.
I neglected to mention this next part in my earlier write-ups, but
two or three times during this batch of shows, I was privy to an
interesting post-Bulldog interaction between Andrea (Fania Grigoriou)
and Andy. As I understand it, this is specific to the pairing of
Fania and Rob; no one else does it. They meet, shake hands, and
introduce themselves at the exact same time (the “And-” portion
of the name overlapping). Clearly uncomfortable and shaken, they
then turn away and shrug off their jackets, again at the exact same
time – and upon realizing that, quickly rush off. It's a very cool,
kind of creepy acknowledgment of the mirrored structure of the show,
and something I kind of wish we had more of.
Of course, this time around, I wasn't really paying much attention to
that interaction. Instead, I was enjoying the jealous glare of the
Drugstore Girl as she saw Andy introducing himself to hot young movie
star Andrea Alden.
Once we got back into town, I was excited to pick up on yet another
detail that I had never really registered – the exact circumstances
of Drugstore Girl acquiring Andy's jacket. I'd seen her pick it up
from the sandwich board sign outside the Drugstore before, and always
assumed that Andy left it there for her deliberately, in that
old-fashioned, “hey, you're my girl” sort of way. But the guilty
look on Drugstore Girl's face and the way she hid it behind her back
when he turned back to say goodbye tell the true tale.
Back inside the Drugstore we found Harry waiting. This was a treat –
I remember following James Traherne's Harry back in May, loving his
scene with Drugstore Girl, and thinking about how much better still
it could have been if he was paired with Sonya's Drugstore Girl.
Now, at the last possible opportunity, I got my wish – and it was
everything I had hoped for, even though it didn't go quite the way it
usually does. Instead of pulling out a bottle of vodka, she brought
out two of them, causing Harry to do a bit of a double take. “What
do you have all this alcohol for?” he asked.
Without missing a beat, she replied, “This is the good stuff and
this is the bad stuff.”
Harry protested that he doesn't drink anymore, and she shrugged and
said “Fine. I'm gonna have a bit of the good stuff.”
This of course led to Harry taking a drink with her, which he, as
usual, proclaimed to be disgusting. Drugstore Girl's response was
easily my favorite line of the night thus far:
“I know. You want some of the bad stuff?”
After another shot, Harry launched into his sales song, which
Drugstore Girl was well-familiar with, even singing along with some
of the lines – but he concluded with “yours for just. . . one
dollar,” even as she sang “just two-fifty,” after which she
laughed and told him he'd changed his pitch. I worry a bit that I'm
assigning significance to something that is actually part of the
standard script, but I swear that every other time, he finished the song out as
normal, then adjusted his cost down to a dollar afterward.
Either way, it was a sweet, charming exchange.
Then they moved into the dance behind the counter, which ended with
Harry leaning in for a kiss. I've never actually seen exactly what
happens to break the moment at the end of this scene before, as I've
always been down at the other end of the counter, so it was nice to
see it up close this time. Then, in another “This feels different
and I hope it's not just my imagination” moment, he lingered by the
counter, drawing out his apology. I feel like typically he rushes
out pretty quickly, telling Drugstore Girl that she “looks just
like her” while on the move. But this time, he stood his ground.
“No, it's not okay. I'm an asshole, what can I say? But in my
defense, you look just like she used to look. Beautiful. You look
beautiful. You are. . . beautiful.” It was incredibly awkward and
incredibly lovely at the same time, and I started to realize that
some of those early show feelings were returning – just a hint of a
stinging in the eyes. Drugstore Girl was affected even more so –
she had to stop to wipe away tears before calling out for him to come
back.
He did not, of course, and we were left with just enough time for her
to give out another vodka lemonade before the Grocer arrived to
introduce himself. This time, I felt like her subsequent description of the
interaction (“I was mean”) was a little more accurate, but she
still couldn't help a brief, playful smile when he took the napkin
holder from her, leaving a single napkin in her hand.
Once he returned with the script page, she was as concerned and
fascinated by it as ever, which is to say, much more so than any
other Drugstore Girl I've seen. She pored over it, underlining key
descriptions, and finally wrote “she skates over with lemonade”
before doing precisely that. And yes, the lemonade had vodka in it.
After dropping off the drink and inviting the Grocer to the hoedown,
she skated out to the arcade and danced around with the Barman
(Daniel Whiley), which was much more fluid and impressive than I remember from
before – I think, oddly enough, this fully packed audience was
actually better about staying out of their way than the audience at
my not-sold-out 24th show. Afterward, we headed into the
Horse & Stars for the hoedown. I didn't feel up to fighting the
crowd, so I decided to watch from the curved end of the bar, for a
different perspective. I settled onto a bar stool right at the top
of the curve, only to be forcibly evicted by William (Ygal Jerome
Tsur). Whoops. Where did he come from?
After the hoedown, we returned to the Saddlery – this was the point
where my loop came full circle, but so close to the end, I was
sticking around for the duration. Drugstore Girl's response to Faye
and Miguel was different this time: she called out directly to Faye,
saying “That's how you get. . . . “ something. I couldn't hear
the last word. Laid? Happy? Pregnant? Herpes? Flowers? One last
mystery of Temple Studios, I suppose.
After inviting Tuttle over for another lemonade (like me, she just
doesn't learn), Drugstore Girl led us back into the Drugstore, where
instead of cleaning up and handing out more lemonade, she grabbed
stacks of coffee mugs and started setting them out on the counter –
five or six of them, all told. Sadly, having decided to hang back
ever-so-slightly again, I was not one of the lucky recipients, but at least I still got to watch. She
poured vodka into each, then raised her mug, toasting to. . . well,
that's a matter of debate. My recollection says “to all those
bright, shining people out there in the dark.” Another recap I've
read claims “beautiful people.” Then, of course, there's the
Sunset Blvd. quote, to which this was surely a deliberate reference, which says “wonderful people.” But really, the exact wording
doesn't matter – the sentiment was clear. A toast to all of us.
It was a beautiful moment, made even more so by the simple aesthetic
effect of her quiet whisper against the early bell-tones of
“Avarice.”
She cleared the mugs, and for a moment, the Drugstore was quiet, and
at peace. No one, Drugstore Girl included, wanted to break the
moment. But then Andy arrived to do just that, panicking about
William. When Drugstore Girl held him, trying to calm him down, they
seemed to linger together a lot longer than usual, whispering things
that none of us could hear. And then he was gone, spilling the
postcards across the floor as usual.
Drugstore Girl attacked the postcards with her usual gusto, but
instead of hauling them straight up to the counter, she kneeled over
the pile, staring down - perhaps even crying over them. No one moved. Eventually, composed
again, she returned to the counter and half-heartedly sorted one or
two piles before pulling her script page down from the wall.
This is where things got very exciting.
She looked over the page, re-underlining things, and generally lost
in thought. Then, she moved he pen to the bottom of the page, and
began to write. But she didn't write “Enter 'Grocer' with
ANSWERS.”
She wrote, “She runs to her new friend and they live happily ever
after.”
My heart leapt into my throat and my heart began to race. Did I
really just read what I thought I read? She looked up and smiled at
all of us, and the sparkle in her eyes told me it was true.
