"There
are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The
other is as though everything is a miracle." - Albert Einstein
We
both felt a little ill, slightly nauseous, with grumbling, roiling tummies and
headaches that make you pay attention and not move too quickly or too far. We
both felt that helpless anticipation of unknown food poisoned doom.
Perhaps
it was the heat, or the Mexican food, or the Indian food, or the Thai food, or
the unidentified lunch objects from the conference I had spoken at that day at
the Ritz Carlton where hotel rooms cost $649 a night and where we did not stay.
It certainly was not – and I repeat was not – the empanadas from Julia’s
Empanadas, my first stop when we had gotten to town.
A
few days in our Nation’s Capital – once my home for over 20 years and now not –
and Emma and I were exhausted, spent, queasy, though after an afternoon at my
old stomping ground, the Andre Chreky
Salon, our fingernails and toenails looked smashing and I was sporting new,
slightly Groucho-reminiscent eyebrows. So we might have been sick, but
stylishly so, adorned in OPI’s I Love This Color
and, in Emma’s case, a lovely oil slick color of dark blue.
We
had fallen onto our hotel beds at the
end of the day, sweaty. “How’re you doing?” I asked a little while later, the
drone of the air conditioner creating a freezer that held me in some fine molecular
stasis. “Harph…” I heard her groan. “It’s time to go if we’re going to get to
the Kennedy Center on time," I offered weakly.
“We’ve got to catch a cab now if you want to go.” It was one of Those Moments When
You Know What You Really Want To Do Is Sleep Or Be Put Into A Medically Induced
Coma until the sick wears off, but then again, too much of life is sleeping already
and it’s not every day you can go see “Macbeth” at the Kennedy
Center, and for free.
Our
options at this Very Moment In Time were narrow and narrowing the longer we lay
prone. It was clear that eating dinner was out of the question. We both felt
too ill and knew that the next morning our 4:00am wake-up call for our 6:00am
flight would come awfully early. Best not to tempt the gods of further food
poisoning, given how we felt. “I don’t know,” she said quietly. “I don’t feel
so good.” “Me neither.” “I don’t know, what do you want to do?” “I don’t know,
you?” we softly lobbed the decision back and forth, eyeing each other with our
one good eye to see who would give us the out to stay in our meat locker until
morning.
We
each suffered in our own silence for a few more moments, the cool sheets
feeling good, like a cold bathroom floor feels good when you’re spending some
significant amount of time in there, well, you know.
It
was 5:25pm. If we had any hope of making the 6pm show, we’d have to leave now. There’s little I hate more than being late. “I
really want to see it,” we both said, and stumbled to our feet.
Once
outside, the hot air felt like an assault. “I need a ginger ale and some
saltines,” I said. Instead, we got slowly into a cab, one with air
conditioning, blessedly, and made our way through rush hour traffic to the Kennedy Center, each lurch of the cab sending us
into deeper concentrated effort. “Look at the horizon,” I whispered frantically
to Emma. “Just look at the horizon.” If it works on ships in typhoons, surely it would work
in a D.C. cab in rush hour.
Before
we had left home for D.C., I had checked the Kennedy Center website to see what was playing. Perhaps we could see an interesting show while
in D.C.– we used to take Emma to the Kennedy Center all the time for shows when
she was little, followed by taking photos of low-flying helicopters over the
Potomac out back on the Center’s wide, low terrace. She loved it until she got
bored with it: “Aw, no, not the Kennedy Center again,” she would wail
sometimes. Our protests that most kids never even see the Kennedy Center fell on deaf ears.
Irrelevant to a six-year-old.
The
Millennium Stage was completely empty when we got there. “How can that be?” I
asked, peering at the chairs cordoned off, struck dumb by their emptiness. “I
couldn’t have made a mistake—I know
it starts at 6pm.” I stood looking at the stage as if staring was a change
agent and suddenly Macbeth would appear. In my weakened state, I was completely
befuddled.
“Mom,”
I finally heard Emma say behind me. “Mo-om!” I slowly turned to look at her,
not willing to risk sudden movements. “There’s where everybody is going,” she
said, pointing. I turned further to peer at the other end of the long overly
red hall in The Kennedy Center, past the gigantic gnarly head of John F.
