readingredhead: (Default)
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Well, this corresponds nicely with the following meme I was going to steal from [livejournal.com profile] gienahclarette. The rules are:

Day one • a song
Day two • a picture
Day three • a book
Day four • a site
Day five • a youtube clip
Day six • a quote
Day seven • whatever tickles your fancy

I'm not the kind of person who tends to follow individual artists; usually I just stumble across individual songs that set my mind on fire a little. I've only ever been to concerts for Jason Mraz and Vienna Teng, and I do like them both very much...but then there are the musicals. And I feel bad picking a single song out of context -- I feel like knowing the full ten helps. (Really you'd need to see the contents of my entire iPod to figure this out; I'm leaving out so many great songs from musicals and Disney movies that I love and adore, just to make sure all the right ones get in!) So, here goes!

10. "You Make My Dreams" by Hall & Oates
--I first fell in love with this song thanks to the movie (500) Days of Summer. It's just an upbeat little ditty that always makes me want to sing (and dance) along whenever it's played. Over the summer it was the number one song on my workout playlist; I would start my runs every morning to the bouncy, upbeat beginning chords and smile because everything was right with the world.

9. "I Can Go the Distance" from Hercules
--The thing about this song is that I have often dreamed of a far-off place where a hero's welcome will be waiting for me. And on some days, when that welcome seems further off than others, I can listen to this song and take hope. And it also has the nagging ability to remind me that there are different kinds of welcome -- the shift in the final verse from finding the hero's welcome in a crowd of people who are impressed by fame and fortune to finding it in the arms of someone who loves you for who you are, hero or not, to that person you are the world.

8. "Don't Stop Believing" by Journey
--Although the first Journey song that I ever listened to was "Running Alone" (because Nita listens to it in High Wizardry and I wanted to know what it was about it that made it a good enough song for Diane Duane to actually include in her novel), "Don't Stop Believing" (for all its popularity) strikes a stronger chord in me. It's about anguish and despair and making meaning out of the nothingness, whether there is any intrinsic meaning or not. There are days when I think about taking the midnight train "going anywhere," and on these days this song seems to speak even more loudly to me.

7. "Come on Get Higher" by Matt Nathanson
--When I first heard this song I didn't like it that much because everyone else liked it. Then someone had it as the leading track in a fanmix for a specific Young Wizards pairing (expect to see much more of Diane Duane's Young Wizards in this seven-day meme) and listening it in that context made me realize how beautiful it is. "Everything works in your arms"? So perfect. So true. It's a song for many moods, and I never feel like I can't listen to it.

6. "City Hall" by Vienna Teng
--I couldn't believe this song the first time I heard it. It tackles the issue of gay marriage in a singular, individual manner that makes you listen: it's not general, it's specific. Again, the piano is beautiful, understated, with this great cheeriness to it, of the smile-in-the-face-of-darkness variety, that seems so appropriate given the circumstances. "You've never seen a sight so fine as the love that's gonna shine at City Hall," and "If they take it away again some day, this beautiful thing won't change."

5. "Vienna" by Billy Joel
--Sometime during junior year of high school, when everything seemed to be all too much, Stephanie Johnson told me that I needed to listen to this song, and I'm still indebted to her for the suggestion. From its first command to "slow down, you crazy child" to the sad but true injunction to "dream on, but don't imagine they'll all come true," this song provides a good breather to the person I am, a reminder that I "can't be everything [I] want to be before [my] time, although it's so romantic on the borderline tonight." It tells me that I need to slow down, to put things in perspective, but it also tells me that "only fools are satisfied," that the dreaming and the inability of ever achieving everything that I want to will hurt but will in the end be part of who I am.

4. "All That's Known" from Spring Awakening
--There are a lot of blockbuster songs in this musical, but this is the one that always gets me. Melchior's questing at the boundaries of the knowledge allowed to him by traditional institutions is something I've felt before: that, and the desire "to know the world's true yearning -- the hunger that a child feels for everything they're shown" -- to feel the world in such an immediate and unfiltered way.

3. "Beauty and the Beast" from Beauty and the Beast
--"Bittersweet and strange, finding you can change, learning you were wrong" -- I honestly think that this song charts the course of all of the great romances that I have come to know and love. And it's part of the best Disney movie in all existence, based on the best fairytale in all existence, etc. I love Angela Lansbury but I don't like the version she sings; I prefer the duet between Celine Dion and Peabo Bryson. Just the opening chords are enough to give me that feeling of warm-and-fuzzy happy.

2. "Harbor" by Vienna Teng
--I love Vienna Teng as a songwriter because she has lines like this: "Fear is the brightest of signs -- the shape of the boundary we leave behind." And she backs them up with gorgeous and emphatic piano. In this song it becomes dramatic, swelling, and yet still so personal. She takes a common metaphor -- the loved one as a safe harbor (for example, see "Wild Nights! Wild Nights!" by Emily Dickinson) -- and turns it into something unique and beautiful.

1."Brave Enough for Love" from Jane Eyre the Musical
(in a great irony, I can't listen to this track recording because I am in the UK and the service is US only -- but that means you all can listen!)
--Of course my love for Jane Eyre as a book contributes to my love of this song in the musical. Everything from the little interchanges between Jane and Rochester, taken almost verbatim from the book (R: "Am I hideous?" J: "Very, sir. (pause) You always were, you know."), to the final climactic sweep of the ending chorus, gives me hot and cold chills. And there's this idea that love is something that requires bravery -- that living in tandem with another life is difficult, a struggle -- and yet the most worthwhile struggle that mankind can engage in. The music is absolutely beautiful and backs this up wonderfully.
readingredhead: (Rain)
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ANYTHING from Rent, though especially "La Vie Boheme":
"To days of inspiration, playing hooky,
Making something out of nothing,
The need to express, to communicate
To going against the grain, going insane, going mad!"

