Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Poltergeist 3-D

I had a marvelous day today!

For the most part I've been waking up each day since graduation dreading the inevitable boredom that will soon descend upon me. I've alternated between binge watching Netflix and packing up my room (which we are paying the movers to do anyway so I'm not sure why I bother)

Today, however, I made plans with my best friend, Matt! We decided to go get lunch and see a movie as a sort of last play-date before I move away.

Matt is now also a WAC Drama alum, and he's feeling the boredom as much as I am.

Check in for more on Matt next week for Man Crush Monday. 

We ate a nice long lunch at Jarrettsville Creamery before catching the 2:50PM showing of Poltergeist in 3-D.

Nothing like watching a horror movie before you move. Most horror plots call for a happy American family moving into a creaky old house. Mayhem promptly follows. Poltergeist was no exception. Can't wait to move now! Apparently the new house is haunted, too haha. One of Mom's new parishiners took great delight in sharing that little nugget of info while we were there on Saturday taking measurements. According to her there have been several reports of the pervading scent of coffee with *gasp* no source. There have been worse hauntings, I think haha, I wonder what our spook will make of the Keurig... I'll keep y'all posted.


Anyway... Poltergeist. Don't see it. It wasn't scary. It wasn't even the fun kind of bad. (I get a huge kick out of laughably bad horror/thriller films.) The re-vamped take on the Speilberg classic was unnecessary, added nothing to the story, and cheapened the actual horror components expertly presented in the original to that of an uninspired videogame. Sam Rockwell was great, but overall this movie simply did not need to be re-made. Oh well. No regrets. Still an amazing day :)

Banking

dun dun dun...
Today, I received my new hire packet for my job! We are getting offish up in here!

As I started to go through the bunches of legal documents I found myself asking more questions than I was answering. Of course I knew my surname, birthdate and SSN, but I started to struggle when it came to bank info.

Basically, my current bank has maybe 1 and a half branches and even fewer ATMs in Richmond. I don't want to pay a $3.00+ non-mybankATM fee every time I make a withdrawal so I'm searching for a new bank.

Here is a summary of my comparative research:
Welcome to $$$ Bank, where we charge you $100.00 to open your checking account and continue to charge you every month. *We will waive this monthly fee if you a. have a way more in your account than you will ever be paid b. make regular deposits valued at more than the monthly fee and more than you can expect to be paid c. buy all of our products and services

Layman's terms: 
Basically, I could ask you to watch my purse  that has$50 in it while I run to the ladies room, but I'd have to pay you $60* up front and pay you $1 for every minute I'm gone.
*Amount may vary depending on the designer of the purse. 
Thanks. I think I'll just take my purse with me to the bathroom. So why don't we all just keep our money under our mattress?

 HONESTLY...A lot about banking does not make sense to me. Everything from why we call automated teller machines ATM machines to how the heck an account can accrue negative interest. Money in general intimidates me. Institutionalized maintanence of money moreso. Anyone else remember that scene towards the end of Mary Poppins?

The stuff of nightmares...
The Disney-induced emotional scarring is probably why banking and financing are all very complicated to me. I do not claim to be anything close to an expert. If it were up to me I'd be out feeding the birds, flying kites, and dancing with animated penguins. I like to think I'm fairly smart about spending, but I've been sucker-punched by many a BOGO sale in my day. So new-born financial-guru adulting Rachel did some research today.

Researching something you know nothing about can be daunting. One of the first steps is simply acquainting yourself with the language of the industry. I turned to the almighty Google and asked (actual quote of my search) "How to pick the right bank"

Top Three Helpful Links:

  1. How to Choose the Right Bank For You - ABC NEWS
  2. 10 Things to Consider When Choosing a Bank - HOW STUFF WORKS
  3. How to Pick the Best Bank - FORBES
One of the unanimous tips put forth by each of these sources called for some evaluation of your personal banking needs. What do YOU need from your bank.

My initial answer to thank question was "UGH I JUST NEED SOME PLACE TO PUT MY MUHNAY!" A few hours ago I had next to no idea about what types of services I could demand from my bank search. 

It's kind of like starting a college search. You can't articulate that you want a small liberal arts school, in a rural area, with substance free housing options, a pre-nursing program, one large dining hall versus several smaller ones, and a welcoming Greek community until you've visited a college or two to know that those are things that are offered (or not offered).

