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We have a cast for the reading of "Like a Loss," the ten-minute play in the Hawking timeline!

"Like a Loss"
by Phoebe Roberts
~~~

Starring
Colonel Reginald Prescott Hawking, hero of the Indian Rebellion: Brad Smith
Mr. Henry Chapman, his valet and batman: Eboracum Richter-Dahl

Read the rest of the entry on Mrshawking.com!

Join us for our one-night only performance as the opener of Bare Bones 16: At War for piece, The Wheel, written by Zinnie Harris and directed by Jess Viator, on Thursday, March 26th, 2015 at 8pm at Unity Somerville, at 6 William Street, Somerville, MA.
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Saturday of Intercon started out with Bernie and I helping usernamenumber prepare for lunch in consuite. We hadn't planned on it, but we like Brad and we like Intercon and we like helping, so we jumped in when we learned we could be useful. It was actually a lot of fun, so we're likely to sign on to help in a more official capacity next year. I typically don't do morning games despite being a morning person-- they are prone to drops --so that worked out nicely.

My afternoon game was The Bloody Harvest of Pomona, an Ancient Roman Cthulhu game. I like Ancient Rome even if I'm a bit burnt out on Cthulhu right now, and I've been mulling ideas for writing an Ancient Roman game myself, so I thought I might see how other people approach it and signed up.

I was extremely happy with how my costuming turned out. I found a modern gown in a cadet blue that had stola-like details, wore my beloved strappy wedge sandals, and found this awesome forensic hairstylist who does Youtube videos demonstrating how Roman women did their hair. I did a version of the one she does representing that of Empress Sabina, only simplified without the needle and thread and the need for a slave to help you. ;-) I glued together two headbands with spikey-looking detail on them such that they looked kind of like the points of a crown, separated the top layer of my hair from the bottom layer, and put my new circlet on so that it lay between the two layers in the back. Then I braided the layers and coiled them into a bun on the back of my neck. I looked very regal and Roman, so I was extremely pleased, especially since I usually suck so much at doing hair and usually give up on it. My makeup was also modeled after actual Roman preferences, with heavy winged eyeliner, bold cool tones and metallics around the eyes, and deep red lips. So I looked really good. This doesn't quite do it justice, but here's an idea:

Sadly I was not impressed with the game. My character sheet was exceptionally bland and full of "woman things" like make sure everyone enjoys the party and find a lover and glare at my husband. There was an intro into the cultist plot, at least, but the design was such that everybody knew who was part of their faction and who wasn't, so keeping secrets from the right people was easy, and there was no good way to get information about people who you were competing with. So everybody just cast their rituals and all the gods they summoned just showed up. I also have a theory that there was an effort to some semblance of "historical accuracy" with regard to gender roles-- a lot not including women in plots they "wouldn't have been involved in back then" --so the ladies' characters ended up pretty boring. Of course, I'd have to read the whole game to be certain, but I did see a lot of bored women in that game. I had some good conversations, and got to interact with a couple of cool lapers I've only ever met at Intercon, but overall the game was pretty weak. Not recommended.

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I am pleased to report that my staged reading of Mrs. Hawking at Bare Bones went well. We filled the house and the presentation went off without a hitch. I was very happy with the actors, and the script is in fairly good shape. There's a few things I want to change since the reading but not too much, so I think it's in a pretty tight state.

The question here is next steps. The audience reacted really well to it, but many of them were like, this is begging for sequels, and it's action, while stageable, is somewhat cinematic-- certainly expensive, which may prevent it from ever being produced. That's something that has been on my mind. Unknown writers do not often get production with big budgets. I hate to think the play will never see any future because of that. And yet, I think some of its expensive bits-- the milieu expressed in set and costumes, the stunts --would be part of the story's appeal.

So I am pondering ways around this sort of thing. I chatted a bit with [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber after the production (and during the lovely cast party reading star [livejournal.com profile] lilibet hosted) and he spitballed some interesting thoughts. He said it might have a possibility to become a "Kickstarter darling," appealing to people who like Victoriana, strong female characters, and the neat combination thereof into an action-adventure mystery caper. If I could get the word out to the right people, and a large enough group of them, I could see that. Also the medium is in question. Brad mentioned that it would be fun to pitch it to PBS as a "action Downton Abbey," which amuses me. I'm sure that's a little bit too ambitious for them to take me seriously right now, but with some capital, would it be possible to film on my own? I am, I think, capable of adapting it to screenplay. A feature-length already crossed my mind, but I thought maybe that might push the chances of ever seeing it come to production even further. But what if it were in more episodic form? Do each "adventure" as a multi-part "series" of episodes, along the lines of how Sherlock has "series" rather than "seasons"? I am not trained in film production myself, but might that form place it more within the reach of finding someone who could help me bring it to reality?

