Prologue
"Hey Sim, are you doing anything Monday night?"
"Hey Gin, Monday, the 14th?" A pause. "No, nothing special. Why?"
"Couple of the girls and I are having a little impromptu gathering in the green room. Be nice if you stopped by." A short pause, then: "Jason's cool with it." Jason was the Company Manager, and if he wasn't cool with it just yet, he soon would be.
"Alright, that sounds like fun. Shall I bring anything...or?
"Nah. Don't worry about it. Just bring yourself."
Sim gave a little half smile, as if to say 'Well, if you're sure.' and started back towards the parking lot. Then he turned.
"Sorry. I've got the car here tonight. You want a ride back to the place?"
"No, Liz and I have some girl stuff to talk about, and I could use the walk. Hey last thing: could you not tell anybody else about it? I don't really want to make it a big deal."
"No problem. You sure you don't need a lift? Plenty of room for Liz, if..."
"No, I'm good." And I was too. Having invited the guest of honor, I now had most of five days in which to get everything ready. Not much time, but I was going to have some help.
1.
If you've never seen
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum...
, you're missing out. It's a great show, it's the first musical for which Sondheim wrote both music and lyrics, and it's basically a Roman sex farce with some pretty catchy songs: "Comedy Tonight", "Lovely", "Dirty Old Man", great stuff. The plot—not that it matters much—concerns this young man who lives with his parents. The 'rents go off to the country for the weekend, and he (his name is Hero, by the way) falls in love with a courtesan who lives at the brothel next door to his house. Her name is Philia, she's a virgin, and she loves him too, but she's due to be sold to this super-stud of a general called Miles Gloriosus. So Hero offers his slave, Pseudolus—Pseudolus is the real star of the show—his freedom if he, Pseudolus, can figure out a way for Hero and Philia to be together. Well, plans get made, lies get told, potions get drunk, men put on dresses, everybody chases everybody else, and hilarity pretty much ensues. It gets done a lot, because the music's not too hard, the cast is not too big, and who doesn't like songs, gags, and scantily-clad ladies doing the Roman equivalent of pole dancing? Anyhow, if you haven't seen it, check it out the next time it comes to the local theatre or college or whatever. And if you have seen it recently, or if you see it in the next five to ten years, you probably have or will see me playing Gymnasia.
You see, when Hero tells his slave that he's in love with a courtesan, Pseudolus asks Lycus, the owner of the brothel, to show what he's got on offer so that Hero can point out the one he's interested in. This is a perfect excuse for a dance-number in which six lovely ladies of pleasure display their wares for a potential buyer. For five of the roles, casting doesn't have to be too specific: basically you're looking for attractive women who can dance. Tintinabula usually has a kind of belly-dancer thing going on, so she's often a little softer and curvier than, say, Panacea, who's probably going to be somebody with ballet chops. The brothel owner describes Vibrata as a tigress, so she tends to get the most athletic choreography, leaps, twists and tumbling, like that, and she's usually wearing a kind of jungle-girl bra and loincloth ensemble. And the Geminae are a pair of twins, so most directors find a couple of girls around the same height and build, put them in identical costumes and wigs, and then choreograph for whoever's the weaker dancer. But Gymnasia has to be something special. She's this Amazon bitch goddess: tall, stacked, and fierce. Pseudolus falls in lust with her at first sight, and there are all kinds of jokes in the script about the size of her body, the size of her boobs, and her ability to single-handedly pleasure large fraternal organizations. So right off the bat, you're looking for somebody with size, sass and sizzle. Put another way, you're looking for Virginia McNally. That's me.