Almost anything from Jane Eyre, but especially "The Graveyard" and "Brave Enough for Love."

Almost anything from The Last Five Years, but especially "The Next Ten Minutes" and "Goodbye Until Tomorrow."

The song lyrics that continually hit me on a most personal level are from Beauty and the Beast:
"I want adventure in a great wide somewhere,
I want it more than I can tell.
And for once it might be grand
To have someone understand
I want so much more than they've got planned..."
readingredhead: (Stars)
Beauty and the Beast (which I'm seeing in less than a week!)
Into the Woods (which I'm seeing in less than a month!)
Jane Eyre (which I would KILL to get tickets for -- seriously!)
Dirty Dancing (which is coming to the Pantages in a year!)
The Last Five Years (which I need to see again!)

Other than that, not much is happening in my life. Except for, you know, "finals" and "studying" and "papers" and "stress." I have a strong desire to spend a night in the library because it's open 24 hours during finals week.

Seriously though. I think I really need to see Jane Eyre the Musical right now. Why is it that my favorite musicals are the really obscure ones?
readingredhead: (Stars)
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First off, take note: this is discounting characters I've written. Invariably, I can relate to them best (although Holly, Jasen, and Noelle top the list right now).

If we're going chronologically from when I encountered these characters, the first on the list is undoubtedly Hermione. I was (and am) so happy that she was a girl, and smart, and skillful and perfectly capable of running with the boys, and necessary to them. She makes being the only girl in a group of guys seem effortless. I relate to her obsessive scholasticism, but also to her vulnerability. I'm Hermione in her moments of triumph, but also in the moment when she's sitting in the girl's bathroom and crying because Ron insulted her.

Next -- specifically for one line of beautiful prose -- I'd say I'm like Mac from Julie E. Czerneda's Species Imperative series. That one line, which I'm sure you've heard me quote over and over (though never exactly) is the one about a heart with two settings: "don't care" and "forever." More and more, I think this describes me. And that's not a bad thing.

The character who's felt the most like me since Hermione is Aryl Sarc of Julie's Reap the Wild Wind, because Aryl's just on the edge of growing up, and she's scared and apprehensive and faced with things too big for her, and her entire picture of what her life was supposed to be is fractured in the space of a moment, but despite all of this she's brave and strong and spirited and doesn't give up, and though she doesn't know it yet -- neither do I, for that matter -- she's going to be rewarded for it.

And of course must come Elizabeth Bennet, who I really feel is my Austen double. Ask any girl which Austen woman she'd be and I'll bet you good money she answers Elizabeth, but I'll also bet you good money she's lying. Not to sound conceited or anything, but I'm not. All I'm waiting for is a stand-in Darcy to tell me about the beauty of my intelligent eyes and proclaim that he most ardently admires and loves me.

To round the list out, there's Jane Eyre, who really is quieter than me, but other than that is a person I can deeply sympathize with. We both have moments where we gasp for liberty; we both have moments when we do things we wish we didn't have to; and in the end, I know we both will grow and change as individuals, defining ourselves as separate from men (the book's not called Jane Rochester for a reason) and happy in our own right. What more is there to ask for?

(And this is only including literary characters I relate to. If we broaden our approach to encompass TV, movies, and musicals, I have to add Scully, Princess Leia, and Elphaba to the list.)
readingredhead: (Light)
And you thought that one month-long timed writing challenge per year was enough.

As some of you may remember, last year the wonderful folks at the Office of Letters and Light -- yes, those same awesome folks who run National Novel Writing Month for my novel-writing enjoyment every year -- started up another project. Script Frenzy ran through June and challenged everyone to write a 20,000 word screenplay or stage play in 30 days. I started (and as usual didn't finish) a play about five writers who were part of the same college workshop class. It was my first foray into the world of script writing and I was convinced after the end of last June that I wouldn't make another attempt at it again.

Of course, I began to eat my words sooner than had been expected, even for me. This year Script Frenzy's been changed up a bit. It's been moved to April and the goal is measured in pages -- 100 of them -- instead of wordcount. And the one reason that I'm doing it again this year is that in Script Frenzy, unlike in NaNoWriMo, it's acceptable (even perhaps encouraged) to work with a partner.

So without further ado, I announce to those of you who do not already know this that Rebecca and I are turning Pride and Prejudice into a musical over the course of the upcoming month.

I just got that much cooler, didn't I?

At first the plan was to write a few original melodies but then rip off popular tunes and write our own words to them. Now, it looks like we're starting completely from scratch, with nothing but Jane Austen for our guide. But as some of you know, she makes a pretty good guide.

Wish me luck, and if you're at all interested at getting in on the frenzy, you can find out more about it at www.scriptfrenzy.com. It's not too late to sign up!
readingredhead: (Earth)
  1. Finish The Printer's Daughter
  2. Start a rejection collection (i.e. send short stories to publishers)
  3. Become a paid writer
  4. Learn how to dance
  5. Write a musical
  6. Learn how to play a complete song on the piano
  7. Go outside some night and just look at the stars with a friend for a few hours
  8. Take a road trip with someone new
  9. Skip school for a good reason
  10. Stop biting my nails (it had to be on there for old time's sake)
  11. Memorize more poetry
  12. Write more poetry
  13. Abolish the distinctions between literary and genre fiction
  14. Go to the east coast
  15. Elect Barack Obama
  16. Work in a bookstore
  17. Do something big without asking for permission or directions
readingredhead: (Default)
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beauty_and_the_Beast:

"Beauty and the Beast might be interpreted as a young woman's coming-of-age story. Content with a pure love for her father, she finds sexuality bestial, and so a man who feels sexual desire for her is a beast. Only when she is capable of regarding the desire of sexual relationship as human is she capable of achieving happiness."

