On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 6:46 PM, Jerald Head
<jlhead1952@gmail.com> wrote:
Mike,
All jesting aside, I do remember the Lear performance 30 years later, and I was amazed, eyeballs and all. And I remember Joy, and Robert, and Jeff. Joy was such a delight and Robert was soooo evil. Some guy as you mentioned, Bruce Meyer was there too. It is such fun to stir up such memories. Although I will never concede "best class" I tip my hat to "80.
The fact is, every summer is special, and each summer is special in its own way. I had been in the class of '79, and I had learned an immense amount that summer, especially from Maria Black, who gave the most informative and nuanced line readings for Rosalind that I had ever heard (I still believe her Rosalind is the best I've ever seen, for that matter, and I've seen a bunch since then). Maria, Bruce Wharton, and Richard South were returning from the previous summer, as I recall, and each of them taught me a lot. But those of us for whom 1979 was our first summer also had so much to offer -- Bruce Meyer, Jeanne McCarthy, Britt Block, Teresa Jaynes, Robin Mize, and David Sharpe come immediately to mind.
In 1980, those of us returning from 1979 and from previous years were all very aware that it was the tenth summer. We especially knew what kind of impact your classes had, Jerald -- people in the community still talked about them -- and we knew we had to build on that in 1980. We knew we could do comedy, but were not entirely sure we could do a whole tragedy. (Well, maybe some of us were sure -- I was nervous, though.)
I strongly believe that if 1980 stands out, it's largely because of the strength of experience -- not just the strength of experienced individuals (although we had a lot of folks returning to perform that summer) but the strength of the shared experience and community of knowledge that was created by people like you, Jerald -- and Mary and Terry and Maggie and so many others -- and communicated in some profound cultural way so that we quickly grasped the magnitude of the tasks before us, and we were able to hit the ground running as a group. (I remember with great clarity a moment when David Polley and I were sitting in the chairs and coaching Robert Faires about different ways we thought he could play evil Edmund -- I think we both took as much pride in Robert's performance as he did.)