First, you have to hearse. That's obvious. Of course, no one
teaches hearsing anymore. It's fallen out of fashion. So you'll have
to teach yourself to hearse, which is how you get ready for a rehearsal,
and you'll never have any idea if you are doing it right.
Second, begin apologizing to everyone who will not
be in the rehearsal room, (hereinafter simply called "the room"). Those
not in the room will never understand. The mania is particular each
time. No one outside the room will understand the importance of the
stories you tell about the room. No one outside the room will
understand the vocabulary of the room. No one outside the room will
understand why you want to get back into that particular room.
Third, your baby and your boyfriend and your
favorite TV show are probably all outside the room. You'll miss them and
two out of three of them will miss you. Pray for the right two.
Fourth, beware of connections. While the boyfriend and the
baby and the TV show might not be able to get into the room, the room
can leave itself and follow you around. It'll make you start to believe
that everything in your life is connected to what's happening in the
room. The lyrics to your boyfriend's punk albums will start to guide your
text. The yogurt your baby eats will announce itself as the color
your character's costume should be. The TV will explain how your show
should end. Almost all of these seeming connections are dead ends. The
room is just jealous of your life. But you never know. One out of a
thousand weird connections is perfect and useful, that's what makes
chasing them all down worthwhile.
Fifth, begin apologizing to everyone who's in the
rehearsal room. You're cranky. You smell like energy drink and
cigarettes. You didn't hearse right, so you're not as ready as they
are—at least you're not as ready as they think they are. You're having
trouble compromising. You're having trouble collaborating. You're having
trouble remembering the difference between compromise and
collaboration. You're checking your phone under the table to see if your
boyfriend sent you a picture of your baby dressed up like a character
from your TV show.
Sixth, it's already over. It happens so fast. And
it's only as magical and as deep as you're able to make it by really
being there, being prepared, focusing, loving with passion, arguing with
love, collaborating without compromise, compromising on all the little
things, recognizing the big ones, staying balanced in your personal life
so you don't crash the room, engaging with the process and not giving a
fuck about the product. The product lives only in the heart of the
audience and they're only in the room for one glorious hour and fifteen
minutes if you do your work right. Two hours if you're pretentious.
Three hours if you're a fucking asshole who can't edit. And even
then—it's already over. And it's time to start hearsing again.
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