Whatever this was, wherever it would lead, it was actually happening. Her previously scrawled stage directions may not have meant anything, but this time. . . this time she really was taking control. She grabbed a rose and ran to the door, pausing just long enough to
toss back an almost irrelevant “I quit.”
I chased her over to the Grocer's, where I couldn't get through the
doorway and was just barely able to hear what was happening between
the two of them inside.
“Let's run away,” she said. “Let's just go.”
They exchanged their roses, holding their heads together, repeatedly
confirming their plans with mounting excitement, back and forth,
until finally the Grocer looked to the sky and proclaimed, “This
town ain't big enough for the both of us.” He took her hand and
led her out to the arcade, where they stood face to face,
grinning like fools.
“We're gonna run away,” the Grocer said. “And we're never
gonna look back. On the count of three. One.”
“Two.” she continued.
“THREE!” Suddenly they took off down the arcade like a rocket,
laughing and screaming. Thanks to the very considerate countdown,
I was right on their heels. Their elation washed over me in waves,
and I couldn't help joining in the laughing and screaming, “no
talking” rule be damned. We hit the back door to the studios and
they just kept going, a whirling, twirling mass of smiling, whooping
faces flashing in and out of the dark, battering through door after door until we reached the stairs.
I stuck close to them all the way down until we reached Studio 2,
where they slowed and finally came to a stop at the edge of the stage. It was slightly early for the murder; Wendy and Marshall were
still fighting in front of the caravans. Drugstore Girl put her arm
around the Grocer and I stood a bit behind them, not wanting to miss
a second of what they were doing. This was so much better than any
walkdown could ever have been. I remembered how excited I was by their third loop alternate ending the last time around, and marveled at how Sonya had for the second time managed to take one of the things I loved most about her Drugstore Girl loop and amplify it to dizzying new heights.
Then, a surprise – she turned to look at me, reached out with her
other arm, and took my hand. I stepped forward and the three of us
watched the scene play out, together. When Wendy and Marshall moved
toward the murder mound, we followed: first the Grocer, then
Drugstore Girl, then me. As we walked, I felt her hand slowly relax
in mine and begin to slip away. It seemed to take ages, my arm
extending forward, hers backwards, our fingers loosely intertwined
until, finally, the very tips lost contact. She looked back at me
the whole time until that final moment, when she finally turned away, fading into the darkness.
It seemed to take several long minutes, but the distance we traveled would surely be covered in seconds. I caught back up to them at the mound, where
amazingly, the crowd hadn't closed up behind them. Perhaps I had
remained in step with them the whole way after all, and the vast gulf
that opened up between us was in my head. There, I watched them
watch the murder and throw their roses, together. When Stanford
called wrap, Drugstore Girl finally released the Grocer and took my
hand again. She led me over to a spot by the caravans, where she
stopped and gave me a long, contemplative look. She dug into her
apron and pulled out a marked up script page, pressing it into my
hand. Then she kissed me and spoke into my ear one last time:
“Goodbye, Johnny Guitar.”
That was it – those words were the final straw, unleashing a
torrent of tears beyond even those from the early show. In fact,
their very character was entirely different – not sad tears, not
sentimental or nostalgic tears, not even tears spawned by
overwhelming beauty. They were tears of simple, rapturous joy,
unleashed when those three words brought everything else into focus.
The first time I heard her say them, at the end of the 1:1, they hit
me like a ton of bricks. The three saddest words in all of The
Drowned Man, especially the way she spoke. Quietly, resigned -
not just sad, but desolate. She spent all of her life – or as much of it as we've been privy to, waiting for Johnny to come save her, to take her away, and having that possibility dangled in front of her and then snatched away just took everything out of her. Those words represented the death of an all-to-brief dream –
goodbye to the thought that the moment, that Johnny himself, had finally arrived.
This was different, though. The words were warm, loving, and, most
importantly, confident. When she decided to run away with the
Grocer, it was her defining moment. She would no longer wait for someone to
save her, but rather take her destiny into her own hands. “Goodbye,
Johnny Guitar,' in this context, is not a sad acceptance of reality,
but a bold statement about her future. She said goodbye to me (as a
proxy Johnny) because she didn't need me (him) anymore. Goodbye to
fantasy and dreams, hello to life. The last few moments in Studio 2
flashed through my mind – standing hand in hand with her and the
Grocer, the slow release of my fingers, this final statement – it
was a transition. She was letting go.
With a beautiful, radiant smile on her face, she turned and disappeared into
the crowd, dancing up to the stage. I watched her go with tears
streaming down my face, yet I've never been happier. Somewhere at
the far end of the room, I heard one or two people clapping along
with the music. Overwhelmed with joy, I joined in, stomping and
clapping to the beat with an intensity completely foreign to me. Soon
everyone around me was taking part as well. It was the loudest, most enthusiastic finale I've ever seen - I'm not even convinced the following night managed to top it.
Then a funny thing happened – I felt myself letting go as well.
I've been making claims all along that this was the real last show,
that the final show was just a bonus round, but I never really felt that
way inside. I was trying to convince myself. Until that very moment, I
wasn't ready for the end. But in using me to say goodbye to Johnny, Drugstore Girl –
Sonya – had made it possible for me to say goodbye to The Drowned
Man. I was still excited to see the final show. I was sure it would be
fun, and wonderful, and exciting as always. But in my heart, it all
came to an end that night. In the ways that really matter, my time at Temple Studios concluded with “Goodbye, Johnny Guitar,”
reclaimed and transformed into a declaration of hope and possibility,
and with a final, enduring image. Drugstore Girl, tucked in between
the others in the final lineup, dancing hand in hand with the Grocer:
alive, free, and, finally, perfect.
Friday, July 18, 2014
My Time at Temple Studios, Part 31
Show #31
Saturday, July 5: 5 pm
Saturday, July 5: 5 pm
The endgame was well underway. This Saturday double marked the final
night of The Drowned Man. Not technically, of course – there was
still the finale itself. But with rumors of extended endings and cast
swapping, not to mention the hordes of emotional fans that would be descending on the site, there was no
telling what it would be like. This was the final night for the show
as we had known and loved it. At the very least, that's the way I
was treating it.
As such, I was firmly in “revisiting” mode (with allowance made
for a single specific exception, if the opportunity arose - more on that in my next write up). As they
say, every story reaches a point where it has to stop expanding and
start contracting. There were still so many loops, specific
character combinations, that I had never done. Even some characters
that I had never followed properly (Sorry Marshall, Barman, and
Gatekeeper). But it was too late. If I kept chasing them, I was
sure to regret it. It was time to start saying goodbye.
When I got to the board, I second-guessed my philosophy a bit. Laure
Bachelot was playing Lila. I had always loved her Mary, and never
got around to following her as anyone else. Her sand dance with
Miguel several shows back was exquisite. I wanted very much to do a
loop with her – but I stuck to my guns. Contract. Say goodbye.
I wound up with three people on my list. Kirsty Arnold's Andrea,
Sonya Cullingford's Faye, and Sam Booth's Stanford. All three
represented key parts of my Drowned Man history, and all three would
be playing those roles for the last “proper” time (that is,
outside of the finale). I just couldn't figure out what order to do
them in, nor which one to short-change – after all, there aren't
actually three complete loops in a show.
