My odds are better when I don’t audition

It sounds counterintuitive, but it’s been true when it comes to me and Expressions Theater.

Years ago, I auditioned for Mind Over Matt and was cast in the main role. In the spring, I auditioned for Wage Warfare and got shut out. 50% success rate. That by itself sounds pretty good, right?

However, for this summer’s production of Everybody Loves Opal, we were scrambling for a cast: not enough people auditioned for all of the roles. I was supposed to be just an assistant director, but since I’d been reading the Brad role during rehearsals for everyone else’s sake, I ended up playing that part for the performances as well.

Then there’s the fall/Christmas show that Expressions is putting on stage in November. I was planning on taking some time off, just relax and enjoy the season without acting, working backstage, etc. I got an email about auditions for Trials, Tribulations and Christmas Decorations and promptly deleted it. Life was spiffy.

Then I got a random phone call one evening about a month ago. At least I thought it was random. Erin, the director from Opal and the assistant director for this show, was calling to ask if I’d accept a role in the play. (Cindy, someone who’s worked with Expressions in the past, was yelling in the background that I was accepting the role whether I wanted to or not.)

There are two males in the script: John (the main character) and his son-in-law, Dennis. John is supposed to be of grandfatherly age and four or five people auditioned for that role. With about an hour left of the second day of auditions, they were distinctly lacking in a Dennis. No 30-somethings showed up, so they called me.

I suppose I could interpret that as “We’re desperate, you’re at least a marginally okay actor and won’t make the show suck too bad.” I prefer to put a more positive spin on it: “We’re desperate, you’re a slightly-more-than-marginally okay actor and could make people not thoroughly regret the fact that they paid for their tickets.” It’s all about stroking my own ego, right?

And it turns out that my luck for lack of auditioning has continued outside of Expressions. I’ve mentioned playing trivia on Thursday nights here before, but I haven’t mentioned is that a lot of my teammates attend the same church. They’ve put on a production of Scrooge every year since… I have no idea how long. I’m guessing they started sometime after “A Christmas Carol” was written, but that’s the extent of my knowledge in that regard.

I also know that one of them is the director this year and she’s been sounding… reminiscent of Erin this summer when we were having trouble finding people to put Opal onstage. In this case, it’s because they’re having a problem finding male townspeople to sing and dance in the background for Scrooge. A MAJOR problem.

Because I remembered everyone’s distress this summer, I volunteered to help out. Up until the last few weeks before performance weekend, my rehearsal schedule for the show will entail about three hours every Saturday. Learning music and choreography… I think I’ll be okay. I hope. We’re doing this for a church, I’m sure God will forgive me if I totally screw up.

I discovered how big the problem was when I got to the church last Saturday. I had no idea where I was going, but I walked in the front door, followed some voices I heard in the distance, then got pointed in the right direction. When things finally got organized, we had all the townspeople in one room to practice choreography. There were 10, maybe 12 females there? And I was one of four guys. FOUR. When you need to have couples dancing and have to tell the girls, “Pretend there’s a guy here and a guy here”… that helps explain the tone of desperation.

So now I’m committed to two shows in the next few months when I didn’t audition for either. And if I could apply that luck to finding a girlfriend, I wouldn’t care nearly as much about what Cindy might be yelling in the background during a phone call.

Oh my God, it’s Aaron Starr!!!

We had a pretty solid second weekend of Wage Warfare. The guy in the light booth and I hit all of our cues, so I stayed within my quota of screw-ups. (Yay for me!) But alas, now the play is over and I haz a sad. I won’t see most of the cast until our DVD viewing party in about a month, at which time I plan to get everyone to autograph a poster so I can sell it for a lot of money when they all become famous.

I do have one tiny regret. One of the characters in the play is Aaron Starr, “an international superstar and music icon.” The director picked a guy named Kyle for the role in part because he could get up on stage and play guitar between scenes and during intermission. (Wage Warfare takes place over the course of a work week, so people needed time to change into new clothes for almost every scene.)

I consider the final intermission a missed opportunity because if I’d told people ahead of time, they could have recruited some friends and family members to carry out my sorta evil plan: While Kyle performed, have a bunch of audience members stand in front of the stage cheering and screaming, then start throwing very large pairs of women’s panties up at him. He might have felt like a music icon; he might have frozen like a deer in headlights; he might have panicked and sprinted out of the theater. Whatever happened, I’m sure his screaming fans (and those of us backstage) would have loved the show.

That was our cue! Hit the lights!

The first weekend of Wage Warfare went well. We had a decent audience for all three shows (they might have been larger had Winter not decided to rear her cold and snowy white head again) and there were no major flubs onstage. Honestly, I think I might have been part of the worst one.

