The Best of All Possible Shows
Today’s story took place during my senior year of undergrad.
Three friends (Ian, Megan, and Noelle) and I had been asked to perform a
song-set from Leonard Bernstein’s Candide
for the general music class of my rather strict, and extremely
intimidating, voice teacher. So, the girls and I decided the night before to
wear formal black and white for the performance and I must have forgotten to relay
that bit of information to Ian. I will share more on that in a moment. Side
note: Ian was quite well-known for his HUGE collection of Tommy Hilfiger attire
and a silver tray filled (there must have been 25 bottles!) with various
colognes that I often sampled. But, I digress.
So, we arrived that next day in our formal black and white to
greet my voice teacher and his class of about 20 college undergrads. Ian hadn’t
arrived yet, but, he was coming from a distant class so we weren’t too
concerned. Now, before I continue, I have to tell you about Megan’s “support
belt.” Megan has a beautiful rich voice filled with color, but, for whatever
reason, our voice teacher had insisted that she wear this support
belt/contraption for that semester. It was really akin to wearing headgear for
braces. Sometimes the wearing of it could be masked by outfit choice; sometimes
not. I can vividly recall my teacher turning to Megan shortly before our
performance and with his trained operatic baritone voice he said, “Maaaygan
(that’s how he always pronounced her name), did you remember to wear your
support belt?” Well, as I mentioned earlier, our voice teacher could be quite intimidating,
to say the least. Whenever we would forget something, if there was some way to
hide that fact, we would. So, Megan said, “Oh, yes, I remembered.” He must have
sensed some delay in her response because he squinted his brow and replied,
“Now, Maaaaaaaaaygen????” It was then that I knew she had most certainly not
worn her support belt. A moment passed and she sheepishly responded, “No, I’m
sorry. I was in such a rush, I forgot.” He then nodded with a brief look of
concern and consternation flashing over his face. Well, that already had me
stifling a chuckle when Ian suddenly arrived making his usual grand entrance
wearing shorts and a shirt so bright purple that Liberace would have deemed it
“too much!”
Oh my goodness, we all looked at each other and laughed at
Ian’s expense. He looked at us incredulously. “Why didn’t someone tell me this
was formal?” In hindsight, I really don’t know how I missed this detail with
Ian as he was my roommate at the time AND I had driven him to school earlier
that morning! Still, I sincerely blame all of what was about to happen on the
three of them and their set-up thus far. For what was to come, I would give a
month’s salary for video footage.
I haven’t said much about Noelle yet. Noelle was my partner
in crime during undergrad. We were the best of friends and could read each
other like a book. All we needed to do was glance at one another and vivid
messages were shared. Noelle has these big, bright, beautiful eyes and, back
then, when she would get nervous or alarmed about something, they would get
bigger and brighter and more beautiful. Well, every time we looked at Ian’s
outfit, and then over at Megan hiding from the teacher because of her lack of
support belt, we would glance at one another and laugh. But, the time had come.
It was time to settle down, take our places and begin the presentation.
Our voice teacher hushed the class and with his commanding
voice and presence, he introduced each member of our quartet, our pianist, and
shared a bit about Leonard Bernstein’s operetta. We were grouped together with
our backs to the audience; two seated on tall stools, the other two standing to
the side. The pianist began. Each person was to turn one at a time toward the
audience and begin the performance with its introductory set of four solos.
Megan was first. With her beautiful rich voice, she began to sing. A glorious
sound emanated but it was just the slightest bit under pitch because of her
having grown accustomed to her support belt which she was now not wearing. Now,
this I could have handled. No reason for alarm. But, I made the mistake of
glancing over at Noelle, whose eyes were now widening as Megan sang her part
just a bit under pitch. As the pitch dipped further, Noelle’s eyes grew wider
and I could feel laughter building inside of me. I quickly turned my eyes to
Ian in an attempt to squelch the growing laughter within; however, the site of
Ian in his shorts and bright purple shirt did not do the trick. I started to
make an audible sound. Luckily, Ian was to sing next so I had time to get it
out of my system. But, as Ian began to sing and he was jabbing me because I
still had my back to the audience chuckling, he started laughing. So, now, I
couldn’t look at Ian anymore because he was sending me into a laughing fit, so
I turned my face back to Noelle whose eyes were now as big as saucers and I
laughed even harder; Ever closer to my turn to solo. Somehow, by some miracle,
I made it through my solo, but then, it was Noelle’s turn. She had to sing the
line, “I was in a funk, my confidence was failing…I was feeling sunk but once
again I’m sailing” after which the quartet sang together. Well, I don’t know if
she always did this on purpose, but, I always thought she was mispronouncing
the fifth word in that phrase. I won’t share what it sounded like, but, she did
it again. And I was done! When it was time to sing, I could hardly make a
sound. Ian and I were just laughing and moving from place to place leaving the
girls to cover the "quartet" by themselves. Megan without her support belt and
Noelle who, God bless her, had kept her composure longer than any of us. That
piece of the presentation ended in this odd mix of laughter and incomplete final
chord. Ladies and gentlemen, it was here that I was to step forward and sing
the sensitive ballad, It Must Be So.
If you are familiar with the show, you know this is a scene where Candide has
returned to his home of Westphalia to find his family and friends all killed in
war. He is literally walking through a battlefield stepping over the bodies of
the fallen. The ballad, It Must Be So,
has never been, and will likely ever be, performed as I did that day. I Could
Not Stop Laughing: “My world is dusthhahahahahaha now (insert strained
grandmother laugh here) and all I’ve loved is deadhahahahahahahhaah, so let me
trust now in what my master saidpppphhhhhhhhhhh, there is a hahhahahahahahaha
in every hahahahahahaha, it must be so… it must be hahahahahahahaso.” All the
time, my friends are laying on the ground convulsing in laughter when they were
supposed to be portraying the dead!
I wish I could tell you this comedic nightmare was over but
we had two more songs to perform. They went about as well as the first and we
finally closed it out with this dynamic final power pose, arms stretched up and
out shaking in laughter. The final piano chord fell into silence and the class
just sat there; afraid to move. Slowly, one or two started clapping and we
quickly bowed and stepped outside.
Our voice teacher was LIVID. He walked outside and scolded
us and as soon as we were out of ear shot we went to breakfast both laughing
and fearing for our lives. He eventually
forgave us and, weeks later, we were all able to look back at the humor in all
of this.
It is these moments that are so absurd and shocking and
embarrassing at the time; yet, they create the most wonderful spice of life. I hope
you take a moment today to look back on something embarrassing from your past and
laugh and laugh and laugh!
I continue to be,
Jamie
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