Without really making a decision, I let my gut carry me out of the
lift in the basement and rushed over to Stanford. Enough waffling,
time to act. Unfortunately, in a classic example of how I Just.
Don't. Learn., he disappeared into his 1:1 within fifteen seconds of
my arrival. Why do I always show up right out of the lift, when I know this is exactly what's going to happen? I
couldn't wait around. Not at this show, when time was so short.
That's when an idea came to me – if I took off and picked up
another character, did a complete loop with them, and returned, I
should make it back just in time for Stanford to emerge for the
initiation – my transit time would cover the time spent in the 1:1. Efficiency in action.
Enacting the plan, I headed upstairs – but I still didn't know
which of the lovely ladies I should try to find first. It became a moot
point when I unexpectedly ran into Andrea just outside of the stairs
on the ground floor. She was walking to Studio 3, fan in her hands
and fans at her heels. I briefly thought about following her and
trying for the 2:1, but I'd already had it with her once, and I'd
most likely just wind up back in the same position, waiting for my
character to emerge.
So then: that left only one option. Back to the stairs, I headed
upstairs to town, where Faye would be waiting. I felt kind of
strange about following her for the first loop – as I've mentioned
many times before, Faye, to me, is a third-loop kind of girl. But
sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do. Emerging into the hallway
near Romola's shrine, I peeked into Studio 5 and the Seamstress's
workroom, just to make sure she wasn't there – I was still slightly
unsure of the timing. Since she was gone, I had to assume she'd be
out in the arcade, probably watching Dwayne and Mary dance on the
car. I headed for the studio gates, but halfway there, I realized I
was going the long way and took the back door into the cinema
instead. Emerging into the lobby, I saw her straight ahead of me,
standing in a pool of light, staring a the car with the first hints
of tears in her eyes. I gave the doors a push and rushed forward,
smashing my face right into the glass.
You see, the cinema doors open inward.
Take two went considerably better, and I caught up to Faye just as
she was heading into the motel. I made a conscious decision at this
point to really take it easy during the loop, hanging back, not
rushing, and taking shortcuts to scenes rather than sticking right
with her for every single moment. I thought this might make dealing
with the crowds a little better. It worked out better than I had
hoped – I figured it would be a bit of a trade-off, where I would
avoid frustration, but remain a little distant, and not as
emotionally involved. In fact, quite the opposite turned out to be
true. By relaxing and just letting things happen, rather than
actively trying to get the best spot, I opened myself up to exactly
the sort of emotional investment that I had been craving for the
entire week. It snuck up on me, too – I watched her breakdown in
the motel room, the dance in Dwayne's trailer, the desert dance, the
hoedown, the dance through the arcade. . . they were all wonderful,
and it felt like Sonya was really pouring everything into her
performance – but I wasn't really investing any more deeply than,
say, on Wednesday – or so I thought. But the whole time my heart was slowly crawling up into my throat, and by the time Miguel (Georges
Hann) left her in the motel room, it had taken up permanent residence there, and my eyes refused to blink. Outside of that magical loop 3 in show
16 (and even then it's arguable), this is the most upset I had ever been at that scene. I wanted
so badly for things to work out for Faye, and I dreaded the reset,
knowing that the story would lack my beloved loop 3 ending.
Out at Dwayne's trailer, Faye was like an animal, slipping and
sliding in the woodchips, clutching the door frame like it was the
only thing keeping her from drowning. This scene has always felt
just a bit like a preamble to the main event (Walking in the Sand) to
me, rather than a significant piece in its own right – but this
time, it was tearing me up inside. I swear, Sonya was
giving her strongest performance of the run (my admittedly limited
experience notwithstanding).
Then “Avarice” faded into “In the Still of the Night,” and
she climbed to her feet. That was when I felt it. A shudder in my
chest, a hitch in my breath, a burning in my eyes. Faye stumbled
into the Horse and Stars and I followed, fighting to contain the
mounting pressure inside. She took the stage, shouting her name as
if it meant something, and I nearly lost it – but I held tight,
shuddering and shaking, the rhythm of my breath abandoning all
regularity. She began to sing, looking slowly around the room,
locking eyes with anyone who would have her. Each time she came to
me, it seemed like she lingered for an eternity – but I'm sure it
just felt that way. She came to the quiet break (“remember. . . .
“), and then the crescendo (“softly we'll meet with our lips”),
and I was gone. As if on cue, right on the downbeat of the new
verse, the floodgates opened and big, rolling, blubbery tears began
pouring down my face. They didn't stop until after the reset.
Once could argue that I'm overly familiar with Faye's loop, but the
next scene was relatively unfamiliar to me – I've only seen it two
or three times over the past year. Even though I usually avoid it, I
have to admit it's a really nice, touching scene – but then, I'm a
sucker for Faye/Harry interactions. I mentioned before that I prefer
James Traherne's Harry to Edward Halsted's broader, more stylized
take – but actually, Edward's style really lends itself to scenes
like this. While I'd probably rather follow James for a loop, I
think Edward plays the better supporting character for Faye.
I also found a new contender for most heartbreaking line of dialogue:
“Pop, I hate it here so much.” It's a simple, shallow statement
– the sort of thing a kid would say on a boring family vacation –
but the way she said it transformed it into something else entirely.
There was such desperation behind it – a woman's pain voiced with a
child's words. The tears that had begun to ebb surged anew.
One “hush little baby” later, Faye was drifting off to sleep. I
felt a bit of panic as I watched her breathing slow and become more
regular, and her face relax. In a few moments, she would be gone –
the reset music would play and she would wake up as a new person,
ready to start the day again, to go through the same ordeal. There
were only seconds left – not nearly enough time to turn her story
around, to make things just a little bit better. It was too late,
and it felt horrible.
Once, somewhere back in the history of these write-ups, I said that
Faye's story peters out at the reset. I clearly had no idea what I
was talking about.
Moments later, the reset music kicked in and Faye awoke for her day.
Harry returned, and managed to cheer both Faye and me up. I love
this first scene between the two of them so much – there's so much
love and warmth, it's really unlike anything else in the show. I
just spent the whole time thinking about how much I loved all the
little bits of it. I love the way Sonya calls him “Pop,” which I
don't remember any other Fayes doing. I love the way Edward uses
sheer gusto to power through some dicey singing. I love the funny
voice Faye uses when singing along with him, and her response to his
excitement that she's going to use Codfish Ball for the audition (“of
course, it's the only one I know.”) Says so much about them, right
there. And of course, “Today is the day! For Faye!” If it
wasn't for this scene, I probably never would have stopped crying.
Next up, she dropped her dress off at the Seamstress's shop, a scene
I'd long ago given up actually trying to get in to see, and then we
were off to the arcade for the “I Wanna Hug Ya, Kiss Ya, Squeeze
Ya” dance. Clearly I was still struggling with my emotions even
after the reset, because I found myself tearing up at the sight of
what is, really, a fun, light-hearted number. The audition featured
the most aggressive stomping I've yet seen from Sonya, and another
new detail I hadn't ever picked up on before – the look of
desperation and frustration on her face as she descended from the
stage, clearly believing that she'd blown the audition through no
fault of her own.
