Bombs I Have Been In

I have been in my share of bombs.

Plays which made me question whether or not I was doing the right thing with my life. Plays which being a part of made me hate the whole world. Plays through which I understood, on a deeper and more visceral level, just what the word “embarrassment” really means. My long-time dear friend Jackie has labeled the kind of embarrassment you experience when you are up onstage in a HEINOUS piece of theatre as “white-hot shame“. That about sums it up. Embarrassment like that is not an emotion. It is a full-body sensation.

The only thing to do when you are in such a cataclysmic bomb is bond ferociously with your fellow cast members about how terrible the play is (hopefully they feel the same way … If they do not, if they think the play is good, then you are completely screwed … you will realize what it means to be truly alone) – and have absolutely rocking cast parties where the bacchanals you create will drown out the memory of the SHITE you have just inflicted on an unsuspecting audience.

Some of the best parties I have ever been to, parties that will live on in infamy, were cast parties for some horrific play I was doing. Being in a BAD play is much more condusive to making life-long friends. Because you must cling to one another in agony and white-hot shame.

Bomb #1
I was in a production of Lysistrata in college. Anyone who was unfortunate enough to see it, 15 years ago, continues to use it as a gauge by which to judge other terrible plays. As in: “I saw a TERRIBLE play the other night. It wasn’t as bad as that Lysistrata you were in, but it came close.”

First of all, the director thought it would be cool (and please, do not ask me why), to call HIS version of the play “Ly-SIS-trata” … as opposed to the normal pronunciation, which everybody knows is: “Lysis-TRA-ta.”

So we, as cast members, were forced, against our will, to join in on this idiocy. He forced us to be accomplices.

“So what play are you working on now, Sheila?”

“Ly-SIS-trata.”

“Uh � I think you mean Lysis-TRA-ta.” (with a tone of: Wow. You just mispronounced that word, and you’re a theatre major!)

“No, no, I know … but this director wants to call it Ly-SIS-trata.”

“Why?”

“Uh … well…I think he thinks that maybe the audience will … uh… he wants to show that the play has relevance in today’s….Oh, Jesus Christ, I have no idea.”

I had countless conversations like that, and I resented it.

3,000 years of Lysis-TRA-ta needed to be upended. For what purpose? If the play had come off brilliantly, then of course the director would be forgiven everything, because it is all about the result. You can be as pretentious and as pompous as you want, as long as the end-result is something to be proud of. That’s the deal with the entertainment business. It attracts massive egos. And that’s fine. But if you have a massive ego, then you BETTER deliver the goods. Nothing worse than a grandiose personality, filled with dreams of glory, pumped up with a sense of grandeur and originality, who does crap work.

We, as cast members, were held hostage by our own director. He forced us to do things onstage which we found supremely embarrassing and stupid. At one point, I lost it, and pleaded with him, “Oh, come on, you aren’t serious, are you?”

I remember one night, as we all were preparing to enter for the first time, I started crying. I just could not go on. I could not subject myself to that meat-grinder of white-hot shame. I wept to my friend Mitchell, as we stood in the wings, “I just don’t want to go out there! I feel sick! I don’t want to do it! It’s so awful!” Meanwhile, of course, we are in our GOOFBALL Roman-toga-esque costumes, talking to each other seriously, having nervous breakdowns at the same moment. The situation was bleak.

Actor-friends would come to see Ly-SIS-trata and not even hold back their contempt and scorn. Normally, when you are in something that is clearly bad, and other actor-friends come to see it, they usually say one of these comments:

“Congratulations!” (complete avoidance of the awful-ness)

“So how did you feel?” (that is my least favorite one)

“Great energy up there!” (subtext: You put all your energy into that???)

“So what’s next for you?” (subtext: You need to move on from this nightmare as quickly as possible.)

All of this is code for: “Wow. That was absolutely god-awful.”

Well, actor-friends came to see Ly-SIS-trata and couldn’t even hide behind any of those stock phrases, they could not lie. To lie about a play that was that offensively bad goes against the grain of human morality. I would come out afterwards, having changed into civilian clothes, washed off the stage makeup, and one of my friends who had come to see it would immediately exclaim, “Oh my GOD, you were NOT KIDDING when you said this was a piece of shit.” Or, literally, blatantly saying, “That was absolutely fucking terrible.”

