readingredhead: (Talk)
I spent the first two thirds of my day working on an essay for my Dickens class that I don't want to have to look at ever again, even though I have no choice but to do so. But then I went out to dinner with friends and went to see The Real Thing at the Old Vic and it was amazing and here I am thinking that it's going to be cool enough to meet Toby Stephens (aka Mr. Rochester from the 2007 BBC miniseries), AND THEN IT GETS BETTER. You know how? Because Christopher Eccleston -- the Ninth Doctor himself! -- walks out from backstage and smiles that goofy grin with those fabulous ears and I get up the guts to walk up to him, offer him a pen and paper, and tell him as he signs my program that he's my Doctor. And I'm thinking it's not just my imagination that that smile got just that much wider when I said it. After that, Toby Stephens was really just icing on the cake.

And then I came home, AND THERE WAS CAKE WAITING FOR ME. It's almost like there was no Dickens in my day at all.

(Also, how do I not have a Ninth Doctor icon? Perhaps after I have written three essays and died, I will have to find one.)
readingredhead: (Professor)
I should be doing important things, like reading up on the history of conduct books for my essay on Evelina but instead I'm getting ready to go to the Globe and watch a fabulous production of Midsummer Night's Dream.

I'm also thinking a lot about the fact that I'm going to spend Friday and Saturday turning a piece of fiction that I (co-)wrote into an actual (experimental) film (though when I say I'm going to be doing this, it really means I'm going to do what my film major and co-writer friend tells me to do). It should be completely awesome; we're filming on location throughout London, but the actual acting parts are small-scale enough that Oren and I are actually just playing the characters that we wrote, which for me will be all kinds of amazing. I'm starting to think about how my character would dress, and do her make-up, and wear her hair, and all kinds of stuff (and the best part is that none of these answer are hard for me to figure out...I just know her, y'know?). So while it is distracting me from the essay(s), at least it's doing so in a good way.

Also, I have tickets for two events on May 30 at the Hay Festival of Books but no idea as of yet how I am going to get there and back, since Hay is really small and doesn't have its own train station. There are buses and shuttles and the like but it doesn't seem feasible to go up in the morning and back that night; if I'm going to be spending the money on train fare anyway, I might as well see some of the surrounding countryside. Also it would be a lot easier to get back to, oh, say, Cardiff after the last event finishes at 9PM than it would be to try to get back to London (which would probably be impossible). But this means I need to find accommodation in Cardiff (or wherever), and I have yet to broach this subject to my mom, who would freak if I told her I was considering staying in a hostel on my own. She's already worried that no one wants to go to the Hay Festival with me...silly mother, they speak my language in this country!

Now, I shall file all of this under "things to sort out later" and get ready to go see some Shakespeare.
readingredhead: (Default)
Not much update time, but I have to say -- I never really liked A Midsummer Night's Dream, and then I saw the Globe's traveling company perform it at the Globe last night and it kinda blew my mind. Can we say 1920s theme? A cast of 8 people portraying all 20+ characters through some pretty fantastic costume changes? Aforementioned actors singing, dancing, and playing musical instruments in addition to acting some of the best Shakespeare performances I have ever seen? SO AWESOME.

Also, I ate lunch at a restaurant looking out directly across the Thames at Tower Bridge. We ate on the south bank before crossing the bridge (in an intermittent thunderstorm) and getting on with our day, but it was nice to just sit for an hour, rest our already-tired feet, and look at what I would argue is the awesomest bridge in London. The Millennium Bridge may be stylish, but Tower Bridge...I don't even know why I like it so much. It just rocks.

Today I am heading into East London for my first look at the school where I will be spending most of next year! And tomorrow I finally get to see the British Library.

Addendum: I have the WORST INTERNET ACCESS EVAR right now. And it kinda makes me want to die. Might have something to do with being on the top floor of a building with wireless coverage that's poor to begin with -- on the bottom floor a few rooms away from the router I only get three bars. BUT STILL. It is making things like paying a deposit for housing at Queen Mary incredibly difficult, and if there's one thing I hate, it's technology that I spend money on and rely heavily upon not working in the way that it should. I hate that this is enough to make me angry on any given day, but it really is.
readingredhead: (Light)
Because Jacqueline insisted that I "lj the heck out of" this, I figure I have to. :)

So yesterday for Father's Day my family drove up to Westwood for lunch and to see the play Farragut North. It's a political drama set during the presidential primaries that focuses on the backroom politicking that goes on over the course of two or three days leading up to the Iowa caucuses. The central character is 25-year-old Stephen Bellamy, a superstar press secretary for the fictional Morris campaign; the play follows him through a series of bad decisions (at first innocently bad, culminating with menacingly bad) that change the shape of the campaign, or at least Stephen's involvement in it. To me, it felt like a more cynical version of The West Wing with much more swearing (amazing what you can say when you don't have to keep it clean for TV), and although I missed the general optimism-under-pressure of West Wing, this definitely painted a picture of what always could happen to the good guys (and sometimes does).