This is exactly what I was trying to get across about Phantom of the Opera here.  This makes me oddly happy.

I probably should not be staying up this late, I'm really no good at it.  But it's fun...I'm trying to find an image I can use to design a Beauty and the Beast tote bag on CafePress.
readingredhead: (Stars)

I’m rather annoyingly bored.

 

One would think that something like this would be nigh on impossible, considering that I’m currently sitting in London, listening to cars going by and what I think is thunder out of the open window.  Maybe bored isn’t quite the right word.  But I feel like this time around, I haven’t been nearly as productive as before.  The last time I spent a week in London, I used it to produce a short story, one of my favorite ones I’ve written.  I wanted to use this time on vacation in order to start writing again, but I just haven’t been able to stick to a single idea that I want to develop.  Because there really isn’t a single idea that I want to write on right now.  I keep jumping from plot to plot with little motivation to make any headway with any of them.

 

And for some of the time here I’ve been reading good books and doing good things (like seeing a Shakespeare play in front row seats for under $10), and when I’m doing those things I’m not that bored.  But come on—it’s Friday the 13th and nothing interesting has happened yet.

 

And I’m going to be awake all hours of the night because I took a nap earlier today because I had nothing better to do than sleep!

 

(And I realize I’m ridiculous because I’m complaining while I’m in London.  I hate myself even more for that.)

 

I think the problem is that I need deadlines, and real incentive to meet them, in order to really go places with my writing.  I also occasionally need prompts, though in some cases deadlines spur me to continue or finish things that I’ve already thought up for other purposes.  That’s why I like NaNoWriMo, and writing for Julie.  I’m given a specific amount of time in which to do things, and a schedule to keep to (in the case of NaNo), and that’s comforting for me.  Which is interesting, because I originally started doing NaNo to move outside of my comfort zone (because my other discomfort comes from writing anything that’s not polished the first time around).

 

Another problem is that I see editing as work.  I don’t see it as nearly as joyful as the writing process.  What I think I need to realize is that rewriting is just as important as writing.  I think I need to remove the word “editing” from my vocabulary and replace it with “rewriting”—because it emphasizes the fact that it’s the writing that’s important.

 

For instance, I’ve been trying to edit—ahem, I mean, rewriteKes Running, the most recent November Novel, for some time.  I keep getting bored, or skipping ahead to the good parts.  I really need to take the time to notice which parts I’m skipping—because those are the ones that ought to be deleted from the final draft!  More than that...I feel that Kes’s story really needs to be finalized before I go to college.  It’s really a product of my pre-college anxieties, and I think it would sound false if I finished it at a much later date.  Hell, it’s about a girl who runs away because she doesn’t get into the college she wants to go to!  I don’t think I can honestly write that as a college student and make it sincere.  I don’t know for how long I’ll be able to draw upon those reserves of dejection that the initial rejections made me feel.  I should tap them while I still can.

 

(And yes, I realize I’m manipulating my own emotions in order to write.  It’s really the way to make it sound the most real.  And it doesn’t hurt all that much any more...)

 

Another issue I have with writing that I really need to fix is my problem with plotting.  Simply said, I cannot plot out an entire story before I start writing it.  Once I start writing it, I get bored with it because I haven’t plotted it.  See the dilemma?  Really, I ought to just be harsher with myself about plotting things out, but it seems like every time I try that, something comes up that I just have to write, and the voice in the back of my head assures me that I’ll be able to fit it into my plot outline at a later date...  I honestly think I have about six unfinished plot outlines for Azuria (because before I ever had time to finish one outline, I re-thought the story and so that plot actually changed).

 

Then there’s the problem that, while I do write for fun (or, more accurately, while I do enjoy writing), I also want to be published, and it’s really hard to stop thinking about that when I’m writing.  So I get into arguments with myself about whether or not something is “publishable.”  Kes Running would certainly be publishable by DAW (my publisher of choice) by the time I finish with it.  But Azuria, which has been my pet project before I even knew the girl who named Kes, was started when I was much younger and therefore the characters are much younger.  In fact, it was intended as young adult fiction.  DAW doesn’t publish young adult fiction.  Now, it wouldn’t be hard for me to remake Azuria so that the characters were a bit older and things were a bit more, well, adult.  But part of me wonders if I should have to do this.  Part of me wonders how true I ought to stay to my initial vision of the story.

 

And then there are the random short stories I write that don’t seem to fit anywhere.  They’re not easy to classify.  The ones that I’ve written for Julie have managed to fit into their required categories, but the stuff I write for fun frequently defies categorization.  The closest term I’ve coined is speculative fiction, but even that doesn’t cover everything—one of my favorite stories is about a Parisian college student who pays tuition by working late nights in a bar!  And the political romance I want to write certainly doesn’t fit the mold most people place me in. 

 

(I hate that, by the way.  I hate how, when my dad first read the aforementioned story involving the Parisian college student, he was so surprised that I had written it and obviously enjoyed it much more than anything I’ve written since.  I hate how mom assumes that I only write and read sci-fi.  I hate how Corinne snubs me for not reading “literature.”  I think the load of it is bullshit.)

