blague city

From TORONTO,
March 25th, 2007


NAKED NEIGHBOUR ETIQUETTE
So let's say you and your friend Sarah have been drinking on a patio all afternoon (Ten degrees! Woo hoo! Let's take our pants off! Nutty Canadians). And let's say now it's evening and you're both sitting on your couch eating ice cream. (No, this is not going into exciting lesbianic territory; we didn't start play fighting and get sticky ice cream - oh no - all over! Maybe next week....) But let's say you look up and notice that your very hot neighbour, whose kitchen faces your living room, is walking around cooking wearing just a towel. Clearly he's making a post-sex snack for his wife who's all worn out and breathless in the next room. And he's just out of the shower, so he's kind of wet and glistening-like...and....ahem.

My question, dear reader, is not whether to stare at your wet, half naked neighbour or not; obviously you stare, I did say hot neighbour, we're not talking Mister Roper here. But let's say this certain neighbour looks up to see two chicks eating ice cream and watching him. What's the etiquette there? Do you wave? Do you, I don't know, take your top off, just to make him feel more comfortable? (Would your friend Sarah mind?) What you probably don't do is go with my spur of the moment reaction, which was to just sit there all slack-jawed and stalker-y, unable to avert my eyes, pralines and cream all drooling down my chin.

Funny that our initial assumption was that a hot male neighbour would enjoy being watched by randy strangers across the way. When he was probably just thinking, "Oh great. Now I have to cook in the dark."

My eventual solution was to go out today and pick up a set of international code flags ($16.95 at Zellers). I'm teaching myself the universal signals for "Drop the towel"...."Hey, you've been working your pecs"....and "Is your wife into this?" Even if I don't use those on the neighbour they're bound to come in handy sometime. There's also the curtain option. Which would not only give the neighbours their privacy, but spare them having to know how many games of Spider Solitaire I play each day, and how regularly I pick my nose.

STREETCAR BEACH
I like finding little mini-vacations for myself. It helps when you can't afford a real one. This one's as mini as you can get. It's in fact on the King streetcar. Under that short little train overpass between Dufferin and Strachan. After the systematic mowing down of four hundred and twenty-three cyclists, the city finally installed proper lights in the tunnel....and I don't know if there was a beauty sale at the city store or something.....but the lights they put up, instead of being your run-of-the-mill glaring fluorescent uglies, cast a truly lovely amber glow. There's this magical suspended moment when the streetcar slows for safety and the warm light comes in the windows and suddenly all the pale March faces are lit up and sunny and warm....I look up and around at my fellow passengers every time to take in how pretty they all are, how slow and relaxed the world is for just that moment......and then the streetcar leaves the tunnel and everyone starts strangling one another again and my vacation is over. It lasts all of thirty seconds. But it's probably why I usually head home along King instead of Queen. It's a little thing. But it's a motherfuckin' nice thing. Biatch. To quote post-jail Martha.

DENSE-CITY
I am getting rather fed up with the official Toronto policy of knocking down anything old (buildings, people) to vomit up ugly new condos. I mean, I think urban density is great, better than sprawl, but why does it all have to look like it's made of cardboard? I cry a little when I think that this city would look a lot like Montreal if they had left more of it the fuck alone. I was walking along Charles Street, West of Bay the other day, and noted again the small row of beautiful red-brick Victorians boarded up and slated for demolition. There are signs out front announcing re-zoning to allow for two new buildings 23 and 15 stories high. Next door is one of those boring, old-folks-in-Miami lookin' condos, and I'm sure these will be more of the same. Aross the street they're knocking down the Lycee Francais.

Walking a little further brought me to the ROM, where that huge glass and steel THING is being whacked onto the side of the building. The THING being the Michael Lee Chin Crystal (designed by Daniel Libiskind, named for a banker). See it and track its progress at http://www.rom.on.ca/renaissance/architecture.php .
I find it kind of hideous. But at least it's interesting. And it may turn out all right. Better than that nasty thing they stuck on top of The Ontario College of Art and Design.
(See the monstrosity at right.)

The new Art Gallery of Ontario addition might be kinda cool, but it's gehry, and not, you know, GERHY, and a bit pedestrian. (http://www.ago.net/transformation/new_building-images.cfm) He apparently abandoned a more ambitious and spectacular plan when local citizens complained about its height. AAAAARGH! World famous avant garde architect returns home to be met with "Uhhh....can you make it a little smaller?" No wonder the new plan is slightly lame; he probably got pissed off and gave us some ol' crap design he's had sitting in his basement for thirty years. The addition, still under construction, is already being called the AGO Sneezeguard.

I quite like the new Opera Centre.....except the decor is a bit IKEA, something Tracy Dawson and I noted at the open house before shamedly reading some display about the imported limestone floors and the expensive German wood. Are you sure you don't mean Swedish? Isn't that staircase the Kvurtslig from page 46 of the spring catologue? Does the bar serve meatballs?

YOUNGER LIVING
So I'm playing a teenager again starting next week. Which is getting a bit weird. Starting to feel like Gary Coleman or Emmanuel Lewis. That's right, I feel small and black. This time I'm teening it up in Better Living and Escape From Happiness, two George F. Walker plays at Factory. The very eerie thing about this casting though, is not my extraordinary oldness, thank you very much. (Hey, I still do get carded buying booze and hit on by adolescent boys.) No, what has me freaked out is all the parallel lines to my younger life. It's one of the East End Plays, and my character has a cop for a father and a hoodlum boyfriend named Junior. In case you're not up on your Tourist lore (and I'll forgive you this time), I grew up in Scarborough (east end as it gets), my dad was on the force (even worked fraud, same as the dad in the show), and my first big high school boyfriend was Junior Bailey, a small-time hood in training.

