Thursday, June 28, 2012

...GIVES ME THE SHAKES



The most exciting thing about theatre, if you appreciate the nuances of live performance, is that you can never experience the same thing twice.  As the performer, every night you get to embark on a fresh journey with your fellow cast members; to discover new things; to build a unique relationship with each audience.  And mistakes don’t exist, only a series of unforeseen moments to respond to.  No matter what has been rehearsed, you cannot map out the next few hours of your life.  Upon the rise of the curtain, “the show must go on…”

In February of 2004, I was in the middle of a world tour of a show that every musical theater performer would dream of being cast in, Fosse.  It was the ultimate ensemble piece, twenty or so in the cast, featuring some of the greatest musical and dance numbers set for both the stage and the screen by legendary choreographer and director, Bob Fosse.  And the icing on the cake?  We were in Paris for a six-week run, and privileged to have one of the greatest Broadway stars of all time leading us, Mr. Ben Vereen.

“What are you doing?”  Sarah, my “Steam Heat” partner, crouched down next to me in a changing station backstage.  I was sitting on the floor, with one shoe on and one shoe off… “I am thinking about jumping onstage with Ben.”  Her eyes widened as she smiled and gasped with excitement.  “Do it!!!”  She joined me on the floor, and we both scrambled to get my other tap shoe on.

On this particular night, about twenty minutes after “go time”, the sound system crashed right smack in the middle of a high-energy, fast-moving number.  But the entire company continued dancing and singing without music.  (Technical difficulties happen, but never dire enough to stop the show.)  Then the curtain dropped in front of us.  So we took the cue, and filed offstage through the wings, to rest until the problem was fixed.  Mr. Vereen didn’t miss a beat.  He u-turned from behind the curtain, and swiped the emergency wireless mic from stage left.  The spotlight hit him as he exploded back onstage, a glorious reveal!  “Bon soir Paris!!!”  As he broke the fourth wall for the first time, he was met with uproarious applause.  It was an interruption.  But to the audience, this moment was no faux pas.  It was a gift…

“Oh… they say some people long ago… were looking for a different tune… one that they could croon…as only they can…”

I watched from offstage in awe as this consummate artist opened his mouth to sing the first line of The Birth of the Blues.  Then he signaled for the conductor to assemble a small jazz combo from the orchestra pit, to back him up impromptu. The crowd was thrilled…

“They only had the rhythm so… they started swaying to and fro… they didn’t know just what to use… but this is how the blues… really began…”

The entire audience (including the cast and crew of Fosse) was witnessing magic in the making, beautiful chaos.  I couldn’t wipe the smile off of my face as I studied every move and sound.  Then it occurred to me…  “This is not a classroom…  There are no rules…  This IS the show tonight… And ANYTHING can happen.”  I felt a boldness rear up in me, and suddenly I wanted to be onstage WITH him.  And as time passed, this urge was growing stronger.  So I waited to see if we would continue where we left off, upon the last note of The Birth of the Blues…  (applause) …  (silence) …  “That Old Black Magic has me in its spell… That Old Black Magic that you weave so well…” The band followed his voice into another jazz standard, and I bolted to the changing station…

Once my shoes were on, laces tied, I rose up from the ground… “Under that Old Black Magic called Love...” I could still hear Ben singing from behind the backdrop.  I couldn’t believe what I was about to do.  Then something hit me in a cold flash…  And I froze...  “Now, what exactly ARE you going to do?” …  “He’s Ben Vereen!  Who the heck are YOU?” … A barrage of doubt flew into my atmosphere of thought.  “What the heck am I doing?”  As I began to agree with the gray cloud of negative opinions swirling around me, a one-ton anvil seemed to materialize from within my stomach…  And then I knew what was happening…or WHO was happening I should say…  And I could almost picture a face…

            Hello Fear.  Once again I have found you in this familiar place… at this intersection of Risk and Uncertainty.  I know you’re here to falsely comfort me; coddle me; pat my cushion of Convenience, that I might sit back down and rest safely and soundly.  But I am desperate to see what is on the other side of the great wall of Opportunity that stands before me.  I am determined to scale that magnificent rampart that you would do anything to keep me from.  You see… I believe there are certain promises that unfold whenever I run into you; and then run forward, in spite of you, with uninhibited faith that something spectacular awaits me.  I have seen how you partner with Circumstance to paralyze Humanity.  So I refuse to pitch a tent with you on the campgrounds of Complacency…

As I approached the stage, in an effort to garner courage, I started rifling through brain files for some reference; some recipe for what I was about to do.  Nothing came to mind.  Then I thought about my last “show-stopping” confrontation with Fear…

I was a part of the first American musical to grace the Russian stage. Our show was co-produced by an American company, and a Russian guy named Boris (who I am pretty sure was in the Mafia). We left the States in September, rehearsed for six weeks, and opened in October with a bang…

I was eighteen…
It was my first job out of high school…
My first time overseas… 
And my very first terrorist attack... 

