The Quidditch World Cup is this coming Sunday. Games will be broadcast live at: http://www.collegequidditch.com/wc/ from 9:45am to 6pm (Eastern Time), in case you feel inclined to watch. I think it will be great fun!!!
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Wyatt Earp has Alopecia!
Egads! It’s been quite a while, hasn’t it? My life has been out-of-control busy, but I’m on October Break now, inside and watching football (only getting the Vikings game, unfortunately, but hopefully I’ll get to watch them lose…) on a cold, drizzly day, and it seemed like it was time for an update.
This semester has started… stressfully. But, as is usually the case, everything is working itself out for the best, I think. At the very beginning of the semester were auditions for Drama Department shows, and I went in with very high hopes since we’re doing RENT and a Streetcar Named Desire, both shows I adore. Plus the third show, Haarlem Berlin, is also a musical, so it was an exciting time to be auditioning. Of course, that made it all the more devastating when I got cast in nothing. Nothing. Well, that’s not entirely true, I got cast as the Assistant Costume Designer for Haarlem Berlin. But, while I enjoy costuming, it wasn’t exactly what I wanted to be doing production-wise this semester. However, my friend Andi was cast in the ensemble of Haarlem but had to drop out do to scheduling conflicts and they asked me if I was interested in taking over her part. I was.
Haarlem Berlin is an original musical written by one of the professors here at Vassar, with music by a guest artist. It was directed by a guest director from NYC. The music was beautiful (I have it on my computer. If you’re interested in an original cast recording, let me know), and unlike anything I’ve ever done before. And the process itself was taught me a lot about what it’s like to workshop a new show. The cast was a great group of people, and all in all I had a great time. We performed the first weekend in October, which means September was extraordinarily hectic, but it freed me up in time to get involved in student shows here, too. So I’m currently in a show called Our Hearts Were Young and Gay. It’s very lighthearted and hilarious. It’s set in the 1920s, and is about two 19-year-old girls, Cornelia and Emily, who go to Paris and have all sorts of absurd misadventures. I’m Emily, and I’m having a wonderful time. Rehearsal is probably my favorite part of the day.
In other news: Fencing is going really well. I’m the most experienced female sabre fencer on the team, which I was really worried about because it means I’m in charge of getting the girls ready to compete, I’ll be in charge of the roster/substitutions during tournaments, I’m expected to help coach them a little, etc. and I feel like I’m still learning so much myself that I wasn’t sure if I was ready to give other people advice. But the Alumni Match was the other weekend, and not only did I win undefeated, but I realized that I did have a lot of tips to offer the other girls. I’m pretty sure our squad is going to get killed at tournaments, but I think we’re going to have a fun time anyway, and I’m actually excited to be able to help them the way that all the previous sabre girls helped me.
The Quidditch World cup is next weekend, and it’s going to be incredible. Our team is phenomenal this year! And there are going to be 24 teams there from all across the country, and I think one from Canada. International. Awesome. I’ll let you know the results when we get back!
In other academic news: I love my classes, as usual. I’m taking Sources of World Drama, which I enjoy immensely most of the time. We’re reading drama from a time well before the women’s rights movement, however, and I’ve gotten a name for myself as the girl who always brings up feminism. Ah well. It’s just like being back in high school in Fort.
I’m taking a Seminar in Paratheatre, which is the study of everything theatrical that is not theatre. For example, religious ceremonies, sports games, and even everyday conversations, given that one behaves (or performs) differently depending on who they’re talking to (the audience). It’ very fascinating, but I sometimes feel like I’m beating my head against a wall because a main premise of paratheatre is that everyone has an individual definition of what constitutes a performance, so discussions can get very circular.
Because my semester would not be complete without a class where I do yoga, lie on the floor and breathe, play acting games, and other strange things that I often think it’s funny I do in college, I’m also in the Actor’s Voice. So far my favorite days have been the one where we learned tongue stretches (I often catch myself doing them in public now, which would make my professor proud, but is more than a little weird…), and the day where we got to look at our own and others’ soft palates and learn how to lift them correctly. It was one of the most unsettling things I’ve ever seen, but it’s actually been really helpful, especially for voice lessons.
Speaking of, voice lessons started off a little rocky this semester because I’ve been so busy and wasn’t able to practice as much as I should have. However, now that my life is a little more calm, things are going really well. I’m singing some wonderful songs, including The Lonely Goatherd from The Sound of Music, because I’m a huge dork, but it’s SO MUCH FUN! My friend Charlie and I really want to do a senior recital together and we want to sing the Edelweiss duet. I’m so glad I’ve found someone else here who knows how to appreciate The Sound of Music.