After her dance with the Barman (Ygal Jerome Tsur), I got to see him
launch into a lengthy spiel about his upcoming fiesta, and how he
would only give her the studio pass if she promised to come. This
was new to me – in the past, the Barman typically insisted on a
kiss, instead, and didn't mention the hoedown at all. It was an
amusing bit, and nice to see an animated, chatty Barman. I felt a
little bad that I never got around to spending much time with him,
especially after so many of my friends raved and raved and went out
of their way to follow him over and over (including a big group
outing that very night). But at least I got a little taste of the
Fiesta Barman.
Then it was time for Bulldog. I found my usual area to stand in,
sacrificing my view of the bedroom in favor of the kitchen and locker
room. As Stanford gave his instructions to Faye (“Miss Greener,
this is your big shot, so make it count. Let me see those eyes
twinkle.”), I found myself tearing up yet again. Faye's face in
that moment, eyes to the sky, full of hope and promise, is the
enduring, iconic image of Sonya's Faye for me, and has been ever
since my first loop with her way back in September. When I think of
her, that's the moment I see – which I guess explains why I got
emotional about it. But then the moment passed, and the song started
up, and it's just too much fun to cry through – so I didn't. I
followed Faye out to the Seamstress's workroom, watched her delight
as she found the new shoes and dress, and then, having come full
circle, peeled off for the stairs when she headed back out to town.
Those last bits had restored me to an even keel, emotionally speaking
– at least temporarily. Time to return to Stanford.
As expected, I made it to the basement just in time for the
initiation. Oddly, the room wasn't particularly crowded, and I was
easily able to take my usual spot – because where else would I want
to be? Like many of the scenes featuring several characters, I feel
there's not much more I can say, as I've seen them so many times –
but I will add that the confetti always surprises me, because I so
often catch this scene in the first loop, when there is none.
When Stanford handed out the part of the Grandmother to Dolores
(Bryony Perkins), I slipped out to make sure I was in a good viewing
position for his next scene with Romola (Sarah Sweeney).
This scene was an early favorite for me, when I first saw it near the
start of my second show. While other scenes have since overtaken it
in my esteem, I still felt a nostalgic pang, watching it play out for
the final time. That's just the sort of sentimental mood I was in. I
suppose you can guess what the end result of that was – waterworks,
round two. As soon as the scratchy sounds of a record player started
up, leading into “Where or When,” it all started up again. Twice
in one night – I didn't think I had it in me.
The thing that really set me off, though, was Stanford's face as he
danced. My first loop with Stanford, back and my third show, had
left me with the impression of a man trying to achieve a good end
through bad acts. He seemed guilty and regretful, especially with
Romola, and not entirely under his own control. It struck me
strongly enough to inspire a whole, extensive (and later debunked)
theory about the “real story” of The Drowned Man, and Stanford's
role as the hero in that story. Ever since then, as if mocking me,
Sam's Stanford has gotten more and more nasty, controlling, and
vicious in this scene. My impression of him as sympathetic, tragic
hero was torn apart and stamped into the mud.
But not this time. There was no smug, evil sneer on his face as he
danced – but rather a remorseful, almost shell-shocked stare, with tracess of a deeply buried panic. For the first time in many months, I
saw glimmers of Stanford as I first knew him, and it broke my heart.
When it came time to leave for the rolling desk dance, I trailed
behind. I wound up spending the dance tucked into a corner of the
Temple Anteroom, half-watching and half-pulling myself together.
Afterward, drunk off of orgy juice, Stanford headed into the Temple
and began a little bit of a dance – much more of a dance than I
remembered him doing before - and eventually collapsed. He gestured
toward a white mask just to my side, but when the mask leaned in,
another went with him. Then a third leaned in, then several more –
he was surrounded. Instead of whispering in an ear, he addressed us
all - “You are the camera. Record everything. Shutters open.
Record, record, record” He looked around the room, locking eyes
with as many people as possible and pointing at them, repeating
“record.” Even me, standing several feet back from the ring
around him. It felt so strange to have this moment displayed out in
the open like that, shared amongst us all. On the one hand it was
kind of nice, binding us all as a community. On the other, a bit sad
- these were the end times, and there was no use for secrets
anymore.
Then came the orgy, and Stanford's early exit via wheelchair. I had
pulled back from the crowd early to make sure I could follow him out,
and managed to get right behind him. We creeped slowly down the
hallway, and god damn it, I started to tear up again. I love this
walk, a nice, creepy moment of calm in the midst of all the late-loop
chaos. When we emerged into the larger hallway near the stairs, I
hung back, hoping to follow him into the frisky corridor. I stayed
put as he directed so, so many people up the stairs after Wendy
(Leslie Kraus) and Andrea (Kirsty Arnold), instructing them to “stay
tight. Everyone stay tight. Stay tight. You – you'd better go
wide. Everyone else, stay tight.” After what seemed like more
than a hundred people had been funneled up to the ground floor, he
took a white mask's hands, creating the barrier for Lila to smash
through – and then started funneling people into George Buchanan's
office after her. I remained stubbornly in my place, determined to
make it to the frisky corridor, but he was having none of it – he
grabbed my shoulder and physically forced me over to the office. Ah,
well. At least it would give me a couple more minutes with Laure's
Lila, since I wasn't going to be doing her loop.
Lila's Discovery went as usual, with a bit of a flub – real
Stanford's line “a whatever it is” was a little late, and
overlapped VO Stanford's “Good.” At the end, I didn't follow
Stanford or Lila out of the room – it wasn't worth it to even
attempt to be the one person who got to follow him, and given the
state I was in, I didn't think I could handle a tearful corridor
breakdown from Laure. Instead, I waited a moment as the crowd
thinned out, and then headed to the temple to wait for Stanford's
return. There, I was found myself lulled by the solitude and the
quiet, ominous drone of the basement soundtrack, and didn't even
notice Stanford's return until he set the postcard pedestal down a
few feet behind me with a loud “thunk.” He took a seat at the orgy table, and soon the Doctor (James
Finnemore) arrived for their reset scene. It was stripped down a bit
from the equivalent scene I had seen two nights earlier with Sam's
Doctor and Adam Burton's Stanford – basically the same, but without
that slick little mirrored dance. It seemed to end almost before it
began, and I became acutely aware that we were now into the third and
final loop. Soon, I would need to leave to find Andrea.
I stuck around for one more scene – I wanted to see Stanford do the
crazy typing spasm at the desk in the photo room and select Wendy's
creepy, eyeless photo. By the end of it, though, I was starting to
get paranoid – I really, really wanted to catch Andrea's trailer
dance. Really, really, really. And I couldn't remember exactly how
early it would start. Third scene, I figured, or was it second?
You gotta prioritize. I had said my goodbye to Stanford, so best to
move on. I slipped out of the room as he began his phone call, and
headed up to the ground floor – or at least, in the direction of
the ground floor. Before I could continue, I had to get past the PA
(Stephanie Nightingale), who was leading her entourage toward the 2:2
room. I nearly bowled her over as I turned a corner, and she fixed
me with a stare. Slowly, I inched my way around her, and she just
kept turning to maintain eye contact. I was terrified that she was
about to grab me. Funny, that – afraid of being chosen. Never
thought that would happen. But I was a man with a mission. When I
finally made it past her, I breathed an actual sigh of relief and
headed upstairs.