 

And (I notice I start a lot of my sentences with “and”) the one story I might possibly want to plot out thoroughly before I write is starting to seem not so publishable.  Really, on the surface it seems very stereotypical, in the way a bad romance novel is stereotypical.  It’s really easy for me to describe it, but the description I most frequently give makes me realize just how shitty it sounds.  And I know that when I write it, it’ll be ten times better, but I can’t help but thinking that somewhere along the line, an editor will read it and say, “What the crap?  It’s just Jane Eyre with werewolves!”

 

At which point the only thing I’d be able to do to correct the editor would be to mention that there’s only one werewolf, and there’s a bit of Pride and Prejudice, too, if you look for it.

 

See what I mean about it sounding shitty?

 

The story behind this story actually starts around sophomore year, wherein a few great things happened in quick succession: I read Cyrano de Bergerac, Austin got me into musical theater, and the movie of “The Phantom of the Opera” came out.  The result of this was an epiphany of sorts that Cyrano, Phantom, and the other stories like them were all just twisted versions of the old tale of Beauty and the Beast (there was also an epiphany relating to the fact that all of these stories were of French origin, but we’ll get back to that later).  Project Gutenberg being the godsend that it is, it was only a short while before I had the e-text of the original Beauty and the Beast in front of me and had read that, too.  I began to rather idolize that particular plot—the idea that a person could see past the surface and grow to love another for something beyond appearances, the idea that a relationship of sorts between two people could develop the better qualities in both parties.  Add to this that Belle was always my favorite Disney Princess (because she was the only brunette and because she liked books almost as much as me) and it’s understandable that I became rather obsessed.  What was my response to such an obsession?  A rather logical one, actually.  I decided I would attempt my own rewriting of the classic tale.  But how, I wondered, would I keep it interesting?

 

The answer came to me in a single word while sitting in MUN during junior year.  And the word was werewolves.

 

Now, I’m not the type who’s particularly fond of this specific portion of supernatural lore.  Not that I have anything against werewolves—in fact, one of my favorite fictional characters happens to be one—but I don’t really have anything for them, either.  Which was why, initially, the idea was an odd one.  Surely, werewolves were something that other people wrote about.  But the idea was just such a good one.  It allowed my “beast” character to actually be a beast, but only for a small portion of each month, so that his human side could also be explored.  Hell, he could even hide his lycanthropy from my “beauty” for a while, if he wanted.  Let people think he just had attitude problems.  And the fact that he could hide his condition meant that I could make the story seem rather realistic from the start.  When I first thought up this idea, I cackled to myself at the look on my readers’ faces when they realized what I’d done.

 

Now, I’m starting to wonder if this is the best of ideas, and I’m wondering this for the stupidest of reasons, and that stupidest of reasons is: how do you write a back cover synopsis for a story that essentially hinges upon something that doesn’t get revealed until halfway through?  It’s no fun if the readers know that he’s a werewolf from the start, but if there’s nothing special about him, who’s going to read it to begin with?

 

Stupid reason, I know.  But nonetheless, I continue to stumble over it.  (You know what I want for Christmas?  A way to talk myself out of stupid reasons for not writing.  Also, the X-Files movie on DVD, but that’s for another day.)

 

And it bugs me, because I actually like the idea for the story.  I actually have a plot for it (almost) because I’m tentatively stitching together one that follows the typical hero’s journey.  Once I’ve laid that down as a skeleton, I plan on fleshing it out with more of the details that can add pacing to things...and the strangest part is, for possibly the first time, I’m actually looking forward to this part.  I usually hate planning.  But part of me thinks that, this time around, the planning could be fun.  At the very least, it could be interesting.  One of the things I like about this story is that it’s giving me a chance to pay homage to some of my favorite stories.  Beauty and the Beast, obviously, but also Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice, from which I’ll be pulling ideas about the interactions between my two principal characters.  Stop for a second and picture someone who combines the moodiness and quick temper of Mr. Rochester with the pride and arrogance of Mr. Darcy.  Then, imagine him hiring as a servant someone with Jane’s quiet determination and Elizabeth’s curiosity.  Throw in the fact that everyone in the village is sure the man is cursed, so he’s had barely any human contact...and I think things start to get rather interesting.

 

Really, I just ought to write this.  I ought to stop worrying and write this.  Or at least, I ought to stop worrying and plan this.

 

But at least writing about it incessantly has helped me to think it out a bit more.  Usually when I complain about myself, I’m not smart enough to get it in writing.  Lucky for me, this time I managed to.  Hopefully it helps me out in the future.

 

Until then, I think I’m going to read, because although my fingers are warmed up by the typing, my lap is overheated by the laptop’s fan and I’m in a good book anyway, so there.

readingredhead: (Talk)
I've just seen Phantom of the Opera in London for the second time, and I'm in a bit of a mood to write about it for long hours. If you don't want to read long musings about this great musical, don't bother with the rest of this entry, because that's all it's going to be!

***


Pitiful creature of darkness,
What kind of life have you known?
God give me courage to show you
You are not alone!


Those lines won’t leave me alone. In truth, they’ve been running through my head for what feels like a lifetime, even though I just got out of seeing The Phantom of the Opera in London less than two hours ago.

Every time I see a show, a good show, I come away with something that can only be described as a high. Some people need drugs or alcohol or sex to feel it. I just need good art. And I'm feeling it right now -- so much so that it feels weird to be sitting on my bed and doing something as ordinary as typing. I feel like, instead, I ought to be dancing and singing and living and laughing and loving. I feel like I need to act; great art also always calls me to action.