Of course, the highlight of the show was that aforementioned political wunderkind Stephen was played by Chris Pine (which is basically the main reason that we went to see the show -- well, the main reason my sister went, anyway; some of us were there for the politicking). Personally, I thought he did a great job with the role, and gave it the right kind of nuance. It would've been easy to play up certain character traits earlier in the play that would have made the ending less surprising, but it's supposed to be a surprise: the point isn't that everyone in politics is an angry bastard who, when it comes down to it, will sacrifice anything to save his own skin. The point is that even intelligent guys sometimes make bad decisions and get played. I definitely still had sympathy for Stephen at the end of the play, though not in the same way as I had when the play opened.

A word for sets and stage transitions: The stage was pretty bare but with alternating blue and white-blue almost-checkerboard squares projected onto it (each big enough for a person to stand in) and looked pretty awesome. But the awesomest part was the transitions between scenes. While the hardy props team was readying each new set, the same projector that (presumably) projected the chessboard motif was used to show faked news clips. You could still see all the people onstage, yes, but personally I was focusing on the news.

But back to Chris Pine. I should start this off by saying that my sister's much more of the star-shocked one than me -- I wouldn't say she chose UCLA as a school specifically so that she could be in the middle of all the entertainment world, but it was definitely a motivating factor. She's interested in being some part of the media circus, and definitely has her actor crushes. Sometimes I think they're a little silly. This time, I can't blame her. Chris Pine is actually a good actor and not just a pretty face (though oh my goodness is he ever a pretty face).

Anyway, the whole going to see the show thing was at first largely Corinne's idea. I'd seen ads for it in the paper but not really thought about going to see it, until I mentioned it to her and her brain took off like a rocketship. Sometimes she comes off a little too naive-fangirl for her tastes or mine, but I have to give her the credit for getting my family to go see this play, and for forcing me to stick around with her afterward until Chris Pine came out from backstage. I hadn't really thought I cared too much but I will only be slightly ashamed when I admit that when I saw him standing less than six feet away from me I got the stomach tingles. There were surprisingly few would-be stalkers present (though I will say that is the great thing about small theaters -- did I mention that the Geffen is not huge at all?), so after he greeted a couple of people he knew who'd come to watch the show, Corinne and I were first in line to get some autographs. Not that you can really tell from a two-minute slice of time, but he seems like a nice guy. I forgot to ask him who his favorite English professors were at Berkeley (he graduated from there with a degree in English) but I did get this beautiful picture. And I got to see a great play. All in all a pretty great day!
readingredhead: (Light)
Well. Right now I should be studying for either History or English (probably history, seeing as how my final is tomorrow) but I really have no drive or desire to do so. I'm on campus because I was planning on going to my English professor's office hours, but I came too early because I got the wrong time, so I'm sitting in the library and trying to forget about school.

I'm really not too worried, and I don't need to be. But there's some work I need to do, some things I want to figure out, before the history final. I don't want to be learning things the day of -- that just seems too last-minute to me, even though considering that my final isn't until 5pm I've got a lot of time in which to study "the day of."

Right now, my plan is to write essay outlines for each of the six (yes, six) essays I may potentially be required to write tomorrow. I'll only have to write two of them, but I still think that's two too many. I've got a good grade in the class but if I want a solid A in the class I need a solid A on the final. I'm pretty sure I can do it, but still...I think the problem is that I'm used to going into the final with a cushion. I'm used to thinking, "Well, it doesn't really matter because I only need to get a C on this to keep my A in the class." Also, here an A- is different from an A in terms of reporting GPA, and therefore I see no reason why I should be getting A-'s. I think I can get a 4.0 here just like I could at Mission.

So, plan for the rest of the day:
1. Study English while still in the library
2. Go to Goldsmith's office hours at 2pm and talk with him until I have no excuse to be talking with him any more
3. Pick up stuff from PE locker and return tae kwon do uniform
4. Return to Clark Kerr and begin writing history essay outlines
5. Eat dinner
6. Get dressed up pretty and go see The Nutcracker with Rebecca
7. Come back to Clark Kerr and fall asleep listening to my history lectures on podcast.

And still, that doesn't seem like I'm studying enough. Oh well.

In a final bit of news, today was actually my last day at the NaNo headquarters. The guys there are so awesome -- I know I'll be going back to help them with whatever it is they may need, provided I have the time. It really depends on how next semester turns out, but I'd love to help them with Script Frenzy. Mostly because how often do you find people who are really that cool? Not often enough.

Okay. So. Now I'm going to go do something. Yeah, that sounds like a good idea.
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.

Profile

readingredhead: (Default)
readingredhead

March 2013

S M T W T F S
      1 2
34 5 6789
101112 131415 16
17 181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios