So busy!
I’ve been plotting with Anenome on how to deal with Nigel, meeting with the planning committee for PC2007, editing a new poetry volume, trying to write new poetry AND taking a Chinese cookery class at the Learning Annex at the Institute. And I haven’t forgotten about all of you commenters. I intend to respond to each and every one of you when I get a free moment. And back to our story!
Every other week, the University puts on a major theatrical, musical or artistic production, prefaced by student presentations that anyone can sign up for. When I arrived at the theatre with Sol & Pepper, I was overjoyed to see several familiar names on the program.
Before the first act, the dean introduced a very special guest, Jan Betel, whose patronage paid for the event. She was seated next to her son Dickie who Nigel & I knew from our fencing class. “I’m so sorry all these horrible people are spoiling your birthday!” Jan hissed to Dickie not realizing* that there was a microphone nearby. “We’ll have a real party as soon as they all leave. Can I buy you something to make it all better?” Poor Dickie squirmed in his seat looking mortified.
Ms. Betel approached to podium. “My dear students. Welcome. Many of my friends (no one any of you would know) have asked me why I’ve sent my dear son Dickie to this university. After all, I have a great deal of money.” She stared into the distance lazily for a moment contemplatively before resuming her speech. “Yes, a great deal of money. Why send my only son to this school?”
“Only son? I thought she had two other boys!” I heard a whisper from behind me.
Ms. Betel continued. “I sent young Dickie here because there is so much that people of your station can teach him. How to procure illegal substances. Relations with the local bail bondsman. The latest dance steps.” Without another word, she left the podium and sat down leaving the audience unsure of whether she had finished or not. There was a smattering a polite applause.
The evening began in ernest with The Nice Young Men, a barbershop quartet featuring our own Ritchie Sauces as well as Dickie Betel. It was enjoyable if you like that sort of thing, although we were surprised to see one of the quartet wearing short pants.** Odd since he was performing onstage and this was in the middle of winter! Apparantly, he wears these abbreviated slacks wherever his travels take him.***
Next on was Wotcher!, a skiffle group led by a man who must have been my parents age or older. I asked Pepper if he was a faculty member. “Colin? No. He’s a local eccentric. I have a few classes with him. He’s been an undergrad for decades! I hear he’s quite the charmer, though. If you have a girlfriend, you should probably have her steer clear of him.”
If I have a girlfriend! Oh, these words stabbed through my very being like a icepick through the cornea! If I had a girlfriend, she wouldn’t be attending the theatre or art museums alone, say I! I busied myself looking through the program. “Oh my good friend Amy is on next! She will be giving an interpretive dance! That one is filled with hidden depth!” I tried to keep my tone of voice cheery.
If I needed a distraction at that moment, Amy certainly provided it. Her dance was captivating and absorbing. I was at the edge of my seat, eyes glued to the stage. Only the boos and catcalls following her performace broke my trance. It seems no one else shared my appreciation for her work. Their loss.
And then, after a brief intermission: Hamlet. While my primary literary interests lie in the past century and a half, I’ve always had a special place in my heart for the bard. The performance was adequate, but I kept being distracted by the two men seated in front of us. Since one of them kept whispering in the other’s ear, I mistook them for a couple.**** As I leaned forward to shush them, I noticed that the whisperer was reading to the other young man from A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Between the 2nd and 3rd scenes, I politely asked them to keep it down. The whisperer apoligized and said “Sorry, Serious likes to listen to the dialogue from one Shakepeare play as he watches another.” As I absorbed this odd bit of information, I recognized the whisperer as Marcel, a young writer whose poetry was over-rated, but whose dramatic work showed tremendous promise, greater than any other English major I knew of.
I would have responded, but I was struck dumb by the entrance of Ophelia. Longtime readers perhaps have already guessed that Ophelia was played by the young French actress Harriet. I had not suspected her nationality though since she bore no trace of an accent. Her beauty and extraordinary acting kept me captivated.
Pepper must have noticed this. “Why don’t you send her a note?!” she suggested at the intermission while we stood in line for snowcones.***** As I hemmed and hawed she fumbled though her purse for pen and paper. Finally, she turned to the gentleman standing behind us in line, who turned out to be none other than Marcel’s companion. “Excuse me”, Pepper said. “Can I borrow a pen really quick?”
His eyes brightened and he replied. “Yes, but first let me ask you, are you …. serious?” He arched an eyebrow as I noticed Marcel appear out of nowhere, roll his eyes and exale with resignation, a harbinger of what was to follow. Pepper began to respond, but he interrupted her by singing loudly “HAVE YOU EVER BEEN SERIOUS?”****** while gyrating and giving Pepper odd and improbable looks. This, of course, attracted a great deal of attention. Marcel, acting as if he had done this countless times before began to sing the bass line of the song while miming the onstage persona of Noel Redding. “Well, I have”.
He finished singing and presented Pepper with a pen. “A blue pen to go with your lovely blue eyes,” he purred. “But my eyes are grey,” she said hesitantly, as if approaching an unpredictable animal. “Marcel!” he yelled. Marcel, who had just disappeared reappeared just as suddenly holding out what looked like a contact lense case sitting atop a purple pillow. Pepper examined the case. “Color contacts?” she asked.
As Marcel and his friend walked away,******* Nigel appeared behind us.
“Ah, I see you’ve met the young Serious Dogstar.”
“You know him?” I asked my roommate.
“No, never met the man.” he replied.
“Then how do you know his name?” Pepper asked “And who the heck are you anyway?”
“Nigel Cuttlefish at your service!” he beamed, sticking his thumbs in his armpits. “As to how I knew his name, merely look at the pen he gave you!” Nigel chuckled.
Pepper and I gave the pen a closer look. On it was engraved, “A blue pen to go with your lovely blue eyes from Serious Dogstar“
“Oh brother,” thus Pepper. She took a napkin and quickly wrote out a note, not letting me see. “Now, how do we get this to Harriet?” she mused.
“Never fear,” an already familiar voice bellowed, “Serious is present!” He and Marcel were approaching us again.
“Uh, thanks for the pen. Bye.” Pepper started to walk away.
“But Harriet is my buddy!” Serious said.
“It’s true”, Marcel spoke up. “She’s an exchange student and Serious is showing her around.” The crowd had made their way back into the auditorium and we were nearly alone in the lobby. Pepper reluctantly agreed to give Serious the note and as he vanished through the backstage door, we returned to our seats.
Just as we were sitting down we heard a loud bang. I assumed that it was a part of the production until I recalled that we were seeing Hamlet which traditionally does not make use of firearms. The bang was followed by a high-pitched scream and a female voice with a Russian accent yelled “Harriet! She’s been shot! Serious has shot Harriet!”
To be continued ….
* Or perhaps not caring
** Junie tells me this style of trousers are called “shorts.”
*** I’m told that he is quite the world traveller.
**** Forgive me, Marcel!
***** A local theatre custom. Odd, but charming.
****** To the tune of “Are You Experienced” by the Jimi Hendrix Experience
******* I don’t understand why they left. They didn’t want their snowcones any longer?