Our Last Summer MusicalA Chapter by Robert H. Cherny70k words; An amateur community theater summer music provides the vehicle that brings three teens closer to being adults and forces their parents to reveal and own up to their darkest secrets as the RCHAPTER ONE - - "Dad, I need a favor."
Thaddeus Rubinstein
glanced up at his daughter from
the print-out covering his old-school style drafting table and looked back
down. He was revising the computer generated lighting plot and floor plan for
the July Fourth Weekend Christian Music Festival. He keyed a number into a
spreadsheet on the computer next to the drafting table, clicked "Save"
and looked up. Debbie stood
patiently waiting for her father to finish. She knew that his job as a lighting
designer for conventions and festivals often took him away for weeks at a time
so she cherished when he was home working in his tiny office. Among her
earliest memories were the times she had spent in his lap while he explained
what all those funny little lines and symbols meant. She also knew that
interrupting his work was one of the fastest ways to make him angry and you did
not want to make her father angry. You don't spit in the wind. You don't pull
the cape of the old lone ranger and you don't piss off her dad. "Hey,
baby-doll, what's up?" Even though she was
sixteen, Debbie liked her dad still calling her "baby-doll" in
private although they both knew better than to mention it in public. The
protectiveness made her feel good. "Dad, I need a
favor." Tad loved his
daughter and would do anything for her, but he knew her body language well
enough to know whatever this favor was, he was probably not going to like it.
Tad met her eyes thankful that both of his girls looked like their mother.
Their son, Mike, looked like a huge version of him, but the boy's lack of his
mother's beauty did not seem to be a misfortune. Except for the last few months
when Mike could not get a date to save his life. Of course, Mike hadn't exactly
been aggressively out looking either. "What kind of
favor?" Debbie took a deep
breath. "A big one." He could see his
wife, Amelia, and younger daughter, Theresa, peeking around the door frame
watching. He was getting a really bad feeling. "Amelia, are you in on
this?" "Teddy, this is
important," Amelia answered, knowing his use of her proper name and not
her pet name, "Ami", was a sign her husband was already beginning to
resist. She knew he would pick up on her calling him "Teddy" and not "Tad"
like everyone else did, which meant this was as important to her as it was to
Debbie and if he resisted, he would have a fight on his hands. Tad looked at the
three most important women in his life and sighed. He had already lost whatever
battle this was and resigned himself to dealing with the consequences. "Theresa,
please get a pitcher of iced tea. We'll sit at the dining room table and discuss
this like reasonable people." Theresa took off. "He's
gonna do it," Theresa whispered to Mike as she detoured through the living
room. "No way,"
Mike said. He knew what the project was and had heard his father turn down
similar plans in the past. "Way. Dining
room table. Family chat," Theresa said. "Does he know
what Debbie wants?" Mike asked his fleeing sister. "Not yet,"
she said as she skidded around the corner. Mike put away his
e-reader and way too casually wandered into the dining room. Tad met his son's
eyes, which was not an easy task given that Mike towered over him, and said, "Do
you know what this is about?" "Yes." "Are you in on
it, too?" "Dunno, Dad, do
you want me to be?" Mike evaded the question. This was his sister's fight.
He would support her, but she needed to be the point person. "Should you be?"
Tad asked. Mike's unwillingness to give him a direct answer annoyed him. Mike rolled his
eyes, "Look, Dad, just because I'm the resident engineering geek does not
make me the only rational one in the family." He held his hands up in
submission. "This is Debbie's mess, not mine." They gathered at the
table and took their places. Tad collected his thoughts. Tad did consider Mike
the only rational one in the family, sometimes even including himself. Tad
smiled at his son. Mike would make a great dad someday. Some woman would be
lucky to land him, if he ever started dating again. "Debbie, since
I appear to be the only one in the dark, please explain," Tad said. "First, I have
a question. Before I ask what I want to ask, we don't even know if you'll be in
town. When is your next out-of-town job?" Debbie asked. "It's a dry
summer, even dryer than normal. I only have two jobs. The Christian Music
Festival I've done for the last ten years is July Fourth weekend here at the
Convention Center. I have one other show at the end of August in Las Vegas,"
Tad replied. "My summer is yours." "Dad,"
Mike interrupted. "Will we have enough money to live on if you don't have
work?" "I was planning
on talking to you on that subject. We may have to cancel vacation," Tad
said. Mike quickly read
his siblings for a consensus. "We're cool. A family project is better than
an expensive vacation. Especially since we fought most of the time on the
Alaska cruise we did last summer. We wasted a lot of money." "And Mike's
gone in the fall," Debbie reminded her father. "It's not like
you're going far. College is only two hours from here," Tad said, already
missing his son. "Out of sight,
Dad," Mike contradicted. "Out of sight, out of mind." "Well, Debbie,
I still haven't agreed to do this project of yours. What is it?" Tad
asked. Debbie looked at her
mother who nodded and motioned for her to continue. "Dad, the instructor
for the summer program at the arts center wants to do a full musical. We knew
what the show was and we've been working on bits and pieces, but he handed out
the revised scripts we'll be using for the first time this morning." "A full musical
in a summer program? Depending on the talent, it could be a stretch," Tad
said. "That's not it,
Dad. He wants to do this stupid show nobody's ever heard of. Who are Gilbert
and Sullivan anyway?" Tad smiled and said,
"Two of the best known creators of the light opera genre which later
developed into what we now know as musical comedies. Which one?" "Da-ad, you're
not helping. Why can't he do 'My Fair Lady' or 'Brigadoon' or something normal?" "I always loved
Brigadoon. It's a great show." Tad smiled and began singing, "Come ye
to the fair..." "Dad!"