A lot of stuff to think about. I'm not sure what makes the most sense. But I would love to figure it out.
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Rehearsals have been going along nicely for the reading of my play Mrs. Hawking with Bare Bones, the staged reading series sponsored by Theatre@First. I was lucky enough to have a wonderful cast come out to be involved, and they're doing a great job of helping me figure out the best way to present the material. The script, thanks to them, is in better shape than ever now. I know many of you have already come to the first reading, but those of you who are still interested and those who have not yet had the pleasure of hearing it, I would love it if you could join us for the reading. The details are as follows:

MRS. HAWKING
A staged reading of an original play
Written and directed by Phoebe Roberts
Newly edited for presentations

One night only!
April 11th at 8PM
Unity Church, 6 William Street, Somerville, MA

Admission is free!
$5 donation to Bare Bones suggested

STARRING
Elizabeth Hunter as Mrs. Victoria Hawking
Gabrielle Geller as Miss Mary Stone
Ryan Kacani as Mr. Nathaniel Hawking
Brad Smith as Lord Cedric Brockton
Stephanie Karol as Mrs. Celeste Fairmont and Miss Grace Monroe
Nick Martucci as Lord Walter Grainger and Mr. John Colchester

You can find the Facebook event here if you'd care to RSVP. Thanks so much for your support!

breakinglight11: (Cavalier Fool)


Auditions went well on Monday night for my reading of Mrs. Hawking, and I am pleased to announce I have a lovely cast!

Elizabeth Hunter as Mrs. Victoria Hawking
Gabrielle Geller as Miss Mary Stone
Ryan Kacani as Mr. Nathaniel Hawking
Brad Smith as Lord Cedric Brockton and Narrator 3
Stephanie Karol as Mrs. Celeste Fairmont, Miss Grace Monroe, and Narrator 2
Nick Martucci as Lord Walter Grainger, Mr. John Colchester, and Narrator 1

I was fortunate to have a number of talented people, and it was pretty much a battle between two choices in literally every role. But I am happy with this cast and I think they will not only do a good job representing my piece, but also that they will work well together.

Now I need to get down to brass tacks. The script is mostly prepared, but still needs a last go-over before I send it to the actors in case they want to look at it ahead of time. We have rehearsal dates and location (thanks to the wonderfully generous Ms. Hunter) but I need to block out what sections of the script we're going to work on when. This project is important to me, so I'm excited to get going on it.

The reading will happen on April 11th at 8PM at Unity Church at 8 William Street in Somerville, so I hope I will see you there!

breakinglight11: (Faustus Jared)

The Post-Meridian Radio Players are getting close to their performance date for their Summer Radio Mystery Theater show!

The pieces:

From The Burns and Allen Show - "Gracie Takes Up Crime-Solving!"

Gracie's fascination with the radio detective show "The Tall Man" inspires her to change careers and drag hubby George into an investigation of the local postman's missing 1928 Ford Essex!

Written by George Burns
Directed by Brad Smith

Featuring Jared Hite as Bill Goodman!

Sorry, Wrong Number!
After overhearing a murder plot on the telephone, Mrs. Stevenson tries in vain to alert the authorities, but no one seems willing to listen to—let alone believe—her story until it is too late!

Directed by Neil Marsh
Original script by Lucille Fletcher

Featuring [livejournal.com profile] rigelin the starring role of Mrs. Stevenson!

And The Hound of the Baskervilles

A rural doctor from Devonshire enlists the aid of Sherlock Holmes to protect the new lord of Baskerville Hall from a sinister threat: a demonic hound!

Directed by Jess Viator
Original script by Murray Burnett
Adapted from the novel by A. Conan Doyle
Performance adaptation by Jeremy Holstein

Featuring Jared Hite as Sir Henry Baskerville!

