brant (brant) v.i. - to simultaneously brag and rant.

brant (brant) n. - a shared on-line journal where people can post brags and rants about themselves and their personal experiences, opinions, observations, and feelings.

branted, brant-ing, brants intr.v. To write entries in, add material to, or maintain a (we)brant.

September 27, 2007

The Painfully True Confessions of a Would-Be Teenage Mime

Filed under: Laura (All About) — lzigman @ 8:59 pm

Here’s the whole piece, without the typos:

The Painfully True Confessions of a Would-Be Teenage Mime

I received an email yesterday morning from a good friend who informed me that Marcel Marceau, the famous mime, had died. I was shocked and saddened by his passing, because even though I never met Marcel Marceau, or saw him perform in person, I felt a deep connection to him and his craft.

What I have to say next is a little difficult, since I have confessed this bit of personal information to very few people in my life, but it’s crucial to why I’m writing about Marcel Marceau’s passing: when I was a teenager, I wanted more than almost anything to become a professional working street-performing mime. Which is to say: I willingly, and without any irony whatsoever, voluntarily pursued educational training for mime-becoming.

Before I get into the particulars of my education and training as a (would-be) working mime — I feel the need to set the stage, as it were — to provide both an emotional context and then a cultural and political context for my heretofore inexplicably embarrassing behavior. On a personal level: let’s just say that had John Hughes been making his teen-angst movies 25 years ago when I was a teen-angster, I’m sure his casting people would have rejected me for looking “too authentic.” I was an outsider, a geek, and a misfit — not to brag or anything — and when I wasn’t busy sneaking into one of the biology classrooms trying to figure out what species I was since I clearly wasn’t the same species as all the other teenagers, I sat around with my best friend Jennifer and bemoaned our epic lack of popularity and what could possibly happen to change our fate and put us out of their collective adolescent emotional misery.

As for the cultural and political context: Thirty years ago, in the mid-to-late 1970s, mime — or, as the true masters of the art form call it, pantomime (pronounced by the French as pant-o-MEEEEM) — was deeply respected and enjoyed by all. Larraine Newman, one of the super-cool original cast members of “Saturday Night Live” had actually studied in Paris with Marcel Marceau himself, and mimes were everywhere — on street corners, on college campuses, in small dark theatres with small round stages. M.C. Escher posters were also everywhere (like, all over my bedroom) which was just further evidence of a pervasive fascination with the notion of visual illusion. Back then, one could even go so far as to say that mime was cool. Hard to believe, certainly, from the current vantage point of true cool now — rap singers and reality show stars and real-life real-time web-cam bloggers. But years ago, when I was suffering in silence every day in the prison of a high school (fact: my newly built high school was actually designed by an architect who had previously designed prisons), I lived for afternoons and weekends when I was free (now that I was finally finished with Hebrew school) to take the bus from my nearby suburb to Cambridge and roam the streets of Harvard Square in search of the perfect $3 used suede jacket and a poofy-but-slimming embroidered Indian shirt.

Most of all, though, what I was searching for was a place where I could “be myself,” and I found that place in Harvard Square. “The Square,” as it was called by people in the know (suburban teenage commuters) was a breeding ground for individuality, and because of its relatively loose restrictions on conformity and mainstream attractiveness — straight blond hair and impossibly delicate noses, to name only two predominant physical features, neither of which I possessed and both of which I blamed for making me feel incredibly lonely and like a total loser all the time — street performers in general and street mimes in particular flourished. And it was there — in the long-haired bell-bottomed Peace-sign-wearing Volkswagen-Bug-covered-in anti-war-bumper- stickers-driving hipster- populated sidewalks of Cambridge, Massachusetts — the only state that voted for George McGovern in ‘72, don’t forget! (not to mention the backdrop for two of my never-before-confessed favorite films — Love Story and The Paper Chase) — that I saw my first mime and was smitten.

