So this whole trying to get a crap load of hours done in two weeks is continuing to bite me in the backside.
Remember the whole needle attacking my fingers fiasco? Ah yes, that was a simpler time. Apparently that's not actually what my job is going to be for the rest of the quarter (that's just a side job of sorts I guess).
Yesterday I started the REAL work.
If I haven't made it clear by now that I'm a theatre newb, well, this should do the trick. I'm not sure how many people reading this know what a "Running Crew" for a show is, but if you do you're going to laugh at my naiveness for thinking that I was just going to be sewing the whole time. They really should have had a description or something on the sign up sheet... Of course, the word "running" is in the title, so I suppose I should have expected some sort of physical activity, right? Like maybe some running perhaps? NAH, couldn't be!
I showed up yesterday morning at 11 (the call time was an hour earlier than the day before... I should have known something was up) blissfully unaware of what I was actually going to be doing that day. I was sitting around in the lounge, eating a banana and rubbing sleep out of my eyes while the rest of the cast and crew trickled in (I'm NOT a morning person. 11:00 am is technically still in the morning you know) when the other girl on the Costume Crew, Kim, started calling me from the hall. She told me we had to get stuff ready on stage. Confused, I told her I thought we were still going to be sewing the rest of the buttons and velcro on the jackets today. She just laughed. Uh oh.
For those of you who, like me, have no idea what being part of the Running Crew actually entails, it seems to involve:
1) A LOT of running (huh, go figure)
2) Enough stress to make poor Erika want to curl up in the fetal position behind the curtain and go back to sleep
3) Yelling (the angry kind and the frantic kind)
4) More stress
5) MORE running
6) Dealing with sweaty, stressed out actors
7) EVEN MORE RUNNING
8) and cleaning everything up at the end of the night
Since I was on the Costume Running Crew (as opposed to props and maybe tech? I'm really not sure what all the jobs are) I was in charge of helping the actors with their costume changes. Now that doesn't sound too hard, does it? HA! If wouldn't be so bad if the play we're doing didn't happen to have at least ten quick changes. PER ACTOR. A quick change is when the actor has mere seconds to change outfits before he/she has to run back out on stage. Granted, there are only three actors, but still, trying to speedily change three sweaty guys without ripping anything or making them miss their cues is no walk in the park.
At first it didn't seem too bad; there were three of us, and one girl (Carol) had seen the play and run through the changes before, so Kim and I basically just stood around and watched her run all over the place. However, about five minutes into Act 2 was when Carol decided to drop the bomb on us: she had to leave. She was abandoning us?! Well, that's not good. Apparently she has a job that actually pays her. Whoa, now that's a strange concept.
Kim and I had never even SEEN the play, let alone gone over any of the costume changes for the second act. To say Act 2 did not go smoothly would be an understatement. We missed changes, didn't know where props were (which I really didn't even realize we were supposed to be in charge of anyways; isn't that what the prop people are for?), and basically pissed off all the actors because we couldn't keep up. Needless to say, by the end of the first run through, I was pretty defeated. I was longing to be in the costume shop poking my thumb with that needle again, or better yet hiding at home under the covers.
Thankfully during the dinner break the stage manager went over the cues and costume order with us, and then for the second run through she let us keep her laptop with all her notes on what to do backstage with us, and it went much smoother. But I still was longing for a big mug of hot chocolate and a good episode of Friends by the time it was over. And I also made note of the fact that my sneakers, which I've had for about five years now, were apparently not meant for ten hours of running back and forth (we had to run everywhere just to keep up with the play; it's a very fast moving comedy). I might have to go out and buy some Dr. Scholls tomorrow... no buying cinnamon bread for me this week (I really need to make some money...).
Two more weeks of THAT? Oh God, what have I signed up for here?? Definitely no procrastination for me next quarter.
Hebrew School
3 months ago

