Saturday, July 30, 2005

Trip preparations

Cat and I ran around doing a bunch of last-minute stuff for our trip -- needed new sunglasses and sunblock, mostly. I also got my hair trimmed and nails done, thinking of my class reunion. Nobody will notice because it's very natural looking, but I also got a weave which covers up most of the gray. Vanity, thy name is Charlotte!

Then I spent awhile online looking up bus schedules and directions to the mall ... very important details! The Ala Moana mall is HUGE. Three floors, and they're building a fourth. I'd also not gotten the confirmations for our Elvis Blue Hawaii Dinner or our Pearl Harbor and Island Tour, so I called to follow up on those. I've now got those confirmations in hand (in addition to our Airport transportation, Polynesian Village and Hanauma Bay trip, which I'd already received). We're doing all the tourist stuff!

To help us get in the mood, we went to see the preview performance of South Pacific last Thursday at Delta College. It was a delightful production -- well done and quite enjoyable.

I just fired up the barbecue, and Cat and I are going to have steak and corn-on-the-cob for dinner. It's a bit too hot to cook indoors, but much cooler than it's been. The temperature might be as high as 90 or 95. Quite pleasant!

Sunday, July 24, 2005

Lots of family

The reunion yesterday in Lodi (Grace's family) was well-attended and lots of fun. I took about 6 zillion photos -- I think I've already e-mailed the link to everybody who reads this. I really enjoyed seeing everyone and catching up on their lives. Cat and Sean came with me, and Liz and Jerm met us there.

Grace's sisters, Ethel and Mary, were able to make it, along with her brother, Arthur. There were plenty of nieces and nephews and cousins and spouses and assorted shirt-tails. It was plenty hot; however, we were right by the lake with a whiff of a breeze from time to time, so that kept it bearable. I teased Ethel and Cal about being careful not to get too cold, since they live in Phoenix where it's been insanely, unbelievably hot recently.

I had another golf lesson today. I'm supposed to practice swings this week, which will be interesting without any clubs. Sort of Zen, I guess.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Learned something new today!

Did you know country clubs have dress codes? I took a golf lesson today and ended up buying a shirt in the shop -- they require collared shirts, and I had worn a T-shirt. I guess that's why they make "golf shirts"! Now I just need to go get some shorts before next time -- longer and looser than what I already own. I wore stretchy long pants this time, which worked fine but were really too warm for the weather.

I think I did fine. I listened really carefully and did exactly what the golf pro told me. Guess what? It worked! He said I was doing really well.

[Monday edit] Found their dress code online: "No denim, collared shirt and bermuda shorts required."

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Beautiful roses!


Aren't these lovely? Today's our fifteen-month anniversary.

We're having another very hot day today (yesterday's high was 104). I heard that someplace in Arizona recorded 124 recently, so I guess wherever our high ends up being isn't bad at all!

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

Another "Bus Stop" review!

Strong cast and convincing ensemble works for 'Bus Stop'

Sherman Spencer
Special to the Record
Published Tuesday, Jul 12, 2005

In "Bus Stop" -- now being staged at San Joaquin Delta College's Studio Theatre as part of the Stockton Theatre Project -- playwright William Inge tempers the characters' essential loneliness with strokes of broad humor and compassionate understanding. A tiny Kansas roadside cafe/bus stop serves as a microcosm of human isolation when some bus passengers are forced to spend several hours together due to a snow storm.

Into the cafe comes Cherie Catherine Frye, a somewhat shopworn young nightclub singer who is being practically hijacked to a Montana ranch by Bo Brian Peccia, an obstreperously immature cowboy. His friend, Virgil Sean Dinnell, tries with limited success to keep Bo under control, but it requires the strong arm of the local sheriff James Key to bridle his actions.

Another passenger, Dr. Lyman Harvey Jordan, a rather prurient alcoholic, tries to arrange a rendezvous with Ellma Megan Devencenzi, the pretty high school-aged waitress. Grace Joanna Bernazzani, the cafe owner, makes out with bus driver Carl Dean Phillip Gundlach.

The cast is uniformly strong in characterization and works as a totally convincing ensemble, as everyone attempts to assuage the emptiness of their lives.

Frye and Peccia exhibit a flammable degree of chemistry in their relationship, while Bernazzani and Gundlach revel in a more mature sensuality. Devencenzi and Jordan even add a touch of promise and compassion to their aborted rendezvous.

Only Virgil is left "out in the cold," as Grace says. The script describes Virgil as a man in his 40s, a parental influence on Bo. Though Dinnell had a consistent and viable take on the role, he is obviously about the same age as Bo. A Virgil who is not seen as a father figure detracts from the ending's poignancy.

