Saturday, July 28, 2012

Secrets of Adulthood

My Secrets of Adulthood


I know I'm only 20, but there are a couple things I've learned from time and experience. It's not a lot, but it's something to start. I looking forward to this list growing as I do. Here are my Secrets of Adulthood:

1. It's okay to ask for help.

2. You can choose what you do, but you can't choose what you like to do. 

3. You don't have to be good at everything.

4. Shout removes almost any stain.

5. Most decisions don't require extensive research.

6. You never know who could help you out down the road or be your next connection - be nice to everyone. 

7. The concept to being healthy is quite simple - eat better, eat less, and exercise more.

8. What is fun for other people may not be fun for you (and vice versa)

9. The days are long, but the years are short. 

10. To eliminate clutter on the inside, start by removing clutter on the outside.

11. Other people don't notice your mistakes and flaws as much as you do. 

12. Money is a great slave, but a crappy master.

13. Don't go to the grocery store on an empty stomach. Or without a plan. 

14. Most lost things can be found by cleaning up the space. Things wouldn't get lost if the place was clean in the first place.

15. Turning something on and off can actually fix a lot of technical problems.

16. Suffering through a headache without Advil does not make you a stronger person - it makes you a grumpy person. This day will go a lot smoother if you just take a tablet and get on with it.

17. Things like hard work, smiling, and being on time don't go unnoticed. 

18. Some things can't, or shouldn't, be done alone. 

19. The minute you accept how weird of a person you are your life becomes light-years more fun. 

20. You'll never regret getting to know someone better, but you may regret not getting to know them enough. 

21. Friends come and go. Family stays. 

22. First impressions exist, therefore, your appearance matters.

23. You only get one body. Take care of it. 

24. Make peace with the past so it doesn't destroy the present.

25. Sleep cures almost everything.

26. No one is the reason for your happiness except you.

27. Don't assume you know the journey of someone else's life by comparing yours to theirs.

28. Don't think so much. It's okay (let alone impossible) to know everything.

29. Smiling can solve a lot of little problems. 

Friday, July 27, 2012

Hip Hop Stigma

Just before leaving for Rossland, I took a drop in dance class at Harbour Dance Centre on Granville. I had the day off and I could have taken any class that day - Power Yoga, Modern, Ballet, Sexy Stilettos, Jazz, Lyrical Jazz, Grooving, Contemporary Jazz, Breakdance... All of these classes were being offered that particular day and out of all of them, I chose Hip Hop 1 with Eric Malapad. I hadn't danced in over a year, besides some moderately easy choreography that I performed back in February with 'The Mystery of Edwin Drood", but I had been hired to teach some kids hip hop workshop here in Rossland and wanted some inspiration and ideas to get me started with the kids. 

I attended the service that morning at Christ Church Cathedral and then rushed over to Harbour to change out of my church clothes just in time for class. I was really nervous. What if I looked like an idiot? My mind and body were so out of "dance shape". 'At least it's Level 1,' I told myself. 'It's not going to be crazy.' I was mostly right - the routine we did wasn't insane or anything. It was just enough of a challenge for me that it made me give a mental note to myself to kick my own ass this summer and get back in shape by September. This class though, it did something more important that work me out and inspire me for the kids this summer. It reminded me about how much I love dance and how much I adore hip hop specifically. I love all forms of dance - don't get me wrong. But there is something special about hip hop that the other genres don't have. I love ballet and it's structure and elegance. I love tap, the mental challenges it brings, and the creativity required to come up with the endless possibilities of rhythms. I love contemporary because it feels so free and lets us leave our emotions on the dance floor, for everyone else to analyse. Hip hop though, it has everything. There is a certain grace to it. A fluidity of movements. But also a crispness - a sharp edge. It can go from smooth and elegant to hard-hitting and rough in less than a count of 8. It incorporates unity, precision, and teamwork as well as individuality and freestyle. Hip hop says "Come as you are." It doesn't care what color you are. If you are fat or skinny. If you have big boobs or smaller boobs. All styles are for everyone and there is a style for everyone. I go back and forth in my own confidence with this style. Sometimes I do a routine and think 'Hey I'm actually not bad. If I keep working there could be some potential here..." yet other times I think 'OH MY GAWD, who am I kidding? I am the most uncoordinated and whitest person that ever walked the planet!' To the latter thought - who cares? I enjoy it. It's fun. It's good for me. It makes me a heck of a lot happier than lifting weights at the gym does. I should keep doing it. So maybe I will never be pro. Oh well. There is no where to go but up from this. 