When I got to Studio 2, I found that, true to form, I was actually
really early. Marshall (Jesse Kovarsky), Dolores, and Frankie
(Daniel Whiley) were cavorting in front of the caravans. I briefly
considered trying to track down Andrea (presumably in Studio 4), but
I decided against – she would be there soon enough, and this scene
was essentially brand new material to me. I hadn't seen it since my
first Dolores loop, all the way back at my very first show. The
first loop of my first show, in fact. I had literally forgotten
everything about it – even some of the music was completely unfamiliar.
After a few minutes, Andrea and Wendy walked in, arm in arm,
announced by Frankie like the big damn stars they are. I've said it
before – I love this particular pairing. Kirsty and Leslie make
such a great match, looking almost more like sisters than friends.
It was worth missing out on the last minute or two of their Studio 4
scene to catch that entrance from the front.
Soon everyone except for Andrea headed off to the birthday tent, and
she hopped atop the caravans to dance. It was absolutely lovely, and
cast an amazing, specific mood. It felt like evening in the late
summer, like smoky campouts and the last moments in the fading light
before everyone says goodbye forever. I could already tell this loop
was going to be just as difficult as the others, as the tears sprung yet again to my eyes – but didn't release. Not yet.
Once Andrea came back down to earth, we headed up for her
audition, and I used the trick I picked up from Faye's loop, cutting
through the back door to get a good seat just behind Claude for her
audition. The audition was a rousing success, and soon we were off
to Bulldog. I hung back, watching from a distance, so that I could
sneak back to the dressing area afterward. Having discovered that
she and Dwayne have some actual dialogue there a couple of shows
earlier, I wanted to be sure to catch it. The exchange was brief,
but worth the trouble – Dwayne commented that they “made a good
team,” and Andrea, ever cool and unflappable, simply smiled and
said, “yeah, on camera it sure looks like it.” Zing.
The next stop was the dressing room, where Andrea changed into her
costume for the magic trick. That was where I realized that the
situation was not precisely as I had expected. I figured this was
her final “proper” loop as Andrea, and that she'd be doing
another round at the finale. But when we got to her dressing table,
I saw that someone had written, “Andrea, I will miss you!” with a
heart below the exclamation point in lipstick on the mirror. There was only one explanation
for that – this wasn't the last proper loop. This was the last
loop, period. In just a few short scenes, Kirsty's Andrea – the
first character I ever had a moment of connection with, would be no
more. Forever. Again, my vision blurred with those damn tears that
suddenly refused to actually fall. I looked around, in a near-panic,
wanting to grab everyone and shout “Do you see that?! Do you
understand what's going on here?!” But of course, I couldn't.
Soon Conrad (Ben Whybrow) emerged and they proceeded to Studio 3.
When I arrived, I found several of my friends already gathered around
a table near the gazebo, ready to watch the magic trick, and I joined
them. Just before starting, Conrad gave his usual “it's water”
comment, referring to his drink, and set it at our table, telling my
friend Alex to taste it. She ignored it at first, until someone else
asked if she was going to taste it. She said that he's said that to
her on many occasions, and that she'd never actually done it. After
all, why would you? With a
little bit of prompting, she finally gave in and took a sip, and her
eyes went wide at the realization that it was most definitely not
water. We all took turns tasting it, confirming the diagnosis, and
thus began a little game, as Virna and Alex raced to finish off Conrad's gin before the end of the magic trick, passing the glass under the
table and taking sips and gulps whenever he wasn't looking.
As for the magic trick itself: fun as always. It was nice to catch
Kirsty's rendition one last time, as I always felt that Fania's
version was missing something – namely, a punchline. The whole
thing is a lead-up to Andrea's reappearance sans dress. Once said
dress made its first appearance, poking out through a whole in the
middle of the box, Conrad seemed to target it deliberately, making
sure that each subsequent pole exited the box in roughly the same
spot, pulling and tearing the beleaguered piece of fabric in every
direction. By the time he was finished, that whole chunk of the
front of the cardboard box was one massive, jagged hole. I guess
that particular dress was never going to be used again anyway.
After Andrea emerged from the box, Lexie (Jo Bowis) announced ”The beautiful Andrea is about to go film on set in another country, so let's give it up for this beautiful girl! We're gonna miss her!" confirming my realization from the mirror and inducing
another round of almost-but-not-quite crying from me as the room
exploded with thunderous applause for her. Most of my friends stuck
around – after all, they were in the middle of a Studio 3 loop, but
I slipped out quietly to continue on with Andrea. I didn't really
feel like laughing and chatting and "Telephone" anyway.
After a brief pause in the dressing room, the next stop was Studio 5,
for the Infidelity Ballet. I grabbed my usual spot, right in front
of Andrea's stage. It's funny how rarely I've actually watched the
Wendy/Frankie portion of this scene. With only a few, rare
exceptions, no matter who I'm following, my eyes are on Andrea. Must
be the red dress. As I stood there, she caught my eye for a second
and I thought I saw a momentary flicker of. . . something. Recognition,
perhaps? Surely not. It had been months since the last time I
followed her. But there was some sort of acknowledgment in there –
or at least, that's what I chose to see.
Unfortunately, my position, while great for watching Andrea dance,
was not so ideal for the forced medication interaction. The Doctor
positioned himself so that Andrea's back was to me, the Seamstress
was behind her, also back to me, and both of them combined completely
blocked my view of him. No faces visible, whatsoever. I was
similarly stymied when leaving the Studio – I missed much of the
excited giggling between Wendy and Andrea as they discussed the
upcoming party while on the move, on account of getting stuck behind
way too many people.
Leaving the dressing room, however, I managed to strategize myself
back into a good position, and had an excellent vantage point for the
whole journey to the Masonic Temple, complete with confident, dreamy,
big-damn-movie-star strut. Once we got to the temple, I tried very hard to
position myself in the proper “Andrea spot.” During my previous
orgy, with Stanford, I had even taken note of exactly which light she
stood under, to make sure that I didn't mess it up. Sadly, the scene
was well underway by the time we got there, and very well attended by
white masks. The best I could manage was several feet down. No orgy
eyes for me.
But then, as the line dance took shape, Andrea's gaze slowly slipped
down the crowd of people. Instead of looking at the person directly
across from her, she started looking down the line, right at me.
This was huge for me. When I mentioned earlier that she was the
first character I ever had a moment of connection with, this is the
moment I mean. In my first loop at my first show, while following
Dolores, I wound up standing near Andrea for the line dance. And the
look she gave me, locking eyes as the line advanced – I'll never
forget it. Quite possibly the sexiest thing I've ever seen, and even
after having seen Sleep No More repeatedly before that, that level of
intense acknowledgment completely blew me away. It was where I first started to fall in love with the show.
This time wasn't so sexy. I was far too emotional for that. Those
same tears that had haunted me all loop were once again brimming in
my eyes, as I realized I had come full circle, back to the very
beginning.
As much as I love the pre-orgy line dance, I do find the orgy itself
a little bit boring, so once everyone rushed the table, I moved out
to the hallway, making sure I could follow Andrea and Wendy closely
as they ran out of the room. Everything went according to plan, so
this time I was able to listen to their conversation in the
staircase - Andrea trying in vain to calm Wendy down, even as she
struggled to understand her own role in Wendy's humiliation.