One friend (who is generally always negative, whenever he comes to see anything, good or bad) actually recoiled from my hug. As though my even being associated with such an awful production meant that somehow … my soul was corrupt, or I was a bad person.

The play wasn’t just bad. The play was so bad that it made people angry.

Bomb #2
Another TERRIBLE play I was in (and I’ve been pretty fortunate … haven’t done too many white-hot-shame plays) was a musical version of Jerome K. Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat. I did it in Philadelphia.

I knew from the first rehearsal, when I met the Anglophile playwright, that I was in trouble. The only way to save myself was to treat the entire process as one long extended GOOF, which did not endear me to said playwright, who thought that Three Men in a Boat was on par with Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.

A couple of very good friends (Mitchell, Jackie, and Steven) drove down for opening night, to participate in my goofing on the production.

There was an opening night gala afterwards, where I could not contain my apathy for the playwright.

She kept trying to take my picture, for her photo album … I would protest. Openly. “I told you not to take my picture, okay?”

I wanted no evidence that I had ever been involved with this production. But she trapped me a couple of times, taking candid shots of me, her lead actress, swilling back free wine like a lunatic, drowning my sorrows and white-hot shame, whispering with my friends like a conspiring Roman senator. All 4 of us guffawing with irreverent laughter.

My friend Mitchell took one look at the playwright, saw which way the wind was blowing, and murmured to me, “She looks like a retired racehorse.” Which was so true, and so spot-on, that the ENTIRE terrible experience was redeemed for me, in that moment. I feel like I did Three Men in a Boat in order for Mitchell to be able to make that frighteningly apt observation.

But the crowning glory was the review. It is, by far, the worst review I have ever received. Actually, I escaped comment. All of the actors did. The full brunt of blame for the debacle was placed on the retired racehorse. As it should have been. I even kept the review. I still have it somewhere.

I don’t remember anything but the first sentence:

“Not since the Titanic has there been such a nautical disaster.”

See what I mean about a bomb bringing out the best in a reviewer?

Even though there was definitely shame involved in being a part of that “nautical disaster”, I also admit that I felt tiny pricks of weird pride at being involved with something so monumentally bad. It wasn’t just a bad show, a take-it-or-leave-it show. It wasn’t your run-of-the-mill bad show. It was HISTORICALLY bad.

Bomb #3
The final terrible show I must inflict on you all is: the half-hour version of Macbeth I was unlucky enough to get roped into.

At grad school, we had a season of thesis productions. Each one had to be half an hour long. So the actors would have half-hour scenes, whatever the playwrights wrote for their thesis projects had to be half-hour…you get the picture.

Well, there was a director in our program who (for some unknown STUPID reason) wanted to somehow do the entirety of Macbeth in half an hour. Why his thesis project was approved, I have no clue.

I’m still angry that it was.

Angry because I was playing one of the five witches.

(“Hold on a second,” you might be thinking, “five witches? Aren’t there only three witches in Macbeth?”)

You may be thinking that but that is only because you are an intelligent person, with a sense of dignity and logic, which clearly was lacking in the mind of the director.

He made there be FIVE witches.

There are too many problems to even discuss … because it is hard to get past the wrong-headed-ness of the entire idea of the project to begin with.

People were racing around, murdering each other, casting spells, having duels, seeing blood on their hands … all in half an hour’s time.

The man who played Macbeth had an accent. He was from Texas or something like that. So the line: “Have we eaten the insane root that takes the reason prisoner?” consistently came out as: “Have we et the insane RUHT that takes the reason prisoner??” RUHT. And he would emphasize that word. It got worse and worse.

Every time he would say it, every time he was even close to approaching saying it, the five witches (who all had to be onstage at all times, terrible luck, we could never escape to lick our wounds) would put our heads down, as we were casting our spooky spells on the five corners of the stage (not the four corners, the five corners), and shake with laughter.

Finally, the director said tentatively, “Uh … yeah … could you please say ‘root’ and not ‘ruht’?”

Macbeth said, “I am saying ‘ruht’.”

Two or three of the witches burst into inappropriate laughter.