I need to go apply to my abroad program in New Zealand now, because I’ve been putting that off for far too long. But I hope you are all well and enjoying the early snow! I know I am!
This semester has started… stressfully. But, as is usually the case, everything is working itself out for the best, I think. At the very beginning of the semester were auditions for Drama Department shows, and I went in with very high hopes since we’re doing RENT and a Streetcar Named Desire, both shows I adore. Plus the third show, Haarlem Berlin, is also a musical, so it was an exciting time to be auditioning. Of course, that made it all the more devastating when I got cast in nothing. Nothing. Well, that’s not entirely true, I got cast as the Assistant Costume Designer for Haarlem Berlin. But, while I enjoy costuming, it wasn’t exactly what I wanted to be doing production-wise this semester. However, my friend Andi was cast in the ensemble of Haarlem but had to drop out do to scheduling conflicts and they asked me if I was interested in taking over her part. I was.
Haarlem Berlin is an original musical written by one of the professors here at Vassar, with music by a guest artist. It was directed by a guest director from NYC. The music was beautiful (I have it on my computer. If you’re interested in an original cast recording, let me know), and unlike anything I’ve ever done before. And the process itself was taught me a lot about what it’s like to workshop a new show. The cast was a great group of people, and all in all I had a great time. We performed the first weekend in October, which means September was extraordinarily hectic, but it freed me up in time to get involved in student shows here, too. So I’m currently in a show called Our Hearts Were Young and Gay. It’s very lighthearted and hilarious. It’s set in the 1920s, and is about two 19-year-old girls, Cornelia and Emily, who go to Paris and have all sorts of absurd misadventures. I’m Emily, and I’m having a wonderful time. Rehearsal is probably my favorite part of the day.
In other news: Fencing is going really well. I’m the most experienced female sabre fencer on the team, which I was really worried about because it means I’m in charge of getting the girls ready to compete, I’ll be in charge of the roster/substitutions during tournaments, I’m expected to help coach them a little, etc. and I feel like I’m still learning so much myself that I wasn’t sure if I was ready to give other people advice. But the Alumni Match was the other weekend, and not only did I win undefeated, but I realized that I did have a lot of tips to offer the other girls. I’m pretty sure our squad is going to get killed at tournaments, but I think we’re going to have a fun time anyway, and I’m actually excited to be able to help them the way that all the previous sabre girls helped me.
The Quidditch World cup is next weekend, and it’s going to be incredible. Our team is phenomenal this year! And there are going to be 24 teams there from all across the country, and I think one from Canada. International. Awesome. I’ll let you know the results when we get back!
In other academic news: I love my classes, as usual. I’m taking Sources of World Drama, which I enjoy immensely most of the time. We’re reading drama from a time well before the women’s rights movement, however, and I’ve gotten a name for myself as the girl who always brings up feminism. Ah well. It’s just like being back in high school in Fort.
I’m taking a Seminar in Paratheatre, which is the study of everything theatrical that is not theatre. For example, religious ceremonies, sports games, and even everyday conversations, given that one behaves (or performs) differently depending on who they’re talking to (the audience). It’ very fascinating, but I sometimes feel like I’m beating my head against a wall because a main premise of paratheatre is that everyone has an individual definition of what constitutes a performance, so discussions can get very circular.
Because my semester would not be complete without a class where I do yoga, lie on the floor and breathe, play acting games, and other strange things that I often think it’s funny I do in college, I’m also in the Actor’s Voice. So far my favorite days have been the one where we learned tongue stretches (I often catch myself doing them in public now, which would make my professor proud, but is more than a little weird…), and the day where we got to look at our own and others’ soft palates and learn how to lift them correctly. It was one of the most unsettling things I’ve ever seen, but it’s actually been really helpful, especially for voice lessons.
Speaking of, voice lessons started off a little rocky this semester because I’ve been so busy and wasn’t able to practice as much as I should have. However, now that my life is a little more calm, things are going really well. I’m singing some wonderful songs, including The Lonely Goatherd from The Sound of Music, because I’m a huge dork, but it’s SO MUCH FUN! My friend Charlie and I really want to do a senior recital together and we want to sing the Edelweiss duet. I’m so glad I’ve found someone else here who knows how to appreciate The Sound of Music.
I need to go apply to my abroad program in New Zealand now, because I’ve been putting that off for far too long. But I hope you are all well and enjoying the early snow! I know I am!
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