Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Andy Cooper-Leary

1.  Have you ever had a transcendent experience?  If so, what happened?


Yes...I can honestly say the when i was directing "Cabaret" for the Hackley School about 3 years ago....I was absolutely working beyond my given talents..the collaboration with my cast, designers, fellow directors was scarily good. I still get emotional thinking about it..I should have walked away from teaching/directing right there. It was 9 weeks of absolute artistic nirvana. 




2.  If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?


Sight. Hands down no question.  You can communicate with sign language or read lips. I would eat and drink less. Too many sounds get on my nerves and touch..who needs pain? And please after living in New York for 15 years I would give smell away without hesitation. 


3.  What is your favorite attribute in a person?


Accessibilty. I hate interpersonal games and barriers despite playing and having many myself. 


4.  Describe your happiest accident.


My first conversation with my wife..I embarassed myself and offended her..but I got her attention! Thank you tequila! 


5.  If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?


"Andrew's Skunk" a drawing made for me by noted children's author Jan Brett (family friend) when I was a baby. It's a family heirloom but it feels like something that will last forever. Besides many friends, family, and colleagues will tell you I enjoy making a stink. Thanks I'm here all week. 

Monday, August 30, 2010

el celso

1. Have you ever had a transcendent experience? [i.e., beyond the limits of ordinary and human knowledge] If so, what happened?


Aside from an alien abduction outside of Roswell back in the late 80s....I can't recall any transcendent experiences. Perhaps my memory of these events was erased now that I think about it.


2. If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?

A sixth sense would be nice but also kinda creepy.... I guess I'll stick with my eyesight and definitely wouldn't mind losing my sense of smell in NYC - especially during the summer months...


3. What is your favorite attribute in a person?

A good sense of humor can go a looooong way!


4. Describe your happiest accident.

When I proposed to my wife on the roof of the MET. I wasn't planning on it and it was really more of a hypothetical question for me...then again it could have been all the whiskey.


5. If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?

I hope to leave many behind but if I had to choose just one it would have to be a work of art that is so beautiful or amazing that it has a life of its own and manages to transcend time...well, at least for a couple of hundred of years :)

Friday, August 27, 2010

Keely Williams

1. Have you ever had a transcendent experience? If so, what happened?

I think that is depends on what you mean by a transcendent experience, but either way the answer if yes. If you mean an encounter with a transcendent being then I have had a few, most notably with the ghost lady that lives in my apartment. She likes to wander by the door of our wreck room at night in her long white gown. It sounds stereotypical but I'm not the only one who has seen her...always in exactly the same spot. We think she is the lady that lived there before us, who apparently lived in that apartment for all 90+ years of her life. Makes sense I guess, I mean where else would she go?

If you mean "beyond the limit of ordinary experience" I like to flatter myself that I have had a few of those moments on stage. Where I, however briefly, got so far into the head of a character that I completely lost myself. I would consider that transcendent.


2. If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?

My sense of touch, no contest. There is something so powerful, even healing, about the sense of touch, I think it would be a lonely sad world without it.


3. What is your favorite attribute in a person?

Sense of humor. I think it is sooo important that people not take themselves or life too seriously. If you can make me laugh, and make me think while you are doing it then I am all yours.


4. Describe your happiest accident.

That would have to be the day I met my fiance. I was supposed to hang out with his sister and she got sick, so we went back to her apartment and I ended up spending the evening with him and his friend. In fact we ended up spending the rest of that week together and I haven't been able to shake him since. =)


5. If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?

I have to say this was the hardest question for me to answer, but one object keeps coming to mind and that is my feather pillow that I slept with as a child. My grandfather gave it to me when I was 5 or 6. There was nothing special about it really, just a musty old feather pillow that he kept in a back bedroom, the kind they don't make any more because of the dander. I was very warn and the sharp shafts of the feathers used to find there way through the casing and stab me in the face. But there was something about the smell of it that was so comforting to me.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Linda Sadowski