Performance Dates
Friday, July 27th, 2012 @ 7:30pm
Saturday, July 28th, 2012 @ 2:00pm (matinee)
Saturday, July 28th, 2012 @ 7:30pm

Location
Urban Promise Church of Somerville
204 Elm Street, Somerville, MA

Besides being excited for the shows themselves, I am excited to see Jared play two such different characters. The Burns and Allen piece intends to imitate the original as much as possible, so Bill Goodman is the first role he's ever gotten based on his considerable skill as a mimic. And I've always loved The Hound of the Baskervilles as a story, so I was incredibly pysched that he got to be in that.

I will be attending two of the three performances, the Friday night show and the Saturday matinee. If anyone would care to join me, I would love the company, and would be interested in making plans for dinner and lunch beforehand. So please let me know once you've reserved your tickets, which you may do here on the show website.
breakinglight11: (Puck and Oberon)

The Post-Meridian Radio Players just announced their cast lists for their Summer Radio Mystery Theater! I am very proud to say that Jared will be playing not one but two parts across the three pieces featured in this show. In the production of "Gracie Takes Up Crime-Solving," drawn from the Burns and Allen show, he will be playing the womanizing charmer Bill Goodman. Personally I thought his reading at the audition for that part was phenomenal, so I'm really glad he got it. This piece will be directed by [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber, and I'm so happy for him that he'll get a chance to work under Brad's direction. Additionally, the other day he was offered the role of Sir Henry Baskerville in another of the three pieces The Hound of the Baskervilles. I am a huge fan of that novel, so that's really cool. He'll be in excellent company, too. Congratulations to [livejournal.com profile] rigel for getting the lead in Sorry, Wrong Number, directed by the awesome [livejournal.com profile] audioboy. And most of the other cast members are names I recognize from previous productions Jared did with Theatre@First, such as the amazing Leslie Drescher, who was Rosalind and Caroline Bingley. Jared's wanted to get into voice acting for a long time now, and I know he loves working with this group, so I'm extremely happy for him. It makes me so proud to see his name on the cast lists here on the show website.

Jared and went to see the last production that PMRP put on, when they did an episode of Red Shift and a reading of The Day the Earth Stood Still. I'd never been to an audio drama performance before, so I didn't know what to expect. They lined the edge of the stage with microphones and had a row of chairs along the back where the actors waited until it was their time to move up and speak. The sound effects were handled by the techies over the sound system, like in a regular play. The actors were sort of in costume too, which was interesting. I was impressed to learn that [info]oakenguy* was one of the writers of well-written and hilarious Red Shift script. All the actors were very funny and did a great job, but the highlight of the show for me was [livejournal.com profile] lediva, talking in the WEIRDEST sort of strangled-off nerd voice, playing a violently obsessed fan from a race of acid-spitting aliens. It was an interesting experience, and one I will be repeating when I attend the Summer Radio Mystery Theater. It will be July 27th and 28th, both nights at 8PM and then a 2PM matinee on Saturday. I hope you'll join me there for Jared's PMRP debut!
breakinglight11: (Crawling Dromio)
At last, the week of ceaseless theater and theater prep is over. I went to all four shows of As You Like It, which turned out to be a thoroughly enjoyable production. There was lots of good acting and great humor as I was hoping there would be, and it was also nice to be reminded just how good Jared is. I haven't seen him act in a while, and I was incredibly proud of the performance he turned in as Oliver, the hero's wicked elder brother who reforms by the end to marry the heroine's cute cousin. He seems to have enjoyed it too, as they were a great group to work with and he very much liked his part. [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber too is particuarly worth a mention in his hilarious portrayal of Touchstone who was easily everyone's favorite part of the play. My favorites of his line readings were his scary-heavy-metal-voice "DOTH MY SIMPLE VISAGE CONTENT YOU?" and "Thou art in a perilous state, shepheeeeeeeerd!' The picnic on Saturday made it even better. We ended up in a group of over twenty people, with lots and lots of delicious food to share. It doesn't get much better than combining three of the best things in the world, food, friends, and theater.

I hope this coming week is lower-key. Even if I'm enjoying the things I'm doing, constantly having to run from one thing to the next is a surefire way to stress me out. I'm still a little residually edgy. But on the plus side, I will soon be able to release the cast list for Merely Players, which I am very excited for. Had a very productive meeting with Dave to make sure we were on the same page, and I think things are going to work out very well. He was great to talk to and I think he'll be great for everyone involved in the show to work with. My parents are also coming in, and I know they're going to need my help with some stuff they need to get done while they're here. More work, I guess, but it will be nice to see them. Here's hoping I get a minute to catch my breath after the week I've had.