When we got to the dressing room, the two women embraced for a long,
long time. They weren't just comforting each other, they were saying
goodbye. I began to feel that gnawing panic in the back of my mind,
knowing that we were nearly at the end of something I didn't want to
let go of. Finally, they released each other and moved over to the
dressing tables, where Wendy gave Andrea her watch. Then they
parted, and Andrea headed for the kitchenette to get a glass of
water.
Now, I have a bit of history with Andrea in this scene, particularly
Kirsty's Andrea. For the longest time, I always wound up doing the
same thing – I would follow her into the kitchenette, and step back
out of the way while she paused at the counter to compose herself.
Invariably, my “out of the way” spot was right in front of the
cupboard she needed to get into. I think this happened four times in
a row. I was determined not to let it happen again (even though, of
course, she probably wouldn't remember any of that anyway), so I stayed
out of the kitchenette entirely, watching from the other side of the
counter instead. As she headed for the cabinet, I wondered briefly
if the Fool would emerge to menace her – I hadn't seen the third
loop version of the scene since he started hiding behind the door.
He did not, thankfully. I do enjoy that addition to the loop, but
the moment was all about Andrea, and I wanted it to stay that way.
My choice of viewing position turned out to be very fortuitous in two
ways. First, it gave me a great look at “we live inside a dream,”
scrawled on the back wall of the cabinet. I knew the words were in
there, but in all this time, I don't believe I had ever actually seen
them myself, always standing in the wrong spot. Second, and much
more importantly, I had a front-row seat – literally inches away –
as Andrea returned to the counter and looked up at Wendy's box in the
rafters, realizing that her friend was gone. As she looked up, I saw
a single, dark, mascara-stained tear rolling slowly down her right
cheek. This was extraordinary. Kirsty has always played Andrea as
very cool and reserved. She's not one to jump up and down screaming
for you to stare at her tears. This is not to say she doesn't emote –
just that it comes out in a different form, in her dance and
movement. To see this single, beautiful black tear right where I
least expected it was completely overwhelming, and my own tears
surged forward again – but they didn't break.
She left the kitchenette and returned to the dressing tables to
change back into her early-loop dress for the finale. One last
costume change, because that's what Andrea does: she changes clothes.
It's her thing. I used to find it a little awkward, but just this once it was warmly comforting. Then, she looked up, caught my eye, and
took my hand.
Finally, the wave of tears that had been building all loop crested
and began to pour out of me. That full circle I mentioned before was
now even more complete. I walked down to the murder, hand in hand
with Kirsty's Andrea, just as I had at the end of that very first
show. I don't think I can fully explain just how much it meant to me
to revisit that moment, for her final walkdown to bring me back to my
very first. By the time we got to the mound I was properly sobbing,
and as she held me during the murder, instead of squeezing me tighter
at each stab of the scissors, she squeezed each time she felt my
chest heaving.
And then, Wendy dropped Marshall down the hole, Stanford called
“wrap,” and the room exploded with cheering. I felt Andrea's
hands slipping away, dragging along my arms almost like a caress. I
turned to see her slip away into the darkness. I'm not even sure
where I wound up after that; I was mostly oblivious to the rest of
the finale, and eventually stumbled into Studio 3 almost in a daze.
I was completely unused to crying like that, so three hours of
slipping in and out of such a state was nearly more than I could
handle. It was the show I had been hoping for all week, the one that
reminded me exactly what it was that makes The Drowned Man so special
to me – its ability to make me feel, in ways that nothing else can.
One for the books, with the most intensely emotional ending
possible.
Or so I thought. With the late show still to come, the night would prove to
hold one more surprise for me.
Thursday, July 17, 2014
My Time at Temple Studios, Part 30.
Show #30
Friday, July 4: 9 pm
Friday, July 4: 9 pm
I was really unsure how to start this show off. Still reeling from
the massive metaphorical faceplant at the end of my previous show, I was kind of
worried that the weekend shows, with their slightly different crowds,
might just not work for me this time around. Could it be that the best days were
behind me? Were my final shows doomed to disappoint? As I perused
the cast board, I did my best to bury these thoughts. The more I let
them consume me, the more likely I was to have a bad show. I
couldn't allow that to happen.
In fact, there wasn't much for me to decide at that point. I already
had an appointment to meet with friends in Studio 3 during the second
loop, and then some of us were going to spend the final loop
together, watching Fania Grigoriou's last “proper” PA loop.
Proper in the sense that no one knew how the final show as going to
be, or whether the loops would proceed as normal. This would be her
last performance in the role during a normal show. Couldn't miss that.
So really, it was just the first loop I needed to sort out. It took
me until I was halfway through the dark maze to settle on the answer:
it was time to return to Kath Duggan's Lila. I found her alone in
Studio 2, mid-dance in the trees. It was really quite amazing to
catch this moment in isolation, and I briefly flashed back to the
time, so long ago, when I saw Sophie Bortolussi's Wendy dance in the
same trees under similar circumstances. There's just something
magical about those first few lonely minutes of the show, when you
can find yourself alone with a character in a vast, open space.
There were precious few of those moments during this final week, so I
savored every moment of it.
Soon the dance was over, and she headed over to the birthday tent to
meet the Fool (Alistair Goldsmith). He was completely new to me, but
I didn't really get to form much of an impression other than that he
seemed much louder than the other Fools. But this wasn't really the
best place to see what he's all about – it's probably my least
favorite Fool scene. I much prefer to see the Fool flirting with
Andrea, making drowning sounds, piecing together his map, sending
Marshall to his fate, or anything else. Really, my favorite part of
the scene is Lila's reactions to everything. I was about to add
“especially when Kath is playing Lila,” but come to think of it,
I've never seen another Lila in the birthday tent. Anyway, there's
just something so sweet and almost child-like about the way she
smiles at the Fool; it's very endearing.
Soon enough we were off to the basement, where Lila spent some time
creating sound effects. It's a strange scene – nothing much
happens, and yet it is entirely riveting. I used to feel like Lila
disappeared between the birthday tent and the drowning recording,
clearly not doing anything of importance. But now, the scene
actually feels kind of incomplete if I come in with the Fool and miss
all of her work beforehand.
Once the Fool was gone, I followed Lila to the orgy, which is really
one of the hardest scenes for sticking with your character. Try as
you might, you're going to watch whoever it is that winds up right in
front of you for the line dance. And I certainly did try – but I
still wound up split between Lila and the PA. That spot also wound
up being a prime entry location – Dolores (Bryony Perkins), Claude (Omar Gordon), and (I think)
one other person that I can't remember wound up pushing me out of the way to get into the
room.
After the orgy, Lila stumbled out into a vomiting fit (well, retching
and dry-heaving, anyway) in the hallway. Shakily, we headed toward
the Buchanan office, outside of which Stanford (Sam Booth) just
barely managed to get a white mask's arms up in time for Lila to
burst through them. Close call – I didn't think he'd make it.
Much has been said about the subsequent scene in the reel-to-reel
room, and I don't know if I have much to add – it was as it has
always been, which was oddly comforting. That's probably not the way
it should feel, but I guess that's the sort of thing you start to
encounter after 30 shows. Once Stanford left the room, we started
into new territory for me – last time I did the loop, I had to
leave before the scene was over. Other than that, every single other
time I'd been in the room, I left with Stanford.