Jordan designed the realistic set and also directed the play with his usual emphasis on physical action which gave considerable energy and focus to the plot. Julienne Hastings' costumes were appropriate, but the outfits for Cherie and Bo were a good deal niftier than those described in the script.

The Stockton Theatre Project's second production is thoroughly enjoyable and certainly demonstrates the value of the group's cooperative effort in giving new life to some older American classics.

Contact Sherman Spencer at features@recordnet.com


Copyright © 1998-2005 ONI Stockton, Inc.

Monday, July 11, 2005

Heat, glorious heat!

Today definitely feels like summer.

I was walking around the winery a few minutes ago and was reminded of the deliciously wonderful, skin-tingly feeling it was as a child to walk out of our overly air-conditioned Sears into the dry desert heat. Ahhhh!

Sunday, July 10, 2005

Review of "Bus Stop"


Strangers in the night
Drama and comedy binds the stranded characters of ‘Bus Stop

By PAULA SHEIL
Record Staff Writer
Published Thursday, Jul 7, 2005

A classic of American theater, William Inge’s “Bus Stop” cooks up a slice of rural life full of love, lechery and laughter with a crust of loneliness and despair.

The 1955 comic romance is the second of three shows being presented this summer by the Stockton Theatre Project, a collaboration among the city’s leading theater companies. The series concludes next month with a production of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “South Pacific.”

“Bus Stop” is acclaimed as an ensemble piece, director Harvey Jordan said. The story unfolds after a bus load of strangers is forced to spend the night in a diner because of a snowstorm.

“Inge said he did the play as a study in ensemble acting, creating a reason why people were stuck together,” Jordan said. “He didn’t want to just trap these people together to impact each other, but to force them to take time to consider one another. From that, they grow.”

The central story concerns Bo (Brian Peccia), a randy cowboy who expects to wrangle a woman like a wild pony, and a nightclub singer named Cherie (Catherine Frye), who objects to being emotionally hogtied. Don Murray and Marilyn Monroe filled the roles in the 1956 film version.

Convinced Cherie is the love of his life, Bo managed to get her on the bus with him and plans to marry and keep her on his Montana ranch. She’s trying to figure out how to get out of a one-night stand, enlisting the help of the local sheriff, Will (James Key). Bo’s sidekick, a cowboy named Virgil (Sean Dinnell), steadies the emotional seesaw.

Nineteen-year-old Frye comes to the role of Cherie not intimidated by Monroe’s work. Jordan has toned down Cherie’s Ozark accent and cut some lines referring to her backwoods beginnings, Frye said. The goal is to make the character as “realistic as possible” while preserving the comic aspects.

“She’s a very eccentric character, and I am keeping her very sincere,” Frye said.

People who have seen the film but not the play will discover a slightly different “Bus Stop,” with less background on the main characters and more humor.

“In general, the play is lighter,” Jordan said. “It is a mix of comedy and sentiment and drama.”

Two other dalliances take place in Grace’s (Joanna Bernazzani) diner. She wants to serve up something more than steak for bus driver Carl (Dean Phillip Gundlach), and her waitress, high school student Elma (Megan Devencenzi), falls for a Shakespeare-quoting passenger, Dr. Lyman (Jordan). Stewed in alcohol, Lyman spends the evening recounting affairs with former students.

Peccia, 22, who appeared in productions of “Man of La Mancha” and “How I Learned to Drive,” is no stranger to men who want what they want when they want it. His Bo is “like a puppy who doesn’t know how big he is.”

“That’s where his charm comes from,” Peccia added. “He goes to rodeos. He ropes cattle. He looks at Cherie as kind of like a prize.”

(Copyright © 1998-2005 ONI Stockton, Inc)

"...lovely blond-ringleted Catherine Frye"


I missed this review when it came out -- she mentions that Cat and her "husband" were "...among the most intelligible actors in a cast of over two dozen."

* * * * *

Plenty of laughs in Delta's 'Lysistrata'
Special to The Record
By Dianne Runion
Record Staff Writer
Published Friday, October 22, 2004

College theater regulars are used to saucy characters like "Oklahoma's" Ado Annie, who "cain't say no." But in Aristophanes' ancient Greek farce, "Lysistrata," strong women of Athens and Sparta won't say yes. Fed up with 20 years of Peloponnesian war and under the title character's leadership, the women swear an oath to withhold sex until their menfolk negotiate peace.

With "Lysistrata" now playing at Delta College, director Jeff Wentworth reprises a 1990 success. This production is also Wentworth's Delta swan song, as he retires in June.