The director, trying to hold us all together, and keep us from spiralling out of control, said, tentatively again: “Actually … you just did it again. The word is ‘root’. With an ‘oo’ sound. If you say ‘ruht’, then the meaning of the line is lost.”

I held myself back from saying, “If you attempt to do Macbeth in half an hour’s time, then the meaning of the ENTIRE PLAY is lost.”

Boom boom boom, scenes came fast and furious. Boom: Macbeth and Lady Macbeth conspire. Boom: Murder and carnage. Boom: The witches race into place and cackle gleefully. Boom: Lady Macbeth staggers on, shrieking “Out damn’d spot” … and then just as quickly staggers off. Boom: There is a very quick sword fight. Who knows why. People just had duels back then, I guess. Boom: Everybody dies. Except for the five witches. Who live on, eternally. Exeunt

The whole thing was ridiculous.

Actors have different ways of surviving terrible shows. The five witches survived this nightmare by literally becoming ONE. We were a five-some. We completely separated ourselves from the poor stars of this stupid production, who still were trying to actually do Macbeth. We realized very early on that Macbeth could not be done properly in half an hour, so we refused to take anything seriously. Anything. Anything.

Nobody had told us what our makeup should be like, as witches, so the five of us designed our own looks. Our makeup and hair got more and more elaborate and out of control with every performance. We had to arrive at the theatre earlier and earlier in order to complete our transformations in time for curtain. Our faces were literally caked with Kabuki-mask makeup. The more grotesque the better.

At one point, Eileen, a beautiful Asian girl, turned from the mirror, to display her horrific makeup job … red circles around her eyes, red wrinkle lines radiating from her mouth, caved-in cheeks, and said to all of us, brightly, “Do I look really gross?”

We validated her. “Yup. Pretty gross.”

My costume, unfortunately, made me look like the chair of a women’s studies department at a small college in Vermont. We would all be sitting at our makeup mirrors, and I would suddenly start to pontificate about the evils of the patriarchy, or about holding focus groups to show women their cervixes, and everyone would absolutely die with laughter. I was also in the midst of reading The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich at the time, so there are a couple of pictures of me, backstage, in my “wymyn’s studies” Wiccan outfit, twigs sticking out of my hair, big brownish-purple circles around my eyes, seriously reading my book.

Jen, my roommate, with her long mane of curly hair, made her hair bigger and bigger and bigger every night. That became her main goal. To make her hair as large as possible, so that it would completely shield her face. Also, every time she had a line, Jen disguised her voice.

The five witches were so taken up by our stupid costumes and makeup that we would hang out in the backstage hallway before entering, taking pictures of ourselves.

Pictures of all the witches peeking their crazy heads around the corner.

Pictures of all the witches making their way down the stairs, like some demented version of the Von Trapp family singers.

Pictures of the witches lying about in death poses on the floor.

We were collectively late for our entrance one night because we were too busy taking pictures of ourselves. We resented the actual SHOW we were doing, for taking away from our time taking pictures of ourselves in costume.

Each witch had a big gnarled stick. The first witch-scene began with us doing what was supposed to be a Celtic dance, I suppose. Lots of drum-beats, and moving in circles, and banging the sticks on the floor. It was interminably stupid, and horrifically embarrassing to execute.

We had to enter, as one, holding up our sticks in front of our grotesque faces, moving as slowly as glaciers. The effect was supposed to be scary and ominous, I guess, but a couple of nights I heard someone in the audience burst into laughter at the first sight of us.

And occasionally, as we moved on like that, with our sticks, I would hear either Eileen or Jen or Kimberly start to giggle …and try to choke it down … but laughter like that catches on like wildfire. Once it begins, it is nearly impossible to stop. So there we all were, supposed to be the scary 5 witches, moving on, holding up our sticks, shaking silently with laughter.

Jen made a big announcement backstage to the rest of the witches, on the night of our dress reherarsal.

“I have decided … that when we come on with our sticks—-” Long pause. We all waited, breathlessly, hoping that she might actually have an IDEA about how we could make it all better. But then she concluded, finishing her thought, “We look like assholes.”

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12 Responses to Bombs I Have Been In

  1. Bill McCabe says:

    Ouch…I’ll have to ask my former actor friend if he’d been in anything that bad. You want to read some bad reviews? I’d almost say “Dungeons and Dragons” was worse than “Battlefield Earth”.