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As you may know, Jared is going to be portraying the wicked elder brother Oliver in a production of As You Like It. [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber is in this show as well as Touchstone, one of Shakespeare's awesome fools. It will be going up in Seven Hills Park in Davis Square the weekend of September 8th - 11th. I would like to plan a lovely potluck picnic dinner in the park before the show on Saturday the 10th and I would like you all to be there with me. The show is at 8PM, so I figured we could arrive in the park around 6, and play and eat and hang out together in the park for a while before we watch. Please let me know if you can come that day, and if you would like to make anything for the picnic, that would be very welcome! And feel free to bring anyone else you know you might like to come.

I am looking forward to your company, so I hope you all can join me there! Remember, the show is FREE. And if you can't come on Saturday but can come to another night, let me know that too, as I'll be going to all four shows and would be glad to make separate plans with you as well. :-)
breakinglight11: (Cavalier Fool)
I totally forgot to mention this, even though it's cool news and it happened a while ago now. Jared is going to be in a production of As You Like It! He will be playing Oliver, the wicked older brother of the hero Orlando who initially betrays his brother but ultimately learns the error of his ways. The production is being put on by Theatre@First, a well-regarded local company whom I first became aware of when I saw [livejournal.com profile] oakenguy in their awesome Shaken Up Shakespeare show, a pastiche of pieces by the Bard and reinterpretations thereof. To make it even cooler, [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber is also in this show, playing Touchstone the fool, probably my favorite character in this play. I have a soft spot for fools, you know. :-) I think he'll be really great at it, which makes me even more excited to see it.

This is pretty cool because this marks Jared's first role with a company other than Hold Thy Peace. It makes me really happy for him that what he learned working with HTP got him to the point where he could audition for a Shakespeare play for a director who didn't know him and sufficiently impress that person enough to earn a part. The show will be going up September 8th through 11th, at 8PM the first three nights and a 3PM matinee on Sunday, at Seven Hills Park. I am planning on attending all the performances if I can, and would love to get a group together to go support Jared and Brad. HTPers, you in particular I'd love to bring along. So mark your calendars now and come out with me to see our lovely and talented friends. :-)
breakinglight11: (Cool Fool)
Despite missing Jared, this was a pleasant, low-key weekend. Saturday I went with Bernie to see [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber in A Midsummer Night's Dream, and that was a lot of fun. The show was set in the sixties, complete with a conflict by ultra-hippie Lysander (brilliantly and hilariously played by Brad) and the square Demetrius and Egeus, and all the fairy magic seemingly boiled down to the effects of various psychedelic drugs. It actually worked quite well, particularly skewing Lysander that way, and made for a really funny setup with lots of fun performances. Brad was amazing as always, taking on his first Shakespeare role with energy and great physical embodiment of the role. I also was pleasantly surprised to see that the director and the portrayer of Theseus and Oberon was Ron Lacey, the gentleman who played Ferdinand in the production of Love's Labor's Lost I was in last summer, an actor I admire and who apparently is quite clever behind the scenes as well. While occasionally I found the blocking a bit frenetic, making it a bit tough for the dialogue to come through clearly and with nuance, I thought they did a great job transplanting the play into their new context and a great job making a fun show of it. I gather this is a new troupe, and if they continue to put on Shakespeare, I would love to audition for them myself. Brad has kindly agreed to keep me informed, so that could be a fun possible theater opportunity in the coming days.
breakinglight11: (Cavalier Fool)

Sunday I went to see [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber in the MTG’s production of Jesus Christ Superstar. I attended the Sunday matinee, and Bernie and Plesser were good enough to accompany me. I enjoyed Evil Dead there very much, and I know now that I should never miss a chance to see Brad act and/or sing onstage.

The production was decent and I enjoyed it, but it had issues. To put on my critic hat, as I threatened Brad I would, the biggest problem for me and the one that kind of pervaded the whole show was that the sound levels were really off. I had a very hard time hearing the singers over the band, which unfortunately made it harder to appreciate everyone’s performance. Judas was a good actor as well as a good singer, but he particularly got lost volume-wise. Brad of course was amazing, easily my favorite performance in the show. He has such a rich, strong voice, and I very much enjoyed how he conveyed the peculiar conflict of Pontius Pilate, particularly when he exploded with frustrated rage when the man he was trying to spare would do nothing to save himself. I also had no idea that [livejournal.com profile] wired_lizard could dance, and my compliments on her really fun costume work!

