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For this theater novice, putting on a play proves to be quite the production. (Commentary).


THERE was a night when the bed hit a panel. That was funny. It was supposed to roll onstage on·stage  
adj.
Situated or taking place in the area of a stage that is visible to the audience.

adv.
In or into the area of a stage that is visible to the audience.

Adj. 1.
, where a young actor holding an old actor in his arms would lay the man on the bed. Unfortunately, since the bed moved too fast and smacked into the sliding panel and was now stuck, half onstage, half off, the young actor had no place to go. His arms began to tremble. So he turned while holding the old man, and exited stage right.

And we sat there, looking at the bed.

And sat there, looking at the bed.

And finally, someone whispered, "I don't think this is part of the play?'

I will not soon forget that night, nor will I forget many others in the nearly two-year process we have finally completed in taking the book "Tuesdays With Morrie" to the stage. It opened last week at the Minetta Lane Theater in New York There are many famous theaters in New York, most notably the Broadway theatres in New York City.
  • Chelsea Theater Center Theater founded in 1965 by Robert Kalfin that folded because of decreased funding for the National Endowment to give to the arts.
, and as a first-time playwright and a guy who mostly thought "serious theater" was something you went to when the musicals were sold out, I have had quite an education.

I have learned, for example, that hearing aids Hearing Aids Definition

A hearing aid is a device that can amplify sound waves in order to help a deaf or hard-of-hearing person hear sounds more clearly.
 go off in the middle of a show. One woman's hearing aid squealed so loud and long, it was like a mouse had been squeezed in a fist. And when someone asked her to fix it she went, "WHAAAAT?"

There was another night when the actor playing Morrie -- an amazingly talented veteran named Alvin Epstein -- got a piece of egg salad Egg salad is part of an Anglo-American tradition of salads involving a high-protein or high-carbohydrate food mixed with seasonings in the form of spices, herbs, and other foods, and bound with an oil-based dressing.  caught in his throat.

They don't teach you that in Drama 101.

Maybe in home ec.

I also learned that you don't just slap a show together. You write it, you have a reading in a rehearsal room, you rewrite it, read it in another rehearsal room, you find actors, you take them to a small theater in the boondocks, you try it out, you rewrite it, have another reading, find another theater in the boondocks, rewrite it...

Finally, if you are lucky, you get to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, where critics wait with sharpened knives, and where plays often open and close with the life span of a fruit fly.

Here is what I learned about actors: They are extremely gifted, sensitive people. They can emote (chat) emote - (emotion) A command used on talk systems and MUDs to indicate the performance of an action, usually a facial expression of emotional state.  with their eyes or their fingers. They also don't like to lose lines. When we cut or changed a line from the play, we endured negotiations that U.N. weapons inspectors would consider difficult.

"You know," Jon Tenney Jonathan F. W. Tenney (born December 16, 1961) is an American actor.

Tenney was born in Princeton, New Jersey to a psychiatrist mother and a research physicist father.[1] He received his B.A. degree from Vassar College, where he majored in drama and philosophy.
, the actor who played me, once said, "I'm not sure my character would say that line."

"Jon," I said. "I am your character. And I said it last week."

Lucky for us, our actors' talent was, as one critic later put it, "beyond praise." Our director was top-notch, as was my fellow playwright. There were no major battles, no ego clashes, lots of laughs, and a shared feeling that a special story about a special old teacher was worth doing.

So we made it to opening night. We had a full house. They gave the guys a standing ovation. There were flowers and gift baskets A gift basket, or fruit basket is typically a gift that is delivered to the recipient at their home or workplace. There are different varieties of gift baskets, some which have fruit only, some with dry/canned goods only (such as tea, crackers and jam) although the standard  and toasts.

The critics, tough as they are, still mostly liked it. Some loved it. A few didn't care for it.

And so I say to anyone thinking of getting involved in the theater: It's a blast. Do it if you can. Just make sure your beds are slow and your panels are fast. Not the other way around.

Mitch Albom Mitchell David Albom (born May 23, 1958 in Passaic, New Jersey) is a U.S. novelist and newspaper columnist for the Detroit Free Press, radio host, and TV commentator. He is a graduate of Akiba Hebrew Academy, Brandeis University, and Columbia University.  is the author of the bestseller "Tuesdays With Morrie."
COPYRIGHT 2002 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Minetta Lane Theater in New York
Author:Albom, Mitch
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 2, 2002
Words:592
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