Luckily I have the banking equivalent of a college I have visited - my current bank. I asked myself, "Rachel what do you like about your current bank?" which gave me a starting point for criteria I could demand from competing banks.

The biggest breakthrough in my banking search came from a few links suggested in the Forbes article (#3 above). findabetterbank.com is actually a pretty darn nifty tool. Basically you type in your zip code, refine your search, select a few preferences, and then the website filters and compares banks. It provides really in depth summaries of plans offered by tons of different banks, lists the number of branches and ATMs in your specified radius, and links you right to the banks' websites. You can search this tool as many times as you want. Don't stress if you don't feel like you know how to answer the questions. I refined my search by eliminating bank names I simply didn't recognise and then selected preferences arbitrarily. My first search gave me a starting point for some very (very) basic criteria. 

I went from my criteria being:
  • SUMPLAYCE 2 POOT MAH MUHNAY
To banks with:
  • several branches and ATMs in my area
      • several branches nationwide (I'll most likely move again next year and I won't want to change banks again. I'm coming to terms with the nomadic lifestyle of an artist. Something to consider!
  • online banking options
  • banking apps for my phone
  • a low opening deposit amount
  • a low monthly maintenance fee
  • several reasonable options for waiving maintenance fees
Many of you probably knew your preferences already and many more of you probably don't need to change your bank any time soon, but these were my break-through discoveries today. I hope even some of this helped you. 

At the very least, spend some time clicking around your bank's website. It's tedious boring information, but simply reading it may help you get more out of your bank. Does your bank have an app?

In sum, find what works for you!

Any questions? Ask below!
Any tips? Post below!

Thank you for reading Strange Stage Blahg! There is no reading fee :)

Theatre is where the Heart is

From the Guardian today:

Home is where the heart is: why theatres must be more welcoming


I LOVE this model for theaters. Let's foster creativity AND community. 


Sunday, 24 May 2015

Write Write Write!


My personal journal preference - basic composition books.
I like the more professional feel of the composition book.
Find what works for you. Turn it into a scrapbook! 
As I have said, this past semester I created an Independent Study: Professional Theatre Preparation.

Basically I created a class as a safe arena in which to ask all my questions about the professional world of theatre - everything from what to wear to an audition to how does one join the union. It also helped me to create, schedule, pursue, and reflect on goals relating to entering professional theatre. As part of the class, I set out to attend a few auditions and work on a repertoire of monologues.

The professor who was helping me with this independent study suggested I keep an audition journal to track my thoughts pre- and post- audition. AND IT CHANGED MY LIFE #casual. I have a running diary that documents my growth from my first professional audition ever all the way to present day and it's seriously the best. The journaling I did actually served as a founding inspiration for this blahg.

Seriously. Write everything down. Give yourself that outlet. Writing helps to validate and reinforce your thoughts. Morever, emptying your thoughts on to a page helps you to address them and leave them behind while you are auditioning. By all means revisit your thoughts afterwards (one of the perks of writing it down) but first capture them on paper so they won't swirl around your head.

Already in a production? Keep writing! Journal about rehearsals. Each day can be different. Were you in your head? Did you acheive what you meant to in that scene? Why? Why not? Take your pulse each day and write it down. Plus you end up with an amazing souvenir at the end of the show.

Writing is a healthy way to check-in with yourself. Knowing yourself, what you need, what you like, how you work, your weaknesses, strengths, past experiences etc. are all necessary when trying to put yourself on stage/into a character. Everything comes back to YOU - the actor. Get to know yourself.


Write write write!

And keep reading, of course!



Read Read Read THESE:

Remember that time I told you to Read Read Read?

Here's an amazing listed of Top 10 Blogs Actors Should Know:

1. www.broadwaystars.com

If you live in New York, or you're simply interested in the Broadway scene, this is your blog. You can scan the headlines (and a single descriptive sentence) über-fast to discover all manner of breaking theater news and reviews. If brevity is truly the soul of wit, it's witty as hell.

2. 50in50.wordpress.com

Actor Brent Rose took a break from auditioning to accept a full-time job, but he didn't want to take a break from acting. So he created a video blog to keep up his acting chops and came up with a novel idea: 50 unique characters in 50 weeks. While not every video is a gem, there's no question the guy can act, and he's created a great showcase for himself.

3. www.the1secondfilm.com/blogs

Nirvan (yes, that's his full name), director of "The 1 Second Film," offers cool insight into the work of an indie film and video director by detailing his artistic process, making this blog both inspirational and fascinating as a production journal.

