I participated in a reading of "Dead Man's Cell Phone" by Sarah Ruhl. What fun to read the part of an espionage spy as the other woman and the stranger using different accents. You can almost hear the film noir music as Jean (the girl that finds the dead man's phone) gets herself into an adventure that might be in a Hitchcock film. The theme of the play deals with the ability of the phone (and the people who use it) both to unite and isolate. The phone becomes another character in the play -- reminiscent of the use of the phone in a Neil Simon play "Chapter Two”. The commonplace phone that we are asked to turn off in the movie, theater, and on an airplane becomes a character of transformation. There are several references in the play to “Carousel” in this oddball comedy. The song "You'll never Walk Alone” is mentioned several times and the idea that if there is one person on earth who remembers you then it isn’t over. The author reflects on the question of how will you be remembered after you're gone by entrusting the memory of a not-so-dearly-departed man to a woman he never met.
A journey of a retired Girl Raised in the Southern mountains
who sometimes snorts when she laughs
Monday, January 12, 2009
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Christmas Joys 2008
"Christmas Joys" By Joanna Fuchs
Evergreen boughs that fill our homes
With fragrant Christmas scents,Hearts filled with the loving glow
That Christmas represents;
Christmas cookies, turkeys stuffed,Festive holly berry,
Little faces bright with joy,
Loved ones being merry;
Parties, songs, beribboned gifts,
Silver bells that tinkle,
Christmas trees and ornaments,
Colorful lights that twinkle;
Relatives waiting with open arms
To smile and hug and kiss us;
These are some of the special joys
That come along with Christmas.
This poem sums up the joy of the holiday season. I enjoyed visiting with family and friends during the holidays and loved my Christmas tree and decorations.
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