Robin 的个人资料Robin's content... :)照片日志列表更多 工具 帮助
2007/8/12

Penny for your thoughts

On Sundays I navigate my browser to postsecret.com to read the artful postcards people have mailed in. I have done this for the past few years fairly religiously. I own one of the post secret books. I read ps.com for a variety of reasons. Every postcard has a secret written on it. I read them out of curiosity, for the shock value, and for the occasional clever gems that crop up. Mostly I go because I want to see my secrets appear on the screen. I haven’t sent in a postcard (yet) but to see one of my secrets appear would mean that I’m not alone in my suffering, my confusion or my joy.

The creator of postsecret has created a video for the project:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6rTkp1dek4.

Unfortunately this means there are no new postcards on his blog this week. Perhaps I should use this as an opportunity to create my own – or as they say in the convenience stores, “Take a penny, give a penny.”    

 
2007/8/3

“First Class” at Act Theater

I’m too young to have taken a poetry course with Pulitzer-prize winner Theodore Roethke at the University of Washington. He died a few years before I was born.  I did not hear his inspirational talks about making music with words or what it takes to make a good poem great (and why great poetry is important.) I most certainly didn’t see the effects of his bi-polar disorder which propelled him into mad ravings and crazed phone calls to people such as the president of the University, the mayor of Seattle and governor of Washington State.

Last night however I traveled to a 1950s classroom and got glimpse into what it might have been like.  We went to see “First Class” on opening night at Act Theater, a one man play that invites the audience into Roethke’s classroom and at times into his mind. John Aylward is absolutely riveting as the clever and intense poet. The show was written by David Wagoner a former student who wanted to share experiences that clearly made an indelible mark on his life – and now this play on mine. I will not forget the professor’s angst and torment – and I will remember some of his lessons, too. He taught that Shakespeare knew that “eee” sounds belong to witches. I can still see professor screeching “When shall weee threeee meeet again…?”

Well-acted, well-cast, unusual and interesting play.