4. backstage.com/unscripted

Back Stage offers several useful blogs, such as Unscripted—musings from actors about their acting lives that will give you plenty to identify with. I also like Blog Stage's "buzz on the biz," at www.backstage.com/blogstage.

5. www.riskybusinessblog.com


The Hollywood Reporter offers three excellent blogs that are up-to-date, well-reported, and a welcome alternative to the awful snarkiness of other Hollywood blogs. Between the three, you'll be well-versed on whatever's happening in Tinseltown. The others are at www.thrfeed.com and www.thresq.com.

6. www.dailyactor.com

Created by an L.A.-based performer, this blog is intended to help actors promote and market themselves, though it's often more advice-oriented than anything else, with worthwhile tips coming from well-known actors via quotes and video clips.

7. danielhg.blogspot.com

Here's an actor you've probably never heard of who lives in London and writes about his auditions, acting, and politics. It's candid writing that keeps me coming back again and again no matter what he's talking about.

8. www.donedealpro.com

If you're an actor who's also interested in the craft of screenwriting, or you just long to know what scripts are making the leap from page to screen, this is a fantastic insider's site, even for the $23.95 yearly membership fee. Though it's more interactive than bloggish, there's a great Q&A section called Hollywooped (www
.donedealpro.com/members/hollywhooped.aspx)—which you can access for free without being a member—offering some of the best script advice I've seen anywhere.

9. www.clydefitchreport.com

This blog, named for turn-of-the-century playwright Clyde Fitch, the Neil Simon of his day, is a cleverly penned melding of New York and national theater news and interviews, trends in arts funding and advocacy, politics, and New York arts community gossip. Newsy and fun, it's run by Back Stage theater critic Leonard Jacobs.

10. cliffosmond.blogspot.com

This seasoned actor and teacher offers his insights in a beautifully articled blog with useful acting tips.

READ THEM!

Read Read Read

It's Summer time!

Which for most means we finally have the chance to read all those books we got for Christmas! High school and college students spend the rest of the seasons keeping up with assignments and academic readings. Summer is the golden opportunity to get to all the leisure reads we've put to the side.

I usually spend my summers toting dime-store romance novels back and forth from the beach. Lately, though, I've been super into non-fiction and biographies.

First on my list this summer is: Me: Stories of My Life a best-selling autobiography by Katherine Hepburn.
Quirky autobiography FULL of photos, anecdoctes, and wisdom.
 A remarkable staff person at my alma mater gifted this nifty book to me as a graduation present and I already can't get enough.

Actor Friends: If you do anything for yourself this summer, whether it's cleaning, crafting, camping, practicing, exercising etc., do yourself a favor and READ MORE! (A tip I should put into practice myself).

The head of our Drama Department at Washington College, my dear friend, and my constant inspiration, is famous for saying "A play a day". Your average play is ~70-100 (usually double spaced) pages. Read a play a day. It's easy. It's good for you. You find audition material. You have conversation material for shmoozing and socializing. You find inspiration.You find what you like, what you hate, what is overdone, and what is missing. Read a play a day.