Debbie exclaimed. "You're not helping." "Sorry, baby
doll, but it's up to him. He's the director. Which show are you doing?"
Tad asked. Mike's grin caught
Theresa's eye. She knew as much about the project as Mike did having seen the
rehearsals that afternoon. Mike confirmed her suspicions that this was setting
up to be a great summer. She hoped it would be as much fun as the summer they
all pitched in to help Tammy, their mother's employer, build a new studio after
the old one burnt down in a fire which had started in the restaurant next door.
Theresa remembered the care her father had taken to find new speakers for the
studio. He knew that these speakers had to be capable of running all day long
at high volume so the student dancers could hear the beat. She had been there
when the big truck pulled into the parking lot next door and two big guys
rolled out of the cab. She had been disappointed when she learned that the rock
star who owned the truck whose logo was emblazoned on the side was not coming,
just his truck. She had helped lug the speakers and amplifiers that had toured
with a dozen rock stars and now were being retired to the peace of a small town
dance studio. Debbie caught the
smile and knew her father was teasing her. "Some stupid show called 'Ruddigore'.
Have you even heard of it?" "It's one of my
favorites." Tad smiled with an old memory. He had done the show and knew
it well. But then, his memories of the show had mostly to do with the people in
it and one soprano in particular who made the show much more fun. "Da-ad!" Theresa swatted her
sister. "Stop whining!" Tad smiled at his
daughters before continuing. "It's a fun story." Tad paused
melodramatically. He put his hands over his heart and looked heavenward. "Oh,
the poor, misunderstood, not-so-evil Barons of Ruddigore beset by a witch's
curse to commit a crime every day or die in excruciating pain." He smiled
at a joke he did not reveal. "It's not particularly lofty or deep, but it
has opportunities for humor. We had a great time with it in college. I'm sure
whatever your director is doing has been done before," Tad said. "Dad, the play
is more complex than you give it credit for," Theresa said. "You have
the main love story of Ruthven and Rose and the two parallel love stories
between Despard and Margaret and Roderick and Dame Hannah. Not to mention the
triangle with Ruthven, Rose and Sailor Rick. For a piece of fluff, there's a
lot going on. He's completely messing it up." "It's not like it's the end of the world,"
Tad said. "It's an amateur summer musical. His adaptation can only be
awful. It won't kill you." "He's asked the
university drama recruiters to see it," Debbie said. "I'll die if
they see me in this. I'll never get into college. I'll be a laughingstock." Tad shook his head. "I've
seen a lot of bad shows in my day. How horrible can it be?" "What if they
see me in this and think that's what my acting is really like?" "College
recruiters see lots of bad directors. They look for the actor's ability to rise
above a bad director and still turn in a believable performance," Tad
said. "Do you really
believe that, Dad?" Theresa asked. "Yeah, I do.
