Imagine What?

In the last few weeks more than a handful of friends, family and acquaintances have told me in many different ways that they could never have imagined what passes for politics and news in the U.S. these days.

As is usual for these types of conversations, talk kept going back to the former US president, meaning the guy before Joe Biden, and the deviously gluttonous way in which he manages to devour everything and everyone in his path.

Now and forever

How is it that this happened???…they all eventually ask in various forms.

I know it’s important but if I hear one more word about Him, I’m going to scream… so many confess while simultaneously admitting they find themselves tuning out the news.

Every single day I wish he was dead.

Why doesn’t he just have a heart attack and die? 

I’ve gone to the bad place

The fury of those last thoughts often come with an apology for wishing or even imagining them.

Until I interrupt and confess I feel exactly the same way.

But more so. 

At which point I mention all of the ingenious ways that my imagination manages to… well, you know.

When they beg me to elaborate I mostly decline. 

Give in to the dark side

Though I must admit a few of them are so good that they scare even me.  And, after a particularly heinous news day…

Make me smile.

But see, that’s the thing with imagination.  It’s an incredible balm to the soul.  If you allow yourself to think it up, it can feel real. 

It doesn’t have to be real.  But it can help you think and process your innermost desires and demons and other stuff that you can’t quite yet categorize and comes from who knows where.

Or it can simply get it out of your head.  Maybe never to be heard from again but perhaps to be sorted out.

uh oh, we’ve entered the slippery slope

I’m a writer so I often write it down.  And very occasionally, but not often enough, it spawns a good idea for a script or story of some kind.  Or a new way to think about an old story I’ve been telling myself for years – either on paper, or in everyday life, or way, way in the past.

This weekend a good friend invited me to a filmed play of what was billed as a radical new version of Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya.

And playing ALL EIGHT PARTS in this retelling of a 125-plus-year-old Chekhov story was none other than the actor Andrew Scott.

Netflix’s Ripley. 

The tortured gay heartthrob from last year’s All Of Us Strangers. 

The hot priest from Fleabag. 

Moriarity from the long-running BBC series Sherlock.

Among others.

Does this man age??

You watch this guy nimbly jumping back and forth from one character to another, sometimes in mere seconds and other times in minutes, or monologues, as he quips, cajoles, argues, eats and occasionally even, with the use of his hands, shoulder, neck and breath, simultaneously portray two different male and female characters making love to each other, and all you can think about initially is….

How????? 

How is this possible?  How is he able to do this? 

And then… who imagined it?

All of these emotions

Well, it was adapted last year by the playwright Simon Stephens, who a decade ago theatrically shed light on and likely helped change the way we thought about autism in the groundbreaking play The Curious Incident of the Dog In The Night-Time (Note: Adapted from the novel by Mark Haddon, it’s won most major playwriting awards). 

And he is billed as co-creating it with both Scott and Sam Yates, a 40ish British stage and sometimes television and film director known for his unusual approach to both new and classical material.

Okay.

But then you ask yourself…

Why?????  Why do this?

Why do we need this?  Why do it at all? 

::Throws hands up::

Well, because someone, or a handful of ones, thought of it and needed to think of it.  Something about the world they lived in, or events they were personally experiencing, prompted them to think of it.  And then move forward with recreating something (and a bunch of fictional someones) from the past that would allow them to understand their present in a different way.

It’s not as if before seeing this filmed version of a play done last year at the National Theatre I was excited about seeing Uncle Vanya done as a one-man show.

Or frankly, any production of Uncle Vanya at all.  Nor, I venture to say, is the average person.

Preach it, Chairy

But watching Mr. Scott (Note: I so want to call him Andrew, or even Andy)… okay Andrew… throw himself so fully into instantly becoming so many people – with no wigs, no costumes, only a trajectory of mangled feelings, conflicts and eventually emotional outcomes, denials and realizations – well, it was about as contemporary as it gets for me.

It seemed that this film, of this play, had nothing at all to do with Uncle Vanya, or even the playwright himself. 

What it addressed were the myriad of emotions, sometimes life and death ones, we are ALL trying to manage as best we can these days.  Only to be shown there is no managing. 

See above

There is only being truthful about how and what we feel, taking the actions we believe fitting and holding out some hope for a better future when they don’t work out. 

And, well, to keep trying.