Don't know where to start?
Here is a list of plays/theatre books I was given as a freshman:
  • Antigone by Sophocles
  • Macbeth by William Shakespeare
  • Hamlet by William Shakespeare
  • Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett
  • Angels in America by Tony Kushner
  •  A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams
  • Playboy of the Western World by JM Synge
  • A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansbury
  • Caucasian Chalk Circle by Bertold Brecht
  • Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen
  •  The Bakkhai by Euripides
  • Medea by Seneca
  • Wasps by Aristophanes (or another Aristophanes substitute)
  • Bacchides by Plautus (or another Plautus substitute)
  • The Second Shepherd's Play by Anonymous
  •  Heartbreak House or Major Barbara by George Bernard Shaw
  • The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde
  • The Triumph of Love by Maravaux
  • The School for Scandal by Sheridan
  • The London Merchant by Lillo
  •  Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller
  • Tartuffe by Moliere
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream by Shakespeare
  • Buried Child by Sam Shepard
  • Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf by Edward Albee
  •  Our Town by Thornton Wilder
  • Spring Awakening by Wedekind
  • Six Characters in Search of an Author by Pirandello
  • Oklahoma by Rodgers and Hammerstein
  • Blood Wedding by Lorca
  •  The Piano Lesson by August Wilson
  • Awake and Sing by Clifford Odets
  • Under the Gaslight by Augustin Daly
  • Idiot's Delight by Robert Sherwood
  • The Homecoming by Harold Pinter
  •  The Rover by Aphra Behn
  • The Verge by Susan Glaspell
  • Watch on the Rhine by Lillian Hellman
  • How I Learned to Drive by Paula Vogel
  • Fefu and her Friends by Maria Irene Fornes
  •  Accidental Death of an Anarchist, by Dario Fo
  • Betrayal by Harold Pinter
  • Master Harold and the Boys by Athol Fugard
  • Matsukaze by Zeami
  • American Buffalo by David Mamet
  •  Uncle Vanya by Anton Chekhov
  • Dr. Faustus by Christopher Marlowe
  • 'Tis Pity She's a Whore by John Ford
  • Cloud Nine by Caryl Churchill
  • Long Day's Journey Into Night by Eugene O’Neill
  •  Shakuntala by Kalidasa
  • Death and the King’s Horsemen by Wole Soyinka
  • The Ghost Sonata by August Strindberg
  • Uncommon Women and Others by Wendy Wasserstein
  • Six Degrees of Separation by John Guare
  •  The Dramatic Imagination-Robert Edmond Jones
  • The Empty Space- Peter Brook
Mostly groundbreaking classics. I do not claim to have read even a fraction of these. I can say that the ones I HAVE read (Cloud 9, Streetcar, Waiting for Godot, Our Town, Uncle Vanya, and Six Characters in particular) have made lasting impacts on me and continue to present themselves in my my life and the newer plays I read. Let's work our way through em together. Let me know what you think!

Perk of most of these being classics? They're in the public domain and easy to find for free or cheap. Troll yard sales and used book stores for major play bargains. 

Too good for classics? Reconsider. I thought I hated classics. (Sorry, Billy Shakespeare) But hey! classics are classic for a reason. They withstand the test of time. Centuries can pass and these works still have relevance. I can still identify with Chekhov's pained characters. Can you?

What about new work? Make no mistake, however, I am a constant supporter of new work. There are hundreds/thousands of talented contemporary playwrights churning out new work. Read as much new work as you can too! Basically, read EVERYTHING. It's nifty when you find parellels between contemporary and classic.

Also available for Android!

Play a day too much right now? Start small! Just keep reading! Start your day reading an article from Backstage, American Theater, or the Arts section of the Guardian. *cough* the Guardian has an app *cough* #justsayin #playaday #noexcuses









Whatever you do, keep reading!

Thanks for reading ;)



Saturday, 23 May 2015

New House

First major event (salute) of post-grad life: We are moving!

Home Sweet Home!

My mom is a priest and has recently accepted a call to a new parish back in Pennsylvania. With the church comes a rectory - a house owned by the church in which the priest resides while working for that church (usually). That is our current set-up in Maryland actually. Five years ago (during my senior year of high school) my Mom took a call and moved from Pennsylvania to Maryland to her current parish. Dad and I followed once I finished high school. Very recently, we finally sold our house in PA. Of course now we are moving back to the same county haha. It's funny how life works sometimes. I've really loved my time in Maryland. We'll see what this new chapter in Pennsylvania brings.

I'll be living with my parents in their new house for the rest of the summer before heading off to Richmond. The move sort of threw a wrench into any plans I'd had for summer employment. It's difficult to tell a potential Maryland employer they can only have me until June. Alternatively, it's hard to find work in a different state and to tell them they can't have you until mid-summer. Ultimately, I am actually super pleased the summer worked out this way. I usually rush to fill all my free time with something or other. Now I fully intend to relax and enjoy every bit of my summer (after we've finished moving, of course. Those boxes aren't going to unpack themselves!)

Are you moving this summer, too?
Pro tip: Plan with paper!
This is a system my parents swear by. Take measurements of your new place and all of your current furniture you wish to move. Translate those measurements into scale drawings. Have all the fun of decorating fend shui-ing without the back pain!


Mock up of my new room. Actual pictures coming *fingers crossed* next week.



The movers come on Wednesday. For now we're just moving around paper furniture.
Stay tuned for all the moving fun!

Have packing tips of your own? Share below :)

Thursday, 21 May 2015

Average Week

5 Days since Graduation.

In those 5 days I have:
  • sort of unpacked
  • played a LOT of Zoo Tycoon (throwback)
  • watched a LOT of Netflix

This is life 

Sunday, 17 May 2015

Commencement

Yesterday I officially graduated Suma Cum Laude from Washington College with departmental honours for both of my theses in the Drama Department and the Psychology Department!