But just as I am called to do, so too am I called to reflect. And since there's little I can do now, I think that I'll think for a while and hope that that's good enough.

The thing that really hit me this time around is encapsulated in those four lines I quoted above. Really, it starts a bit earlier, when Christine reproaches the Phantom for his actions:

This haunted face holds no horror for me now.
It's in your soul that the true distortion lies.


In the world of fanfiction, it seems like every other story tries to write Christine and the Phantom together. But the thing that the fanfic authors seem to never discuss is the fact that the Phantom kills in cold blood -- that he is willing to do so in order to possess Christine all to himself. This is what the voice in the back of my head always whispers when I'm reading a particularly smutty Phantom/Christine fanfic. Christine says it best in the line above: a horrifying visage may lose its impact over time, but something as cruel as the ability to commit murder goes deeper than that. This, rather than anything purely superficial, is why Christine can never make the choice to stay with the Phantom. She cannot fathom that a man would kill -- and, in all honesty, neither can I.

But my next question, as I watched the final scene in the Phantom's lair unfold, was who to blame for the Phantom's actions and demeanor. Christine wonders at what kind of life he has known -- for me, this was the beginning of the answer. A life lived in loneliness, shunned by others due to something as unchangeable as a physical birth defect, cannot be a life that breeds compassion and a sense of value for human life. It cannot be a life that breeds humanity, for that is learned through association with others, something the Phantom never has. He even laments to himself that his disfigurement is at the root of all of his problems:

This face that earned a mother's fear and loathing --
A mask, my first unfeeling scrap of clothing.
Pity comes too late!


So the Phantom has never had even the most basic experience of human love and kindness. He has never been taught to regard life as precious, because he has never valued his own. Who wouldn't hate a society that was disgusted by something he had no power to change? Who would not turn against the people who could not see beyond the physical? Christine's sympathy in the final scene is still tinged with that dread which the Phantom associates with his deformity. Even as she asks for courage to show him that he is not alone, that he, too, can be loved, she calls him a creature of darkness. Not even a man -- a creature, like some common animal -- pitiful, like a poor stray dog that no one wishes to take in. Christine criticizes her society for treating the Phantom the way that they have, essentially creating him as a monster where before he could have been a man, but at the same time she is inextricably bound to this society. As one of the beautiful, she can never quite understand what it is like for him to be shunned because he is ugly.

The thing that hits me about this is, Christine could have loved him. She sees past his face, past even his music in that final scene. If only what she saw was something brighter, something more noble, something more humble -- then, she could certainly have loved him. As it is, she is left only to pity him.

***


Another thing that struck me about this performance was the way in which Christine can be defined through her relationships to the men in her life. There are really three important figures: her father, Raoul, and the Phantom. The thing I find interesting is that I can see how each of these corresponds to a different type of love as defined by the Greeks, who had three words for it: eros, filios, and agape.

For her father, Christine feels a love that is almost spiritual. She feels that he has the power to send her an angel from heaven now that he has died; she reveres him and his memory. This is quite like the idea of agape love, or love of the spirit. Often this is defined as the love one feels for god or the supreme being, but really I see it as a love where the relationship is not equal, and one partner is of a higher caliber than the other (or is perceived to be thus). Christine is really just a little girl who wishes she could look up to daddy for all the answers to life's questions. For her, her father represents the security of her childhood and her younger self, bringing her back to a time when there were fewer things for her to deal with.

I see Raoul as playing a very similar role, in that Christine attaches to him because he is a remnant of her past and makes her think of safer, calmer times. Also, she clings to him in the hope that he can protect her from the world around her. I would define their relatinoship as falling under the category of filios, sometimes defined as the love of siblings and friends, because although it is not purely platonic in nature, it is also not seriously sexual. It provides Christine once again with a safety net, something to lean back on. Raoul is the perfect example of the safe choice in love -- there is no danger to her being with him, and it is comfort that she feels when around him.

The Phantom, of course, is practically the embodiment of eros, or the physical/sexual side of love. If Christine's response to Raoul's attentions is to feel comforted, her response to the Phantom's is to feel excited. And it scares her -- of course it scares her! The Phantom represents something completely different to her, a total unknown, an unsolved variable. In addition, he is no figure from her childhood; he does not carry with him the safety of her youth. It's safe to say that her feelings for the Phantom and her feelings for Raoul could not be more dissimilar; Raoul offers her a safe love with no real mention of physical commitment, whereas the Phantom bombards her with the truth of an adult relatinoship. Christine is certainly frightened by her reaction to him, and his music -- I think that what scares her the most about the Phantom is that he can make her respond in a way others can't. He offers her great pleasure through music, but demands in return that she grow up a little. "Little Lotte" of the first act cannot be the same as the Christine who plays in Don Juan in the second act; there must be a change in Christine's character, or else she lacks the nerve to do anything about her situation. Where her father and Raoul have always made decisions for her, the Phantom emphasizes that she must choose for herself. And unlike in her younger years, the choices she makes now will have a great effect upon her future.

***


Dropping the scholarly and philosophical voice for a moment, I really have to say -- the sexual innuendos in this musical are great! In some places they're a bit obvious to even be called innuendo -- they'd put Shakespeare to shame! If you want to know what I mean, listen to "Music of the Night" or "Point of No Return" and try to see if sex isn't the first thing that comes to mind. Some lines from "Point of No Return":

Past all thought of right or wrong -- one final question:
How long should we two wait before we're one?
When will the blood begin to race,
The sleeping bud burst into bloom?
When will the flames, at last, consume us?


