Showing posts with label acting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acting. Show all posts

Sunday, December 1, 2019

My Life on Stage (short memoir) by Leanne Dyck

    An actress? Me? Um, not! Or at least that's what I thought before encountering Mayne Island Little Theatre. After that meeting, I was never the same. MILT taught me to step outside my comfort zone and have fun doing it—mostly.

    My acting career was brief, varied, and coloured by many happy memories. I played a Greek citizen in a Greek tragedy. In a tribute to Monty Python, I played a (possibly) expectant mother and a monk. Yes, a monk.

   As a monk, my only task was to walk across the stage while chanting and striking my head with a foam tablet. The challenging part was doing this in sync with the two other monks. Unfortunately, I found this synchronization to be quite difficult. While they hit their heads in perfect unison, I was two beats off. I was convinced I would never get it right. However, during one rehearsal, I finally managed to hit my head in sync with them. You can't imagine my relief when Director Carol McAndrew said, "No, I think it's funnier when you're not in sync." 

 

   So, no, you'll never find my name among the cast of your favorite drama or comedy.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

My life on stage by Leanne Dyck

An actress? Me? Um, not! Or at least that's what I thought before I encountered Mayne Island Little Theatre. After that meeting, I was never the same. MILT taught me to step outside my comfort zone and have fun doing it--mostly.

My acting career was brief, varied, and coloured by many happy memories. 
Choosing from them proved to be a challenge.

My first part was in a tribute to Monty Python--a monk in The Holy Grail. My role as a monk was easy. All that was required of me was to walk across the stage chanting and hitting myself in the head with a piece of foam. Oh, yes and the tricky part--do this in sync with others. Well, this tricky part proved to be too tricky for me. I thought I'd never get it right. I did eventually manage to reach this goal once during a rehearsal. 

You can't imagine my relief when Director Carol McAndrew said, "No, I think it's funnier when you're not in sync."

So now when I must prepare for an author reading memories of my brief time with MILT are my ace in the hole.