It was a grotesquely humid 82 degrees out, but the day itself was lovely nonetheless (especially considering the thunderstorm that was forecast earlier in the week).

Overall, I remember less of the actual day than I thought I would. I had attended the commencement ceremony last year and somehow, the memory of standing near the flagpole on the green watching my friends graduate is more salient in my mind than sitting in the front row for my own graduation. This fact simply reinforces a strange pattern I have come to recognise in my life: Milestones hold a lot of weight and have a tremendous lead-up, but tend to pass rapidly and without warning. There is no pause before a momentous occasion occurs. Instead, I find myself in the middle of an event before I think to myself "Oh my God, it's happening!" And then the event ends and I realise I spent the entire time yelling at myself to pay attention rather than actually experiencing it.

I mean I gave the student commencement speech for crying out loud! And even that was over before it began.

I have spent the past 24-hours being mad that I didn't pay better attention/ that I didn't take enough photos/ that I felt hurried the whole day/ that I don't feel different now that it's over/ and so on whine whine whine.

I tend to think of life as isolated events, but everything thus far has proven to exist as more of a continuous conveyor belt of moments that gain significance later. My four years at college just kept coming towards me. I worked like a dog with the end-game of getting out of there. Now that it's over, I miss it (just as everyone said I would). Then again, I wouldn't do anything/couldn't do anything differently if I had the chance to do it all again.

Earlier in the week, my friends and I went to our local run-down bar for a final Team Tuesday. As we toasted to graduation, a friendly stranger named Whitey overheard us. He bought us all shots as a gesture of condolence that the four best years of our lives were behind us now. Whitey clearly felt that his years at college were his golden years, the zenith of his existence. In that moment, I feared that I had squandered my time at WAC, and began to mourn my wasted years. Barroom cliche much? As I write this now I am confident that my best years lay ahead, whats more, I have an obligation to myself to seek and achieve great years in my future. College was great. Seriously. I had some miserable set-backs, but some unforgettable experiences, too. And I emerged knowing myself. I made my mark and left on a high note. (Click speech above for more eloquent ramblings regarding my college experience).

Nevertheless, I am still frustrated at how dismally anti-climactic the day of graduation was. Anyone else? Sometimes I forget it happened. I feel strangely disowned, but also like I could go back tomorrow. I spent my four years racing towards that day. Imagining it. Fantasising about it. Then whooshclank. To be fair we had spent most of the week celebrating and having ceremonies. It felt a lot like saying goodbye to someone then realising you both are walking in the same direction X1,000. By the time graduation happened we were all a little saturated with farewells and parting words of wisdom. Even so...

Perhaps it isn't the graduation we are meant to remember. Perhaps the purpose of graduation is to provide some sort of definitive punctuation to an experience, provide a landmark of recognition on the conveyor belt. Overall, it's an indulgent ceremony with a lot of literal pomp and circumstance, but it's also a celebration. It's a mandatory halting of all other obligations. A chance to stop and look around. I think that's what I'll chalk it up to. I am grateful for even one moment of that day when I was afforded the opportunity to look back on my hard work, take pictures with friends and family, and say "I've done it!" It still doesn't feel like it happened, though. I've submitted all my assignments, received my diploma, sent my thank you cards, said goodbye, and emptied my room. It still doesn't feel like I finished.

Maybe nothing truly ever ends. (See conveyor belt analogy.) We continuely begin new stages in our lives. Everything keeps us moving forward. The "end" of a stage can feel a bit blasé, but each new beginning feels special.

There is a reason Washington College (and many other universities, colleges, institutions of higher learning) call their graduation "Commencement" - it is a new beginning, not an end.


I am an alumna! Ask me how I feel about it tomorrow haha

Tuesday, 12 May 2015

Taming of the WHO?

A spontaneous opportunity came my way during my last couple weeks of undergraduate study.

Amidst the chaos of submitting two theses and preparing for finals, I received an email from one of our new professors at WAC bearing the simple, ambiguous subject: "summer".