My favorite scene was the scourging of Jesus. They had a very clever, visually striking way of doing it. They had Pilate stand on a higher level than everyone else, cracking his whip and counting the lashes, as Jesus was seized by the arms and turned away from the audience, so that the ensemble could run downstage, dip their hand in a bowl of blood, and smack their bloody fingers against Christ’s back in time with each of Pilate’s strokes. I thought that was an incredibly clever way to do that. Other highlights include Greg Lohman’s really fun performance as Herod (his song is one of my favorites from the show) amid girls dressed as sexy security guards, and the tiny Asian guy with the BIG BASS VOICE playing Caiaphas.

I wish I could see it with Jared and hear what he thought. He's a big fan of the musical, and while I saw the movie a million years ago, I didn't remember it all that well. He and I had an interesting conversation as to how the musical is ambiguous about whether or not it sees Christ as truly divine. As for the group I went with, Plesser was the only one of us with real familiarity with the music. He was sorry that Pilate's Dream was played electric instead of acoustic. I was just glad that they did Superstar justice. And though I'm not sure I agree with every stylistic choice made by Andrew Lloyd Weber, I find his adaptation of them material very interesting. Recasting Jesus as a sixties-style revolutionary is a great idea because he really was a revolution. Religiously, socially, politically, ideaologically revolutionary. He did what every great social reformer means to do: he changed the world. And after all, as I've always said regarding the saga of Christ-- even if you don't believe it, you gotta admit, it's the greatest story ever.


breakinglight11: (Puck 2)
A little while back, [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber posted a fantastic entry musing about what we can do in this day and age to live  a litlte more environmentally responsibly by taking into account small things that make a big difference. I really admired how thoroughly he thought the idea through and he gave me lots of things to think about regarding my own level of environmentally-conscious effort.

Ways I Do Well:

- I'm very conscientious about recycling. All my discarded paper or cardboard, any piece of garbage plastic, every shard of scrap metal or glass. I have been known to hold onto my soda bottle or cardboard snack box for hours after I'm finished with it until I see a place to recycle it.

- I stopped buying bottled water years ago. When I need to have water with me, I use my Brandeis-issue metal water bottle.

- I reuse paper compulsively. Whenever I print something out and it has extra space remaining on it, I put it in a box I have under my printer, either for scribbling on or printing on the other side. I have a folder full of directions I printed out in case I ever need the hard copy again so I don't need to make another. At work, when asked to make a copy to keep a record of something, I scan it and save it as a PDF in an organized folder rather than copy it to paper.

- I am working to minimize my use of disposable things. Since I live in a house without a dishwasher it can be very tempting, but generally I use real dishware that I wash rather than plastic that I throw away. And on the occasion that I do use plastic, I make certain to recycle all the pieces. Also, it's a small thing, but in the last month I had made sure to keep at work a ceramic mug, a metal tea ball, a metal spoon, and a canister of loose-leaf tea. Everything is washable and since I quit using the disposable cups and plastic stirrers, the only thing that gets thrown away is the packet the sugar comes in. Perhaps I should start bringing my own sugar (or even better, honey) in a plastic container. Honey is tougher to transport without another eventually disposable container, but at least that container is recyclable.

- I keep four reusable shopping bags in my car so I don't have to remember to bring them along and have been making a real effort to use them every time I go to the market. I am also training myself into the habit of saying "No bag, please," when I buy things I can carry in my hands.

- I make an effort to walk places rather than drive whenever possible. I like getting the exercise, but honestly if I'm short on time I am more inclined to save the travel minutes and just go by car.

Ways I Don't Do Well and Will Try to Work On:

- Other than paper, I am not so good about reusing. Reuse, I know, is superior on the hierarchy to recycling, but I dislike keeping anything that looks like trash around, so I am unlikely to ever be able to do things like turn plastic vessels into planters or anything like that.

- I often forget to use those reuseable shopping bags, even when I bring them with me in my car. :-P There are about ten trillion plastic bags stashed away in my house. I reuse them as trash bags for wastebaskets, but there come in faster than they go out. Also, there are often items in the grocery store like produce that are hard to bring home unless you put them in a little plastic bag. I am considering getting myself some resuable produce bags, but many of the ones I've seen seem ridiculously expensive, so I think I will hold off until I see a reasonably priced option.

