The Victory Squirrel

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And this was my weekend…

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Pad thai takeout with mango tapioca bubble tea and reruns of Gordon Ramsey’s Hell’s Kitchen on the tube.

I also rented The New York City Ballet Workout DVD from the library then proceeded to make the most-fattening from-scratch dark chocolate sea salt brownie recipe I could find on the internet, took a nap, led a talkback for Next to Normal on Sunday afternoon at the theatre, toured a few potential apartments, watched the Super Bowl (and accompanying Super Fail of the lights) whilst downing a black olive and artichoke pizza, and saw a gleeful squirrel galloping across a snowy yard with a whole chocolate glazed donut in his little mouth. Total victory.

How was your weekend?

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Get Your Brain Working Monday!

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Your reading material for the week:

  • I post this because I spent four years in the theatre department at Boerne High School. And I can tell you from four years of near daily onstage and backstage experience that our sets were never even close to being safe. This is a sad story, but it’s a wonder this didn’t happen sooner. Simply put, I don’t think our high school teacher (for 10th-12th grades) had the technical training or knowledge to know how to make our stage safe, and with a per show budget of approximately zero dollars (or so it felt), he couldn’t afford to make them safe either even had he known how. In Texas schools there’s a rule (so I’ve heard, but don’t quote me on it) that all sports monies must be matched dollar for dollar with monies for the arts. Either this rule wasn’t around when I was in high school, Boerne chose not to abide by it, or the monies went to the other arts divisions (marching band, choir, etc.) because it seems like the high school theatre department saw none of it after necessary royalties were paid. We had tremendous moral support from our principal, but the district provided no monetary support to make things easier, better quality, or safer. I truly feel for this kid. Especially because it could have so easily been me or one of my peers eight or nine years ago. Accidents happen. And anyone who says the theatre is not a dangerous place has clearly never worked in one. It’s the risk we all take doing what we love. But I don’t know about this case. On one hand, with all the educational and community theatre I participated in as a teen, I was aware that it was at my own risk and that the school and/or theatre would assume no liability for injuries or accidents, were they to happen. On the other hand, if nothing has changed safety-wise since my schooling days at BHS and the set was not properly secured (and it doesn’t seem that it was), then I think the school district needs to pony up some funds to help pay for this kid’s medical bills (and trauma, no doubt) and invest in some safety training for the technical theatre department so this doesn’t happen again. Safety should always be first and, unfortunately, outside of being reminded that we needed to be careful, it never was. I hope that changes.
  • This is a totally fascinating read about a family that was discovered living in the remote wilderness of Russia, devoid of human contact for 40 years. Amazing.
  • More professional female theatre director goodness right here! YES.
  • And even more here. Things are looking up! Bravo and well deserved!
  • We all need to read this. Just for the reminder of what is truly important in this life and to not let ourselves get totally swept away in the job or the art, as it can be so easy to do.

Happy reading!

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Super Snacks

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So I came across this goodness for Super Bowl Sunday, which I will definitely be making:

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Garlic herb, traditional, and cinnamon sugar pretzel bites with cheddar, honey mustard, and chocolate dipping sauce. Tasty.

And then there’s this fiasco, which I definitely will NOT be making:

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That’s 47 layer dip. You don’t even want to know what’s in it. My gut is cringing.

What snack will you be savoring on Super Bowl Sunday?

Go Packers! (I know, I know…)

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Top 10 On My International Travel Bucket List

1. Machu Picchu, Peru

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2. Santorini, Greece

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3. Iceland/Finland/Norway/the Swedish Lapland (okay, so I know they’re not all the same place, but they’re in the same general region for geyser spying, volcano trekking, northern lights gazing, hot springs soaking, igloo lodging, and snow/ice adventuring)

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4. Italy (Venice, Rome, Tuscany, the big cities, the country villas…all of it.)

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5. Cable Beach, Australia

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6. New Zealand

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7. Russia

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8. Egypt

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9. Poland

Neptune statue by the Tawn Hall

10. Bali

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P.S. I haven’t forgotten about Rio, Northern Ireland, Thailand, South Africa, Antarctica, or Casablanca, Morocco either. Those are on my travel bucket list too!

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Broadway in 2013: Yea or Nay?

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Broadway shows I want to see:

  • Big Fish (For real! This is going to be a beautiful show! And I know someone in the cast, so that already adds points to the “see it” column.)
  • The Book of Mormon (Hard to ignore all the great press about the catchy tunes and humor! Plus I know someone in the cast, so again…yes. I’d see it.)
  • Mary Poppins (It had just opened in 2007 when I was in London and I missed my opportunity to see it. Making it up this year!)
  • Newsies (I’ve loved this musical since theatre camp 2003 when we learned the dances to it. A long-time favorite.)
  • Once (Neat concept, interested to see how it translates to stage.)
  • Nice Work If You Can Get It (I have nothing but love for the 20s, 30s, and 40s style musicals. They’re my weakness.)
  • Jekyll & Hyde (The music and story are both phenomenal!)
  • The Mystery of Edwin Drood (I adore murder mystery musicals!)
  • Rebecca (Yes, they’re bringing the Daphne Du Maurier novel to the stage! God, I hope it’s overly-dramatic with whiny violins, just like movie!)
  • In the Heights (National Tour) (I’ve been itching to see this one for a while now.)
  • Anything Goes (National Tour) (Love the style. Can’t help it.)

