I’ve had many
part-time, temporary jobs over the years, but none harder than Costume Director for a small community theater production. I was paid what I was worth (a bag of
chocolates, I think it was), so no one really had the right to complain about my
performance. But surprisingly, they did.
The play was called
“The Quick Change Room,” and my job was to coordinate the costume changes
backstage. Whoever volunteered me should have known better: you don’t give this
job to someone who is easily distracted, likes to chat, and can’t see well in
the dark. Focused, silent, eyes like a cat—these are the stuff. And the more
amateur the actors, the more at stake. This particular troupe took great pride
in their entrances onto the stage (which were, I’m sorry to say, usually better
than the acting they did when they got there).
The job requires
precision. Prepare for complaints. “Next time, unzip the black dress before you stick it over my head.” “Leave the
top two buttons of the skirt undone—I have big hips.” “Could you just sand the
soles of my shoes? I slip every time.” And my favorite: “You need to set the
hat eight inches to the left—I’m used to grabbing it there.” There were also
dangers. Two actors came to me breathing murderous threats against each other; the
issue was (I am not making this up) a shoelace hole. As the saying goes, there
are no small parts, only short fuses.
I trouble-shot and
fumbled my way through five performances and at the end of each, while the
actors were out celebrating, I checked and rechecked zippers, repaired rips,
ironed undergarments, hung slumps of dresses back on their hangers, and rinsed
out the armpits of the men’s shirts. The bag of chocolates didn’t last long.
Half-way through the
first performance, I knew this was not the career for me. There’s no future in
a field where you are the personal pin cushion of a prima donna. There’s no
workplace pride when a misplaced boot forces an improvisation that ends with an
actress in tears.
The irony in all this
was that “The Quick Change Room” is a comedy taking place in a dressing room.
The setting is a Russian theater. The troupe, and the country as a whole, is
transitioning from communism to capitalism. The laughs come as characters
bumble and hustle in and out of costumes, agonize over missed cues, and bemoan
the public’s changing tastes. In the end, they turn Chekhov into a
Broadway-style extravaganza, and the place sells out.
I can’t recommend it
for the whole family (there is one scene that has, uh, no costumes and is
rather…hippy), but it is a very clever play. And I learned a lot. Some
fascinating discussion took place in the (real) changing room. The best actor
was a big bearded Italian with a host of family anecdotes and a loud, happy
voice. Joe was actually the one responsible for the lost boots (he had left
them under his dressing table), and he graciously apologized, which was no
small consolation amid the slings and arrows I was dodging. Joe liked to call
attention to his orientation. He talked about his “crush on this cute guy at
Walgreens," and he liked to describe features of the culture he hung out in.
One actress bantered back and forth with Joe about their lifestyle differences.
She was the mother of four. So was I. One night Joe said, “Do you know what we
call women like you? Breeders.” The actress laughed, and I felt
curiously unoffended. I liked Joe. He was nice to me. He was polite about
buttons, and he sprayed all the shoes with Febreze. He meant no harm. He was simply
offering a glimpse into a social order that he himself didn’t seem to take all
that seriously.
To tease out a
metaphor: We are in a quick-change room, and rehearsals aren’t going well. It’s
not exactly a family-friendly show. Apparently a new world order is afoot and
we're all expected to shift a little to the left.
I am a mother (of an
admittedly wild brood), not a politician or pundit, and most of my job is done.
The hustle and fumble and forced improv was worth it. I couldn’t ask for a
better role. I’ll admit that, as the show goes on, I worry. But I have heard
that the director is very good and, as he is wont to do, will flawlessly pull
it off in the end.
Your writing is beautiful, Rhonda. Love the controlling metaphor and highly descriptive detail.
ReplyDeleteI, too, am a mother of four. Your ending is perfect! So is His.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting read; entertaining leading into thought-provoking.
ReplyDeleteI just wanted to recommend to you that, based on this real-life experience of yours, you should look into the movie "Noises Off", about the cast of an upstairs/downstairs comedic play. The play is presented I think three times in the movie, and each time it is less about what's happening on the stage, and more about the drama off-stage. T&I were just saying the other day, that may be the funniest movie we've ever seen.