Gymnasia doesn't even have to dance much, although it's better if she does. And as it happens, I do; pretty well, actually. I'm also 5'11" with a big rack, a curvy ass, a slim waist, and what my jazz teacher calls "forever legs." I've also got apple cheeks and blue eyes from my Irish mom, and waves of sexy-messy golden-blonde hair from my German grandma. I've just turned 26, and I've already played Gymnasia three times, although this is far and away the best production I've been in, and the hottest costume I've ever worn. Our designer was going for a kind of wild-woman/dominatrix look, so she gave me this killer black wig with a thick braid that reaches down almost to my ass. She also found these amazing thigh-high black leather boots with three-inch fuck-me heels (hell to dance in, by the way, but damn they're hot!), black spandex panties—we're not hugely concerned with period accuracy here—a garter belt, stockings, and a sort of half-corset which makes my boobs, half bursting out of the damn thing anyway, look even bigger than they actually are. Then I've got these kind of Xena Warrior Princess black and gold armor pieces: a really wide belt-thing, which rests just under my tits, and broad leather bracelets. And props found me this evil-looking black riding crop which I get to use on poor besotted Pseudolus at the end of the finale. Basically, if you've ever fantasized about Wonder Woman going over to the dark side, buy a ticket to the Broken Arrow Opera House's production of Stephen Sondheim's
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
(Must Close on March 20th) and kneel before me, worm!
I'm mostly kidding about the "kneel before me" thing, although I do get a little—shall we say "dewy"—just from putting on the costume, never mind the rush I feel every time I step on stage and hear from a third to half (lots of gay guys at musicals) of a 750 seat house moaning with lust at the sight of me. (No shit, I can hear it.) But beautiful and talented as I almost certainly am, I'm also smart enough to know that I'm not actually the reason that this production of
Forum
is so good. Gymnasia doesn't actually have any lines. None of the courtesans have, except Philia, of course. No, we're basically sight gags or eye candy depending on who you're talking to. A production of
Forum
lives or dies with its Pseudolus; in this case, Sim, the guy who just agreed to meet me and a couple of other ladies at the theatre on Valentine's Day—well—night. This year the holiday falls on the off day. Like most theatres in the United States, Broken Arrow is dark Mondays.
Now I love, love,
love
musical theatre, but as a career path, it does have its frustrations. You might work a little more often and make a little more money than theatre folks who don't do musicals, but unless you're Patti LuPone or Idina Menzel lucky, you don't get rich. Then there're the social drawbacks. All that waffle about how gorgeous I am to one side, the chorus of your average regional musical tends to break down as follows:
50%: Attractive, talented young heterosexual women (say aged 21-35.)
49.9%: Attractive, talented young homosexual men (same age range.)
0.1%: Attractive, talented heterosexual man who's had almost every woman who's ever signed an Equity Chorus Contract three times a week and twice on Sundays, and who consequently thinks he is God's gift to the ladies.
It really can become a problem. Take my case here: I'm young, unattached, and usually far from home (it's an absolute bastard finding work in the City.) So when I have work, I'm giving eight athletically rigorous, sexually-charged performances (ok, so maybe not so much in
Sound of Music
, but
South Pacific
,
Guys and Dolls
,
Cabaret
, fer chrissake?) per week, which flood my body with adrenaline and stoke the fires of my not-exactly-latent exhibitionism. So show's over: I'm restless, jumpy, and often just plain horny, and I'm surrounded by beautiful, sweet, intelligent, witty guys, almost all of whom want cock as much as, or more than, I do. Of course the lads can, and do, turn to each other for sex, solace, and, more often than you might think, long-term partnerships, but we ladies are left with few options, all of them unattractive, (unless of course we happen to be gay, which, despite some experimenting in college, I'm not.).
There is the occasional straight chorus boy. He's usually gorgeous, ripped and ready, but he's also usually an arrogant prick who wouldn't know a clitoris if it offered to help him with the Times crossword. There're stage hands, house management and/or box office, if anything particularly yummy happens to be working the show. But since those folks are local, they tend to have wives and girlfriends nearby, and while I'm occasionally a slut, I'm not a home-wrecker. There's bar-hopping: maybe that works for some gals; of my experiences that way, the less said the better. And of course there are the principals.
Actors who play leads in musicals tend to have come up in musicals, and so of course many of them, particularly the handsome leading men types, are gay. More of the character guys tend to be straight, but first of all, they're "character", a Hollywood euphemism for ugly or older or both, and they mostly break down into two categories: married and "Not with a titanium condom in a rented vagina." I know it sounds really awful and shallow, but I'm 26 years old. Sex with some paunchy, middle-aged lech, or even with some beaky, emaciated 30-something just doesn't appeal; at least not more than