Tuesday, April 15, 2014

RENT(ing)


Five months ago, in a warehouse on the edge of town, I sat on a pew facing a piano. I found myself thirsty, having arrived here with my audition accomplice but not a drop of water between us. The arrangement was simple, my accomplice assured me: show up, say 'I'm interested in participating in the show RENT', at best receive my homeless-person-4b assignment, but more likely go down in flames and then head on home.

My heart racing, fingers twitching nervously, brain trying to bend physics to pop me out of my sweaty seated existence and send my atoms outside, safe and sound... But it didn’t really work out that way. As fate would have it physics remained intact, and I remained in my seat. I relaxed a little, surely if nature would not grant me this somewhat unreasonable and unnatural request, then I could count on my lack of headshot, audition music, references, experience and general talent to expedite my departure from the audition.
But a surprising thing happened: I was welcomed in.
Staying true to the spirit alive in every corner of this wondrous land, I found a community of people open. Inviting. From teachers to students, baristas to bartenders, cooks and technicians, contractors, tour guides, mothers, daughters, fathers, sons, friends and enemies; everyone here had found a home in the theater.
Rehearsals in small spaces, under staircases, lighting imaginary candles, which would one day reflect and burn in the hearts of many. Singing in empty rooms, listening to a nervous voice crack and reverberate across the studio floor. But at every turn, my fear of failure was met with friendship, with deep breaths and knowing smiles, with a glow that shone on everyone in proximity, even in our dark hours. The cast, directors and band, flexed and morphed, everyday evolving into something new and fascinating.

The group around me ran the range: some seasoned veterans, some taking on new responsibilities and, others with a familiar trajectory stepping out onto the stage for the first time. Yet despite our differences we all began the process of learning lines, getting comfortable and starting to sprout together. Days blurred into weeks, and with practice we all found our voices. It became so fluid that at times it was hard to tell where a character ended and a person began. This line between imagined story and actual experience was one that I tangled with regularly, occasionally throwing up my arms and surrendering to a declaration of “...must be musical-theater magic”.
As rehearsals progressed, the sky began to lighten, evenings walking out of the Dance Theater Fairbanks were met more and more with sunlight, signaling the upcoming move to the West Valley High School; the space that would house our family for a short but intense period. As we drew close to load-in the excitement was palpable, thick, yet a tension was building. Installing and erecting the set was a sight to behold. An incredible multi-level design, excellent lighting, textures, sight-lines, well thought-out, engineered, and expertly carried out. In my experience, in both family projects and in the architecture profession, there are few things so all-consuming as construction. This absorption is ideal when you are struggling to lower your blood pressure and pull your mind away from the impending doom that is you singing-on-stage for the first time.
Time distorted.  Months of three-a-week rehearsals, hundreds of hours of reading and memorizing, plucking away at a piano, compressed into the blink of an eye. Moments spent dangling from scaffolding, while a wall section was slowly hoisted into place, stretched on into eternity. Joining these talented voices, and able hands to erect and assemble our stage, our set, our HOME, consumed me. From rotations painting bricks during rehearsal to hands on screw guns and brooms alike, I hadn’t felt this united and close to any group before.

The Thursday before opening night the hammer finally dropped. Quite literally. Kurt exercised his directorial dictatorship and made me put the tools down. And I was plunged back into the land of “how did I get here”(s) and “greeeeeat... fuck!”(s)

I drew in a breath that would last three days.

No matter how much you prep mentally, those first seconds when you hear your voice resonate outside your body, amplified by electrons and magnets, is a bizarre and disorientating experience; one which aggressively causes a knee-jerk ‘flight’ reaction in me. At that first performance, had I a tail, you could consider it tucked. By the time ‘Places for act one’ was called, kneeled before my barf pail at stage right, I contemplated making a run for the hills. Bright lights dissolved temporary fears. Blocking replaced shakiness. Memorization and practice spread like a safety net.

The first weekend was a hot fire, shaping everyone, ironing out wrinkles, and forging the base of what was to come. Between moments of panic I looked up to see a cast unfold its wings. Saw it stretch out across a backdrop of very real and evolving emotion, and relax into exquisite verve and detail. Behind heavy curtains blossomed voices and cues. Props sprouted on walls and tables while tape marks directed traffic. Senses you didn’t know existed, surfaced and were honed. You learned to navigate without the visual clues, to hear a smile in the passing dark, detect tension in a vibrating air, and to clear the soupy awkwardness of a missed line or cue.
The set continued to gather our fingerprints and to be shaped by the desire lines of our feet. Events surrounded the performances - existing within the story, and out in the margins. Dancing in dark wings; Grinning across set pieces; Playing air instruments while soaking in the sound of a professional and incredible band playing mere feet away then watching it propel action on stage; Jokes in dressing rooms; Romance in back hallways; celebratory hugs in relief for lines remembered; Backs cracked; High fives slapped; Falls caught.
The action behind the action is a story upon itself, often rivaling the activity happening on stage. So many people come and see only what is presented, eyes never cast behind black flats or beyond foam bricks.