Broadway shows I have no desire to see:

  • Matilda the Musical (Meh. Matilda was never my favorite stories.)
  • Mean Girls the Musical (Sadly, they’re not kidding. This is happening, apparently. My brain cells are melting just thinking about it.)
  • Kinky Boots (Um, this looks weird.)
  • Ever After (Meh. The Cinderella story does nothing for me.)
  • Cinderella (Ditto.)
  • Orphans (I’m not intrigued, sorry. And the star power in the cast doesn’t do it for me either.)
  • Bring It On (National Tour) (More brain cells melting.)
  • Catch Me If You Can (National Tour) (I’m drowning in melted brain cells!)

Broadway shows the jury is out on seeing:

  • The Addams Family (I’ve heard it’s great, and I’m curious, but I’m not sure it’s at the top of my must see list. It could go either way.)
  • The Miss Firecracker Contest (I think I liked this script when I was a teenager…)
  • Can-Can (Only if it promises amazing costumes, lots of glam, and fantastic dance numbers.)
  • Jersey Boys (Feel good musical with loveable classic tunes? I could see it. But I don’t think it’s worth emptying the bank for.)
  • Spider Man: Turn Off the Dark (I feel like I should see this after all the hell, time, money, and injuries they went through trying to make this happen, but I’ve heard the story just isn’t that great, unfortunately. And all the special effects in the world won’t make up for that.)
  • Aladdin (This could be awesome, or it could be terrible.)
  • Nerds (I’m interested – after all, it is a nerdy rock musical. It could be really awesome, or really weird. I want to know more.)
  • War Horse (National Tour) (I’m not all that interested in the story, but I keep hearing how amazing it is.)
  • Shrek the Musical (National Tour) (I can’t help it. I hear it’s funny, but yet…?)

P.S. Eat Pray Love, and The 39 Steps are opening on London’s West End in 2013. I’d see ’em!

What Broadway shows would you see on a trip to the Big Apple in 2013-2014 if money and time were no object?

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Today I Love (Reading Nook Edition)

Last week I posted some rockin’ inspirations photos for a reading nook that is apartment-friendly, adaptable to almost any space, DIY, and budget-minded with lots of character that I’m designing for our fictitious apartment without any dimensions (check it out here). Crazy. I know. Now I’ve started thinking about the said “character” of this nook and what objects might give it more coziness and personality (because, you know, an adult tent or converted closet just aren’t personality enough apparently). Though the hunt is far from over and it’ll be months before anything actually materializes, here’s a few things I’ve come up with might make an appearance:

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Hey mom, want to make me another knit blanket, this time in red, to match this awesome pillow? Please?

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An eclectic assortment of framed art and inspirations

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A charming ladder shelf to hold books, flowers, tea, wine, candles, or anything else that might end up in my nook

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Odds and ends

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A little DIY mason jar chandelier illumination

I’m also on the hunt for something old fashioned carnival or circus themed….a pillow, wall art, etc. Something like this maybe?

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Any suggestions?

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All Things Considered

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My bling is back from its annual re-dipping and cleaning excursion. I know I blog about this every single time it happens, but it’s just so darn exciting to have it back after two weeks of being naked and ringless and oh my gosh the sparkle! Looks just like it did on October 24, 2009 when I got it! I’m not normally a very girly person, so I feel no shame in giving myself a pass on this one. That being said: It’s so sparkly!!!!!! AAAAAHHHH!!

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In other news, oh my god my cat has gotten porky! Wow. Not to mention super immodest. Nice going, Sancho!

But he’s still the most handsome cat around, as if that were even in question.

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Ha! Dare I say…of course.

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Watched this movie over the weekend. It’s fantastic and definitely worth a watch. And you can’t help falling in love with Hilary Swank and Richard Gere. Amelia Earhart was such an adventurer. What an amazing woman!

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Duh.

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Dinosaur feet? Yeah, this is happening.

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And this is what my Sunday looked like. Ducks, snow, coffee shop work, apartment hunting (this feels never ending), reading (novels this week instead of scripts for a change – Patron Saint of Liars and Into the Beautiful North), and Ted and I designed and started building my new blog header. It’s coming along.

Not bad at all, all things considered.

Hope your weekend was restful! Last few days of January…bring it on.

