Posts Tagged ‘acting’

A New Philippine Sensation.

January 12, 2008

Kudos to the 21-year-old Vincent Bueno, who won Austria’s talent competition “Musical! Die Show(note that they pronounce “die” as “dee” ;) ) on ORF, an Austrian public-service broadcaster.

One thing that impressed me, granted that it is true, was the fact that he got admitted to the Vienna Conservatory by performing a sketch of an Indian who was asking for directions to the train station in a funny Indian-German accent, while all his other co-aspirants were into Shakespeare and Co..

For sure we will be hearing and seeing more of Vince now. Keep up the fantastic work kid, you make us all proud!

The Lost Muses.

January 8, 2008

The muses (from our next play “The Lost Muses” which premieres sometime this April) had their first rehearsal for this year, and as much as I was really very excited about it, the whole thing still felt kinda strange to me. I wasn’t comfortable with myself. Was it because my tummy was way too busy digesting the huge portion of casserole with cups of rice on the side I had for dinner (which was again my breakfast, snack, lunch, snack, and dinner for that day)? Or was it because I never practiced this scene at home? :oops: *whistle*

I guess it was a combination of both. Though the rehearsal was fun and the muses were really doing great, I still felt like a big fake, a bogus. I felt like insulting our D with my lousy performance. I felt so… bloated.

Funny thing was we were rehearsing the first scene which involves all muses spending a day at the beach. Yours truly had to play the role of a muse lying on the sand, enjoying herself while trying to inspire a frustrated poet lasciviously. Now imagine a meishan swine trying to intellectually seduce a confused poet with all its physical charms, and you’ll get the picture of how my scene looked like.

I was supposed to lie and pose and mentally hook up with the poet, or at least try to look like I was efficiently connecting to his psyche. Looking for the right lying and telepathizing position (i.e. the one that enables me to breath, think, and play simultaneously) kept me busy instead. My paunch just hindered me from being at ease.

I pulled the act off to some extent anyway but I was not feeling the role. That’s bad. For if I don’t feel the role, I tend to “act”, which turns out to look awfully artificial. And that I don’t aspire.

I will never overeat before rehearsals ever again.

Dernier.

December 16, 2007

Our booze ensembleThe backstage stir was still there, but I could feel a strong sense of confidence in the air as well. I swear it whispered in my ear: “You guys will rock”. Well then. Whatever you say, Stage Fairy.

Tonight was the dernier, the last full show. As much as I fought back tears during the last scene (which I always did backstage since the premiere, mind you), this time I was not able to hold back two liters of teardrops. Luckily, one fellow actress got teary-eyed as well – so what the heck – I rode with it. I wasn’t quite sure if we lamented (just a tiny little bit) the end of our show, or our leading actor’s death (he died every night since the premiere, and he died the last time tonight).Pizza Perks

About 9 hours, 17 cigs, 5 jumbo-party pizzas (from which I had 2 whopping slices of), and many many drinks and fits of laughter later, the daylight marked the beginning of a new day. Then we headed home.

Disclosure

 

 

Because all good things must come to an end.

 

 

 

Cyrano de Bergerac.

December 14, 2007

Cyrano de Bergerac

Sold out. The student theater group “Ars Bene Agendi” in Tübingen premiered its last production for this winter semester last Monday, December 10 – Edmond Rostand’s “Cyrano de Bergerac”.

The play tells the story about Cyrano de Bergerac, a hopeless romantic afraid of revealing his true affections for the love of his life, the beautiful Roxanne. Cyrano, a French cadet and a remarkable poet indeed, is in fact a lonely soul deep inside, who longs to be loved but is quite hesitant to let it happen as he believes that his physical appearance (his enormous nose specifically) does not make him worthy. Instead, he helps Christian de Neuville, a handsome cadet in Cyrano’s troop, capture Roxanne’s heart once he learned that Christian himself is in love with Roxanne as well.

A bittersweet romantic comedy with a tragic fate, “Cyrano de Bergerac” continues to play this week in the Brechtbautheater in Tübingen. The dernier will be on Saturday.

“I have eaten the cakes, Monsieur de Bergerac.”

“Good. Now go out and enjoy Nature.”

 

 

 

I just found out that Cyrano de Bergerac currently runs on Broadway too. Aaah, the flukes of life.