This is where realizations began for me. At first in small bursts, freed time to contemplate between lines, a phrase or a conversation in the show linking up with a scene experienced in real life. Little things harmonizing, inflections, attitudes, tones, the way a hand was clasped, an upturned eyebrow, a turned cheek...

And then something big happened. In the ramp up into the second weekend, on a Thursday night, the audience transformed. I’m not sure if it was the energy in the air, or a few organic occurrences, but something shifted. No longer were they antagonists, auditors or bearers of judgement, whose rulings in silence, laughter, applause or moos sentenced your fate. No, they became allies. Empathetic extensions of a story unfurling. Those wanting to watch an experience portrayed by others, to dip into the waters of remembrance, feel it soak into their own lives, and filter through their own emotions. People that have survived the passing of friends, family and lovers. Seasoned hearts and newly opened ones

This is what happened.
Each night “we begin…” Friends united, new relationships bloomed, old ones rekindled, homeless swore, middle fingers flew, squeegies wiped, change clinked in cups, cameras clicked, butts were slapped, kisses stolen, dances dropped, hips thrust, tears wiped, hands gripped, fists clenched, eyes closed, heels broke, lines ran and applause echoed on into silence.
Quiet battles were fought in apartments and wars waged in cafes, struggles between ideals and love. And each night mortality surfaced, sometimes invited other times forced. Friendships faltered, relationships weathered. Personalities grinding against and polishing one another. Coarse and smooth on raw material.

...and then loss.
For me this story is so well received because is not a story at all. Everything we represented on stage has already come to pass for people across times and space; for countless others, it has yet to. People have been lost to drugs, disease, violence, negligence and age; Some departing loudly in a flash of rage, and others passing silently, unnoticed. War, famine, strife, sickness, jealousy, hatred so many challenging shades for people to endure. But what we learned, found, lived, embodied is that Love has been forged despite all opposition, in the face of insurmountable challenge and odds.

Tom knew this risk and lived with it, thriving where others would falter. Roger usurped his chance, leaving love out of fear. In a twist of fate he was granted one last chance, one final song, and the opportunity to share where he’d previously been repressed. We all have this chance. Every day. To connect. To express. To either push one another away and risk loss without resolution. Or to embrace. To pull close those in need, and those that stand to compromise you in life or love. This gift isn’t to be taken or carried lightly.
Larson lit a candle so many years ago in writing RENT. One whose light continues to race outward expanding into a dark universe, connecting lives in the farthest corners of the map. This light, in dim auditoriums and theaters, fuels a fire illuminating minds and hearts; it glows on a stage speckled in faces, polished in love, soaked in tears, and warmed in hope. The ideas, music, emotions born and resonated here are part of what I see as a vast tapestry - one which I have been grateful to play some small part in weaving; a stitch at once connected and supported by so many others.

I consider myself to be among the luckiest, as should everyone, to be here. Alive. Growing. I’ll carry this idea to the ends of the earth and my time. We’re gifted in having another day to express love and appreciation. To share all that we can. No day but today. A mentality that once in your heart opens up a world of a rich color, vibrant sound and unfaltering love.
With more words and emotions than language can hope to capture, my heart goes out to all

Corey

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Buckland Construction Lessons


I'll admit, as friends have also pointed out, that most of my arctic trials and their subsequent posts have been about bathroom issues. Oh how I led such a charmed life down states*. Having an abundance of indoor plumbing at every rest stop, restaurant, house and public scene, divorces you from the need to plan your... Ok I need to get off that topic.

So Buckland.

Its day 18 for me here, day 35 for the project, and things are going swimmingly*

** CCHRC Lead Instructor Mike says I should point out that its not literally going swimmingly… yet. You see, where our accommodations are located is a low point in the area, which is in a village that guarantees one flood per year. During break up, ice jams up in a bend of the adjacent river, and these ice pieces - which can be as thick as 8ft and longer than 40ft (think frozen, drifting semi trucks) - effectively create a dam that leads to flood waters spilling into the adjacent lands. Enter our "work camp". As I mentioned it's low to the ground, and each day that the sun comes out more water from the neighboring yards melt and flow towards our home. Luckily for us right now it's creating a moat, but when the real flood comes… we may be swimming. Phew. Sorry that was a long detour **

At current:


The gravel foundation pad is in place. The Integrated house trusses are up. The windows have been installed. The metal siding is on and just a few short days ago we sprayed the insulation (think expanding foam in a can, but on a 55-gallon house-scale).
It was on the second and final day of my volunteered assistance to the spray foam tech that I learned a very valuable lesson about a very specific piece of clothing.

