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Preparing for "Death Knocks" Bay High School, 1984 |
The first time I ever stepped onto a stage was my freshman year in high school (
You Can't Take It With You by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart). My character appeared at the very end of the first scene. I remember the moment. We’d rehearsed, I had my lines cold, very prepared, familiar with the entire ensemble – making a mistake was not a concern, I hadn’t even thought of saying or doing anything wrong, that’s how well-rehearsed we were.
And yet, just before I moved from backstage, unseen, hidden behind a fake door, to onstage, into the action, under the light, entirely visible to the audience, I was struck with one thought, shockingly vivid to me, even to this day:
“Who said you had the right to do this?”
Who said that? What voice was it? Was that my mother’s voice, she who I had embarrassed so many times with my pranks and shenanigans? Why do you have to attract attention to yourself in this way?
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Maurice Adams, Brian Pedaci "The Vampyres" Dobama's Night Kitchen, 1997 |
Two years later, when I directed a short scene for an evening of one acts (
Death Knocks by Woody Allen) I heard the same voice, right before I entered through an open window that was part of the set, only the voice in my head was a little louder. Because this time I was not merely a participant, I choice this piece. I was responsible for it happening.
When I drew a somewhat
controversial comic strip for the university newspaper (if you believe being inscrutable as controversial) my college roommate asked the same question, suggesting as my mother would have; you could just draw these things and put them on the wall of our dorm, why do you have to put them out into the world?
Once more, when I was twenty-eight, this time sitting in the audience, as the lights came down and the music came up on opening night of my first full-length play (
The Vampyres). I’d been working on the script for over two years, all my friends were involved in the production; directing, acting, designing the set, the mural, the costume, the lights, the sound – Oh! The sound!
We had a full house, everyone was very excited, and in the darkness, before the protagonist spoke his first word, I heard a voice say,
“Who said you had the right to do this?”
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"I Hate This (a play without the baby)" Staged Reading Dobama Theatre, 2002 |
Well, obviously, I did. I told myself that.
My wife thinks it is strange that I would even think this; after all, who has the "right" to do anything? And what entity provides that right? God? Society? My mother?
I do not always feel this way. Call it Imposter Syndrome if you like. But usually I rise above it. What is the difference, though? Confidence, I imagine. In myself, in the work. When I performed my first monodrama (
I Hate This) I didn’t think,
“Who said I had the right to do this?” No, I thought, I have a story to tell, and these folks came here to hear me tell it.
And it’s that last part, that people came here to see this, and that they are counting on me, and on you, baby, to do our best.