Ahem. Well. Yes. So I like it. But only because it's really well written, and the rhyming is good, too. (And because of the way the acting makes it seem all the more obvious when the play is staged that it is really all about sex, and I suppose I am still a teenager so while I don't sit and blush and giggle I am enormously entertained.)
readingredhead: (Burning)
I feel like I have accomplished more so far today than I did during the entire weekend -- and it's only 10:30. I knew I stayed home for a reason. I figured school would be a waste, what with so many people taking the IB math test, and I didn't want to be at school if I didn't have to. So, for once in my life, I followed through with something spontaneous that has led to my personal happiness!

I'm realizing I never updated about my weekend, because I was so busy. Not much to say about Sunday, but Saturday was awesome fun. In the morning, I went shopping with Katie for supplies for our birthday party, and we ended up at Goodwill where I found this awesome dress -- for $10! It's really simple black satin spaghetti strap dress that's form-fitting around the bust and stomach but past the hips, the skirt flares out really wide. So to recap: pretty much in perfect condition, gorgeous, simple but in an elegant way, and only $10. My day was made.

Then we decided to go to lunch at Chipotle because we had coupons. So I'm sitting and eating a wonderful burrito and I get a call from Rick. Turns out his grandmother wasn't feeling well and wouldn't be able to use her tickets to see the matinee showing of The Light in the Piazza at Orange County Performing Arts. So Rick and I went instead. Have I mentioned that these are good tickets? Orchestra, D17&18. To die for. The musical itself was really good -- not like anything I've ever seen before. Not fantastic or to die for, but still worth watching.  Best part was the fact that a large portion of the singing and speaking was in Italian, and I understood most of it! 

Um...yeah. That's about it. Now I'm trying to study, but I figured I'd reward myself for having worked so hard this far. I'll probably get back to chemistry before lunch...I'm making flashcards for the Paper 3 topics, so that on Thursday night when I don't want to review them, I'll have something to force me to.
readingredhead: (Default)
I just read something Lauren posted about the song "No One Mourns the Wicked" and I can't get the song out of my head, except the part I hear is at the end when all the Ozians are chanting "No one mourns the wicked" as Glinda sings "Good news!" And it feels like it should be significant -- okay, let's be honest, it is significant, for obvious reasons, but at the moment I feel like it should mean something more than the obvious. It felt for a moment that there was about to be a meaningful connection forged between my life and that song...nope. I hate when that happens.

And another line: "Woe to those who spurn what goodnesses they are shown." For some reason that's in my head, too. And I keep thinking about the idea of spurning goodness, and I think that no one would do that, but it depends on what you consider to be goodness. Sometimes I feel like that -- like I'm spurning what I have because there's an image of a future even greater that's stuck in my head like a photograph, and I desperately need for the photo to come true. Because if it doesn't, my life will be a waste.  That's not true.  But it felt true when I typed it.

And a thought: maybe "the wicked die alone" because everyone else is too afraid to join them? That sounds like it has the potential for meaning...just not at 6:13 AM.

I am so in the habit of reading and writing volumes that it's hard for me to get through a day without writing, but I like that about me.  It's one of the things that I guess you could call a personality trait.  Thinking about it, I don't know how to describe myself.  We had t odo a poem for Spanish about ourselves, and I kept coming back to the same traits.  I read, I write, I like school, I want to make a difference; I'm smart, hard-working, driven, determined, passionate; I like musicals and London and all sorts of random, unimportant things -- I guess it's odd to think that these all come together to form my character.  I know I'm more than the words I use to describe myself, but the image in my mind of a body made of words comes back, except its my own body, and I want to see the words that make up my soul, but they're obscured so that I can't.

I was thinking about this last night, and I realized I need to read more books.  They're what keep me sane, after all.

And I should update my list of books I've read so far this year:

1. Beauty by Robin McKinley
2. The Coelura by Anne McCaffrey
3. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
4. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
5. An Assembly Such As This by Pamela Aidan
6. Duty and Desire by Pamela Aidan
7. These Three Remain by Pamela Aidan
8. A Wizard Alone by Diane Duane
9. Hamlet by William Shakespeare
10. Cameo Diner by Matt Miller
11. A Wizard Abroad by Diane Duane
12. Talking in the Dark by Billy Merrill
13. A Streetcar Named Desire by Tenessee Williams
14. A Thousand Words for Stranger by Julie E. Czerneda
15. Blood Wedding by Frederico Garcia Lorca
16. Man and Superman by George Bernard Shaw

It's so weird that that list is so short.  It's also frustrating.  I'm in the middle of several books right now (as usual): Science Fiction: A Historical Anthology, Ties of Power, Magic for Beginners, and other miscellany.  But I think it's high time I finished one of those and moved on.  It's because for the last few days I've been watching X-Files in my spare time rather than reading (or writing).  I think the TV doesn't like me...it certainly isn't doing me much good.  I should swear off X-Files for a while, or at least limit myself to an episode a week.

And I should probably get ready to go to school now...great.  Another day.  Oh, and the TOK project is definitely not done yet.  It'll potentially be completed during snack, right before TOK, because I don't know when we have it so I don't know how much I need to stress.  We're the second class, I think?  Pretty sure we're the only ones going today.
readingredhead: (Burning)
Of course, I should have been spending the last two hours studying for the hardest chemistry test of the year.  Instead, I have spent them re-reading a Phantom of the Opera fanfic and creating a new userpic.  Oh, and having a conversation with Rachna about college sweatshirts.
readingredhead: (Default)
Nothing large has happened to me lately -- or rather, those large things which have happened have happened without commentary.  It's funny -- I find it hard to remember a time when I didn't feel guilty if I forgot to chronicle my latest exploits online.  On the one hand I love having a livejorunal because it makes it a lot easier for me to freewrite, and to keep up with friends, but on the other hand there are some parts of the online journal thing that I still don't buy into...completely.