42nd Street cast and crew! Please quickly and calmly exit the building…”

I was in Moscow during The Nord-Ost Siege, a theater hostage crisis that grabbed the world’s attention…

The ordeal happened Wednesday night, October 23rd, 2002, at the Dubrovka Theater.  The Russian Musical Nord-Ost (Northeast) was one of three major productions playing in the city.  After the intermission, at the top of the second act, the full male ensemble was tap-dancing onstage at the climax of a musical number.  Suddenly 40 to 50 armed men and women, who claimed allegiance to an Islamist separatist movement, emerged from the audience and seized the entire theatre. They took 850 hostages and demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces from Chechnya and an end to the Second Chechen War.  If the Russian government did not comply, the female rebels (who were all strapped with explosives) were instructed to blow the entire complex up.  After a two-and-a-half day standoff, Russian forces pumped an unknown chemical agent into the building's ventilation system and raided it.  39 of the attackers were killed, along with at least 129 of the hostages (including nine foreigners)… Roughly 170 people died in all.

“… Don’t bother changing out of costume, hair, or make-up… Get out… now!”

We knew our stage manager wasn’t joking.  It had been a month since the Nord-Ost incident, but bomb threats pop-corned all around the city.  And this was the first time we were ordered to evacuate immediately.  So we slid out of the theater, and into the snow (tap shoes, wigs, make-up and all!).  We scurried across the icy parking lot, and into a sushi restaurant we had claimed as a refuge house during the last two bomb scares.  I don’t know what the Russian name for the place was.  But we called it “Bomb Scare Sushi”… “Happy Thanksgiving!”   We said with jaded smiles, and toasted with hot sake…

In addition to finding ourselves at the center of an international crisis, we had already survived a number of things; rehearsing in a space that resembled a concentration camp, ridden with stray dogs and guarded by machine-gun-clad soldiers; a McDonalds car bombing; a political assassination; and… a gigantic language barrier…

One day in between shows, I had a craving for a milkshake.  There was only one problem.  I only knew the Russian word for “milk”.  But I didn’t know how to communicate the “shake” part in this completely foreign language with an entirely different alphabet.  So on my way over to a Russian McDonalds, I devised a plan.  And I knew it would be brilliant.  I pushed through the glass doors, and there were about 10 people standing in line.  That bought me some time to prepare.

“Da?” (That means “yes” in Russian)… The young woman at the register was already sizing me up (probably because I was wearing the stupidest, most clueless, cheesy, all-American grin ever).  “Priviet” (“Hello”)… That was one of the few words I knew.  Before I commenced, I looked up to see if I could point.  But alas, the screen was too far away, and jumbled in a collage of menu items and Russian words I could neither read nor pronounce.  Then I tried to order in English, but with a Russian accent.  (I love that when Americans can’t speak a foreign language in a foreign country, our default is to speak English in our interpretation of that foreign accent)… “I would like” …  but by the deadpan look on her face, this would be a long shot… So I proceeded with “the plan”.

I locked eyes with her.  I don’t know why.  Maybe I thought that where I lacked in language, I could make up for in telepathy.  I spoke… “Moloko” (“Milk”)… (dramatic pause)… then I hugged myself, and I started to “shake” my head and body emphatically, allowing my lips to whiplash, and release sounds that magnified the effects of being shaken.  I stopped to see if she got it on the first try.

How we respond to circumstances in the midst of a crisis reveals who we truly are on in the inside.  Not being able to order a milkshake when you really want one, and in a foreign country, is a dire situation.  And if my response unleashed the idiot from within, then so be it!  I accepted in the moment that I was asking her to play Charades with me at the front of a McDonalds line in the middle of Moscow… “Moloko”… (action for “shake”)… “Moloko”… (action for “shake”)… And I wasn’t worried about the ever-increasing throng of hungry (now angry) Russian patrons gathering behind me.  I had been “risking my life” entertaining them tirelessly, night after night.  The least they could do was wait until I got my freaking milkshake! 