Kennedy to another Millennium Stage, the one with large hordes of people around
it. We were too late. There were no more seats, and the crowd kept growing,
pinning us against the crowd barrier, the red rope keeping the
seatless masses
in line. “I need a ginger ale,” I said again, buying us two ginger-ale-like Sprites
which we both held, reflexively, against our temples and our necks.
The
efficient red-coated ushers looked nervously at the ballooning crowd of us
miscreant latecomers. One in particular seemed agitated by the size of our army
and moved from side to side peering into the crowd. As the show started, the
action mercifully projected onto a large screen for the masses, the Efficient
and Troubled Usher moved to our side. “I can take six people,” she said,
looking our way. Suddenly, a huge swell of people swallowed us up and pushed
me, Emma, and our chilly, mercifully bubbly Sprites aside. The lucky six with
the strongest arm muscles were numbered and chosen, like those small children
in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,
it seemed to me, pushing their way into the chocolate river and turning into
purple bubblegum. Emma, in this moment of insight, was – of course – dear sweet
Charlie, quietly standing aside, I her simple quiet precious Uncle.
The
show was a production of
“Macbeth” by the Tiny Ninja Theatre Company, founded in 1999 by director
Dov Weinstein. "I had noticed that there were these tiny plastic ninjas in
vending machines all across the city," says Weinstein, "but no one
was using them to perform classical theater. Something had to be done."
Once I read that statement on the Kennedy Center website, I knew I wanted to go.
What could be better? As
one reviewer wrote, “Toward the end of Tiny
Ninja Theater Presents Macbeth,
the title character muses, ‘There's nothing serious in mortality. All is but
toys.’ And thank goodness. While an audience of 10 or so scopes the
briefcase-size stage through cheapo opera glasses, Dov Weinstein puts a troupe
of inch-high molded plastic ninjas through the motions of the Scottish play.
Performed briskly and with limitless confidence, the show delights with
surprising stagings and hilarious bits of literalism. When Macbeth intones, ‘Stars
hold your fires!’ Weinstein turns the light out; when a ninja proclaims, ‘But I
am faint,’ Weinstein knocks him over.” [If you are Ninja-friendly or a Billy
Shakespeare fan, on June 13-14 at 6pm EDT, you can watch a live
Internet broadcast of the Tiny Ninja Theatre’s “Romeo and Juliet.” Only
available live at 6pm on those dates; these performances will not be archived.]
Ever since I saw Rich Hall do skits with tiny
plastic people and trees that he set up inside stereo speakers on the
short-lived David
Letterman morning show in 1980 (turn the speaker on – instant earthquake),
I’ve been a sucker for quirky and small plastic figures. Add Shakespeare and I
have to be there. Perhaps it is the juxtaposition of high and low culture,
serious and funny, like the amazing comic book, Mom’s Cancer, pitting a comic form
with a deadly topic.
We prepared to stand, Sprite-ready, for the
duration. Emma looked particularly Scottish that evening, her dark curls
against pale, pale skin and blue, blue eyes. Feverish? Nauseous? Scottish?
Suddenly, the Very Serious Red-Jacketed Usher
appeared just before Emma, locking onto her eyes. “Come, sit,” she said, then raising
her gaze from Emma to include me. “Come.” She opened the red threshold, pushing
back those who surged forward, picking me and Emma out as the chosen ones,
shepherding us. “Follow me,” she said, and she was gone, lost in a billowing
curtain on the far right. We followed, emerging in the very front of the hall.
“You can sit here,” she whispered, pointing to the ground in front of the front
row of seats.
In front of us was the large projection screen on
which we could watch the play unfold, and to the left was the performer
himself, a man dressed completely in black, with shoulder-length black gloves
like a puppeteer wears, playing every part in “Macbeth” himself while
maneuvering small plastic characters around a small black surface.
We
watched Macbeth don a wee plaid strip before he goes into battle, marveled at lighting
effects operated by the director's toes, and laughed at his imaginative props.
When poor, beleaguered Macbeth cries out, ‘Is this a dagger I see before me?’,
here comes a ninja-sized dagger, hanging by a thread off a long stick. Group
scenes are pre-glued; when they need to disappear, Weinstein simply picks them
up and throws them offstage.
