The following scene is from “The Shock of Recognition,” the first of an evening of four one-act plays, “You Know I Can’t Hear You When the Water’s Running,” by Robert Anderson:
A hungry actor is auditioning for a playwright and a producer in the producer’s office. Before he even knows what the role calls for, he’s equivocating.
“I… uh… didn’t really expect to be seen by anyone… I’ve got
my hair long because I’m up for a part in a Western series… but I can cut that… And the mustache is
temporary… for a commercial.” Told it’s
for the leading role, the actor is quick to add, “I can be taller… I don’t have
my elevator shoes on . . . Or shorter! I mean… I can pretty well adapt. The
hair is dark now, but you may remember… it was blond…. I’m pretty well tanned
up because of this Western… but if I stay away from the sunlamp for a couple of
days… I… well… look more… intellectual… if that’s what you’re looking for. Also,
I have my contact lenses in now, but I do have glasses, if that’s closer to the
image. (He whips his glasses out and puts
them on. Thrown off balance by the two sets of lenses, he takes them off.)
And, of course, I do have other clothes… And my weight’s variable… I mean, if
you’re looking for someone thinner.”
When the producer tells him they’re actually looking for
someone “a little pathetic and ridiculous,” the actor’s trigger-response is,
“That’s me… I mean, put me in the right clothes… a little big for me… and I
look like a scarecrow… I can shrink inside my clothes!” He further assures producer and playwright he
can shrink inside his skin “if I think it. If I can think it, I can be it.”
He shows composite photos of himself as doctor, cowboy, soldier,
businessman, grocer. “You can’t notice it, probably, but I’m wearing a
hairpiece… I look quite different without it. Do you want me to…” He moves to
strip off his obvious hair-piece. The
producer barely manages to stop him.
He continues to profess he can be anything they want him to be. He’ll work out in a gym and become muscular. He’ll look younger. Or older! Not only can he look ridiculous, he avers he does look ridiculous! Toadying and turning himself inside out, changing colors and skins, he’s indefatigable. And a zero. Bring anyone to mind?
The actor finally stops trying to be everyman-under-the-sun long
enough for the playwright to tell him what the part, specifically the opening
scene, calls for. He’d be playing a
husband whose wife is lounging in bed while he’s brushing his teeth in an
adjacent bathroom, water audibly running from the tap as she’s talking to him. Turning off the water, he emerges from the
bathroom—stark naked—to say, “Honey, you know I can’t hear you when the water’s
running.”
“You Know I Can’t Hear You When the Water’s Running,” opened
in 1967, long before nudity had raised heads in Broadway theaters or the
country’s movie houses. But this actor,
who’ll say and do and agree to anything to get what he wants—a part in a play!—
is unfazed. “I can do that,” he says.
Starting to undress to demonstrate how nimbly he can humble himself, he
apologizes for the hole in his sock; he didn’t expect to be stripping.
Note he doesn’t mind looking ridiculous. “Girls have sometimes… uh… laughed or
giggled… at first.” But with eyes
accustomed to finding compromise: “Well, I’ve been turned down for parts because
I was too short or too tall… too fat or too thin… too young or too old… But I
never did or didn’t get a part because of…” (Suddenly…
unbuttoning his shorts) “What the hell!”
I know of someone who’s been auditioning for one role for
six years, preceded by preparing for it practically all of his life. He can be tall, he can be small—or he’ll be
you-name-it, depending on audience demand or the audience at hand. He’ll morph before your very eyes! Shamefully dishonest and dishonorably
shameless, he’s alternately chameleon or parrot. He’s against everything until he’s for it and
for everything until he’s against it. If
the eager-to- please actor says, “I can do that,” he’ll trump it with “I know
what to do!” Ad nauseam, “I know what to
do!” He’s pro-this and pro-that,
extremely whatever and severely the opposite.
“All the world’s a stage? Yes,”
he claims, “I said that… before
what’s-his-name did!” The only thing he
stands for and stands by is what sells.
The actor seeking work merely lacks grace. The man who would be kingpin has no shame.
This is the best piece I have read about Mitt Romney all year.
ReplyDeleteThis was longer and as pointless as the "aristocrats" (if you don't know the joke see the movie). Writing for the Huff and Puff Post, whose former owner is 100 million dollars richer for selling that rag of the left gives one no bragging rights. It's kind of like that line from the Producers when Franz Leibkind says "Hitler, there was a painter! He could paint an entire apartment in one afternoon! Two coats!" The current Occupier of the White House says his position on Gay Marriage evolved. He also promised bi-partisinship. Perhaps he meant his position on bi's in the parties evolved too. We have seen the likes of community (the base word for Communism) organizers like Adam Clayton Powell and Jesse Jackson and the negative effects they have had on our people. Opression of the blacks has always come from within the black community and from guilty rich white folk. Beware of Blacklash ( a wonderful book by a brilliant Black lady named Dineen Borelli). The black are tired of being put upon by community organizers like The Rev Al and Jackson and Obama. By moving "Forward" the current occupier of the White house aims to leave the black half of himself behind. The outcome on Wednesday will be Obama 48% Romney 52%, Obama 266 electorals Romney 272. Sorry kids. The country goes back to being run by the adults.
ReplyDeleteJudge Amos Aloycious Dread
Just came across this. I agree with the 1st comment and laugh loudly at the 2nd.
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