Nothing ventured, nothing gained," Tad added. Mike interrupted. "Dad,
you should read the script. Debbie gave it to me when she came home from
rehearsal. I just finished reading it. She wanted an independent opinion. The
changes are pretty bad. After I read you the opening you'll understand." "Fire away,"
Tad said. Mike read from the
script. Stage
direction: The director appears on the open bare stage. There is no grand drape
and no scenery. The stage is surrounded in black drapes with only a pilot light
on an antique lamp pole with its frayed and patched cord running off into the
wings. A costumer's dummy stands in the downstage right corner of the stage
next to the proscenium. A witch's costume is draped over the dummy. A Styrofoam
wig head with a wig with long black hair sits on an adjacent table. "Sounds like a
hundred other projects," Tad said. "So far,"
Debbie said. Mike continued. The
director runs frantically around the stage carrying the light peering into the
corners and looking out over the audience. Mike looked up from
the script. "Dad, I know this is supposed to be a comedy but it is
becoming a travesty." "Just read the
script," Tad said. Mike read from the
script. The
director looks up into the control booth. Director
(shouting): Hey, you up there! Can we start the show yet? Director:
(claps hands for attention) Is your union break over? Tad sighed. "Who
is this guy?" Amelia answered, "He
used to be a ballet dancer until his knees gave out. He teaches English lit at
the junior college." Mike said, "Dad,
it gets better." Technician:
(shouts from the booth) Two minutes and ten seconds. "Nice,"
Tad said sarcastically. Mike picked up where
he left off. Director:
Can you at least blink the house lights so the audience will sit down? Technician:
House Manager blinks the house lights. We can't start without their approval. Director:
The House Manager is busy. We need to start. Technician:
no doubt Dealing with some patron who wants their money back. Director
storms off. House
lights blink. Stage
lights to half. Director
returns and takes the costume off the rack. He slips it over his head and
fusses over it, straightening it into place. He takes the wig and puts it on.
Picking up a hand mirror from the table, he preens before facing the audience. "Not exactly
the most original opening I've ever seen," Tad said. "I know it's
hard to believe, but I have seen worse." "Oh Dad,"
Theresa said in a simpering tone with her pinkie held in the air in what was
clearly intended to be an imitation of the director she had seen in rehearsal
that day. She jumped up from her chair and swished as she pranced in a circle. "Work
with me, here. Work with me, people." She shook her head, flailed her hands
and twitched her hips. "Theresa,"
Tad scolded. "That is not appropriate." "I'm afraid it
is," Amelia said. "He reappears at the beginning of Act II in a
Shakespearean era waistcoat with a codpiece attached that would make a porn
star look small." "And the strap
cuts up his butt," Theresa added. "Lift and separate," she said
with a giggle. "Butt cheeks for days! He's juth-t tho man-ly." She
held her hand up and flipped her wrist. "Just because
he has an alternate lifestyle does not mean he's not creative," Tad
retorted. "Dad, it's not
his creativity we're questioning. It's his sanity," Mike said. "Let
me read you the narrator's prologue." Director,
in witch costume: listen my children and you shall hear the story of an evil
midnight riding man who crossed the wrong woman in his lust for power. His sons
and their sons paid for his sins with their lives. Not all women are witches
and not all witches are women, but you don't know. Don't ask and don't tell, my
children! You must use caution young man lest the woman you seek be inclined to
do you ill. All you silly ones who follow vampires these days have no idea
where the real power lies. Foolish mortals all! A vampire may drink your blood
and give you a quick death, but no one can make you suffer like a wronged
witch, as we shall soon see. "It would be
one thing if he had a voice like James Earl Jones, but he sounds like a real
flamer," Debbie complained. "It's only a
little over the top," Tad said. "I've heard worse." "Dad, you must
have seen really horrible stuff if you've heard worse than this," Debbie
said. "You have no
idea how hideous some of the stuff was," Tad said. "When I was in
college, it seemed like the play writing classes had contests to see who could
be the most vapid and inane. Trust me. This pales by comparison." "Mom,"
Theresa asked. "Did you have to deal with the same kind of stuff Dad did
when you were in college?" "No,"
Amelia said. "There was no play writing program where I went to school,
but some of the modern dance got pretty strange. I know what your father is
talking about. Some of the shows at a neighboring college were horrid. Some
were brilliant, but you never knew." Mike read from the
script. Director:
carrying the curse of his ancestors, a young descendant of the evil baron,
madly in love with a maiden of the town, the beautiful and naive Rose MAYBUD
hides among the villagers in the small British seacoast town of Red Herring to
avoid the fate that has befallen the men of his line. Fade
off Director to full stage for opening production number. "Production
number?" Tad asked. Standing up so she
would not knock anything over, Debbie launched into her imitation of the
opening production number. Using an overwhelming amount of body language
considering she was restricted by the walls of the dining room, Debbie
described the opening dance number done to an instrumental version of "Ghost
Riders in the Sky" as she had seen it in rehearsal. While she gyrated
around the tiny open space, Mike read the concept description. Four
female ghosts enter from the wings on either side wearing white body stockings
and trailing long diaphanous fabric streamers. "Eight foam-enhanced,
amply endowed ghosts," Debbie elaborated. "Mostly the ghosts run
around the stage in circles trying desperately not to trip on the streamers." The
eight previous barons of Ruddigore enter the stage one at a time in reverse
order. The most recent one, Roderic, enters first from the house. The next six
enter from the wings, The barons greet each other in turn, some with more
civility than others. The last baron TO ARRIVE, Rupert, descends from overhead
amidst cat calls and curses from the others which he arrogantly ignores.
