Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Acting, by Will Stanton


The word “acting” first brings to mind theater acting or perhaps movie acting.  I, however, briefly considered delving into a deeper subject.  I always have been fascinated with human minds, and I have been aware that people often put on acts in front of others throughout their daily lives.  William Shakespeare wrote,All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players.”

The degree of acting varies greatly from person to person depending upon his perceived situational needs and depending upon his own nature.  I, for example, don’t care to engage in artifice; I’d rather be just who I am.  Acting takes too much effort, and perhaps I’m just too simple-minded to be clever at it.  Others, however, are like chameleons, saying and doing anything and everything they deem necessary to attract and influence other people.  An extreme example of that is the last three (especially Republican) presidential primaries.  Many people enthusiastically succumb to such manipulation, but I am repulsed by it. 

So, rather than my being repulsed and spending time talking about the vagaries of human nature, I’ll return to the more enjoyable subject of theater acting.  Here are a few snippets of theater occurrences from my early days.

My first experience being in a play was at age seven.  My elementary school was run by the local university, which provided student teachers with an opportunity to practice by assisting the regular teachers.  One young lady wrote “The Marshmallow Mushroom.”  I was an elf name “Muffin.”  I was a very competent elf.  I enjoyed the experience and still have the script secreted somewhere with all my keepsakes.

Two years later, the university was celebrating the sesquicentennial of its founding, and they had commissioned Alan Smart to write an historical play called “The Green Adventure.”  I played a pioneer lad.  Ever since that time, I never have looked at the script, but I have that one, too.

Of course, I participated in the infamous genre of high-school plays.  The usual botches and glitches occurred in all of them: forgotten lines, mixed-up scenes, stiff acting.  I was sufficiently unimpressed with our productions to remember them today.

I’ll never forget, however, what happened to my oldest brother.  That class put on the famous “Annie Get Your Gun.”  My brother was cast as Buffalo Bill.  The problem was the audience never did figure out who he was.  That is because the lead actor totally forgot his first-act lines and kept repeating the lines from the end of the second act to the point where the rest of actors just went ahead and skipped half the play.  So by the time my brother wandered onto the stage wearing a cowboy hat and a quizzical grin, no one knew who he was.  That role did not lead my brother to a career in Hollywood.

At the same time, the girl destined to become my brother’s wife was participating in a high-school play in Katonah, New York. They were performing “Arsenic and Old Lace.” As you recall, the loony brother who thought he was Teddy Roosevelt always assumed the responsibility of taking the supposed “victims of yellow fever” to the basement to be buried.  The stage was built three feet above the main floor of the auditorium, and a trap door provided access to the space beneath.  The play director decided, having no stairway to a basement that the trap door would suffice as the apparent entrance to the basement.  Of course, when “Teddy” dumped his victims down into the basement, they had learned to bend their knees to simulate descending into a deep basement.  During the first act, the trap door was covered with a carpet.  The problem was that, during the first act, the carpet was there, but someone had forgotten to replace the trap-door cover.  So in the midst of the first act, an unsuspecting student-actor walked across the carpet and immediately slowly sank three feet down into the floor where he remained standing, torso and head above the floor, and wearing a very surprised expression.  Fortunately the play is meant to be a comedy, however, the howls of laughter from the audience came at an unexpected time.

I tried participating in just one play as a college freshman.  The theater department had a good national reputation, so I thought that I would see what it was like.  I played the servant “Mishka” in “The Inspector General.”  I don’t recall seeing any mention of me in any newspaper rave reviews.  Apparently, I didn’t have the immediately recognizable attributes of stunning stature, handsome looks, and captivating voice to merit much attention.  The young stud who starred in “The Fantasticks” was a corn-fed Kansas boy whose natural talent and good looks guaranteed the role, even without any prior experience.  Apparently, I was destined to play character roles such as servants, extras, or just one of the elves.

There is one charming play that I sentimentally recall.  Although I never had the pleasure to be in it, I saw a wonderful production of it by my university theater department and, later when I arrived in Denver, by the young students at Arapahoe Community College.  The play was “Dark of the Moon,” a folk-play about simple back-woods people living in the Smokey Mountains.  Although the theme and setting may seem too antiquated for these modern times, it was remarkably popular for many years from the 1940s through the 1970s, so much so that up-and-coming actors such as Paul Newman eagerly wished to be part of the play. 

The story in a “nutshell” was that “John Boy” fell in love with “Barbary Allen,” a beautiful girl previously never seen in those hills.  It turns out that she is a witch-girl with no soul and who lives three hundred years, after which she turns into Smokey-Mountain mist.  Of course, the story has love, rivalry, and tragedy.  There also were occasional scenes at the general store with the old folks sitting around the pot-bellied stove with their musical instruments and singing Appalachian ballads that coincided with the story.  I became so fond of the story that I bought the script to read, twice, once because I loaned a copy to a friend who failed to return it. 

Now that I have reached my dotage, I recall “Dark of the Moon” with sardonic humor.  That is because I recall the youngsters of Arapahoe Community College doing their best to imitate the elderly, they themselves never having experienced the stiffness, pain, and other afflictions of old age.  They did their best, but somehow, they just did not look convincingly old.  And, I don’t think that additional experience acting would have made any difference.

© 2 Aug 2012 

About the Author 

I also realize that, although my own life has not brought me I have had a life-long fascination with people and their life stories.  particular fame or fortune, I too have had some noteworthy experiences and, at times, unusual ones.  Since I joined this Story Time group, I have derived pleasure and satisfaction participating in the group.  I do put some thought and effort into my stories, and I hope that you find them interesting.

No comments:

Post a Comment