That Junior actually showed up backstage at the Royal Alex one day when I was doing The Innocent Eye Test. I hadn't seen him in fifteen years and he was there, he said, because he'd seen me in a bikini in the newspaper (an ad for the show, not a Sunshine girl spread, sadly). He came by himself, sat in the first row and now was being all pick-uppy and weird. I don't think he blinked the whole time we talked at stage door. And not in that gorgeous Joseph Fiennes "my eyes are so beautiful it would be a shame to deny you them for a moment" way......or I suppose that's the effect he was going for. Instead it read like he was overmedicated. Or just the kind of guy who comes to see his ex up-close in a bikini and keeps telling her how great she looks and talking about himself in slightly suspect ways. He told me he'd gotten his Masters....and later slipped up and mentioned that he'd been to Community College, not University. Not sure when Humber started handing out Masters degrees. But I am glad he's turned from drug dealing to a career in law enforcement. My Dad's about to make the opposite switch, to supplement his pension on retirement. Good for him!

I had another teenager audition this week, and the director had clearly looked over my resume pretty thoroughly, which is usually a good thing. In this case, the more we discussed my past work, the more I felt the role slipping away from me, as each bit of experience added to my perceived age. I could almost hear him calculating years in his head..... I started hunching over more and more, little lines suddenly appeared around my eyes and mouth, my knees started creaking, clumps of hair fell from my head.... I finally did the scenes with a cane and a tremor....and then I woke up and realized it was ALL A DREAM! And that I'm not an actor at all, but a very successful Pakistani engineer, living in Boston with my wife and three children and playing tennis every Thursday! Phew. What a relief. Now who the hell are you and why am I writing this?

PLAYBOOK
Do you suppose anyone has ever adapted a play into a novel? I ask this because the usual course is to take books and adapt them for the stage or the screen, but I started thinking the other day, what if you tried it the other way around? And not like those " based on the movie" novelettes aimed at twelve year olds. (Back to the Future: the Book! Marty McFly woke up. He knew it was going to be a BAD DAY.) I'm thinking this could give a play another kind of life beyond its three-week run, and one for people who read novels but not plays. (Who reads plays except for actors? Oh yeah. Playwrights.)

It would be an interesting exercise, if nothing else, taking a stage work and then being able to dive into the secret thoughts of the characters, elaborate on or invent back stories, add new scenes, more locations.....With a page-to-stage adaptation, a lot of it is cutting things out, distilling, editing....but with stage-to-page, you could expand, explore, extrapolate....do other things that start with ex......and then get punched in the nose by the playwright for getting it all wrong. And have him or her deny you the rights to do anything with it. But it's worth a thought. I shall begin with Puppetry of the Penis: A Novel. It will surely be my master work.

BLAH!
My favourite suggestion addressing the problem of the word "Blog", which really does sound like a creature of the deep, comes from Maureen Del Degan of Parkdale, who points out that the word "blague", French for joke, is a tres chic alternative (Why, yes! It makes me think of croissants! Berets! Sexy little men smoking Gauloises!) and is rather appropriate. Yeah! As if this is all some big joke! As if it doesn't cost me to share all this with you! As if I don't die a little every time I tear out a small piece of my heart and smear it flat on the page for you, MAUREEN! Thanks a lot! Just kidding, I love it, your prize is in the mail. (It's a small piece of my heart, torn out and smeared across a page. Serve with toast. Mmmm - like foie gras, but human!)

An honourable mention goes to Dylan Trowbridge, who is not quite bright enough to have understood the question, but did suggest I call my blog "Leese on Life". Can't believe a retard thought of that before I did. Hell! And I may use that for something in the future. But for now....

I remain,

The Tourist.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

From: "Michael O'Brien" Subject: three cents

FYI ... Bert Brecht wrote a little book called "The Threepenny Novel", from the play, but it contained no catchy tunes for Bobby Darren to swing, or for Satchmo to improvise. Which is why I feel no great hurry to track it down. You know, that's the only example I can think of ... except for Salman Rushdie's "Dirty Dancing".

Anonymous said...

From: "Maureen Del Degan"

Apologies to the sensitive poet Tourist if I implied a lack of profundity in her publishing. Perhaps you can use this pain in the future when you are cast as a grownup. OUCH! I'll take that appetizer thanks...

film nerd said...

What made me laugh outloud: the $16.95 flags from Zellers, does the bar serve meatballs?, the fact that your first boyfriend was named Junior...actually that whole section was awesome. As per usual: you rock my world. Oh and Leese on Life...though it's not technically *yours* it still made me laugh. ALOT.

Anonymous said...

Moments ago I saw your Tourism Ontario commercial on CTV newsworld. It totally inspired me to visit Ontario.

Anonymous said...

Hey Norton: Pet Sounds is not that bad. You just have to be over 50 and taking viagra to appreciate it. Love your blogs. Grumpy

The Skeptical Tourist said...

hey baby. thanks. i'll try to remember to give it another listen when i'm a fifty year old man.