- I don't know if I'm terribly responsible with electricity. I dislike waiting for my computer to boot, so I usually leave it running with the screen off when I'm not using it. Still, I try to turn off lights and other eletronics when they're not needed, I never use an air conditioner, and I only turn on a fan or a heater in really extreme situations. This is necessary for my pocketbook as well as for the earth.

- I eat a lot of meat. I don't have any ethical issues with this, but I know that the meat growing industry is tough on the environment. I would probably do better to cut down to eating meat only a few times a week, but I crave protein in the worst way, and non-flesh sources of it never really seem to satisfy it. So while I could stand to reduce my meat consumption somewhat, I doubt I will feel all right if I do it too drastically.

- I feel like even though I do recycle very carefully, I generate a lot of material to recycle. I love bottled drinks like Coke and Snapple. I line pans and cover things with aluminum foil. In general I prefer using ziploc bags to awkward, space-claiming Tupperware. My penchant for clean, contained, managable things in my life leads me to use stuff that I can get rid of when I am finished with it. I should look into reducing just how much garbage my habits produce.

So that is where I stand. I am planning on making a conscious effort to improve a lot of these things. Every litlte bit helps, right?
breakinglight11: (Joker Phoebe 2)

Saw [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber in Evil Dead: The Musical this weekend. It was a bit of a hectic process getting to it. Since Jared and I never totally settled on which show we were seeing, we never reserved tickets, so we were forced to get on the at-the-door list which, while they told us we'd likely be in with, made the waiting process nervous. And finding a parking space was hell, necessitating me leaping out of the car to stand in the waitlist line while Jared parked the car about a half a mile away. But fortunately all was well; we parked, got seats, and very much enjoyed the show. Everything was funny and Brad was phenomenal, such a great performer and so much fun to watch. I knew he was a great singer, but wow, was I impressed getting to see him onstage for the first time. I've seen Evil Dead 2 and parts of Army of Darkness, but never the musical. Jared is a huge fan of the show, so he had a blast, and I was impressed by the blood-splatter technology. I wonder if at MIT they have a bunch of engineering students on standby waiting to build weird-ass theatrical technical effects for shows just like this. :-) I'm so glad we managed to see it.

Now I think I am coming down with something. Again. This is getting absurd. I used to get sick exactly once a year. This is the fourth time since this past winter. My stress levels must really have done a number on my immune system. I am medicating with tea, which though it seems to be soothing I can barely taste. I hope I don't infect the people around me. Jared needs to finish his thesis this week, so he can't afford to be at reduced capacity.


breakinglight11: (Cavalier Fool)

On Friday night I helped [livejournal.com profile] captainecchi and [livejournal.com profile] electric_d_monk run the fantastic League of Extraordinary Hogwarts Students. I loved playing this game, and I only wish I'd had time to study everything more carefully. I read all the character sheets and the rules, but  I still wasn't quite familiar with the inner workings of the game to be all that useful as a GM. I mostly got answers from Matt and Lise and then passed them on to players. I was particularly proud of [livejournal.com profile] katiescarlett29, who stepped in as Irene Adler even though she wasn't totally confident about the improv part of larping, and of [livejournal.com profile] nennivian, who I always thought was a larper waiting to happen. By and large the run went very well, with lots of activity and engaged players, but I wish I'd been intimate enough with the game to be able to give better suggestions to the couple of (usually new) players that got stuck. I wanted to talk to them after the game, but I was so blasted by gamewrap that I had to drag myself home and sleep. I have been sleeping badly lately, and I had to get up for a 9AM game the next day.

