My
goal for this season in Palm Springs was to write three plays. Going into it
last fall, I had no illusions that the plays themselves, if completed, would be
anything beyond a good first draft. In other words, I wanted to create three
plays with enough sound story structure and character potential that I had something
solid with which to continue their growth and development. Then the idea was to
workshop them back in Minnesota. Well, I accomplished my goal even though
(figuratively speaking) it damn near killed me.
Two
of the plays were musicals although I have absolutely no musical talent or
skills beyond knowing what kind of music I like. The third would be a drama
based on the emotional turmoil a gay man finds himself in as he reaches middle
age; single and alone in the world. Yup, you guessed it. I’m about as straight
as a Robin Hood arrow. In retrospect, I guess my lack of musical knowledge and
gender persuasion probably had a lot to do with the stress I faced in my quest
to write three plays in six months. But they’re finally done and I ‘think they
work.’
Since
two of these plays have music, I had to plot out where the songs might fit in
the storyline. I’ve got a title for each song and a good idea of the message I
want to convey there. But it’s the exact type of song (ballad, upbeat, etc) and
the lyrics that are the most challenging. My hope is to find a musician/s that
I can work with to create music to fit the lyrics that I’ve written for each
song.
During
the season, I was also revisiting PTV
to add more drama to it before a second approach to the Minnesota History
Theater for their interest. Then I had ‘Polly’sAmorous Adventures’ which I was promoting to the Art Theaters in the Twin
Cities along with my other plays to the Community Theaters there. My weekly
blog feed demanded a lot of my attention with multiple rewrites. In November, I
had to write a new play for the grandchildren to perform.
It
was a rather busy six months sequestered in my desert office.
The
first play ‘Wake; the Musical’ had
been percolating around in my brain for a long time. ‘Wake’ is a play about
death, redemption, acceptance of man’s fragility and burying past hurts to open
the future for possibilities. Attendants come together to celebrate the life
and past of a man named John Moses. What they all come to realize pretty
quickly is that John Moses is a chameleon; very different to so many ways to
some many different people. Past secrets are revealed and truth intentions
exposed. Musical interludes are an important part of the storytelling here.
The
second play ‘Tangled Roots’ took
shape and form last summer. I imagined it to be a combination of folk music and
the story of a man’s struggle to find fulfillment and satisfaction in his
retirement. Beyond the surface of ‘what to do with the rest of one’s life,’ it
would also be an examination of life’s purpose and being true to oneself.
Many
folks my age find themselves facing an uncertain future in retirement. They’re
limited by their economic, physical and social resources. Their past is past
and nothing on the horizon looks promising. So it’s not surprising that a lot
of folks in that predicament turn back in time to their past and try, in one
fashion or another, to relive, revive and review segments of their history that
brought them pleasure and pleasant memories.
Folk
music or more aptly called ‘Americana music’ is as old as this country itself
and before that the counties where our forefathers came from. It embodies the
American spirit, the Great Depression, riding the rails, an awareness of civil
and social causes long before the general public was able to grasp those
attacks on freedom and liberty for all.
This
new kind of play would be an intermingling of singing, musical demonstration
and an intriguing background storyline for the characters involved. It would be
a concert, musical theory class and coming-of-old-age saga wrapped up in a
small theater. Black Box would be perfect.
The
third play ‘Widow’s Waltz’ evolved
after a couple of seasons here in Palm Springs as Sharon and I met more members
of the gay community. Many of them seemed to fit the profile of my main
characters in the play.
Photo Credit: Riot at Sage Corner |
They’re older, single gay men without a partner or significant other. While on the surface, their challenges seem much like of straight singles, I’ve found from research that the challenges are far greater for gay individuals than straight ones.
Research
alone will never help me get to the core of the issues or create a storyline
true to their predicament. That is where our friends in the gay community can
provide me with honest, heart-felt advice and suggestions to make the play
honest and true to their ‘real world.’
It’ll
probably be a challenge to present such a play written by a straight author to
those appropriate venues here in the Valley but I’m hoping the honesty of the
storyline will grab their attention and honest evaluation.
The
three plays have been written. Now the hard part begins. I plan to workshop all
three back in Minnesota and then pound out a second or third or fourth draft
until such time that I have a product ready for the next step. Upon completion
of a draft that has withstood the workshops, editing, revisions and changes
each play will require then two of them will be ready for the musical portion
of the mix. Overall, it will be an arduous and challenging task but, I hope,
one that results in an interesting story, engaging characters and something
worthy of an audience’s time and attention. In the end, isn’t that what every
playwright is striving for; to tell a story and entertain an audience. I know I
am.
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