Wentworth can take great pride in the 100-minute high-energy romp of a classic drama that merges lip-synched pop music, timely subject matter and timeless bawdiness.

I would not take young children or my maiden aunt to this show, but high school kids and adults with an eye and ear for double entendre and sexy shenanigans will love it.

Just 18, Naomi Uvalles plays a curvy, feminine Lysistrata. She's the strong heroine who persuades the women of Athens and the hillbilly Spartans to hole up with the war treasury in the Acropolis and hold out on the men.

Jason Flores plays a goofy Commissioner of Public Safety, Lysistrata's nemesis, wielding a golf-club scepter. Like about half the objects and architecture, it's phallic.

Roughly half the other objects are vessels, including John K. White's cartoonishly vaginal Acropolis portal. Neither symbol is subtle; both are nonoffensively comic.

Renata Bricka designed the splendid costumes. The Athenians wear hot reds and oranges; the Spartans, blues and aquas. The men's kilts grow more or less permanently tilted in a running sight gag.

Douglas Parker's 1964 translation mixes elevated syntax with casual contemporary speech.

Wentworth ratchets up hilarity with musical numbers, often providing ironic comment on the action. A chorus of old women dance a delightful "Producers"-like canes-and-walkers number to "I Am Woman," led by bloomer-flashing Christina Chavez Nelson.

As Kinesias, Lee Silveira makes an unforgettable second-act Elvis-type entrance to "Great Balls of Fire" -- a musical comment on the men's deprived state. His moussed-up, glittery Mohawk typifies Wentworth's superb hair and makeup design.

Silveira has a deliciously mobile face for comedy. He plays opposite lovely blond-ringleted Catherine Frye.

The pair is among the most intelligible actors in a cast of over two dozen. Diction, clarity, projection and too-rapid delivery are the show's consistent -- and only -- problem. The young actors need more hard work on modulating their voices and pacing lines so as not to bury them in laughter or lose wit and meaning.

To the show's credit, laughter ranges from constant ripples to explosive guffaws.

"Lysistrata" bursts with eye candy -- handsome soldiers doing a gladiatorlike chorus line to "One" and the pupil-popping erotic dance of "Peace" by the lithe and sinuous Christina Bayless. Her cream-colored see-through accordion-pleated cape makes her look like a gorgeous, exotic moth to the flame of male lust.

Below the hilarity, "Lysistrata" reminds us of a more contemporary weary war. The laughter provokes anti-war thought while showing that after 25 centuries, the battle of the sexes doesn't change much.

Friday, July 08, 2005

Another beautiful wedding picture!

I know we've seen zillions -- this one's particularly sweet!


Jeremiah & Elizabeth Posted by Picasa

Sunday, July 03, 2005

Early Fireworks

Red-haired Jem

This is an adorable picture of little Jem -- it definitely shows how red his hair is getting! His eyes are a very deep blue. Such a good-natured, happy little guy!

We spent last weekend at Lizzie and Jerm's wedding. It was incredibly beautiful -- the most touching and sweet ceremony I've ever been to. I wish I could have taken the day off on Friday, but I coordinated a health fair last week and there were still a ton of details to be nailed down. It went quite well (whew!), which is a good thing because it was one of the events mentioned when I interviewed for the job! K & I took about a zillion photos of the set-up, wedding, and aftermath. I think I've e-mailed pretty much everybody on earth the link to them. A lot of people were taking pictures, so I'm sure Elizabeth and Jeremiah have quite a nice record of the whole event. Even poor Lizzie's nose....

Catherine, Sean, Cynthia and I went to Marine World yesterday and had a ton of fun. We did pretty much everything -- all the major roller coasters and shows. The fireworks show was huge and amazing and timed to the music. Cat and I don't have any particular plans for tomorrow -- maybe a barbecue or something -- so it's good we've already taken care of the fireworks part. I think we'll probably watch one of the extravaganzas that's supposed to be on TV.

Cat has rehearsal for Bus Stop tonight, since they open on Friday. We spent our time after church today shopping for a bunch of last-minute stuff for her...hot rollers, false eyelashes, underwear that won't show under her costume, etc...

I'm still figuring out what I'm going to do tonight -- maybe Miracle-Gro the lawn, take a shower, go work out, take another shower, then watch TV through my eyelids. Sounds like a plan!

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Very busy week!

I survived my dance recital! We had dress rehearsal Wednesday evening and performances on Thursday and Friday evenings.