  2. Colin MacDougall says:

    I sympathize. One show I did, “The Ghosts of Sarah Winchester” received the following review – “If Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder had produced ‘The Ghosts of Sarah Winchester’ they would never have gone to jail.
    Twenty years later I still cringe.
    Colin MacDougall

  3. red says:

    Colin:

    Oh my GOD!
    Still laughing over here …

    Don’t mean to laugh at your pain … sorry. But that review is too good to be true ..

    Isn’t it fascinating, too, that we remember these terrible reviews YEARS after the fact, and yet the good reviews disappear from memory? I mean, I have had many tremendously positive reviews, but I couldn’t rattle them off word for word the way I can:
    “Not since the Titanic has there been such a nautical disaster”

    Thank you for sharing that!!

  4. Seldom have I laughed out loud (or clapped my hand to my mouth in delighted horror) so many times while reading a web page.

    Thank you.

    Skev

  5. red says:

    Ha! Skevos, I live to make people clap their hands over their mouths in delighted horror.

    I got an email from a friend of mine who was ASKED to be in the half-hour production of Macbeth but turned it down … and so escaped with his dignity. My friend said to me, “I knew it was gonna suck when the director said to me, ‘Okay, I’d like for you to play MacDuff and Witch #6.”

    HAHA

  6. Pixy Misa says:

    That was wonderful. Funniest thing I’ve read all day. And I’ve spent the whole day reading funny things.

  7. Dmac says:

    Hey, I remember the greatest time I ever had at a party. My mate and I were starring in a play that we both thought was utter incomrehensible rubbish. Unfortunatley for us, the rest of the cast and crew thought it was a seminal moment in the history of the theatre or some such bollocks. The night the review was published my mate and I were walking to a post show (mid season) cast party at a local night club when we bought the early edition of the following mornings paper. There was not only the most scathing review but a half page photograph of my mate and I in the most ridiculous costume I have ever worn (post apocalyptic latex etc). The rest of the cast were absolutely devastated but we got the giggles, and then felt insensitive so left that party for another cast party. When we arrived at the other cast party (none of whom had seen the play or had any connection to it) several people there were holding it up reading it out aloud. When we entered the room there was dead, embarrassed silence from about 20 people, then someone asked how did this happen. We couldn’t keep our composure any more. I started laughing, hysterically, losing the power of speech intermittently and did not stop laughing for about 90 minutes as we treied to explain the script, plot and direction. And this was before I had even had a drink. To this day it is the greatest moment of hilarity I have ever experienced. To cheer myself up nowadays I just recall that episode and i laugh out loud. Funnily enough we actually hgad people from that party come to the play just to see if anything could be as bad as the review (and the photograph).

  8. Mitchell says:

    Oh my god…so funny…Sheila , i was in a play in Chicago that garnerd this review…”Tip for theater companies: When you have a show this bad, the ONLY honorable thing to do…is CLOSE it.” Ha! Perfect!-Mitchell

  9. red says:

    Mitchell:

    Retired racehorse!! Ha! Member how RUDE i was to that poor woman?

    and what terrible show in Chicago gave you that awful review?

    additionally: do you remember what the Sitcom review specifically said?? I have blocked it out … but i know it was infamously terrible.

  10. Tom says:

    Awesome! Thank you.

    Best opening line for one of my shows: “GET THE HOOK!” Ouch.

  11. SDN says:

    The thing about Dungeons and Dragons is that you EXPECT it to suck. Unlike, say, Battlefield Earth, where it was obvious that they were actually taking it seriously AND EXPECTED YOU TO!

    Possibly even worse than “Highlander 2: The Sickening: There Should Have Been Only One!”

  12. Popskull says:

    “People were racing around, murdering each other, casting spells, having duels, seeing blood on their hands … all in half an hour’s time.”

    Holy shit, red, I almost threw up just now. Each spring, as a new rep season starts for our peers, I say a prayer of thanks that I sidestepped that buzzsaw. He asked if I wanted to be in Macbeth and I said “hell yeah. Can I be Macduff?” He said “well, Macduff is also a witch.” Hmmm. Sweet. Good luck with that. What a great old post.

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