My professor knew of a summer production of Taming of the Shrew and had taken it upon herself to recommend me to the director. They were friends and had been peers while pursuing their Masters degrees at Yale.
Fun fact: Award-winning actor, Lupita Nyong'o, was at Yale at the same time, though in a different graduating class.
 She wanted to know my availability and my interest in pursuing the project. My summer plans were really up in the air at that point, so I said I'd be happy to submit my headsht, resume, and some audition material. I really knew nothing about the project, but any opportunity is worth pursuing right now!

When I heard back from the professor, I found out that the project was unpaid, uncertain housing arrangements, and wait for it...in Northern California (#cantaffordthatsh*t). But wait! There's more! 1) The professor was willing to help me sort out a type of scholarship to help with the cost. 2) The venue was a vineyard in gorgeous Murphy's California. 3) If cast, I'd be working on transcontinental collaboration from early July to late August with God knows how many nifty, talented people (#moneycantbuythatsh*t)

#3) honestly trumps most issues in this business. Opportunities are opportunities. I know now that they may present themselves through a series of sight-unseen emails (something I never would have expected before) haha

Conveniently, my final for my Independent Study for this past semester consisted of what I call my 6 Monologue Marathon. I had been working with another professor all semester on 3 classical, and 3 contemporary monologues. I performed them for other professors in the department on the last day of classes. Despite technological difficulties, we managed to film all of the monologues and send them to my professor who then relayed them to the director.

Less Fun Fact: I never got to review the audition material before it was sent to the director. I should have been more vigilant about communicating with the professors that recorded my pseudo-audition. If I could do it all again, I would have used the Marathon as a practice round, then recorded in the (nifty as all hell) One Button Recording Studio we have on our campus.
One Button Studio - an amazing resource Washington College has that I should have taken advantage of while I was a student. 
My audition (bearing Godknowswhat sound, video, acting quality) was enough to get me a phone call from the director!

After a bit of phone tag, she called me and introduced herself. It was strange that I had been corresponding about this opportunity for a few weeks and I was only now speaking with the director and learning all the hard and fast details about the project.

We talked for a long time about the play, her vision for it, the venue, the logistics of rehearsing, housing, living, performing, a bit about my experience, and then...my availability...Due to a commitment I had made to a theatre summer camp in Easton, MD, I would have had to miss the first week of rehearsal...BOOM DEAL BREAKER. Young woman who has never received official training in Shakespeare/ never been in a full production of Shakespeare AND can't arrive until a week after all the dramaturgy and teaching have finished...yeah I wouldn't hire me either haha.

The phone call quickly went from two theatre artists excited to collaborate with one another, to two women who no longer needed anything from one another. We tried our best to gracefully end the phone call.

I tried not to be too disappointed. I had known it was a longshot when I replied to the professor's "summer" email week before. Talking with the director, though, made the project sound like a possibility. Everything she told me about the project sounded amazing, too. It broke my heart to have to step away from it.

In the end, the puzzle pieces just weren't going to come together.

WHAT NOW?:
I have to believe that it wasn't meant to be. PLUS! There's always next year. I followed up with a "thank you" email thanking the director for taking the time to speak with me. I followed up with the professor, too, expressing my disappointment regarding the current project, but also my enthusiasm for any subsequent projects. We'll see what happens!

Check out details below to reserve your tickets! Break a leg Tara!


For those of you near Murphys California:

  • Check out Shakespeare on the Vine's very first production - a semi-modern, gender-swapped, version of William Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew directed by Tara Kayton!
  • Running: July 31st - August 22
  • Venue: Brice Station Vineyard
  • Click HERE to reserve your tickets

Monday, 11 May 2015

How I got the job


Over the past 5 months or so I have applied for ~ 20 positions and attended 3 professional auditions. I was fortunate enough to receive an offer for on.

Starting in late August, I will be  the Children's Theatre and Education Intern at Virginia Repertory Theatre in Richmond, Virginia for the 2015-2016 season.

How did I get the job?
  1. Luck
  2. Organization
  3. Preparation
My sweet, lovely boyfriend is from Richmond, Virginia. I visited him a few times last summer and learned first hand how nifty and arts oriented Richmond is. One of Sweetboy's best friends is thoroughly connected in the theatre scene in Richmond. When he heard VA Rep was hiring he dropped both of us a line. LUCK.

