another entry in the occasional series describing my adventures pursuing my MFA
Deborah, the redhead, hosted many social events, including this Easter Brunch. Kim was soon to wow audiences as our Reno Sweeney. |
Kim and Richard were to play the leading roles in Anything Goes. Take a look at our swanky "Grad Student Office", complete with up-to-date computer. |
So the summer of 1994 was going to be jam-packed, in fact it would prove to be the busiest time of my MFA career.
The Summer Rep that year included five full productions, I was cast in the two largest. As I mentioned in a previous entry in this series, Anything Goes was placed in the season after several grad students displayed some musical talent. USC was a classical program and did not, as a rule, produce musicals, but the late great Jim Patterson felt confident that this was the time for a full scale crowd-pleasing extravaganza. written about Jim Patterson throughout this series; when he was directing me in The Importance of Being Earnest, he was already planning for Anything Goes. He gave me a huge compliment, in retrospect. He asked me which role I would like to play.
There are two comic roles in Anything Goes which were appropriate for me, and though I only knew the show from the famous Patti Lupone revival cast album, I knew either one would be fun to play. There was a British twit who has a comic song in act two which some consider to be the show's 11:00 number, and the larger role of the comic villain, Moonface Martin, a hapless gangster on the run.
An old friend of the show's leading lady, Reno Sweeney, Moonface had two songs (plus inclusion in some group numbers) and lots of room for comedy. I told myself I had already played a British twit this year (Algernon in Earnest), what would I learn from playing another one? So I chose to play Moonface, but let's face it. I picked it because it was bigger.
A Walk in the Woods, Strange Snow, Anything Goes, The Emperor's New Clothes, The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe |
The Summer Rep that year included five full productions, I was cast in the two largest. As I mentioned in a previous entry in this series, Anything Goes was placed in the season after several grad students displayed some musical talent. USC was a classical program and did not, as a rule, produce musicals, but the late great Jim Patterson felt confident that this was the time for a full scale crowd-pleasing extravaganza. written about Jim Patterson throughout this series; when he was directing me in The Importance of Being Earnest, he was already planning for Anything Goes. He gave me a huge compliment, in retrospect. He asked me which role I would like to play.
There are two comic roles in Anything Goes which were appropriate for me, and though I only knew the show from the famous Patti Lupone revival cast album, I knew either one would be fun to play. There was a British twit who has a comic song in act two which some consider to be the show's 11:00 number, and the larger role of the comic villain, Moonface Martin, a hapless gangster on the run.
An old friend of the show's leading lady, Reno Sweeney, Moonface had two songs (plus inclusion in some group numbers) and lots of room for comedy. I told myself I had already played a British twit this year (Algernon in Earnest), what would I learn from playing another one? So I chose to play Moonface, but let's face it. I picked it because it was bigger.
I don't have any production shots from Anything Goes, but here's Joel Grey playing my role in the most recent Broadway revival. (Joel and I are practically twins, which I wrote about here.) Moonface Martin, Public Enemy #13, spends most of the show disguised as a priest, which causes a problem for anyone playing him. It is difficult to be funny dressed in black. (There's another problem, too. Priests aren't funny. Nuns are funny, priests are not.) You can see here that Grey mitigated the problem of being in black by adding a jacket. Cheater. |
Ann's note to me was so flattering that I kept it. I should have reread it a month later, when she asked me who I'd like to play in her next show. My answer was not very judicious. |
The second show I appeared in that summer was an original adaptation of The Emperor's New Clothes, written and directed by USC's resident provider of children's programming, Jayce Tromsness.
Jayce wrote and directed large scale kids' shows for the Summer Rep, I worked on his shows both summers I was at USC. They were lively and fun, full of energy. |
In this one, I was slated to play one of the Emperor's servants named Mop:
During our first read-through of The Emperor's New Clothes, there were a couple of very small roles which Jayce had not yet assigned to his company. I had my eye on one, a single page scene in which the goofy Emperor, hilariously played by Steve Harley, took a dance lesson from a pompous instructor.
During our first read-through of The Emperor's New Clothes, there were a couple of very small roles which Jayce had not yet assigned to his company. I had my eye on one, a single page scene in which the goofy Emperor, hilariously played by Steve Harley, took a dance lesson from a pompous instructor.