While I can’t remember the exact moment I just referred to, I’m pretty sure it was a hot night in the summer of 1974 when the humid dusk air was full of the smell of wafting patchouli oil and clove cigarettes and cannabis and the sound of deeply contented long-haired macrobiotic folk-dancers nearby. I had probably just finished having a Bass Ale (procured with the obligatory fake ID) and half a pack of cigarettes (Old Golds, because a friend’s unbelievably cute older brother smoked them) at the bar of the now-closed Blue Parrot — or the now-closed H’a Penny Pub or Wurst Haus or 33 Dunster Street or original Casablanca — with Jennifer, who was very tall. Slightly dizzy from the alcohol but energized by the nicotine (not to mention the self-satisfaction of having passed, yet again, for 18), I must have seen a crowd gathered on the triangle of sidewalk across from the now-closed Bailey’s Ice Cream. The crowd would have been six or seven deep and difficult to navigate for someone as not-tall as me — especially given all the view-blocking huge Afros and leather floppy hats and overgrown bonsai-tree facial hair that were the style back then — but Jennifer must have seen and cleared a path for me. And when I eventually penetrated the crowd’s outer rings and made my way to the inner circle — before I knew what had happened — before I knew that what I was looking at — a silent street performer trapped first in what appeared to be an imaginary glass box and then struggling against an incredibly strong head-wind! — had a name — C’est une mime!! [sic] — my mouth fell open, my body became slack, and I almost certainly began to drool:

At 14, I had seen my future. And my future was voluntary muteness.

The most obvious question at this point is why voluntary muteness was such an attractive option to me. This is actually a relatively easy question to answer and a relatively easy answer to understand: not talking was the perfect complement to not being seen. Not that I entirely minded not being seen — in fact, to a large extent I was deeply grateful to my peers for leaving me alone and not noticing me since it was way better than being chased around the vacant hallways of my junior high school with the constant threat of being dragged by the hair to the nearest girls bathroom and given a swirly (getting your head flushed in the toilet so that your hair took on the appearance and consistency of a soft-serve ice cream cone). But being invisible has its price — just ask Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man (if you can find him!) — and it was that price — loneliness and the lack of a friendly peer group outside my gang of two — that made me long for a way to express myself.

This longing to be seen and heard, of course, was in direct conflict with my abject fear of being seen and heard, thereby risking certain rejection and swirlies, and it was this very challenge to find a way to express myself without verbally expressing myself — using my actual voice, that is, as opposed to using paper and a pen as I did when I first started writing (really bad poetry) — that seemed instantly solved the moment I had my first mime sighting. The necessary muteness along with the facial-feature minimizing white grease paint and unibrow-replacing pencil-drawn eyebrows of sadness and surprise — all of which were hallmarks of every mime in the history of the world — were the tools of the street performer’s trade that I knew, if given the chance, I could possess in spades.

I already felt partially trained in l’etude de mime [sic]: I had, for the last year or so, been shoplifting record albums and books and make-up and clothes in The Square with a great deal of regularity and success and the delicious irony was not lost on me — these sticky-fingered sleights of hand were not only (silent) cries for help and deeply connected to my emotional disconnectedness but also precursors to talents needed to become a profoundly talented future mime. It didn’t take me long to connect the dots and realize I was destined for a pure and focused and verbally austere Marceauian Life of the Mime.

But just when the story is finally getting good — just when I’m about to tell you about the afternoon weekday pantomime classes I took with my equally invisible and thus similarly mime-obsessed friend, Jennifer, in and around Cambridge and downtown Boston in the coming years — several classes taught by a “wicked cute” (Jennifer’s words) professional mime who had graced the covers in flagrante delictomime of several “Pousette-Dart Band” record albums (that I had deftly shoplifted) and another class with the absurdly untrue name of “The National Mime Company” — I’m going to have to stop. Because to go further would be to imply that my love of and passion for mime had continued much past high school.

Which in fact it didn’t.