But please forgive me as I digress once more. The most important lesson I learned when I moved to Alaska is that thermal comfort is not only the key to survival it's the key to happiness.  Decide to go for a stroll on a -50 night after a few drinks and they'll find you with the other whiskey-sicles in the spring when the snow berms melt; it will have been peaceful, you just curled up in the downy white for a nap - a smile on your face and a fire in your belly. But try to go to the start of the Yukon Quest dogsled race in January in running shoes, and your friends will murder you to stop the complaining before your toes actually fall off. Wear the wrong coat on a bike-into-work-day and you'll spend the first 2 hours of your work day scouring the internet in order to assure yourself that exposing your crotch to an unbearable itching cold will not result in certain pieces falling off.  Or lately, trying to gauge what boot-liner-sock combination is appropriate for the job site? Too hot and you sweat resulting in trench foot (do a google image search of that one…), too cold and you'll spend most of you morning doing a sort or hopping, baby-steps walk to get the blood flowing.

Too much digression. The fact is: Garb is important here. Know its limitations and abilities.

Back to the learning experience.

A Tyvek Suit. Is anyone familiar with this particular article (well onesie really) of clothing? Imagine hazmat suits, ala Outbreak or Contagion. Step in, zip up. So for two days, 8-10 hours each, I wore one of these suits. The spray foam application process is a fairly caustic one. The foam is really a two-part mix, like an epoxy. The two liquids meet in the gun nozzle and compressed air sprays it against the wall. Here a chemical reaction is taking place with the atmosphere - the foam curing at temperatures in excess of 150 degrees. The fumes in addition to the stickiness of the foam result in the necessity for a Tyvek onesie, gloves, breather mask etc.
 

Because I harbor deep respect for the people doing this work, and would not wish the learning cure I went through on anyone, I will proceed to give away my lessons learned. They are as follows.

Things you CANNOT do in a full Hazmat suit:

1 Laugh. The mask will come up off your cheeks and you'll start breathing the brain-cell-killing fumes. Nothing is allowed to be funny here. Not even your stay-puft-marshmallow-man-moon-walk out to the CONEX to pickup a new pair of gloves.

2 Cry. Sprayin' foam isn't for sissies. No crying about that really tragic This American Life podcast you listened to about Harper High School in Chicago. Those tears will hit the front of your mask and freeze. Not being able to see is bad.
No crying in Hazmat
                                        

3 Use a rotogrinder with a wire wheel. Yeah I know this is specific, but those little wires want to make sweet love to the fibers of your XXL Tyvek onesie. And once they start mingling, you'll be stripped and have to spend the next hour picking your suit out of the bristles.

4 Eat Eggs. God, I cant emphasize this enough. If you eat eggs you'll break lesson 1 right away. Moving around in your suit will subsequently cause you to break lesson 2. As if the smell isn't bad enough by its lonesome, something about the methane particles LOVES the off gassing from the spray foam and the molecules combine in ecstasy to make a new scent that thankfully does not melt your suit off, as you'd expect it to. Picturing this makes you break Lesson 1, then 2 and the cycle repeats.

Enough of the negative lets look at the things you CAN do while wearing a Tyvek onesie/Hazmat suit:

0 Paint and not get stuff on your clothes. this is what the label basically says anyway…

1 Get to the front of the bathroom line at the City Office in Buckland. People see you coming from a mile away and don't want to even know why you need to go into the bathroom.

2 Get noticed. Something about the excessive fabric makes even the slightest clogging steps turn heads.

3 Do daring things. We all had our favorite childhood costumes. That special combination of elements that made us climb tall trees, jump gorges on our tricycles, or try to pull the cookies out of the high shelf; my suit happened to be a diaper, superman cape and cowboy boots - you know, the usual.

3a Be a ninja. It's not everyday that you're presented with a giant jungle gym. A jungle gym that you helped build. A jungle gym that you helped build, and that is begging to be explored.



It is in the ways of a ninja that you fully find your center of understanding, and that you realize the abilities, rather than limitations, of yourself; any 3-year old in a superman cape knows this.





*Down States is Village for L48 with is Alaskan for The first 48 states, which happen to be lower (but not necessarily lesser, as one cousin insists I point out)

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Life Audit, courtesy from a thief.


When I walked up on porch I thought something looked out of place. Its winter, Christmas Eve to be exact, and I see before me a scene with a twist.

Snow - check
Bench and firepit - check
Ailing sun on the cabin door - check
Frosty wood pile - check
Curtains poking through a window… che….
Glass on the porch. Crap



The first thought that crosses my mind is related to thermal physics: I let the cabin go cold while I was house sitting, is it possible for a rapid temperature change to depressurize a window to the point of glazing failure? Who knows; I bet my Uncle Bill would have the answer.