The part of my day which seems the most worthwhile is the odd sensation I got while watching Rent.  It was at the end, during "Your Eyes" and "Finale B," and I was sitting in MUN and looking at the projection screen and something about the way they were singing and the words they were saying meant something important to me at that moment.  The line "I die without you" kept running through my head as I watched Roger and Mimi embrace, and I thought about the people in my own life without whom I would die, spiritually if not physically.  And then I thought of those who I would die for, a different yet related concept, and I cried.

This time through, the relationship aspect of Rent struck me as the predominant issue -- the way that we distance ourselves from others, and the world distances us from others, but all we really want is to connect, to touch.  The question appears first in "Rent": 

"How can you connect in an age
Where strangers, landlords, lovers
Your own blood cells betray!
What binds the fabric together
When the ringing, shifting winds of change
Keep ripping away!"

The answer, from "Seasons of Love": "Love is a gift from up above."

Again, "What was it about that night?" Roger and Mark ask in "What You Own."  The answer: "Connection in an isolating age."  Hell, there's a whole song about "Contact," and while it refers to the mere physical, today Rent reminded me about how important it is to hold and be held for emotional reasons -- how important it is to remember that, for someone out there, it's true for me to say, "I die without you."

But the musical's got the right spin on it, because while that one phrase is being chanted, another one is as well: "No day but today!"
readingredhead: (Different)
So I made it here. I'm typing this on one of my roommate's laptops and listening to La Vie Boheme while we get ready to go to the conference. Yesterday was exhausting yet fun -- we walked a ridiculous amount around San Francisco...I think my feet are still sore. The conference doesn't start tonight until 7, but we're going into Berkeley and taking a tour, I guess? I'd just like time to wander on my own.

I'm really distracted now...RENT does that, I guess? It's laughably loud. We're subjecting everyone else on our floor to it, practically. I can't think of specific things to say about the trip so far...actually I can, but I don't want to take the time to talk about them. Remind me to say something about the really shady food, and feeling awkward in a Borders of all places! (We're not staying in Berkeley, because that would make too much sense; instead we're in Emeryville...more on this later.)

I haven't killed anyone yet, though it's been occasionally tempting? Guess that's a good sign.

Til later, over and out.
readingredhead: (Different)
Every time I see the musical Wicked, I come away inspired in so many different directions that I don't know what to do with it. Actually, any time I see any musical, or play, or finish a good book, or experience any work of art worth my time, I come away with that feeling -- that need to do something, after having sat and watched or read for so long. I need action now, I demand it from myself.

But the clock is once again my enemy. It's too late -- and besides, there's always a morning.

But what if there isn't? That's the question Wicked has me asking today. Why should I worry about the morning? It'll be there when it comes. But in the meantime, why not let my passions be expressed? If there's one thing I learned from Elphaba tonight (and yes, I will continue to treat fictional characters as real people for as long as they continue to be real people), it's that what I admire most about her is that she is unafraid to show her passions to the world.

Sometimes I'm afraid that I come across as insincere -- that the way I express my passions seems like a simple seeming, rather than my being. It isn't, but I hate that it seems that way. Because if other people could only know one thing about me, I'd want it to be that I latch onto things I have a passion for and follow through with them, despite any opposition and at all costs. I want to be known as the person not afraid to feel.

For some reason, the song "As Long As You're Mine" really hit home today. I don't know why, but the attitude of the song just feels like something I'd like to embrace. I just want a chance to let go, for once -- a reason, an excuse, almost a pretense for being myself.

Why do I feel like I need one?

Why does it take a musical about a green girl to tell me this about myself? I understand the power of art, but I am constantly re-amazed by it.

Elphaba asks Fiyero, "Do you think I want to be this way? Do you think I want to care this much? Don’t you know how much easier my life would be if I didn’t?" It's a thought I've had often -- how easy would it be to take the other road? What would it be worth? What would it feel like to leave school at lunchtime, to go out on weekdays, to graduate in a red robe with an average GPA and attend a decent college, to get a moderately high-paying job and settle down and have a family and live the rest of my life being unobtrusive.

What would it feel like to be normal?

But then I remember that I'm different, and it's something I can take pride in, and I realize that I really don't want the answer to those questions I always ask. I don't need to know what life would have been like had I chosen another path. I didn't. I picked this one. I'm still not so sure what that entails, but I know that part of it involves following through. I know that this is the only life that makes me feel so alive (if that makes any sense whatsoever). It's who and why I am, rolled into one.

I thought a lot today, about completely unrelated things -- but then again, I don't think any two things are completely unrelated. I spent time with friends, and remembered their intense worth. And when it came to "For Good," I cried to think that "we may never meet again in this lifetime," but also to realize that so many of these people I know have changed me. I am not myself -- no man is an island. The interconnectedness of humanity really struck me today: how much each person matters to someone else, potentially lots of someones. And also it struck me how great a legacy of ourselves we leave in others without ever knowing it. It's something of which I wish I could be more aware.

Now I think I'm rambling, and my left wrist and right calf hurt (hopefully for different reasons), but I just felt like I needed to say something. After a day like this, I just couldn't be silent. I feel (still) like I need to sing.