Saturday morning that 9AM game was the fifth run of Oz. It was an excellent run, one of the best, with the capable assistance of Jared and Bernie as my fellow GMs. We were a little nervous about the casting in places, but it turned out that everyone had a part they enjoyed. Standout players include the awesome [livejournal.com profile] natbudin, who we initially wanted for EVERY ROLE IN THE GAME, but we finally settled into a part because he wanted to see him portray the personality-- which he did amazingly. Again, Charlotte was fantastic, showing so much talent for getting into and becoming characters. I was incredibly impressed with [livejournal.com profile] wired_lizard, who played the character the way I had always imagined it to be, and gave me a few new ideas on top of that. Zachariah came up with some fantastically clever stratagies for executing his fairly difficult plotline. Hell, pretty much everyone in the game did an excellent job. I should probably stop casting [livejournal.com profile] bronzite as my big bad, because I think people expect him to be the villain all the time, and so no one is inclined to trust him. In the previous run of Oz, Marc Blumberg as the villain did very well and in fact managed to achieve his goal of cataclysmic destruction, but it was more because the characters he was in opposition to made a fatal error that they could not fix. John actually pushed things farther along the doom track than anyone so far, but his opposition managed to repair it properly. I was immensely pleased with this run.

Saturday afternoon, I went home to sleep. I think it helped a little, but I was still pretty draggy for the rest of the weekend.

Saturday night was the fifth run of Alice, again assisted by Jared and Bernie. I think it went well in that players had a good time, but this was the WEIRDEST RUN EVER. Though of course there have been variations, the previous four runs tended to follow some pretty clear trends. Basically, there is a pattern of connections that is supposed to get made, and with some variance in the order in previous runs they all came together, leading to an endgame scenario where two large groups are polarized against each other. A lot of those connections did not click this time around, and I'm not sure where the broken link was. The villain was vanquished again, but not by the person who is supposed to and always has in the past. In all the previous runs, either the core villain group acted so covertly that nobody knew who they were until the end of the game, or they formed a tight-knit group so cohesive that they just overwhelmed and crushed all opposition. I feel like they were more scattered and freewheeling this time around, which made them more obvious and less able to protect themselves should someone decide they were a target. There were still some fantastic performances-- I loved Lise's analytical approach to her character and she made amazing process putting together the pieces of her challenge. And April was excellent, not to mention wearing a fantastic costume. I guess any game where the players have fun is a success, but I was really shocked at how weirdly this run went.

Then I went home to sleep. Again, my sleep has not been terribly restful these days, so still. So. Draggy. Blah.

Sunday was Diamond Geezers, the only thing I played. I had a blast. I was playing an ex-military demolitions expert whose rough, ruthless, but not terribly malicious outlook I enjoyed. It was an interestingly set-up game, basically us in a confined space with a few story hooks built in but a plot that was more or less on rails. I wasn't exactly expecting that, but it was a really fun character game, involving yelling in Cockney accents and waving guns around. We experienced an odd phenomenon that I think was troubling Brad as GM that the only ones who were talking much, at least at first, were [livejournal.com profile] bleemoo, Charlotte, and myself, and everyone else was fairly quiet. I wonder if it was because the three of us were comfortable doing the accent and they felt slightly intimindated to speak if they couldn't. It's not like mine was any good at all, though Josh's and Charlotte's actually were. Josh was so much fun to play off of, and Charlotte continued to prove my theory that she has always been a larper, whether she knew it or not. Definitely recommend this game as a fun silly character experience.

Oh, as a side note, I was amused at [livejournal.com profile] usernamenumber pointing how at Brandeis, of course there was going to be less shooting and killing and more hand-holding and agreeing to work things out. :-) I have noticed this trend myself.

Next year I shall be con chair. I am looking forward to it. I am in the process of pondering a few thing to help optimize, which I will record when I have a better handle on my thoughts. Until then, thanks to everyone for making our very own con a fantastic experience again!

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My goodness, this was quite a busy weekend for me. I spent most of Friday doing chores, cleaning and running errands. In the evening Jared and I attended the birthday party of the lovely [info]rigel, which was one of the most pleasant social gatherings I've been at in quite some time. I had some really nice conversations, particularly those with [info]natbudin and [info]usernamenumber, people whose company I always enjoy but just haven't seemed to have a chance to chat with in a while. Jared and I hada really nice time, thanks to all the good company we hung out with. So, happy birthday to Rigel, and thanks to her for throwing a really great party.

Saturday was spent doing homework, and planning a dinner for the evening. I made chicken marbella, which is an elegant chicken dish that must marinate overnight in the fridge in a mixture of prunes, Spanish olives, garlic, redwine vinegar, olive oil, and capers, then is baked in white wine and brown sugar. I was very pleased with how it came out. I also mde a complicated, kind of sophisticated rice dish of wild rice, mint, orange, scallion, pecan, and sunshine raisins. I don't really eat rice so I've never cooked it before, and I overdid it so that it was mushier than it was supposed to be, but the flavor combination was still nice. At night we went out to Rocky Horror in Cambridge. I gotta say, I was kind of disappointed. It wasn't a fantastic show, even though it had the highest production values of any Rocky I'd ever been to, and the techies were obtrusive and obnoxious. We didn't get back till extremely late, and we ended up getting up extremely late the next today, which I wasn't terribly pleased about.

