Coming off a chat on the phone with my mom, unceremoniously squeezed in between a nap and my dinner preparations, She's the one who dashed crazily out of the house met me on the front porch when I won 'Best Performance' for Miracle Worker at 16. She couldn't wait, she called the school asked who got it. Never mind there were only three nominees the results were a tie between me and Jody Hilbun, who played Annie Sullivan. I thought I was pretty good should have been a dead giveaway; self consciousness creeping into my work, all I could think of was 'I'll do better with the next one'. How to—not an issue. Mr. Gray was leaving whoever replaced him next year would cast me in something. I would learn the part and do it. My mom was the one with an itch to intervene when performing and rehearsing got too much and I lost my voice from misuse. pushed through an audition sounding like Mickey Mouse on nitrous oxide. What was Mr. Gray thinking? Was he out to toughen me up? The Pacifica One Act Play Festival incident might have been in his mind. The one where I missed an entrance. off stage left waiting for a blackout. lights went down—before I had a chance to think, my bladder simply chose to let go. There was nothing for it: lights back up all the way across the darkened stage past the furniture in the other scene, to the platform stage right where Dave Horton was waiting for me. I was sure the entire audience could hear my shoes squooshing. How the devil did my shoes survive a present brought back from France my mom said shopping was a welcome distraction from her duty at her mother's burial Sometimes pee seems like just water I must've got lucky dried off through the course of the play, until the whole thing seemed like I had dreamed it. Only Karen Frankenfield, standing next to me, knew what had happened she wasn't telling. Sitting with everyone at the luncheon listening to the panel, piece by piece, give us their judgments; this group did well, that group did fine, reserved their highest praise for our effort and amongst our bunch, they accorded me their greatest compliments. such detail! I carried the day. The class received an official letter some weeks later reiterating the Festival's pleasure at our production; Mr. Gray couldn't cover his disdain. Interesting that I had been singled out considering that I was the one who had fouled up my blocking. Found out not long ago that he's still around, living in New Orleans. Saw a picture of him at his 75th birthday, looking saucy as ever. So this is for you, W. Grant Now you know.
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