1.  Have you ever had a transcendent experience? If so, what happened?

Have I ever had a transcendent experience? Well, maybe this might pass as one. I've always been fascinated with the paranormal and I'm a bit of a skeptic. One night I was invited to a seance at a friends' house. This was complete with a so-called medium. I say so-called because there she is moaning , groaning and swaying back and forth sounding and looking like she was having a really good time all by herself. I was really having a hard time trying to keep it together and not be rolling on the floor in uncontrollable laughter. I decided to stare at this large painting on the wall across from me in order to tune this fake out. The painting was branches with birds perched on them. As I was staring the painting changed, it became a bay window with blinds open and I could see a spot light shining down from a telephone pole. I'm thinking to myself, “holy shit”, I blinked a few times and the birds and branches were back. After everyone left I told her what I saw., she said, “Oh my god, that was a big window with blinds and I would sit on the sofa waiting for Joe to come home I could see his car because the street lamp would shine on my driveway. We built on a room for my son on the other side of the painting.


2. If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?

If I had to pick one sense it would be touch. I would really only lose taste and smell if I choose touch. I would still be able to see with my fingers, memories and imagination. I would still be able to hear through braille, sense when I read I see and hear a movie in my head. I would still be able to hear or sense music through it's vibrations. I don't think I'd like to live in a world where I couldn't feel the warmth of the sun on my face, the warm gentle touch of another person and the cool liquid velvety feel of water flowing over my hand.


3. What is your favorite attribute in a person?

This is hard, two come to mind immediately honesty and humor. We have to be honest enough to know we are not perfect and see the humor in our imperfections. I also think the ability or effort to see the good or positive hidden in people and things we don't understand. What would that be, compassionate – optimist?


4. Describe your happiest accident.

My happiest accident was Lindsay, my one and only baby girl. Lindsay almost wasn't. I had never been a fan of those drooling, snotty, vomity, poopy, needy and brutally honest things they call children. Plus they terrified me. I was 36 and the Dr. took me off the PILL because of my age and I was a smoker. I decided to get a tubal and made a Dr.s appointment. In the meantime I got this ungodly pain and ended up on the bathroom floor in a cold sweat. I told the Dr. about this, he examined me and said, “Something's brewing”. With that he gave me a script for a sonogram to check for cysts or tumors because of the pain I had and wanting a tubal. I go to the sonogram,bladder full, (FYI: I don't do well with any kind of bladder holding). The tech came in asked what I was there for and did the exam. She asked me again why I was there and said she'd be right back. I asked if I could pee she said no. In comes another tech with her. He repeats the exam and asks what I was here for, I tell him and ask if I can pee. He tells me the Dr. in charge of radiology has to examine me, but if I could pee only a little I could. I asked if he was crazy and his answer to both questions was no. The Dr. comes in does the exam and asks why I was there, I told him. Then he says to me “What would you do if I told you, that you have a beautiful little baby growing”? My answer was, “Well I guess I'm going to have to wait”. My description of children hasn't changed but, I couldn't live without them. Oh, I left out smelly and they don't terrify me any more.


5. If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?

I honestly don't know. Maybe a ring a teacher gave me for working summer school with her. Every time I take it off Lindsay steals it.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Michael Rhodes

1. Have you ever had a transcendent experience? If so, what happened?

I was on stage in France performing "Waiting For Godot" in English for a French speaking crowd, 1991. Toward the beginning of Act II, the actor playing Vladimir and I (Estragon) were in the middle of a passage and I somehow so connected with a moment that I ... "pushed through the page" is the only way I can describe it. I was no longer on a stage, there was no audience, I was no longer reciting lines but for an instant I was completely in the moment of this completely foreign landscape, in some eerie semblance of Beckett's desolate vision. Of course, as soon as I had a realization of this experience it vanished instantly and I was back on a stage, shaken and struggling to pick up my cues. Truly incredible and it has never happened again.


2. If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?

Humor.


3. What is your favorite attribute in a person?

Openness.


4. Describe your happiest accident.

Being talked into going to a wedding that I really didn't want to go to back in October of 1993. I was going to leave right after the ceremony but decided to have one beer for some reason. Hiding in a corner and nearly finished with that beer, this woman came up and asked if I was holding up that wall.