My favorite thing about hip hop is that it makes me feel good about my body. In  this case, I don't mean because it's a form of working out. This time I mean that hip hop is a celebration of the human body. Not unlike other dance forms, it tests and challenges what we are capable of, but I also feel my absolute sexiest when I'm dancing hip hop, which is unlike other dance forms. Maybe it's the attire - cool shoes, the mixture of tight and loose fitting clothes, hair having the option of being up or down, the encouragement of creative make up and jewelry... Anything goes really. There aren't any rules. When I'm having a down day, there is nothing worse than having to squeeze myself into a bodysuit and tights and slick my hair back into a bun. How unflattering, or so it feels to me on that particular day. Even on a good day, when I'm on my way to a cruise ship audition and put a little extra attention on my hair, make up, and dance attire and feel really pretty, my mood is immediately dashed when I walk into the room full of tall, skinny, gorgeous, flexible girls with long legs wearing crop tops and tiny shorts stretching and waiting their turn to dance. I have to catch myself from thinking negative thoughts. My boobs are not too big. I am not too short. I am fit. My hair looks fine. I never have to remind myself of these things in a hip hop class. I feel confident enough to wear a crop top and sweats some days and others I wear a baggy t-shirt with my super awesome hat that my ex used to hate me for wearing. It's all for fun. I don't get, and don't have the courage, to dress like that all the time. It's great to get it out of my system in class. One day I dream about having the confidence that I feel in hip hop class bleed into the rest of my life.

I've been doing some thinking and some research on the topic, however, and I've noticed a lot of negative stigma on the hip hop industry. Just play around on Youtube for a while and you will find tons of awful comments, especially on videos of young girls. Some users even go as far as to call them names like 'sluts' and 'whores' for dancing the way they do. This absolutely sickens me. Why are we not encouraging young women to find their individuality through hip hop? I feel that it is just as legitimate of a dance form as ballet. Haters of the hip hop community believe that hip hop and rap music leads to gangs and violence, drugs, sex and teenage pregnancies. I will not be naive and denote that sometimes the lyrics in hip hop music touch on some pretty taboo things, but I feel that immediately connecting the music to the lifestyle is not entirely accurate. I come from one of the most redneck towns in the northern hemisphere that is as country as it gets and it has one of the highest teen pregnancy rates in Canada. There is hardly any rap music in site and most of the people that listen to it are not dancers. I know one dancer from the last 10 years that has gotten pregnant before graduation, and she had stopped dancing a few years before she got pregnant. So if rap music, hip hop dancers, and teen pregnancies aren't really linked in my hometown, I have a hard time believing that it really does anywhere else. If a child chooses to engage in gangs, or drugs, or sex - to assume that the decision was based solely on the suggestion of their music lyrics is ridiculous. I say the problems extend far beyond those of the words. And why do we nail down young hip hop dancers for their costumes? We put ballet on a pedestal because the costumes rarely show midriff, but it's been proven over and over that ballet and eating disorders ARE closely linked. In one study that I read, it stated that ballet students are seven times more likely to develop anorexia than regular high school students. Yet it seems to be the dance discipline encouraged most in society. Why is it considered so prestige?

This isn't supposed to be a rant or even a statement of facts or answers to any questions. It's more just to pose a thought. I keep being told that my opinions will change when I have a daughter of my own. I can't judge that now. Maybe they will. But, right now, as I stand, I like to think that I would encourage my daughter to pursue what makes her happy. If dancing to hip hop music in a crop top makes her feel confident about her body, I'm satisfied with that. If my daughter wants to pursue the continuous strive for perfection in the ballet world, I'm okay with that too. Then it becomes up to me, as a parent, to teach her the right morals - to raise her awareness and teach her the facts about things like eating disorders, the consequences of sex, the danger with gangs. And even if I teach her all I can, it's going to be up to her to listen and make the right decision. I don't think discouraging her from a fantastic creative outlet is a solution to any of the worlds problems. 

This didn't come out as eloquently as I had hoped, but I think I got my point across. I found a niche and I'm gonna dance my little heart out. 