I started losing hope in the young woman at the register, as her deadpan stare was now evolving into one that communicated irritation.  I emitted a long, audible breath, expressing my sadness.  Then I ordered a Coke… “Okay… Coca Cola.”  I walked out of McDonalds a little disappointed, but with my head held high, and certainly not thirsty…

42nd Street was scheduled to run in Moscow for nine months.  The plug was pulled, and we were sent home after four.  Only then did we realize how close we came to utter disaster.  An HBO documentary on the siege, Terror In Moscow, was produced and released a year later, and most of the live footage used in the film belonged to the deceased terrorists themselves.  Apparently, only a few days before the fanatics apprehended the Nord-Ost venue, one of the Chechen gunmen had videotaped another potential target… the musical, 42nd Street.  The militant group had collected footage of the building, and of all the entrances and exits.  My mouth dropped as one snippet revealed my entire cast walking into the theater, just another night onstage for us… one menacing decision away from eminent danger.

The opening statement of the 25-year-old leader of the rebellion sent chills down my spine … “We’ve come to Russia’s capital city to stop the war or die for Allah… We’ll perish here, taking hundreds of unbelievers with us.  I swear to Allah, we desire death more than you want life… Allah is great.”  I could not help but imagine myself in a sequence of events that could very well have been an alternative fate.  The hostages lived on nothing but water and chocolate.  And the orchestra pit served as a public bathroom, men on the left and women on the right.  “People didn’t drink on purpose so they wouldn’t need to go.  It was a dreadful feeling, rolling up your trousers so they wouldn’t get soaked,” a survivor recalled.

            One first-hand account came from a 42nd Street dresser, and my friend, Sveta.  She was doing double duty, working in the wardrobe departments for both 42nd Street and Nord-Ost.  We hadn’t seen her for a couple of days, from the start of the invasion.  When she finally returned to work with us, she shared how she and some other women hid in an undiscovered section backstage.  They called Russian authorities from within the walls, and were drilled out to safety from the outside of the facility.

I was heavily impacted by one story of a man who was on the creative team for Nord-Ost“I thought I’d try to sit closer to the main bomb, and get to know the woman in charge of the detonator,” he said without blinking to the camera.  “Who knows?  Perhaps at the critical moment I could push her hand away or rip out the wires.  We talked about lots of things, about the role of women in Islam, about art.  She admitted, reluctantly, that she’d enjoyed the show, and she knew I was the co-writer.  Oddly enough she needed to share her impressions of the show.  She wrote an Arabic phrase on a scrap of paper, and told me to say it aloud at the moment of my death.  If I recited it, then I’d be accepted in paradise as a Muslim.  It read, ‘There is no God but Allah.’ ”

Such a dichotomy of character and emotion displayed in this artist:  fierce heroism in the face of death, to be prepared to take the woman down as an enemy; tender compassion, to engage in a human conversation with her, acknowledging her eye to eye, as a comrade and admirer of his work.  The definition of Art is “the expression or application of human creative skill and imagination, producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power.”  That art can move to a degree where it shifts the atmosphere, proclaims life over death, and disarms the very energy that threatens its existence, speaks of the power of creativity…  Creativity releases the capacity to love…  And “Perfect Love casts out all fear.”

“Go for it!”  I had the support of my fellow cast members; still I was shaking and perspiring… “You’re the lover I have waited for… You’re the mate that Fate had me created for… And every time your lips meet mine”… I was now standing at the mouth of the stage, ten feet away from Ben Vereen.  He was approaching the end of the song.  “Last chance.” I thought to myself.  The only bit of security I could cling to was the wing I hid behind.  “I’m under that Old Black Magic called…” I stretched out my right leg to take my first step… then I could swear someone pushed me… Into the light I went.

To choose love over fear… This is the mark of beauty.
To find beauty in chaos… This is the mark of creativity.
The synthesis of beauty and creativity… This is the work of God.

1 comment:

  1. This is amazing and beautifully written. Thanks for letting us journey with you. It leaves me wishing that I could have been there to see it all unfold.

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