I visited the website, read their descriptions and created a checklist for myself. Here is a screenshot of the actual checklist. 
TIP: OneNote from the Microsoft Office Suite is AMAZING! It's an electronic version of every crazy notebook you've ever had. It changed my life. It's easy to use. You can doodle, make lists, collect pictures and ideas. I used it to keep all of my internship applications organized. It's so much better than saving a website bookmark, opening up a word document, or creating yet ANOTHER folder on your Desktop. Srrrzly...check it out.
Most of the internships I applied to wanted resume, letters of rec/references, and a coverletter. I had most of those things ready to go. ORGANIZATION

A few weeks later I received an email asking for a phone interview. I spoke with the assistant to the managing director as a sort of screening interview. She gave me a thorough description of the job and then relayed her notes from the interview to the woman in charge of teh Children's Theatre position.
A few weeks later I had an interview with three people at once (all associated with the Children's Theatre program). It was an overwhelming experience! I got through it though because I had heavily researched their website, talked to Sweetboy's best friend about the company, and practiced speaking informatively about my experiences, strengths, and goals. PREPARATION. 

An hour or so later, the assistant to the managing director called me again and said they'd like to offer me the job. I thanked them profusely and then asked for a few days to think about it (I was still waiting to hear back from an acting troop, plus I wanted to check logistics with my parents). A few short days later I accepted and heeeeeeerrreee we are!


What's a blahg?

blahg (n): essentially a blog (an online journal forum) whose subject matter is that of the everyday and is rambling in nature
blagh (v): to write a blagh (n) ^^^ see previous

Great Expectations

Well how do, folks? My name is Rachel and "Welcome!" to my blahg - Strange Stage. 

What to expect from this blahg:
You can expect a little bit of everything - a wide range of topics relating to post-graduate life, living in a new city, starting a job in theatre, auditioning and networking, cooking, budgeting, general adulting, fun tips and interests etc. You can also expect a healthy dose of grammatical errors, some shameless self-promotion, non-funded product promotion, as well as my personal opinions, biases, naiveté etc. which you are welcome to ignore or take personally as you see fit. Basically this blahg is open to my daily musings and discoveries over the next year.

About Me:
I am a graduating senior from Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland with a double major in Drama and Behavioral Neuroscience. 

I am currently sitting at home with my neurotic corgi, Dora, enjoying my third day post-finals week despite the massive thunderstorm raging outside. I officially graduate from Washington College this Saturday - a fact which which seems intermittently real.

I was recently hired as the Children's Theatre and Education Intern for the Virginia Repertory Theatre in Richmond, Virginia, where I'll be moving at the end of the summer. Click HERE for my post on "How I got the job"


Why this blahg now?

All the world's a stage, and it's a strange one. 

My generation, the graduating class of 2015 has reached a strange stage in our lives. 

There is often an abundance of stigma surrounding the year following graduation. The question "What are you going to do once you graduate?" starts raining down around Christmas time, depending on the investment of you friends, family, and loved ones. (In some ways, the question is helpful. If you have a particular career in mind, due dates for applications for jobs, internships, auditions, scholarships, grants etc. begin to peak between late January to mid-March.) Mostly, though, the "What are you doing with your life?" question is simply stressful. The pressure to start a career and succeed in your chosen field is often anxiety-proucing to the point of paralysis. 

Right now I am of the opinion that there is no right way to spend this year. Everyone is different. Nothing is certain. There is no sure-fire formula for success. I have friends enterring Med School and other graduate programs, joining the military, employed at our Alma Mater, employed elsewhere, taking gap years, moving to new cities, countries, or staying at home, and some are still figuring things out. Every option and combination thereof is acceptable. I also firmly believe that there is no hierarchy here.  

I was lucky enough to find a job with VA Rep for the next year. That doesn't mean I am any more certain about my future than the next person, employed or un-. I am balancing on the edge of something extroardinary and staring down into my life waiting to feel like it's beginning. Grand fantasies and great expectations constantly dance around my head. My imagination likes to pretend my twenties will be reminiscent of the 90s shenanigans of FRIENDS. Overall, I'm scared and excited to see what comes next. 

My hope for this blahg is to provide some insight (for anyone who is interested) into the elusive, unpredictable, terrifying, extraordinary experience that is the year following graduation. 

My journey will feature the particular experience of a 22 y/o, white, woman interested in pursuing a career in theatre. If I get an audition, you'll hear about it. If I get rejected, you'll hear about it. If I forget to pay an electricity bill, you'll hear about it. If I find a great article on shopping on a budget, you'll definitely hear about it. Ups, downs, all arounds...you'll hear about it.

Disclaimer: I am not an expert. I am an experiment. 


Class of 2015:Here's to the adventure!