Saturday, July 7, 2012

My Ten Commandments

"AND SHE SPOKE ALL THESE WORDS..."


  1. BE EMILY               


2. TRUST GOD. 
HE KNOWS WHAT HE'S DOING
     




   3. PRIORITIZE






               4. IT WILL COME WHEN I'M READY





   5. IDENTIFY THE PROBLEM







      
6. DO IT NOW. KNOW WHEN TO WAIT







7. BE POSITIVE. BE THANKFUL







               8. BALANCE AND MODERATION IS THE KEY





9. IMAGINE THE EULOGY




10. CHOOSE NOT TO TAKE IT PERSONALLY




Friday, July 6, 2012

A Particular Class of Women


I probably should have written about this when it was still super fresh on my mind, but I didn't and I still want to take the time to reflect on the Fraser Valley Zone Theatre Festival, which took place at the end of May.

I'll start off the the process.

First of all, when I saw the audition ad, I wasn't able to attend the initial audition date because I had a rehearsal for "The Mystery of Edwin Drood", but I was free on the night of the callbacks. So I pulled my cocky card and emailed the director asking if I could be put straight through to the callbacks. I figured, hey, it's community theatre in Maple Ridge. They'll probably be stoked that someone with professional training and experience is even interested in working with them. Yes, I'm a prick. I should note that I had never been to the theatre in Maple Ridge, at this point, and had never seen anyone in the area perform, so my opinion of the arts scene there was completely uneducated.

John emailed me back saying, yes, he would pencil me in for the callback day, but if he ended up needing that slot for someone else who had come on the original day and needed to come again, I may lose my slot. It was a fair compromise. Then he asked, out of curiosity, what show I was rehearsing for. I told him. He looked it up and saw that we would be performing a matinee on the day of the first read through and he was not thrilled at the idea. He emailed me back and said he had changed his mind about me auditioning. I could still come if I really wanted to - just for the experience - but there was basically no way that he would cast me in the show unless (and I quote) ... Actually I'll just show you the whole email.

From: ******************
To: emnadeauhowatt@live.com
Subject: RE: Auditions
Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2012 18:07:05 -0800

Hi Emily,

I looked at the performance schedule for The Mystery of Edwin Drood, and I see you are also performing Thursday nights and Sundays until March 3. Our rehearsal times are Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Sunday afternoons. The Thursday evenings I could work around, but the two Sundays are a problem because most all the actresses are there. Particularly February 19 because we have interviews with strippers set up on those days, one who worked with the playwright in Toronto.

So unless you just knocked my socks off at your audition, and you didn’t compare to anybody else, and I absolutely couldn’t live without you in my show, I would have problems with you missing the Sundays. I’m sorry, but that’s the way it is. Maybe to reduce that kind of stress on both of us, you should take a pass on this show.

Do you agree?

John

My reply:

Hi John,

It's ultimately up to you. I understand if you don't want to work around my other show. I can't guarantee that I'd knock your socks off, but I can promise that I'm always an asset to any show I'm cast in. Just let me know what you decide. 

Thanks,
Emily

He decided to let me go ahead with the audition. 

Now I was taught that we should always "silhouette" the part we are going for. I knew the show was an all-women show about strippers and that it was based on a court case that happened in the 80s, but that is all I knew. I didn't look up the script. Why would I waste my time? I wasn't going to be cast in the show anyways - the director had made that clear. I decided to just go for it. No holding back. Take a risk. What did I have to lose? I arrived at the address providing for some place in Pitt Meadows. I had no idea where I was going. Turns out - it's the recreation centre. There were children running around. And I was wearing black leather knee-high boots, thigh high fishnets with big white bows on the sides, tiny black booty shows, a French maid lingerie outfit, a black office blazer, smokey eye make-up (heavy on the eyeliner) and blood red lips. I don't have a picture of the entire get-up, but here is the lingerie by itself. Yes, I was wearing this in public. Around children. 

And, of course, I didn't bring anything to cover up with. It wasn't a particularly cold night. But, I mean, it was 8:00 on a Thursday night in Maple Ridge. 

To top it all off, the auditions were happening in a preschool. In that moment, I was pretty sure I had reserved myself a spot in Hell. 

The girl waiting to go in was wearing uggs, jeans, and a cardigan. Gee did I feel stupid.