I unlock the door and go in the house. Yep glass inside, and a piece of firewood is in the kitchen. Welllll. Can it get so cold that a piece of wood flies up and smashes through a window?... probably not.

I look around stuff is generally tousled. Cabinets opened up. Items strewn about. [mental note: I have too much crap] And I realize that something is missing. Something biggish. I interact with fairly regularly. But I cant quite put my finger on it. Its like that one summer where we came home from school, sat in the living room, and stared at the spot where the TV used to be for five minutes before realizing it wasn't there…

The heater. That's whats missing. The little robot-looking guy that keeps me warm.
He used to look like this:

but now he looks like this


I look back and see the methhead-shaped hole in the window more clearly. Now with a fine toothed comb I make some startling discoveries. Other things are missing. It becomes apparent that this guy is a total amateur. Things like a power circ-saw are missing, a hand saw, a level, a roofing stapler; foolish one-dimensional tools… things that any old schmuck would buy.




The heater?! How lowbrow is that? I mean obviously you take the heaviest thing in the cabin not full of frozen food.



Any real seasoned thief would know that you go for rare items; things that you wont find in any ole cabin. Heck, everyone I know has a Monitor or Toyo heater - way to be original. You're never going to go anywhere in the illustrious world of theft stealing shit that everyone ALREADY HAS you Asshat

He missed the most valuable things in the cabin:

First of all Larry
Look out A1 Abrams! This guy can go anywhere. And at just 300k miles young why wouldn't you trust him to take you any place. PLUS he's got VSD (Variable Self-Deflating) tires, self draining fluids (never blow money on another oil change), and integral bow-flex (non-power-assisted) steering - don't ever let anyone tell you that you're not getting a workout while you drive or parallel park.


Gold Lamé Pants. I mean, for crying out loud. How obvious does it need to be for you?… they're made of GOLD!! you dolt.

More Textiles:
A quick peek into that green bag would have revealed:


An award-winning "Paper" costume - as voted by the highly publicized Pub Halloween Judges. And. A pair of Jeggings (which you simply CANNOT buy in Alaska or for 2,150 miles - the distance from Fairbanks to Capitol Hill in Seattle) that were featured in a haunted house in Fairbanks. I should mention that this particular haunted house was in the TOP TWO haunted houses in Fairbanks.

I think our guy might have been deaf. Or maybe just blind. In his frantic smash-and-grab he actually climbed over a priceless piece of history and hip-hop culture. Look closely at the photo below:


Yeah that's right a SHOULDER-MOUNT boom box. The kind that only takes 16D batteries and can jumpstart a VW. The kind that LL Cool J got so much ass with. And if you still doubt its value - just look at the BRIGHT GREEN PRICE STICKER. Clearly its worth at least $10. Do I need to spoon feed value to this guy or what?


Then there are the Artsy items.
shoot. The Great Alaskan Bowl Company robs people by selling these things, I'd at least like to think that they're worth stealing…no? well crud.
A custom handcrafted EPS foam guitar, featured and played one-time-only at J.Mae's birthday bash 2012.
A vintage Columbus Clippers Mini-bat circa 1993 - imported to Interior Alaska from the Midwestern United States.


As for culinary supplies… 
Does this guy even know how to cook? Has he ever eaten a day in his life? Maybe he just eats wood chips and moose tracks; in which case I'm just full of empathy.

On the left: a rubber grippy thing that cost some ridiculous price. The right: A planar; a borderline otherworldly device that unlocks hidden flavor in everyday foods - never before has cheese been shredded so finely, that even a gentle breath could melt it.

And finally. The most valuable items in the place. More valuable than gold pants. More valuable than heating oil. More valuable than vintage objects and custom guitars. Little jars of magic. That bottle of enzyme pills costs well over $30. That's like $4 a pill. Vanilla Extract. Does it really need an intro? It's the most versatile and substance on earth. It goes in cookies and, can be used as a solvent, is used to lighten smells in outhouses AND, I hear, you can even get drunk off it. The last item I surely expected to be missing, especially by a moose-shit eating criminal hoping to improve his culinary situation,
I T A L I A N   
W H I T E    T R U F F L E     
D I F F U S E D    
O L I V E    O I L
This stuff makes everything taste better. In Chicago, a pepperoni pizza blessed with truffle oil will run you three to four-hundred times as much as one with out it.
So in conclusion: I could have left a vial of saffron or a plutonium rod on the counter and it would have been as safe as if it were locked in a vault. (ref: http://www.businessinsider.com/most-valuable-substances-by-weight-2011-11?op=1)

So never fear Fairbanks, your most precious items are safe from this caliber of criminal. And if they aren't perhaps you should reconsider what you regard as valuable.