Today we spent doing homework. I finished the assignment I needed to for tomorrow, and now may relax a little. We're going to go to campus for dinner, and then Jared has some more stuff to try and get through. I believe I will take a shower and make a plan for handling things for the rest of the week. I've got a pretty decent amount of work to get through, and making a schedule helps me a lot.

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Happy birthday to [personal profile] usernamenumbertoday! I have recently heard him play the Squeaky-Voiced Laundian that I now cannot get out of my head. :-)

I am considering something... I have not committed to it yet, but I am considering running a steampunk game over the summer. I would have to figure out the system and hammer down the plot, which I'm not sure I can do yet, but I thought I'd give it a try.
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Got my hair cut. I think it came out okay. I'm always afraid lately that when I tell a hairdresser I want layers it's going to come out looking like a lampshade, but I've gotten lucky lately. I also put in an application for a possible summer job; they said they'll call me back.

Finally started listening to Second Shift. The first time I tried I didn't get into it, but now I've gotten into it. I'm on the tenth episode of the first season, and I'm looking forward to reaching the second, which everyone says is when things really take off. I'm very impressed with the acting ability of [personal profile] usernamenumber, but from what I've seen, there wasn't any question that he'd be great.
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 I am very pleased with today so far. Got to kiss Jared goodmorning, went for a great workout with Alex, grabbed a quick lunch, then knocked off a project that's been bugging me for weeks while watching TailSpin, one of my very favorite TV shows. I have just now emerged from a lovely shower and I feel very good. All in all, both a pleasant and productive day.

Third night of Comedy of Errors tonight. It's been going well, thank God, and I've really been feeling my character. Hope [profile] zapfis pleased. Lots of friends were there last night, including[profile] lightgamer,[personal profile] kamianya,[profile] nyren,[profile] gizmo224, and even[profile] charoolz! Thanks for coming, everyone, hope you liked it. 

Tonight Jared is coming to see me, yay! I'm excited, he's such a wonderful actor his opinion means a lot to me. Other fun people should be there too-- at least [personal profile] rigeland[personal profile] usernamenumber --and I'd like them to see me as an actor, a real actor, for once. I hope people want to go out to IHOP or something after; I haven't had a chance to go out with this cast yet, so I'd be really looking forward to it. 

All in all, a great day so far, and shall likely be through the end.

Oh, I am a tag abuser. :-)
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Well,  we are finally finished with Game of Empire, my third weekend-long larp. I enjoyed the experience overall and find it to be a fairly good game. My character was one of the most straight-up villainous in the game, and so kind of set up from the beginning to fail. Still, my total lack of effectiveness at accomplishing my goals did not keep me from enjoying myself overall. The company helped-- I was part of a group of interaction with [profile] jh1230, [profile] lightgamer, [personal profile] witticaster, [personal profile] kamianya, [personal profile] rigel, [personal profile] usernamenumber, and [profile] turbinehubcaps. As always, [personal profile] natbudinand [personal profile] zrealm are excellent GMs, and Nat and I had a nice out of character coversation besides. Plus a number of interesting non-Brandeisians both new and old were around to spice things up. Glad as I was to have had a good time, I was even gladder that Jared enjoyed himself. He kind of predicted his character's fate early on, and he was in fact killed part way through, but he was recast as a character he really got into, so all was well. Noah was my lieutenant, so we worked together quite a bit. I'm finding I really enjoy his company and I'm glad he seems to want to be part of the gaming community. It occurs to me that the only two larps he's been in have been weekend long, which really are different experiences from four-hour games. Many people, actually, state a weekend-long game was their first real larping experience. I personally prefer the shorter ones, so I'd be curious how his feeling about larps changed after he'd played in that kind. 

Seeing such a strong team of GMs, by the way, as usual, makes me want to run more things myself. I sent out the Alice hints, and the sheets should come out as soon as I make some minor edits to two who got a little bit of a plot overhaul. I've been working most of today on homework I blew off for the weekend, but I want to get that done as soon as possible.

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