So I went in there and performed my Bunny monologue from House of Blue Leaves, sans accent, of course. They laughed a lot, and then asked me to do it again as if I was trying to drive my scene partner out of the room. That's difficult with this monologue since Bunny is basically trying to seduce Artie, so I took a crazy, hysterical approach. They loved it. Then they asked me to cold read a monologue. I don't actually remember if it was from the show or not. I can't picture the words now. It was a great monologue. Lots could be done with it. They asked if I could do any accents. I love doing accents and I knew that there were five in this show - French Canadian, Newfie, Southern US, Polish, and British. I stated that my best was French, though I knew I was much too young to play the French woman (about twenty years too young) and that the Southern and Polish characters were in m age range. But, surprisingly, they asked me to try Newfie. Now a Newfie accent is not one that I could ever get a grasp on. It's probably my worst one. I can do a love Irish and darn good redneck, but I can't blend the two (which is what a Newfie accent sounds like to me). I tried my best. It was okay. Definitely not great though. Then they asked me to improvise a dance on the spot (but to please keep my clothes on). I didn't know there was going to be dancing in the audition, but at least that was ONE thing I was comfortable doing, even if I was wearing next to nothing. I think I am really thankful for is the confidence I have in my body. Even when it doesn't look it's best (I looked my best at the end of last summer. I looked worse than I had in years at the time of this audition), I still feel pretty comfortable in it. I had some awkward months during the tail end of puberty for sure. I weighed a bit more than I do now, but I never was one to really pick myself apart. I really do thank God for this. It made teenagehood a heck of a lot easier probably. 

So I started to dance. A little awkwardly at first since I was wearing knee high stilettos that I had never danced in before. I spotted a chair along the side wall out of the corner of my eye and grabbed it. I love dancing with props and chairs. 

I walked out of that audition feeling good. He had asked if I read the play beforehand. I said no and he asked why. I wanted to say, "Because it would've been a waster of my time," considering I had no part in this show, right? But instead I said, "I'm sorry. I did do a lot of research on the play and the court case itself, but between work and Drood, I just ran out of time to read it by the time I found the script." Lies.

Almost exactly twelve hours later, at 8:30 am, John called me to tell me that I was right. I had blown him away and he wanted to offer me the part of Marky, the youngest stripper and one of the three characters without an accent. He sent me the script, which I skimmed, and accepted the part. I had never done a monologue-play before (which I didn't know it was until I accepted and read the script) and I had also never done a non-musical before. Sure there was going to be a little bit of dancing - stripper-style - and one character sings a little verse a capella, but this was not a musical. My first straight play.

He ended up moving the read through to later on in the day so that I could attend. It was cool to meet everyone and the interview with the two strippers was very cool. John asked if I would choreograph the show as well. That was flattering. I was the youngest person in the cast and didn't have as much dance training as Lauren, so I'm still not quite sure why he picked me, but I'm glad he did. 

Clearly things had started out a little weird with the director and then they were escalated (for me) when he told us that he usually expects his actors to come to the first rehearsal off-book, but because this show was all monologues, he didn't want us to do any homework before our first, individual, private rehearsals. Well thank goodness. I would never come to a first rehearsal off-book. No matter who I was working for. ... Okay... Maybe if Jason Robert Brown or Stephen Spielberg asked me to, I would do it, but it would take one special person to make me go against the training I believe in. 

I arrived at my first rehearsal as a blank slate and was quickly discouraged when I felt that John's directing techniques conflicted with my personal values and education. I struggled with the monologue and continued to be overwhelmed with what was being asked of me for weeks to come. I would come home after every rehearsal almost in tears - either out of frustration or pure anger. "I don't agree with this." "I'm not clicking with the girls." "I just don't get it." My roommate at the time, Meaghan, encouraged me to stand up against it. She advised me to either quit, talk to John, or ignore him and do it my way. Her only "do not" advise was not to continue the way it was going. She agreed with the things that I was saying. I didn't feel like quitting was a good option. I had never backed out of a show before. I didn't feel morally right about that. I started to look at it as a personal and professional challenge - get through this show without killing anyone. That would be good. John went away for a week for a vacation and left the show with the assistant director, Simon. On that day I decided to just go for it and do it my way. It was well received. John came back and I showed him what I had done, and he liked some of it, and wanted other parts back the way he had set them. I struggled some more. Finally I started questioning things and John explained to me why he did things the way he did. It clicked. I understood. And I wished I had asked sooner. I asked to revisit a couple areas and between the two of us, we found a really good compromise between what he wanted and what I was comfortable with. Finally I was at ease with the whole process and my heart softened a little for John.

