Spike's Bitches 41: Thrown together to stand against the forces of darkness
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Amazingly enough, Caryl Churchhill I know. My best friend in high school was in a community theatre, and they did "Top Girls."
She was also in "Nunsense II." The same summer "Silence of the Lambs" was in theatres, and I slept in the sunroom. Stuff grew in our coffeepot and her cat ate my beta, Solzeneitzen. Good times.
Owen and Olivia's newest bath time game: Liv turns on the faucet and fills her little, plastic teapot up with water. She drinks from the spout and then spits the water on Owen. Both kids giggle madly.
Adorable and gross at the same time.
I forgot to say, "eek! Earthquake!" I had gone back to sleep after Persey's 8am follow-up at the vet (she's doing good) and was dreaming about someone trying to impress me with fireworks. The person (I forget who it was supposed to be now) had just said, "well if that doesn't wow you, how about THIS!?" and the ground started shaking. Then I was awake and the shaking turned into rolling. I looked over at the cat standing stiff-legged and staring at me like, WTF? D tapped on my door and said, "are you feeling this?" "Why isn't it over yet?" I replied- and then it was. From the construction site up the hill came a great whooping. It was the first one I was actually awake for most of so that's it. I don't need another earthquake.
I'm not surprised folks haven't heard of [Caryl Churchill]. She's a late 20th century playwright. Amazing stuff, a very strong woman writer. It's a shame that she and others like her are not better known.
Eh, I kind of don't love her. Mind you, I've read several of her plays, but never seen them performed - that probably makes a difference. I have a collection of her plays here, actually - I'll have to check them out again & see what I've been missing.
Meanwhile, a mighty THANK YOU to whoever it was (maybe omnis?) that suggested the icecream ball to meara as an amusing thing for her beach date, a while ago. Thanks to that link, I now own an icecream ball! And can make my own icecream!
And it is TEH YUM!!!!
I think Churchill is hard to read, but I worked on A Mouthful of Birds and it was quite profound.
I have had a little bit of exposure to other playwrights.I find that Shakespeare is easy for me to see. and then some of the more modern /absurdest/minimal plays are ok ---but the closer they are to real,the more that feels missing from a play. I really find it hard to read most plays.
My father used to read me Shakespeare as my bedtime stories when I was under 10. I don't have a distinct memory of his plays in high school, but I know we did As You Like It when I was in 8th grade at a private school.
I also grew up with a Shakespeare in the Park company near my house. Back then it was free and you could watch rehearsals. Over the years it became more popular, started charging and eventually had to move because it outgrew it's humble beginnings which marked my childhood.
I had an earthquake too!! It was SCARY! For me. Cause I had never had one. And half of us in the room (on the third floor) were like "Um, eep! Earthquake! What do we do!" and the rest of the people were Californians and all still sitting down going "oh please...[um, wait...still going....kinda big...um...we should...oh, ok, it's over. Whew. Didn't lose my cool. I'm still lookin' smooth.] CHILL, East Coasters!"
Then we decided that meant it was time for lunch.
Also, apparently the company I work for is hiring ALL the lesbians. Not only was the woman I worked with last week gay, the woman who is training with us this week, who turns out to live all of a mile away from me? Gay gay gay. Hah!
but the closer they are to real,the more that feels missing from a play. I really find it hard to read most plays.
Wow. That's very interesting.
I lovelovelovelove Neil LaBute's
Latterday Plays (Iphigenia In Orem, A Gaggle of Saints
and
Medea Redux,
iirc). And I'm very fond of Patrick Marber. Love Mamet's ear for dialogue, but quite often want to smack him in the face with a heavy object. (Although I just read
Duck Variations
and found that very likeable.)
I remembered our new security system is operational moments after I tried to beat a stapler into submission. I hope there's no camera in this office. Stapler assault is a misdemeanor, right?