Today, Accordion Works performed for the San Francisco Accordion Club. Until we entered the room, I think the median age was around 75! We played most of our repertoire -- some was well received, some wasn't. One thing about older people is they'll tell you exactly what they think!
For me it ended up being an all-day event. I left Stockton at 8:45 a.m., and got home around 8 p.m. We played at the Senior Center in South San Francisco around 3 p.m., but we headed over early and rehearsed from 12:30-1:30. We carpooled from Henri's house in Oakland. There were several other performers at the event, but we were the featured group. It was fun and interesting, but I'm pretty tired now.

Catherine, Sean and I delivered the wedding and rehearsal dinner wine to Orinda yesterday. Everyone was racing around, doing all the last-minute things to make sure the yard is beautiful. We helped out a little bit, then made our escape. I knew I had a huge long day today, so I didn't want to stay up too late. Now Sean's gotten to meet some of the family.

Sunday, June 12, 2005

Wouldn't it make sense...

...for the "do-it-yourself" carwash to have a change machine? I think it takes 8 quarters to wash and another 8 (4 at a time) to vacuum. I got there with only 4 quarters, so I vacuumed just the front seat.

Then I went home and did the old-fashioned bucket and hose thing. Basically gave it a spit and a promise. Tomorrow, I'll see how I did. Can't wash when it's hot and sunny, and can't see when it's dark and cool.

I'm running out of weekend! I still need to sew a bra into my ballet costume. Hope it works. Oh yes, and watch Law & Order. Must keep my priorities straight!

Ballet and stuff

Our dance recital is this week (Thursday and Friday), so we had an extra rehearsal today. I think it went okay. I still tend to zig when I should zag, but I'm pretty much getting it figured out. We'll be rehearsing again tomorrow evening and our dress rehearsal's on Wednesday, so I'm just about out of time!

I thought I had an Accordion Works rehearsal this evening, but it turns out it's just the 3s and 4s this time (I'm a 1). We've got a performance in South San Francisco next Sunday and will be rehearsing earlier that same day.

Saturday, June 11, 2005

More shoes

Found the absolutely perfect sandals to go with my outfit for the rehearsal dinner. We stopped in to PayLess Shoes after getting new watch batteries. Couldn't resist...

What's happening in our world...

Lizzie's bridal shower last weekend was lovely! Alexa and Holly did an awesome job putting it together. We had all kinds of light munchies, including cucumber sandwiches, and a really nice light cake. My favorite part was that we just all hung out and talked -- no cutesy shower games and activities.

Cat and I went out and got our shoes (for the wedding) last night. We started at Macy's, because I'd seen an ad they were having a sale. They had some nice stuff, but nothing close to right. The challenge is the wedding is going to be outdoors on a lawn. Can't wear spiky heels, you know! We ended up at a little discount shoe shop in the mall and found shoes that looked just right AND were reasonably priced (aka "cheap"!). We have a couple more things to shop for today, but are pretty much done. Cat still needs to figure out what to wear to the rehearsal dinner, though.

Looks like Harvest is going to start 2-3 weeks later this year than it did last year, which is a good thing for my department, anyway. We're putting together training to be delivered before Harvest, so that gives us more time. It also makes the timing of Cat's and my Hawaii trip even better!

Thursday, June 02, 2005

"Store Closed During Construction"

I drove by a Chevron station this morning that looked like one of those disaster shots from the news -- every inch absolutely torn to shreds! And I swear it was still in business last night!

There was a lot of construction equipment bustling around and a chain link fence surrounding the entire lot. I took a quick look at the sign as I drove by.

It said, "Store Closed During Construction." Duh!

Saturday, May 28, 2005

Catherine as Myrrine in Lysistrata

Here's another fun photo of Catherine as Myrrine in Lysistrata:


Posted by Hello

Braggin' on Cat!

Catherine made straight A's her second semester in a row. Go Catgirl! (I know, I know...it's "Catwoman")

No family reunion!

For the first time in about a bazillion years, Cat and I didn't go to the big Memorial Day reunion in King City. Apparently, it isn't happening. I tried to e-mail family that would know, but most of my messages bounced back and the others weren't answered. I'm guessing nobody stepped in to take Judy's place. She organized it every year, but died suddenly last year shortly before the reunion.

I had an extra ballet rehearsal today, because our recital is coming up very soon (June 16 and 17). I've also got an Accordion Works rehearsal tomorrow. We had a performance last week and are having another one June 19th.

Saturday, May 21, 2005

It's all about the chair...

Cat and I did a girl-bonding thing today. We had lunch at the Frog, then we both got pedicures. I like to have one at the beginning of summer, just going into sandal season. Judging from today's weather -- it's time!

After that, we went to Michael's for a bunch of art stuff she needs for one of her final projects. Then, on to the grocery store to restock our larder.

Our toes look very cute.