Steve and Monica Wyche were hysterical as the Emperor and Empress. |
Here again, Jayce had written a character's dialogue in a certain rhythm without really realizing it. I, however, could see right away that this Dance Instructor was French. I volunteered to read the scene aloud, and went over-the-top Pepe Lepew with it. I now had two roles in the show (requiring an extremely tight quick change), a Cockney servant and French dance instructor.
Theatre For Young Audiences and Classic Musical Comedy are not all that different from each other. I spent the summer of '94 going over the top with both. |
Steve was in the class ahead of me. I don't remember his role here, though I'm sure it was the villain. We've remained friends and colleagues; he has directed me several times in professional shows in DC. |
I had a full schedule with the Summer Rep and with teaching teens all day, but I also made a decision which I thought was smart but others thought was nuts. The MFA program at USC was performance heavy but was also an academic degree. As such, the degree required passing a grueling comprehensive exam as well as writing a thesis. Usually, grad students postponed dealing with those academic requirements until their second or third year, but I decided to tackle them both that first summer.
That summer, I also wrote a complete first draft of my thesis, which was to be comprised of dissections in depth of four performances I gave during my time on campus. My advisor Jim Patterson encouraged me to take the first four shows I did at USC and write this thing immediately, polishing it later. I was smart enough to take this advice, so in addition to everything else going on that summer, I wrote in depth examinations of my performances in The Cherry Orchard, The Importance of Being Earnest, Measure for Measure, and Anything Goes. Though my thesis wasn't actually due for two more years, I was relieved to have written the lion's share of it so early. Here is the final title page as it was published by the University Press two years later (the format dictated by the university):
MOVING FORWARD
by
R. Scott Williams
Bachelor of Arts
California State University, Northridge, 1979
Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the
Requirements for the Degree of Master of Fine Arts
in the Department of Theatre, Speech, and Dance
University of South Carolina
1996
What a summer it was, I don't regret a single moment of it. Well, except one. Remember that swell note of congratulations I received from Ann Dreher regarding my performance in Anything Goes? I didn't recognize its significance. A month or so after writing that note, Ann dropped another note in my mailbox. She was to direct the first show of the following season, Lanford Wilson's Hot L Baltimore, beginning rehearsal in mid-August. She wanted to know which role I was interested in playing? I was flattered that, for the second time since arriving at USC, I was being offered my choice of roles, rather than simply being assigned a part, but I was fried. Since arriving at USC the previous August, during the school year I had rehearsed and performed in three mainstage productions (taking one of them to Charlotte for a professional run), taken two semesters of upper level Theatre History (in which I had written five term papers), taught two sections of Speech classes for underclassmen, as well as attended a full caseload of MFA performance classes (acting, movement, speech and vocal technique). During the summer, I had simultaneously rehearsed and performed two more large scale productions, taught teenagers in the USC summer camp, studied for and passed my comp exams, and written a full first draft of my MFA thesis. Cue the violins.
I didn't particularly like Hot L Baltimore, and I saw no problem with at least asking to be excused. Boy, was I stupid. |
I dropped Ann a note in response. I wrote that I was exhausted and, as I was already slated for large roles in Othello and Eastern Standard in the fall, to add a third show in the same semester seemed unwise. I hoped to be excused from her show, but if that was not possible, I guess I could play either X or Y (I don't remember which characters those were). I didn't hear back from Ann, but when the cast was announced a few days later, I was not included. I breathed a sigh of relief, but I shouldn't have. I did not know at the time that Ann had taken my reluctance to do her show as a huge insult, particularly after she had praised my work so lavishly only a month earlier. I also didn't know that she could hold a grudge, and nine months later, that grudge would surface to cause me some real trouble during the following summer's season.
My first year at USC had proven to me that my decision to uproot my life to pursue the MFA had been a good one. I flew back to Los Angeles for a week or so to visit my old life, and was back in South Carolina before August ended, ready to hit the ground running for my second year of graduate work. Oh yes, there's more.
One of the requirements of doing the kids' show was meeting the kids out in the lobby. Well, I considered it a requirement. Others, like Richard, considered it a perk. |
Backstage camaraderie. |
(You can read other entries in this series, in reverse chronology, here)
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