So maybe I will, in my dreams.
readingredhead: (Talk)
It's interesting to think how a single moment can change your life. We might not recognize that moment when it comes -- it might be an involuntary action that decides the shift for us.

But it might also be voluntary. We might stand there and see the gap before us, and know that the only option we have left is to jump. To fly into the face of that change, whatever it may be.

This is one of those. The push of a button, and my application to Stanford is submitted. The push of a button, and there's nothing more I can do about it. The push of a button, and it's out of my hands and into the hands of Fate and admissions directors.

All of this with the push of a button.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


“I don’t know how you could be interested in history,” Holly said. “The future has always been more intriguing to me than the past.”

“But without a past, we wouldn’t be where we are in the present, and without the present, we can have no future.” Holly still wasn’t convinced, so Jasen continued. “Think of it as a story—except the main character isn’t just one person, it’s many. In fact, it’s a group of people, or even humanity as a whole, depending on the level you study it at. Yeah, it’s a bit plot driven, but every now and then a character comes to the forefront who is so thrilling that you just have to follow their story through to the end, see where they’re going. And then you dip into that same society years after that character’s death, to see if they really mattered, had some sort of lasting impact.”

Holly suppressed a laugh at the hopeful look on Jasen’s face, the way his eyes were glazed over slightly in thought. “Do you intend on being one of those characters? The ones who stand out and dare to make a difference?”

Jasen shrugged. “I guess it would be nice. But it would be hard, too. You can’t change the world without changing yourself, and you never know beforehand if you’re going to like that change or not. You just have to jump into the wind and see where it takes you. Sometimes it helps you soar. Sometimes it blows so strongly you can’t make it off of the ground. But either way, it’s the decision to make that leap that really matters. After that, anything can happen, and you’d better be ready for it.”

Holly did laugh when Jasen finished, but it was a chuckle of concession rather than amusement. “You really have put a lot of thought into this.”

“It’s life. Who hasn’t?”

“You’d be surprised.”

~from the portion of Azuria which I've written so far

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Too late for second-guessing,
Too late to go back to sleep.
It's time to trust my instincts, close my eyes...
...and leap!"

~"Defying Gravity"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"I stand on a precipice
I struggle to keep my balance..."

~"Goodbye Until Tomorrow"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"There were oceans to cross
There were mountains to conquer
And I stood on the shore
And I stood on the cliff
And the second before I jumped,
I knew where I needed to be!"

~"I'd Give it All For You"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Is this where I need to be?

I guess I'll push the button and find out.
readingredhead: (Earth)
So I'm researching philosopher Thomas of Aquinas for a Humanities skit. Our topic is "pleasure and pain," which (as I'm sure you can imagine) makes things interesting enough to begin with. So I was reading some of the things Aquinas had to say about pleasure. In his Summa Theologica he asks the question, "Is any pleasure non-natural?"

Paraphrasing a portion of his response, with a direct quote included: something unnatural to mankind may become natural to one man through a corruption "on the part of the soul; thus from custom some take pleasure in cannibalism or in the unnatural intercourse of man and beast, or other such things, which are not in accord with human nature..."

Did a thirteenth century Christian scholar just make serious, scholarly reference to bestiality?

I think I'm scared.

On an unrelated note, Austin told me today about an awesome musical called "Zanna, Don't!" A description from http://www.queermusicheritage.us/gm-zanna.html says: "The story of a personable teen named Zanna, who has a need to give budding love a helping hand, plus the keen eye and magic wand to speed the process, ZANNA, DON’T! is set in a world where homosexuality is the norm, and heterosexuals are considered an oddity. The town is called Heartsville, USA. All of the characters are homosexual, or so we think, until one bold student writes a musical about forbidden heterosexual attraction in the army, and the true, closeted desires of two of the cast members come to the surface. A world much like our own, save for this twist on statistical norms, the witty script is full of humor, love, and ironic commentary about social stereotypes." I've listened to the first song and it sounds hilarious. And just now looking for the synopsis I ran across a listing of LGBT musicals that I didn't even know existed, some of which looked interesting...

And that's it for tonight, because I'm getting back to Tommy-boy and Humanities...
readingredhead: (Different)
So, it's actually happening. Tomorrow night after the showing of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, I'll be there to get Norbert's autograph. Mom and dad gave in, and did so in a surprisingly quiet manner. I know where I'm going once I'm there. Now, I just have to get there -- and that's easy.

I think that's about it. If anyone wants to come and stalk with us (and can drive themselves -- I don't want to impose upon Steph) let me know and I'll give you details.

I'm happy. Oh, and I bought CDs today, so I'm even happier.

The end -- for now.
readingredhead: (Different)
To Do List:

--Convince my dad that Steph can drive (because mom's okay with it if dad's okay)
--Find out if Norbert lurks around signing autographs after matinees (because dad would feel better with someone he doesn't know driving me during the daytime)
--Convince other crazy friends to come and stalk Norbert with me, assuming the above two items are accomplished to some extent
--Fangirl squee.
--Cross fingers. A lot.
--Thank Steph profusely.
--Un-fangirl-ize. Resume normal, Norbert-less life.

Lather, rinse, and repeat?

I'm going crazy over this, but it's only because I didn't do it sooner. (That makes sense to me so I don't care if it makes sense to you. I got into this mess because I cared about what other people -- my family -- thought about my excitement. This is how I do ecstatic, and I know my friends all understand.)

I just had a half-hour talk with Luke, a buddy from Stanford. He made me feel good about myself, not that I'd been feeling bad about myself earlier. So thanks, Luke -- and may the force be with you.

(So I'm a sci-fi geek -- so what?)

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