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All the Random Things

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More reads for you!!

There’s this and this.

And this, of which I want to read as many as possible!

And if you’re in the arts, this is gold! I love it!! Makes sense to me.

And if you like ice wine (and who doesn’t?) you need to check out this amazing ice wine food & drink festival in upstate NY that I desperately want to attend (if you’d like to sponsor my attendance for $55 I wouldn’t complain) and download these amazing ice wine infused recipes so you can make your own at home.

And then there’s these beauties, because the windchill has been between zero and -13 degrees for the past three days and, for the love, I just need something not cold and snowy in my life for 10 seconds.

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Let’s compare, shall we? Backyard movie night with summery treats…or frozen nostrils.

And my hibernation thus begins.

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If you don’t believe me, just read this:

Sestina d’Inverno

Here in this bleak city of Rochester,
Where there are twenty-seven words for “snow,”
Not all of them polite, the wayward mind
Basks in some Yucatan of its own making,
Some coppery, sleek lagoon, or cinnamon island
Alive with lemon tints and burnished natives,

And O that we were there. But here the natives
Of this grey, sunless city of Rochester
Have sown whole mines of salt about their land
(Bare ruined Carthage that it is) while snow
Comes down as if The Flood were in the making.
Yet on that ocean Marvell called the mind

An ark sets forth which is itself the mind,
Bound for some pungent green, some shore whose natives
Blend coriander, cayenne, mint in making
Roasts that would gladden the Earl of Rochester
With sinfulness, and melt a polar snow.
It might be well to remember that an island

Was a blessed haven once, more than an island,
The grand, utopian dream of a noble mind.
In that kind climate the mere thought of snow
Was but a wedding cake; the youthful natives,
Unable to conceive of Rochester,
Made love, and were acrobatic in the making.

Dream as we may, there is far more to making
Do than some wistful reverie of an island,
Especially now when hope lies with the Rochester
Gas and Electric Co., which doesn’t mind
Such profitable weather, while the natives
Sink, like Pompeians, under a world of snow.

The one thing indisputable here is snow,
The single verity of heaven’s making,
Deeply indifferent to the dreams of the natives,
And the torn hoarding-posters of some island.
Under our igloo skies the frozen mind
Holds to one truth: it is grey, and called Rochester.

No island fantasy survives Rochester,
Where to the natives destiny is snow
That is neither to our mind nor of our making.

Anthony E. Hecht, excerpt from “Sestina d’Inverno” from Collected Earlier Poems {via}

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To Enlighten

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This is a neat article, especially if you’ve ever wondered what shoes a dramaturg in the theatre truly fills. It’s a pretty fascinating role!

This is an awesome resource for educators, directors, anyone who is simply curious and wants to learn what a specific theatre word means, or needs to explain these definitions to someone else. Your video guide to theatre lingo! It’s an online theatre dictionary where all the entries are super short videos recorded by various theatre companies to explain the definition of each theatre term by acting it out. The comedy improve troupe at the theatre I work for submitted video defintions for five terms (blocking, catwalk, god mike, improvisation, and papering the house). They haven’t been uploaded to the site just yet, but should be soon.

25 Handy Words that Simply Don’t Exist in English is a humorous and enjoyable quick read.

Ever wonder what impact a director has on a production? It may seem obvious but personally, even as a director myself, I don’t typically notice a director’s work when I’m watching a piece of theatre unless the show is really awful. Then it becomes painfully clear what a director actually does, and in some cases, does not do. This delightful and intriguing quick-list can help you pinpoint a director’s work and understand how to watch directing the next time you see a show.

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A Nook of One’s Own

So, I’ve been really hooked on the idea of a reading nook lately. Just a cozy, personal space for me to curl up with a good book and forgot the world for a while. This is all well and good if you dismiss the fact that I have absolutely no idea when or where we’ll live together again. Despite this negligible inconvenience I’ve obviously already started researching how to go about designing and implementing a gorgeous, hidden little reading nook in our fictitious apartment with no dimensions and on a non-existent budget.

Not surprisingly, most of the reading nooks I initially found images of for my inspiration album look like they are situated in fancy, expensive seaside homes instead of in a humble apartment, are rooted in the foundation of some already built-in feature such as a window seat, stairs, or neatly-shaped wall configuration, are professionally and permanently installed instead of DIY (or at least DIY’d by an interior designer with access to some serious cash), or are way out of my meager budget of approximately zero dollars (or whatever I can pester Ted into letting us part with when we finally get a place to ourselves in another 83 months).

With those four limitations in mind – apartment-friendly, adaptable to almost any space, DIY, and budget-friendly – I sought out some different images to help me create a list of reasonable qualities I’d like to fold into my own (eventual) reading nook. I’m aiming for classy and cozy with character and on the cheap. Mission accepted!