Lila left almost immediately and broke down in the hallway, sobbing.
I hadn't expected this – crying never felt like a very Lila-ish
thing to happen. Her whole journey had always felt a little cold –
like she was entranced, going through the motions and only
interrupted by those brief moments of joy (which, due to the offset
schedule of the show, were largely still to come). Granted, there
was her retching episode just a bit earlier, but I always figured
that was more of a physiological response, clearing the orgy juice
from her system.
But then, I suppose that's the point. Confronted with the truth of
her story up to now, she was hit by the entirety of it all. The
horror, the fear, everything she should have felt up to that point
but didn't really – all of it suddenly hit her at once. No wonder
she cried. It was an incredibly key moment – and I think missing
out on it is why I never quite felt the emotional connection to Lila
that I had hoped to before. It was a simple thing, but it resonated
across the entire loop.
Pulling herself together, Lila headed to the back room for her
decontamination, which now felt even more like a reset – not just
cleansing her physically, but erasing all that she had just learned.
The Doctor (Ira Siobhan) added a new trick that wasn't part of the
scene I saw with Doctor Booth – he worked a tray of powder into the
process, spraying it over her with the air gun.
I wound up behind a large pack leaving the room, and couldn't
actually see Lila at all. They seemed to be heading into the
staircase, so I followed. I knew she was supposed to start her loop
in the desert, so it made perfect sense that she would be heading upward. Of course, this particular
staircase doesn't actually go all the way to the top floor, so
everyone piled out into the town. Once out in the open, I realized
that I seemed to be heading for Faye's motel room, and Lila was
nowhere to be seen. Son of a bitch - I just lost her at reset again.
Not much I could do about it, just head upstairs and wait for her to
show up. Fortunately, I didn't have to wait too long – I had just
enough time to fully circle the desert, making sure she wasn't there,
before she emerged from the same staircase I had taken. Although
really, it doesn't make any sense that I would beat her there at all.
She headed for the murder mound and pulled Miguel (Georges Hann) from
the sand, then began to dance with him. Back in May, I was taken by just how beautiful this dance was, with Georges and Laure
Bachelot, so I was excited to revisit it – but sadly, it didn't
quite reach those heights this time, owing largely to the fact that
there were just too many people around. Lila and Miguel had to
actually push their way through to get from pool of light to pool of
light. Still a nice scene, though – my complaints exist only in
light of knowing what it once was.
Once Miguel departed, we moved back downstairs through the Horse &
Stars, then the back hallway, and finally out into town – a moment
that took my breath away. Cutting through the saddlery had become
such a habit that the only time I ever used that hallway anymore was
following Miguel and Faye after the hoedown, when we were all in the
thick of the action. I'd actually forgotten how effective that
moment of emerging into the arcade was, like you've just stepped into
another world. It may just be the most ingenious piece of set design
in the entire show, with the hallway serving as a metaphorical rabbit hole. I had to take a moment just to bask in it, and
missed most of Lila's scene with Tuttle as a result.
The next stop was the Buchanan house, where Harry (Edward Halsted)
sold Lila a can of the world-famous Miracle Salve. I've never seen
so many people packed into that living room before – when Harry
collapsed and took a seat on the chair, there was no hope of watching
the scene – he and Lila just became disembodied voices behind a sea
of masks. Still, I was feeling quite a bit more relaxed at this
show, and just wandered over to the bedroom, where I had a great view
of Lila's subsequent telephone chat with Stanford. It's so strange
watching it from her side, knowing he's right on the other side of
the mirror, but unable to see him. Unnerving.
Pass in hand, Lila headed for the studio gates. I really like this
dance – not all that much of a dance, really, but I enjoy the
interactions between her and the Gatekeeper (Paul O'Shea). Somehow,
even though he's harder on her than anyone else (other than Marshall,
I suppose), she doesn't really get dragged down by him. I still
remember the feeling of sand spraying off of her from the last time I
saw it, which was unfortunately not replicated. The crowds surged in
every time she or the Gatekeeper moved, so she wound up without
enough room to really spin. Still, even somewhat compromised, it was
quite nice.
Then we made it into the executive boardroom to find Alice (Pascale
Burgess) waiting atop the table like some giant buzzard, ready to
devour the fresh meat. Yes, I realize buzzards don't eat fresh meat,
but she – and Lila really is – okay, not the best
comparison. But you get the point. They danced on the Table, Lila
listened to her creepy dictaphone (the kid's voice still drives me
nuts, one of the few missteps I feel they made), and then it was off to Studio 2. Almost time to go.
I stuck around long enough to watch the entire tree dance one more
time. Most of the crowd stayed behind Lila, but I circled back
around to the stage side, so that the lights shined directly toward
me and she was silhouetted in front of them. It's the only way to
watch a Studio 2 tree dance – absolutely lovely. Finally, she
headed for the birthday tent and I took off for Studio 3.
I found many of my friends already gathered and watching the magic
trick, which was well underway – I was, for once, a little late.
There were already eight or nine poles shoved into Andrea's box. The
magic trick came to an end, and then it was time for the main event –
Telephone Man. You see, during this song a certain someone almost
always gets asked by Luna (Kathryn McGarr) where she would have it.
This certain someone (Virna) had been fed a certain answer to that question (Vagina),
and we were all gathered to see how it would go.
So of course, Luna decided not to ask her this time. She's a crafty
one, she is. After Telephone Man, I got to see something completely
new: instead of Delilah Jones, which in my very limited experience
always followed Telephone Man, they launched into the Name Game. I
kind of hate the song, actually – but Larry (Matthew Blake) and
Luna managed to make it really fun. I have to admit, as much as I
loved Pinky and Stevie, Larry and Luna absolutely own Studio 3.
They've clearly been doing it forever, and know all the ins and outs.
Old pros – and it's a joy to watch them work. I kind of regret
not spending more time in Studio 3 with them. Kind of.
Also, there was absolutely no trace of the sinister overtones that
Stevie and Pinky had – just goofy, boozy fun. Of course, that may
be due to the fact that my primary experience with Stevie and Pinky
was the 2:1, while my primary experience with Larry and Luna was. . .
well, the Name Game. Not exactly a reasonable comparison.
After the songs were done, I asked Virna when we needed to leave.
She is the world's foremost PA expert, and was to be my guide through
this final loop. The plan was to get to the basement and start with
the orgy. She thought for a moment, got a weird look on her face,
and said “now, actually.”
So we grabbed another friend who had planned on doing this loop and
left Studio 3, heading down the hall to the. . . right. To the
right? What? As we turned the corner, the corridor opened up wider,
and I saw a large “Studio 3” printed on it, with an arrow pointing back the way
we came. A few more steps and we came to the staircase.
Unbelievable. I had just been led into a space that I had never been
in before. I always assumed that if you turned right out of Studio 3,
you hit backstage areas. And I always thought the ground floor exit
from the staircase was locked. I was sure of it. I had tried the
door. Hadn't I?
Perhaps that is just how strong my aversion to doing Studio 3
mid-show had been. I actually hallucinated obstacles to keep myself
away.