In the program, I’m credited as “Creative Coordinator/Swing.” What those actually mean are 1) I made various suggestions to the director and he used about three of them; and 2) the musical theater term for “understudy.” The title I really wanted, the position I’m most proud of, is that of “Smoke Machine Guy.” And that’s where things got a little messy on Saturday night.

During one of our final rehearsals, I showed up late, but early enough that I was there to push the button and send fake smoke shooting out onto the stage (the first of five times). I heard my cue and pushed the button. Nothing happened. It made a nice clicking noise, but that was it. The director told me later that the machine takes seven minutes to warm up, so since then, I’ve always plugged it in as soon as I get to the theater. I figured I’d reached my quota of screw-ups at one, so I better get it right from then on.

Fast-forward to Saturday night. The smoke always accompanies a change in lighting… I like to think that the lighting change accompanies me, but I usually wait for the lights anyway. When I heard that first cue—the same one when the smoke machine didn’t work before—the lights didn’t change. I had one of those oh-crap-nothing’s-happening-the-lights-haven’t-changed-should-I-hit-the-button-anyway moments—I’m sure you’ve all had a few yourselves. (There was one person in the audience who saw the Friday night performance and had more of an oh-crap-nothing’s-happening-should-I-run-backstage-and-tell-them moment instead.)

I’m not sure if the actors onstage paused at that point or not. After hearing the cue and the lights stayed the same, I was too busy trying to decide if I should hit the button right away and let the lights accompany me for really real. Thankfully, they changed a few seconds later. I think it was a few seconds later. It might have been just one or two, but after getting the timing down during all the rehearsals, it felt like a long time.

But like I said, that may have been the biggest screw-up over the entire weekend, which I think says a lot about the actors and the play as a whole. For those of you who are interested in seeing a really funny show this weekend that has several bursts of fake smoke in it thanks to yours truly, you can still come to one of the remaining performances:

WAGE WARFARE
April 19-20 at 7:30 p.m.
April 21 at 2:00 p.m.

Lakeville Area Arts Center
20965 Holyoke Ave., Lakeville, MN 55044

The official Facebook event page

The official website to buy tickets online ($14.50 for any seat in the theater!)

Engaging in Wage Warfare in 5… 4… 3… 2…

Over the last month and a half, I’ve been working with a fun group of people rehearsing for a play that’s starting in 5… 4… 3… 2… yeah, two days. Today is Wednesday and the first performance is this Friday night. A quick summary of Wage Warfare:

If you’ve ever had a job, or wished you hadn’t, this office comedy is for you. Even on a good day, tensions run high in the customer service department of The Treasure Chest because two of the female coworkers can’t stand each other, and a third is constantly stuck in the middle. But when a chance for a promotion suddenly appears, all three women find themselves fighting for the job, although they don’t all fight fair. A madhouse free-for-all of schemes, sabotage, and unlikely alliances erupts, unseen by their idiotic boss.

Sadly, I’m not a member of the cast this time around. I know, pity party for me, right? In the program, I’ll probably be listed as “Creative Consultant,” “Assistant Stage Manager” or “Smoke Machine Guy.” (I’m leaning toward that last one.) Hey, we need some smoke puffing up in the background a couple times during the show and someone needs to push the button on the machine—it’s totally within my skill set, so I’m the man for the job!

I could probably be “Stand-in” or “Understudy” as well. One cast member who plays “UPS Guy” has had problems adjusting his work schedule, so during the last few weeks, I was filling in for him on stage. The director was talking about how we were about the same size and could use the same outfit, I needed to learn his lines… thankfully, he’s only in a few scenes, so it didn’t take me too long to figure out the cues, what to say and when to say it. However, he’s been at all the dress rehearsals and should have no trouble from here on out, for which I’m also thankful, but I’m not going to spoil anything by telling you why.

This week, I’ve been giving people high-fives backstage because, hey, team spirit! One person preferred a fist bump last night, which was cool. It wasn’t as cool a minute later when I found out I had to fill the role of a teenage girl who couldn’t be there because she was taking an ACT prep course. (Yeah, I don’t understand her priorities, either.) I had to say one line last night. One line. I said it backstage as soon as they told me and said it wrong, so he took his fist bump back and it made my hand very sad.

Up until now, it’s just been rehearsals. The real fun happens over the next two weekends. And now it’s time to promote the show! Because I don’t want you all to miss out on my mad-crazy smoke machine button pushing skills.

WAGE WARFARE
April 12-13 & 19-20 at 7:30 p.m.
April 14 & 21 at 2:00 p.m.

Lakeville Area Arts Center
20965 Holyoke Ave., Lakeville, MN 55044

The official Facebook event page

The official website to buy tickets online ($14.50 for any seat in the theater!)

Hope to see a bunch of you there!