A few weeks later it dawned on me that this show could possibly interfere with a summer contract. I knew Rossland was interested in having me back and decided to audition anyway. In the original audition call for APCW, it had not mentioned the show bleeding into the summer. It mentioned the FVZ Festival at the end of May, but, having never done a festival show before, I didn't know exactly what that meant. The first I heard about the possibility of going into the first week of July was in the audition room when John asked, "And you're not planning any vacations or anything until mid-August?" I nonchalantly said, "Yeah." First, because I've been taught to always say yes in auditions, and two, because I didn't think it mattered since I WASN'T GOING TO BE CAST IN THE SHOW ANYWAY. Now that I was cast and I had my summer-epiphany, I was convinced that we could all work something out so that I could do both. I got offered the contract and then had to talk to both John and Lisa to work something out. Reluctantly, Lisa agreed to release me from the Follies, in the event that we won the festival, for one weekend in June for a fundraising performance, plus for opening night, which is when our slot was scheduled to be in Kamloops. John was very convinced that we were going to win. To be honest, I wasn't so sure. I told my friends that the show was "okay". I thought we performed it well for sure, but it's not everyone's style of show. Also, if I can take the liberty to say this, I think the material in the play itself is great, but I think it's a little repetitive. It's as if every monologue has a pattern: humor, tragedy, dance. I had a couple friends come watch the run and they said the same thing. John wasn't super stoked that I had auditioned for something else, but he got what he wanted, so the tension that had arose eventually went away and things were fine between us. 


















I was proud of myself for the show. It had been my biggest challenge to date. I had learned so much about the industry and even caught myself having fun with these women, even though there are a couple divas in the cast. They deserve to be divas - they are all pretty fucking talented women. I had a newfound respect, and even love for, stripping and was considering taking a pole dancing workshop. The process had  been great, but I was grateful when the run was over. No more driving to Maple Ridge during rush hour. I was so happy that it was only a 5 show run. 

We had scheduled two more shows to do before festival - to keep everything looking sharp. I didn't really look forward to either. My heart had never been in the show and it cared even less now that I had been away from it for a while. Absence, in this case, had not made the heart grow fonder. 

Finally it was festival time. We were scheduled last. I quit my job a week early so I could fully participate in the festival. I had to leave the next week anyway - I had to be in Rossland the week after and I wanted to squeeze in a visit to my family before I left. The festival was amazing. Four great shows, but two in particular that I thought were incredible. I lost a bit more confidence in the show. We were good, but I didn't think we would be quite good enough. Also, I grew such a love and respect for the adjudicator, Stephen Drover. His opinions on theatre, the critique he gave, and the things he had to say about each performance were just spot on. I knew he would like our show,  but it was hard to predict whether he would be on board for the message that it sends. 


Friday night. Performance time. We got ready. We were feeling good. And something clicked in me. I don't know when it happened. Or why. But all of a sudden, I loved this show. I loved the women in it and I was so passionate about what we were trying to say. All of a sudden I was dedicated to giving the best performance of my life. I haven't gotten stage jitters in years. That nervous, excited feeling. I haven't really gotten it for a performance since 10th grade. It came back that night. In floods. I was shaking. I was smiling. I was excited. I was nervous. I had tons of energy and it was going to go into every word I said and every movement I did tonight. The lights came up and we all walked onto that stage and we killed it. I have never felt so good about a performance. It was an incredible feeling. I didn't want it to end. I was ready to pack up, drop everything, and take the show on tour. It wasn't over for me. 


The next night was the awards gala. I wanted to secretly hope we didn't win. I knew my life would be simpler if we didn't. I would go visit my parents and then head to Rossland as planned and have no summer conflicts. But I couldn't even pretend to not care. I did. I wanted us to win so bad. And then we did. We not only won Most Outstanding Production, but we won Most Outstanding Ensemble, Director, and Costumes as well. I've never been so close to crying out of happiness before. We won. We deserved it. And we were going to Mainstage. I couldn't believe it. 