As we emerged into the basement, the clack of the wood blocks was
just audible. With a slight adjustment of pace, we were able to pass
through the doors of the Masonic Temple at precisely the right
moment, flinging them open Claude-style exactly on the downbeat of “The Pink
Room.”
Again, it's hard to stick with your character in the orgy. This time
I actually did intend to watch the PA, but we wound up much farther
down the line, in Dolores/Claude land.
Thus, when the line turned to the audience and they advanced on us,
I was right in front of Dolores – and her stare down was absolutely
terrifying. I don't know if it was the blank, drugged out expression
or the crazy Norma Desmond-style makeup (or both), but we're
definitely talking nightmare fodder.
After the orgy, we slipped out after the PA and were treated to a
surprisingly low-key frisky corridor. This was followed, as usual,
by the angry corridor, with a twist. I had seen the PA go into an
angry fit before, raging at the injustice of having to go through it
all one more time. I had not seen her break down after the fit, but
that's exactly what happened. She leaned back against the wall and
buried her face in her hands. It was extraordinary – I've never
seen that kind of weakness or vulnerability from the PA before,
especially not Fania's control-obsessed PA.
The breakdown left her no time to play around with lipstick in her
office, so she cut straight through the side corridor that runs
alongside it to meet Grandma Dolores. As we all rushed through said
corridor, some asshole tripped over an unidentified object on the
floor (a circuit box, maybe?) and only avoided face planting into the
ground because there was a portion of wall jutting out right in front
of him that he hit instead. Still managed to let out a giant yelp,
totally breaking the mood.
Yeah, that asshole was me.
Fania threw in a little extra twist to her taunting of Dolores –
once inside the stairwell, she shut the door and mocked her through
the window, preventing anyone from following her directly. We caught
up soon enough, though, and were treated to Fania's version of the
reset, which I have gained new respect for. I had kind of written it
off after seeing Stephanie Nightingale's reset, in which she
strangles Dolores to death. After that, any other version seemed
anti-climactic - but I shouldn't have been so hasty with my judgement.
The PA chased Dolores up the snow pile very aggressively, poking her
with the walking stick. Then, instead of strangling Dolores, she
climbed up the pile above her, slipped her fingers under the mask,
and flung it away with surprising grace. In the same
motion, she stood up, folding her arms – the perfect image of
poise. She had completely stolen the scene – it wasn't about
resetting Dolores at all. It was about the PA regaining control,
resetting herself - her own rebirth. The sight of her, standing tall and looking down
on all of us, is not one that I'll soon forget.
Soon after we made our way to the basement, where she selected a
white mask to dance in the dark. At this point most of the crowd
dispersed, as you might expect. My friends took the opportunity for
a bathroom break, while I pulled out my notepad and took a final few
notes about the set. In the process, I had a bit of a moment:
standing all alone in the Masonic Temple, examining the wall, I heard
a woman's voice say “hey, Brian” very quietly – but no one was
there. I mean, obviously I didn't hear it. Not really. But also, I
did.
A few minutes later we were all reunited and the loop continued.
There was a brief, low-key dance with the Doctor, then we returned to
the office where the PA selected none other than Ygal Jerome Tsur
(William/Barman) for the watch quest. It was during this bit that
Virna introduced me to the “duh, use the back door” technique of
getting in and out of the office in the midst of large crowds.
Certainly made me feel pretty stupid for not thinking of it before.
Once the watch was safely delivered to Marshall (Jesse Kovarsky), and
Dolores was changed into her black nightie, the PA headed off for the
1:1. I quickly realized it wasn't even worth trying, and remained in
the bedroom. Virna gestured that she was going to get some water
from Studio 3 while we waited, and I followed her – but when we
passed by Studio 2, I changed my plan. Wendy (Leslie Ann Kraus) was
outside the trailers, fighting with Marshall over the watch – which
meant I was just in time to catch the small portion of her loop that
I had missed last time. You can't pass up timing as perfect as that.
Once the fight concluded, she headed in the direction of the murder
mound for her tree dance. Last time I had skipped the scene because
it was second loop, and I only wanted to watch it right at the top of
the show, when the crowds had not yet gathered. So of course, it
made some sort of horrible, ironic sense that I would wind up
watching it during the third loop on a sold out night instead. At
any rate, I found a spot right at the edge of the stage, and actually
had a pretty good view. It was a terrific dance – Leslie was a
tiny bundle of energy, flying around at incredible speed. I stuck
with her as she retrieved the scissors (which seemed to have been
placed farther in the pool than the expected – she wound up soaking
her sleeves trying to get them), and then as she hid them in the
dressing room. Finally the PA showed back up to point her in the
direction of Marshall's infidelity. Hero that I am, I tried to prevent Wendy from following her by accidentally standing in the doorway for too long. I only realized what I'd done when I felt two tiny hands grab my waist from behind and slide me to the side - ah, the humiliation. All the more reason to get back to my PA loop, I guess.
We took a quick trip down to the basement office, where she sucked
the soul out of Punchdrunk Guru Felix Barrett to make her potion. Then right back up
again to get some of Conrad's dropper drugs. Here is where Virna
proved invaluable – she led me straight to Conrad's dressing room
while the PA was taking a long route. We got there before her and
settled into prime spots before the scene even started – and a good
thing we did, too, because by this time there were so many people
following the PA that most of them didn't even get into the room
before Conrad (Adam Burton) locked the door. And even still, it was
easily the most people I'd ever seen in there. Everyone knew this
was an important one.
Next up was the seduction/drugging of Marshall, and the solo dance
that precedes it. Watching the PA dance on her own up there, I was
struck by a thought – whatever happened to the jacket? She used to
wear a black jacket during the first part of the loop, and strip it
off at the start of this scene. I kind of miss that – the loss of
it was a sign that we were really getting into the thick of things.
Plus, I just like how the characters' looks evolve over their loops,
and without the jacket, the PA looks the same all the way through.
Then it was orgy time, and after that, Frisky Corridor time. The
corridor felt very, very strange – the PA just stood there at
first, not even looking Stanford in the eye. Then, when he told her
that was it, they were finished, she just gave him a single, long,
hard kiss. He gave her a celebratory twirl. It was the least frisky
corridor ever, but also the most emotionally charged. When she said
she needed a drink at the end, she really meant it.
We all returned to Stanford's dressing room, where she toasted “to
The Drowned Man,” rather than “to Dolores.” We all shared the goblet of whiskey, and then she grabbed
Felix for the walkdown, leaving the rest of us to follow.
I was definitely feeling better after this show than I was after the
early, but still ever so slightly uneasy. I was happy to be there,
and really enjoying what I was seeing – but the thing that sets The
Drowned Man apart from all other things, for me, is the level of
emotional involvement. And outside of a few moments, it wasn't
really digging its claws into me as strongly as I hoped, or was used
to. Was it too crowded? Had I finally seen so much that it was
losing its power? Had I closed myself off, as a defense mechanism?
Any of the above, all of the above, or perhaps something else.
Whatever the reason, I was just about out of time to sort it out. So
I was a little bit scared that somehow I'd messed everything up.
I was also an idiot. Because Saturday. . . . ah, Saturday. You'll
see soon enough. Things always seem to have a magical way of working
themselves out at Temple Studios.
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