5. If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?

My mother's ring. I would leave it with a family member, to keep passing along as a keepsake of her memory, of what she meant to this family.

Monday, August 23, 2010

James Wallace

1. Have you ever had a transcendent experience? If so, what happened?

Many times. (If I'm defining "transcendent" correctly.) Mostly they have been encounters with what I can only describe as angels. There has been more than one occasion when I have been at a very low point and needed guidance or assurance. Each time I have left that encounter with a sense of peace that called (if only temporarily) the turmoil that I was in. Other times I have felt a physical presence that has physically moved me and prevented me from injury if not death.



2. If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?

Smell.


3. What is your favorite attribute in a person?

Understanding.


4. Describe your happiest accident.

I was working at a theme park on what was supposed to be my day off. One of our performers didn't have her identification with her and needed to be signed in. I was the nearest supervisor on duty so I took up the task. I sensed a good vibe from the girl I was signing in and we struck up a conversation. That grew and we developed a good friendship and it continued to grow. That was probably about 10 years ago. It could be called fate or an accident. I happened to be working when I shouldn't have been and she happened to forget her ID. Had those two things not have happened we may have never started talking and not have made that initial connection. She and I probably changed the life of the other and I couldn't imagine having never met her. 


5. If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?

My eyes. They've seen so much beauty and I hope in some "metaphysical" way that the good I've seen would be felt by another if they could see through my eyes.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Matthew Dallas Vela

1. Have you ever had a transcendent experience? If so, what happened?

Yes. I mixed ecstasy with hallucinogenic mushrooms. I went swimming and was convinced I was in the boardgame candyland. Does that count?


 2. If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?

My hearing. If I could never dance to music again I wouldn't want to continue living.


3. What is your favorite attribute in a person?

Open-mindedness and willingness to learn


4. Describe your happiest accident.

I'm so stumped on this one. I guess I'd have to say going through what I went through a few years ago when I got fired from my job and moved to NYC. I learned more about myself and gained so much life experience in that time. So many good things wouldn't of happened if I hadn't of been fired.



5. If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?

The only deeply personal object I own is my sibling silver ring. I believe it protects me and connects me to the most important person in my life.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Kristen Sheets

1. Have you ever had a transcendent experience? If so, what happened?


I'm not sure if this is exactly what you mean, but it's the one time I can say with certainty that God spoke to me: http://kscreativebliss.blogspot.com/2009/04/legend-of-sock-monkey.html.


2. If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?

my sight


3. What is your favorite attribute in a person?

compassion


4. Describe your happiest accident.

Kate


5. If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?

My portfolio five years from now

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Monday, August 16, 2010

Greg Skura

1.  Have you ever had a transcendent experience?  If so, what happened?

Yes --  in Amsterdam (and no drugs were involved at all!), about five years ago.  I was walking with a friend across a bridge over a canal...and I had a sudden moment where everything, everything was totally clear and in sync -- the colors, the sounds, the smells, all came together in a crystallized moment in time, and I felt I was totally a part of it.  Everything "clicked"; nothing was wrong, all was beautiful and timeless.  Seriously.  And then I realized I was having the moment and poof!  It went away.  I'll never forget it.  

I've also experienced this feeling a handful of times immediately following a brilliant piece of theatre -- I've literally felt frozen, as if floating above my seat, unable and unwilling to move for a full minute or so.  I remember feeling this way after a production of Edward Albee's A Delicate Balance.  Also after a production of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh.


2.  If you had to pick one sense and lose all others, what would it be?
 
I think I'd need to keep my sense of touch.  I think it'd be impossible to navigate the world without it.


3.  What is your favorite attribute in a person?
 
A capacity for being open.


4.  Describe your happiest accident.
 
Spilling a beer on my laptop.  It allowed me to leave the world of PC's and join the world of being a Mac owner.


5.  If you had to choose one personal object to leave behind when you are gone, what would it be?
 
My wedding ring -- it's a very powerful piece of jewelry and I would like for someone else to have it.