I was happy to see that the newspapers agreed with my glowing assessment of Ceasar and Cleopatra when it opened. Paul McCartney has my vote for the 66-year old with whom I would most like to have dinner; Christopher Plummer has the 78-year old slot sewn up. But he won't be free to dine for some time.
A few weeks ago, I was dozens of pages into my new work, a memoir, and wasn't sure where I was going, so I pulled together a bunch of pages and sent them to a wonderful dramaturge and editor, Iris Turcotte. Iris and I finally got together recently, and she chain-smoked her way through an assessment. Once again, I am taught all the things I teach my students: show don't tell, paint pictures, bring the story vividly to life with detail. Go deeper. Unpack.
Iris told me that she thinks the last scene of the chunk I'd given her is in fact the beginning, and the voice and tense are wrong. Suddenly, I understood why I was having such trouble. Her input was invaluable. And now, to begin again. Only a few more days to get a solid piece of work done, before September - teaching, sweaters, the gradual diminishment of the garden.
So, as I hide in here, tapping away at the machine, I am relishing every second.
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