Wednesday, April 08, 2020

Songs from a Photograph

It's interesting to see the direction that one's thoughts take while indulging in a bit of light convalescence.

After our encounter with the Painted Ones, I spent several days comfortably ensconced in the shade of Chak's wagon, staring at the blank silk canvas of its roof while I waited for my stressed and overheated brain to cool down. What I found it doing, in the meantime, was attempting to recite the entirety of Away from April from memory.

The original play - a rare departure in genre by the great Trachia Ghastie, better known for her murder mysteries - is famous in the realm of theatre for containing no actual events of any kind. The cast is an extended family gathered to sit for an old-fashioned long-exposure family photograph. All of the dialogue in the play is, in fact, the internal monologues of the various family members; their inner selves are free to move about the stage and speak, while the physical bodies of everyone not currently in the spotlight remain silent and stone-faced in their seats. Over the course of the play, the members of the family come to various realizations (singly or in tandem) about each other, themselves, and the nature of reality, all without actually moving a muscle or speaking a single word out loud to each other.

It is, like most of Ms. Ghastie's best-known work, a brilliant piece of psychological drama. That, and the solos-and-duets method in which it is performed, made it perhaps inevitable that it would eventually be adapted into a musical - in this case, by the equally brilliant Temesh Pondshine. The songs of the musical adaptation, in which the characters find their own thoughts taking them to unexpected places and providing unknowing counterpoint to the thoughts of their relatives, are among Pondshine's best.

My own knowledge of the show (aside from those few songs that one hears frequently from music halls and street performers, such as On the Other Hand and Where Have All the Nothings Gone) is thanks entirely to an amateur theatre production in Leopard's Weskit, a small town in the Mountainous Plains.

The quality of the production was nowhere near a professional level; the stage was the back half of a local ice cream shop,* not a single costume was the correct size, and the orchestra was a single elderly pianist who somehow contrived to play three keyboards at the same time. (I believe she had remarkably prehensile toes.) Still, it was clear that the cast and crew loved the show dearly, and they gave it their entire hearts, untrained as they might have been. It remains in my memory as one of the better stage performances I've seen.

I was lucky enough to be commissioned to paint the show's one solitary backdrop, a sepia-toned drawing room with a frame around it. (The director had the clever idea to stage the show as the photograph itself; through the use of colored lights, all of the seated actors were made to look sepia-toned as well, only coming into living color when they left the photograph and came downstage to sing.) As space was limited, I was also lucky enough to find myself painting the backdrop in the shop during rehearsals, with the happy result that I had the show entirely memorized before opening night. This did not, of course, prevent me from applauding from a front-row seat during the performance, though the director flatly refused to allow me to pay for a ticket.

I'd forgotten many of the songs since then, but I was glad, during my recovery in Chak's wagon, to find - with a little of that peculiar not-quite-looking-at-it approach that one uses to gently reel in half-forgotten dreams and memories - that most of them came back to me more or less complete.

I'm glad to have them back in the repertoire of music that I sing to myself while traveling alone (or, on occasion, with a musically inclined companion or two). A good song makes any road shorter.

---

* Named the Tasty Snowman and run by a former manatee trainer and his husband, the shop was well-loved for their charmingly twisted sense of humor (their sign proclaimed that their ice cream was "Served from the Heart!" and featured a snowman cheerfully taking a scoop of ice cream out of his own sternum) and their accidental success, on precisely one occasion, in creating nostalgia-flavored ice cream. Any residents in town fortunate enough to have gotten a taste were eager to reminisce about it to me at length - although none of them were able to describe how, exactly, nostalgia tasted, except that it was "a little too sweet, but in a good way." The shop was the most-visited business in town for six days, after which the single batch of nostalgia ice cream ran out. Subsequent attempts to recreate the flavor were uniformly unsuccessful. Most residents agreed, in retrospect, that this was entirely fitting.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

  • Stats Tracked by StatCounter