The way I see it, there are seven possible types of reading nooks that I have taken a liking to that are almost all feasible in our imaginary apartment with an unknown wall configuration, spacing, and dimensions. A disclaimer: I like the ideas represented in the following images, but not necessarily some the colors, decor items, or styles (in case you thought I was losing my mind or something. Sailboat curtains, a circus canopy, and pink pillows? Please.)

1. The Reading Tent

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Now this is a marvelous idea. With a few raw materials, an online tent making tutorial (already found it!), a modern beanbag-like cushion or floor pillow, a low table, and a great statement lighting instrument like a mini chandelier or cafe string lights, you could easily create a fantastic little hideaway anywhere in an apartment – all you need is an open space. In a word: perfect.

2. The Chaise Lounge or Chair/Ottoman Combo

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This reading nook is another one that could fit in anywhere – corners, flat walls, against windows, or in the middle of rooms. Find a comfy chair and ottoman or a great and glamorous chaise lounge (obviously, that gets my vote) by scouring clearance sections, Craigslist, yard sales, and theatres (Really! Many theatres are open to selling their often brand new set dressings after a show closes), and dress it up with a cozy knit throw blanket, a decorative pillow or two, a lamp that provides good reading light, a table to hold your books and a class of wine (I saw one where the legs that supported the tabletop were made of piles of books – a simple, useful DIY project with lots of character!), and if you really want to get fancy (and I do), turn a hula hoop or wooden cross stitch ring and a bundle of pretty fabric into a canopy that can hang from the ceiling and envelop your nook.

3. The Converted Closet

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Granted, this only works if you actually have a closet to spare, but I consider this a clever and quite cozy use of space! Empty out the closet and get rid of all the crap you were hoarding but never going to use anyway (you know I’m right, plus it feels great to downsize!), build in a 3 foot tall bench the size of the closet, paint or stain the wood, cover a large, thick chunk of foam with some nice fabric, stock your nook with pillows and a blanket, paint the walls, add art, build in a few shelves, and pick up one or two cool lighting fixtures at a hardware store to install on the walls or ceilings. A lantern could be a really cool in this space!

4. The Sectioned Room Nook

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Don’t have an extra closet but got an attic, some other tiny oddly-shaped room, or even a room with a funky little cutout that you’ve always wondered what the hell good it could possibly do you? Now you know. We actually had a little nook just like the first picture with a window in both our old apartment and our old house, so it’s not as uncommon as you might think! This follows a similar concept as the converted closet.  Build in a bench, add a chair, cushion, mattress, or floor pillow, and a don’t forget a table or other storage surface for your cup of tea. If you don’t have the benefit of a window with lovely natural light, find an interesting lamp, set of string lights, or something else to guide your path. Paint the walls. Decorate. Add a pair of curtains across the “entrance” to your nook that you can tie back for an open air feel, or use to close yourself off from the world. 

5. The DIY Window Seat

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Got a great window with a view but lacking a seat? Get crafty and build it (there’s plenty of online tutorials for this)! Cushion it with fabric-covered foam or pillows. Dress up the surrounding area with anything that adds character. 

6. The Floor Pad

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Get low and use your floor! This is another fun concept that can work anywhere with a floor (so…everywhere). Have a low window in the basement or attic? Excellent. If not, this can still ooze plenty of charm. Use an old wooden pallet to create a designated space, show off a fuzzy soft rug, bring out the kid in you with a beanbag cushion, put that twin mattress to use, or highlight your ability to create a mellow Japanese zen garden nook with a low table or standing tray and some floor pillows.

7. The Deck Nook

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I suppose this actually requires a deck or yard, but even with just an outdoor porch or patio in an apartment unit, this could work nicely for some outdoor reading in the fresh air. Exercise your construction skills by building a corner bed or bench. Paint or stain with outdoor paint if you’re not into the natural look. Make a cushion and cover it with an outdoor water-repellent fabric. Add weather-friendly pillows. Hang a basket to hold your books or beverage at arms length and place a flowering plant or succulent terrarium nearby. And don’t forget a hanging lantern or set of outdoor string lights for those late night summer reading sessions (and bug deterrent candle, for good measure!

Also…

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This converted ladder bookshelf will most definitely be making an appearance beside of my nook – a clever, stylish re-purposed piece with tons of character is just what I’ve been looking for! For my awesome inspiration you can check out my reading nook pinterest board here.

P.S.: If money were no object…

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I could curl up with a good read in any of these nooks, quite easily in fact.

P.P.S. In case I haven’t already done enough damage…

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If a closet reading nook is not in the cards (mostly because I’m thinking that tent or a chaise IS in the cards because I adore them so!) and we have a spare closet (Ha! Spare, unused, empty closet? Have you ever heard of such nonsense?), then a closet office for my desk will be happening. I love it! And my desk is the perfect size for a closet already. Yes!

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