However much the other barons might not like each other, they all hate Rupert.
When Rupert enters from above, the others openly show their disdain for their
ancestor who caused them such pain with crude gestures. Rupert arrogantly
ignores the plight of his descendants. He is convinced of the rightness of what
he did in spite of the consequences. The dancers and the barons re-enact the
burning of the witch and the initiation of the curse. The witch points to each
baron in turn and they fall to the ground as if they have been stabbed in the
lower back. Their partners drag them off. When only Rupert is left, The witch
kills him and he ascends to the heavens defiant in his arrogance. The witch
disappears in a puff of smoke and the stage is dark. Tad paused in
thought. "It's an interesting take on the story. I almost like it. The
dance will be difficult to choreograph. I don't know how many people in the
audience will understand dance language enough to follow the story, but it's
worth a shot." "You actually
like this?" Debbie asked. "Not really,
but it's different," Tad said. He paused as a thought occurred to him. "That
theater's a hemp house, isn't it?" "Hemp house?"
Mike asked. Based on the
mystified expressions on his family's faces, Tad realized that none of them
knew the answer. Even though he had spent his life in a wide variety of
theaters and performance spaces, his children had not. There was no reason they
should necessarily know the answer to his question. "Ropes. There's no
steel in the rigging. It's all ropes," Tad explained. "If it's a hemp
house, and even in some theaters with steel rigging, there is not enough
structure to safely support the weight of a person on a line set. There are
ways to do it safely, but I seriously doubt your director knows the techniques." "Do you?"
Theresa asked. "Yeah, the
safest method is with a traveler track, but the most common is called a 'Peter
Pan' rig," Tad answered. "I've done it more than once." "Sounds like
fun swinging through the air like Peter Pan," Theresa said. "He's already
swinging," Debbie quipped imitating an elephant walk with her hips. "Until you drop
someone," Tad replied, ignoring Debbie's wisecrack. "Have you ever
dropped someone?" Mike asked. "Yes," Tad
said. "Do you want to
tell us?" Mike asked. "No," Tad
said, hiding his shame, trying once more to banish the frightening memory back
to his subconscious where it would quit bothering him for a while. Theresa quickly
glanced at her mother. Amelia turned away from her children at the same time
Tad looked down avoiding eye contact. Whatever secret he was hiding, she knew
about it. Theresa's curiosity was piqued by her parents' closed reactions. "But, you'll
help us," Debbie pressed after a moment of silence oblivious to her
parents' emotions. "This show sucks. Maybe you can beat some sense into
this flaming idiot's head. The entire cast would appreciate it." Tad paused before
answering. "I promise I will think about it, but you need to understand
there are valid reasons entertainment industry professionals like your mother
and I do not normally get involved with amateur productions. We can harm the
spirit in which the production is intended. We have different standards. We see
the work differently. It's not the same for us as it is for people for whom
this is fun. They don't have to be good to enjoy themselves. We have to be at
our best all the time, because in our business you're only as good as your last
show." "Do you think
being involved with this show could hurt your reputation?" Mike asked. "Probably not,
but if there's an accident, even if it's not our fault, yes, I think it could,"
Tad answered. The silence appeared
to last longer than it really did. Tad said, "Give
me the script, I'll read it tonight and we'll see your director tomorrow.
Debbie, what part are you playing?" "Margaret." "Really? How cool. We'll find out if you really can act. Should be a stretch for you. Margaret is so random and irrational unlike you, 'Miss Levelheaded All The Time, Thank You Very Much.'" Tad reacted to Debbie's distressed look and said, "You'll be fine." © 2013 Robert H. ChernyAuthor's Note
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Added on June 23, 2013 Last Updated on June 23, 2013 Tags: theater, concert, young adult, romance AuthorRobert H. ChernyKissimmee, FLAboutI have five e-books available on Club Lighthouse Publishing. Four of these are available on Amazon and Fictionwize. A sixth is due out shortly. My hobby is photography of birds and landscapes. more..Writing
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