I had to cancel my trip to see my parents. I stayed behind in Vancouver to figure out some choreography things with John and to attend some extra rehearsals. I put off leaving for Rossland until the last minute, arriving the evening before the first rehearsal. I didn't care. I almost didn't care about Rossland. I just loved this show.

Three days before I left, I decided to audition, on a whim, for CBC's reality TV show, "Over the Rainbow". Well, actually, my roommate Nicole was auditioning. She didn't tell me about it because she had figured I wouldn't be in town anymore. At the last minute, she convinced me to go with her for "shits and giggles". "It'll be fun!" she said. Well, turns out the jokes on me - I got a callback. I had been put through to the Top 100 and was given the opportunity to fly to Toronto and compete for a spot in the Top 20. I wish I could've been excited for this, but all I could think of was, 'Shit. Is this going to conflict with APCW?' I couldn't stand the thought of letting down my girls. I talked to John about it and he agreed to give me a few days to find out as many details as I could. I tried. I really did. I called the producers so many times to try and get itinerary and flight details. All I knew was that something was occurring on June 21st in Toronto, and I was supposed to perform with Emerald Pig on June 22nd in Vancouver. By this time, I was in Rossland and had to communicate with everyone long distance. It was hard, trying to juggle everything. In the end, John decided he couldn't wait anymore for details. I had to decide - turn down Toronto completely or they would replace me. I couldn't turn down Toronto. I couldn't spend the rest of my life wondering if I passed up the opportunity that would've made my career. I had already turned down Disney once. I couldn't say no to this too. I chose Toronto. Now that I've gone, I can't say that I support or regret my decision. I did what I felt was right at the time. It turns out that if John could have waited two more days, we would've discovered that yes, I would have been back in time to do both fundraising performances. My flight from Toronto landed in Vancouver at 2:30 pm. The performance was in Langley at 7:00 pm.

I've tried to look on the bright side of this. Even though choosing Toronto didn't entirely work in my benefit, it was still a great experience. I was able to be in the opening night performance of the Follies, which was great. And I got to pass on the amazing Mainstage opportunity to someone else equally deserving (Krista Magnusson), who I'm sure appreciated it.

Of course I'm human. I am jealous and envious that I didn't get to go to Mainstage. I'm disappointed in myself for not following all the way through a performance. I'm worried that I've burned bridges and damaged relationships with my ex-cast mates and that I've possibly developed a bad rep for myself in Vancouver. I have to pay Emerald Pig back for the flight that they paid for me, which is $323 that I definitely don't have right now. I'm hurt that (it felt) they were so quick to replace me. And I'm curious - to what kind of spin Krista brought to Marky, how the performance went in Kamloops, what the adjudicator (Jeff Hyslop) had to say about the performance and how it would have differed if I had been there instead of Krista. I wonder if she did a better job than me and if everyone is glad that I'm out and she's in. Maybe it was for the better. I try to remind myself that I contributed in getting them to Mainstage. I was part of the festival performance that got them there and I still did the choreography so there is a piece of me on the stage in Kamloops too. I also wonder that if they don't win on Saturday, if it's my fault for not being there, or if they win, if they still would have if I had. There so many things I'll never know. I do honestly and genuinely hope they do well. They deserve it. And despite what some of them think, I really do still care. And I always have. Three of the ladies have since contacted me. They let me know how they felt about the whole situation and I was glad that we got the opportunity to talk it out. There are still four others that are a big question mark though. Do they hate me? I have no idea. John had said on the phone that my auditioning for CBC had created so much animosity throughtout the cast that even if I did chose APCW over Toronto, the damage already done may not be repairable. That's when I knew that I should just let it go. I couldn't go back to a cast that held a grudge against me. It felt better to let them replace me and create a new dynamic.

This blog post would have been very different if I had posted that Sunday morning after we had won. It would have ended with me being ecstatic for Mainstage. Unfortunately that wasn't the way it worked out, but I trust in God and I believe he had a plan and a reason for all of these. I hope one day it becomes clear.

Thank you for taking the time to read this.
Thank you, John, for giving me the chance to be a part of this amazing production.
Thank you, Lori, Angela, Amy, Emily, Lisa-Marie, Kait, and Lauren, for giving me some incredible memories that I will carry with me and cherish for the rest of my life.
And thank you to everyone else who was involved in this production.

And I wish you all every last ounce of luck in this world - not that you need it though.





A Particular Class of Women with Krista Magnusson as Marky