It might sound a bit trite, but that’s what this new version of Vanya, the one I didn’t think I needed but some other people imagined I might need, did for me.

We love an ah-ha moment

It made me realize once again that navigating what we call the politics of today is not much different for our generation than it ever was.

And that, lucky for us, back then Chekhov was quite an imaginative fellow himself.

The Temptations – “Just My Imagination”

Luna, Luna

One of the things that’s great and maddening about creating anything artistic is you never know what might happen with it.

Something, nothing or anything in between. 

A script for a play, movie or television series can sit in a drawer.

A song might never be heard.

A painting or photograph might never be seen.

A novel might never be…

never to be seen again

Well, you get the idea.

Of course, all of these things meet the eyes or gaze of at least one person, the artist.  And usually a bunch more.  But after that, it’s anyone’s guess.  The number could be in the hundreds, thousands or millions.

This weekend I went to something pretty much indescribable.  Though, not really.  Simply put, it was…

An amusement park.

Weeee!

Well,  an art installation that featured parts of an amusement park that was last seen in 1987 for a few months in Hamburg, Germany.

Actually, that’s the only time it was EVER seen.

But now there were fun-houses, Ferris wheel rides, painted backdrops, sculptures, ornate masks, vintage posters, games and T-shirts, as well as merry-go-rounds, mock enchanted trees, a shooting gallery and even a fake wedding chapel.

Sounds a bit… juvenile?……pretentious? ….Avant garde?

You could say that…

Or something that some of you might be interested in but likely nothing most of you would get up and out of your homes in order to go see.

Now, what if I told you that:

Drake (Note: Yeah, that guy.  The rapper) and his production company spent about $100 million to get this thing out of storage and refurbished in order for it to be displayed until mid-May in Los Angeles?

OK I’m listening

And then, what if I added that the designers of these colorful, life-size amusement park doo-dads, stuffed into shipping containers and crates and stored in  a 50,000 square foot warehouse in Germany and then Texas for three-and-a-half-decades, unseen by anyone, were designed by such renowned artists as:

Salvador Dali

Keith Haring

Jean-Michel Basquiat

David Hockney

Roy Lichtenstein

Head explodes

As well as:

More than a dozen others of European and American renown?

And…

Featured original music from both Miles Davis and Philip Glass.

Would it now suddenly all seem A LOT more interesting???

Yeah, it did to me, too. 

It made me want to go.

Here I come

Having spent several hours there, feeling like a kid again, it all made me wonder about….

Actually, let’s just say it made me wonder.  Created wonder.  Prompted cynical ole’ me, after a few hours, to leave there in

Wonder.

Try not to be charmed

I can’t begin to tell the tale of how all this stuff got locked away for 35 years while a single painting from any one of the artists I chose to feature on separate lines above has sold in the mega millions.

Though it did prompt me to ask this question:

If the work of great KNOWN artists can be so easily packed away and forgotten, can you imagine how much other INCREDIBLE stuff has been locked away, not displayed, or has been left lying around or unnoticed right in front of all of our collective societal eyes???

huh!

And just when I thought it was impossible for me to be left in any more WONDER.

You can’t reference Luna, Luna without giving credit to Viennese multimedia artist Andre Heller, who came up with the idea and spearheaded a way to assemble the concept and players all those decades ago:

But here is a link to a 2022 NY Times Magazine article that details its origin story and the road to bringing it back to life far better than I could.

And another to the refurbished ORIGINAL, NOW ON DISPLAY IN DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES, and how to see it. 

Click here for more info

You might not believe an amusement park like this can actually exist, or has ever existed, but it does. 

Nor —

Can you believe that you will only get to see it after 35 years because of Drake, but that is also true.  (Note: No, it does NOT matter if you don’t listen to his music, or hate his music, or don’t like him, or are somehow morally annoyed by his recent online D pix going viral (seriously?).  Here is merely a conduit here).

Drake meme appropriate here

It’s not yet official, but if you can’t get to L.A., a guy who worked there told me it’s likely the whole thing is headed up to San Francisco, and then to New York, in the next year.

Here’s some photos of me and my friend Neil goofing around:

More importantly, here is a recent Luna, Luna piece done for CBS Sunday Morning that will actually take you inside and show you around real time.

Think of it all as a much-needed SMILE break.