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Moe, Julia and I went bike riding last saturday (January 16). It was fun. I have not been on a bike in a while. The seat was way too hard...I got a bruise. Very uncomfortable. We were riding bikes/visitng with Dallin and Giff Giff when Chris came home. At 2am, we all decided that we were just going to go to San Diego for fun. Why not? It is warm there right? At 3, after getting a bag each, ice and some scrambled-together-food, we were on the road. Road trips are very fun I think. On the way, we listened to some Louis Black. Have you ever heard him? He is HYSTERICAL, though I would advise those opposed to swearing to stay away, but man, his candy corn skit is hysterical. We we were getting close to oceanside, we started blast R&B/Rap. Wicked sweet.
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We went shopping at a mall in SD. It is the nicest mall I have ever been to. It kinda was like being on 5th ave in NY in an outdoor Simon mall. Interesting huh??
That night, we all got dressed up and had Thai food. YUM! I love that genre of pallet. So good. We also went and saw some two pianists battle it out, kinda like karaoke, but they would take requests and see if they could play it on the piano. It was fun.
The next day we left at noon. We were in So Cal for about 24 hours. On the way back, it was raining SO hard. SO SO SO SO hard that it was hard to see ten feet in front of you. It took something like 15-16 hours to get home because the first hour took maybe three hours. Something like that. I am just glad that it did not snow like it said it was going to. That would have been worse.
During the rain, we came across a car that was in the right two lanes perpendicular to traffic. It caused a traffic jam, but as we got close we noticed that this woman had fish tailed and spun. Luckily she did not crash into anything and that the drivers were cautious enough/not going so fast that they could notice she had spun out. I was rather sad though because she was crying. How scary would that be...traumatizing probs.
Oh! I got a hair cut. European mullet.
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Auditions are coming up soon, and it just seems that so much happens all the time. I have no time to practice for now CCM...learning new pieces for that on tops of practicing for SFCM and Mannes... PLUS seating auditions on Mahler 5, which I haven't even really looked at. AND we are playing Mendelssohn's Midsummer Night's Dream...joy! That scherzo is going to be the death of me, and I have to perfect it because I am principle. Not that I am complaining though.
I went and saw Tartuffe. Dallin Alred was in it. It was SO good. I liked the costumes and what they added. It was very Tim Burtony, and quite hysterical. I like how they added music. A very good production. Up there with Hamlet. The violin playing/singing could have been a bit better, but it was not a musical so I guess that is alright. Also, sometimes the projection was not good, especially with the woman (minus Norine and Dorine, the maids. They were superb). I think the best part was the costume/makeup design--oh, and the whole picture frame/silohuette idea was bretty nifty.
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Earlier this month, I went and saw a project of They Shoot Horses, Don't They? Now that was one moving piece of art. Not a play, a piece of art. Man. I don't think I have been effected by a play before like that. I couldn't talk. It took everything I had to actually go up to my friends and tell them good job. The sad thing is that many of the audience members were stoic and did not really know what was going on. I loved how the people in the marathon dance represented the people in Robert's life. I also like how it differentiates from the book. Very good. So, I do have one question though--did Robert shoot his mother as well? That is what I got from it. What does someone have to feel like to ask someone to shoot them, and what kind of person actually does it?? Oh wait....I have experienced this....I don't deal well with suicide/death....not at all. This was some of the best acting I have ever seen, and definitely the best "production" at BYU, though BYU could never do it because of content and because of swearing. Luckily I saw this. Oh, I loved how the dance marthoners wore masks and then when they were part of Robert's life, they took off the mask. I also liked how the judge/announcer was almost like Big Brother, how he would always be lurking around, but never do anything or interfere....creepy. Tartuffe was the same as Robert. It was interesting to see him play a dramatic role and a comic role and do both pretty darn well. Way to go Andrew Veenstra.
This brings me to the topic of Angels in America...but that discussion could go on for novels and sequels. That is such an amazing two plays...and the HBO movie is BREATHTAKING!!
"Respect the delicate ecology of your delusions."
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicaVPmfDhu9A2soT10jOf3Ps9kpFCDjT0Kd9TfUmomA6f_kJBFQNkN-LQ4XRLZHQ1F6wZfK85CUnMzSEOTMQfUK7mzPLWMwp6qi-71e3YmtqfF8fhyBk8Ln0_DdmSBdUso5jp45QBA2s_w/s320/SD+7.jpg)
Auditions are coming up soon, and it just seems that so much happens all the time. I have no time to practice for now CCM...learning new pieces for that on tops of practicing for SFCM and Mannes... PLUS seating auditions on Mahler 5, which I haven't even really looked at. AND we are playing Mendelssohn's Midsummer Night's Dream...joy! That scherzo is going to be the death of me, and I have to perfect it because I am principle. Not that I am complaining though.
I went and saw Tartuffe. Dallin Alred was in it. It was SO good. I liked the costumes and what they added. It was very Tim Burtony, and quite hysterical. I like how they added music. A very good production. Up there with Hamlet. The violin playing/singing could have been a bit better, but it was not a musical so I guess that is alright. Also, sometimes the projection was not good, especially with the woman (minus Norine and Dorine, the maids. They were superb). I think the best part was the costume/makeup design--oh, and the whole picture frame/silohuette idea was bretty nifty.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbU3AuQUIjHCqPl3jTd_4Ke36oij_thDhJVFMhFHIRZbAMximmP3maOBMNsdIDE9gogBUBevtTSniXFVNX_4P56gvyzkoj7Oxgvw9n7ngasA98_ZuhOXR5EC0rdAQsOAXymE6AE8YDG-oL/s320/tartuffe+4.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj7pOILprk0pUFw3qXB3rISjfRVUjBuIAPvczG2j5pROlRvrCIP353OedlsQ_JHdYircoER1zPTedWOu2PqiQYLb5ZeDq26QAlNieHjVUT31UM1ZMDH9USCVoyoMHrgISBFUuQTBi7d8m4p/s320/tartuffe.jpg)
Earlier this month, I went and saw a project of They Shoot Horses, Don't They? Now that was one moving piece of art. Not a play, a piece of art. Man. I don't think I have been effected by a play before like that. I couldn't talk. It took everything I had to actually go up to my friends and tell them good job. The sad thing is that many of the audience members were stoic and did not really know what was going on. I loved how the people in the marathon dance represented the people in Robert's life. I also like how it differentiates from the book. Very good. So, I do have one question though--did Robert shoot his mother as well? That is what I got from it. What does someone have to feel like to ask someone to shoot them, and what kind of person actually does it?? Oh wait....I have experienced this....I don't deal well with suicide/death....not at all. This was some of the best acting I have ever seen, and definitely the best "production" at BYU, though BYU could never do it because of content and because of swearing. Luckily I saw this. Oh, I loved how the dance marthoners wore masks and then when they were part of Robert's life, they took off the mask. I also liked how the judge/announcer was almost like Big Brother, how he would always be lurking around, but never do anything or interfere....creepy. Tartuffe was the same as Robert. It was interesting to see him play a dramatic role and a comic role and do both pretty darn well. Way to go Andrew Veenstra.
This brings me to the topic of Angels in America...but that discussion could go on for novels and sequels. That is such an amazing two plays...and the HBO movie is BREATHTAKING!!
"Respect the delicate ecology of your delusions."
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