We
laughed from our perch on the floor, looking at each other from time to time in
surprise and amusement, watching the young red-jacketed usher standing nearest
to the stage as he struggled with his own disbelief that grown people play like
this, forgetting our stomachs and Sprites. It was delicious, the delight that
small plastic smiley-faced figurines can bring, even more so surrounded by the
auspiciousness of the miles of red carpet and curtains of the Kennedy Center.
And for a bright shining moment, this little tribe of Ninjas made all the world a stage. (Sound
effect: Patti laughing Nerdy English Major Snort.)
Sometimes,
it occurred to me as Macbeth received a standing ovation there in the Great Hall, life just comes down to showing up, from sitting upright, or
at the very least flinging one leg at a time off the bed.
~*~ 37 Days: Do it Now
Challenge ~*~
The
motto of the Tiny Ninja Theatre is “No small parts. Only small actors.” Sounds
like life.
Get yourself
there. It’s
too easy to stay in a darkened hotel room with the air conditioner on high and
a Friends marathon on low—pretty soon
you wake up and have missed the Tiny Ninja Theatre altogether.
So get yourself there, even those places you dread.
Get to the gym, to the hospital to visit a dying friend when you don’t know
what to say or do, to the Kennedy Center to see a grown man play with tiny plastic characters attached to pieces of cardboard with duct
tape while quoting Shakespeare. Get yourself to your life. Go see the tiny ninja theatre. Rise above the aches and pains, the
nausea, exhaustion, general malaise. The show won’t run forever. Go now or you'll miss it. And sometimes,
tiny Ninjas are just the miracle we need.
The really cool thing about reading Patti is that one realizes, well,I realize, that some pretty special things happen to us with regularity. And some less than wonderful stuff like food poisoning, missing planes, or nearly fainting in the middle of airports far far from home. But Patti, bless her heart, sits down, well not just sits down but makes herself sit down in the middle of other things going on in her life, and recreates the tiny miracleness or the simple Shaker everydayness of what she observed or was part of, shaping it into a story. And the story unfailingly transcends narrative and arcs off into some reflective philosophic we're all in this together current that tugs at dormant parts of our psyches,and sweeps us from the busy-ness of workaday rapids into deep eddying pools in the shade of our consciousness, a place where we can gather strength, take a breath, and reenter the roiling waters, on the lookout for our own stories, stories that connect us, feed us, sustain us.
I meant to write a tidy little compliment and this is how it came out. I swear I havent been drinking!
pt
Posted by: Paul A. Tamburello, Jr. | 13 June 2007 at 23:17
How DO you do this? I was just sitting here wondering how I could back out of the weekend plans I got coerced into... I'm sure to anyone else a weekend in the spectaculous (I didn't know I'd invented a word until I reread my comment!) Napa wine country with a fabulous group of women in gorgeous weather sounds, well, glorious...but it fills me with dread. I'm not a "girls' weekend" kinda person. Now that I've read this, I guess I'll stop trying to shush that voice that's been screaming in my head, "Stop your whining! Just SHOW UP for god's sake." ;)
Posted by: Marilyn | 14 June 2007 at 08:14
i once attended a sacred harp singing event that was so utterly transcendent it seemed our loud, loud, spirited singing would lift us all off the ground. it was held in a small wooden church in the middle of a cemetery. as we sang our hearts out, one large resonating body hitting notes we didn't know we had, an electrical storm swept over the graveyard. it blew through the windows and the cracks in the walls, and punctuated some of our stormiest singing with thunderous booms and blasts of white fire, as though the earth herself was roused to join us--another voice of praise. and i'd almost missed it, nearly choosing to nap in my dreary motel room to rest up for the drive back the next day.
thank you for this wonderful reminder that getting out there can be much more healing than staying in.
Posted by: eliza | 14 June 2007 at 10:01
Reading the Einstein quote reminded me of my favorite Jewish story about God giving someone two slips of paper to refer to when needed. One said, "The World was made for you." The other said, "You are nothing but dirt." So maybe both of Al's proposals are true, at the same time.
Posted by: The Purloined Letter | 15 June 2007 at 07:46