What did continue with great passion and what I still consider today to be my highest achievement during that time and, quite frankly, my high school legacy, was how I so masterfully avoided my mandatory phys-ed classes and elevated the entire field of “gym avoidance” itself into something of an art and a science — the pinnacle of which was when I convinced the school to agree that my senior-year after-school pantomime classes could be substituted for actual gym classes because of all the stretching we did.

Which means that the only thing worse than having wanted so desperately to become a mime is having failed to become a mime and also having used mime for the sole purpose of getting out of gym.

This post was read by 572 people until now.

September 25, 2007

First Myspace, Now Facebook: Keeping Up With the National Narcissism

Filed under: Laura (All About) — lzigman @ 8:48 pm
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In a never-ending effort to keep up with the national narcissism, Laura has “joined” (or whatever you call it) Facebook. While Laura has a special place in her heart reserved for Myspace since it was her first foray into what her sister-in-law Colleen informed her was called “social networking,” Laura likes Facebook better mainly because the visual layout of Facebook is so much less distracting and crazy and ADHD-like than Myspace. And, to be frank, it’s much less creepy. Facebook has lots of relaxing “white space” and uses one uniform font and Laura finds this very comforting and reassuring and almost completely not-creepy. Creep-factor or no creep-factor, Myspace, with its flashing wallpapers and photo cubes and blaring music, could provoke seizures even in non-epileptics.

To be frank again, Myspace is clearly the Poor Man’s Facebook since under almost every “face” in Facebook is this identifier:

Harvard Alum

Laura has always bristled at the Ivy League qualifier — mainly because she doesn’t have one – but she is forcing herself to ignore the constantly annoying Harvard Alum interruption so that she doesn’t feel insecure about how unimpressive her identifier is:

Boston Network

Laura of course could put her alma mater there instead, but somehow she doesn’t think UMass/Amherst Alum has quite the same impact as Harvard Alum:

UMass/Amherst Alum
-
Harvard Alum

(see?)

Anyway, the main reason Laura went on Myspace in the first place was to continue in her new efforts to promote herself and her books. Tons of authors had Myspace pages and pretty soon half of Laura’s “friends” on Myspace were all those other authors who would leave really nice “comments” on her page and were full of encouragement when her book came out or when they’d see an article somewhere that she’d written. But the real reason authors get Myspace pages is to “meet” their readers, and one of the best parts of Myspace for Laura was “meeting” Janet.

Laura and Janet became what used to be known as pen-pals and after many months of exchanging emails Laura really felt like she had this special friend — not a “special friend” who was way out somewhere in the nowhereness of Myspaceworld, but a real special friend in Memphis, who worked and was in school and had her own blog (called “Student Revisited”) and sent Laura incredibly nice messages every few days that never failed to make her day.

Genius-writer Pagan Kennedy wrote a really great piece called “A Space For Us” that appeared on the back page of the New York Times Book Review a few weeks ago (September 2) about authors going on Myspace and finding their readers, and Laura was included in it talking about Janet.

Facebook feels like it’s much less about commercial self-promotion and much more about that social networking Colleen was talking about and Laura has to admit that finding old friends and colleagues through various search mechanisms on Facebook could not be more fun and exciting. Laura also loves all the funny features it has — like “poking” and “superpoking” (she’d try to explain what they are but she wouldn’t be able to do a very good job and would end up saying something like I guess you had to be there. The thing Laura loves most about it which she only started taking advantage of today is the “status” part. This is what you update when you want to let people know what you are thinking or doing at any particular moment in time and the best part of the status update is that it’s in the third person. Just like Laura’s brant. As the Barefoot Contessa would say, “How fabulous is that?”

Except that Laura will probably never meet anyone quite like Janet on Facebook.

This post was read by 388 people until now.

September 24, 2007

Marcel Marceau

Filed under: Laura (All About) — lzigman @ 12:45 pm

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Laura heard yesterday that Marcel Marceau died. Here’s the link to a piece she wrote called “The Painfully True Confessions of a Would-Be Teenage Mime” that just went up on the Huffington Post:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/laura-zigman/the-painfully-true-confes_b_65647.html

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This post was read by 354 people until now.

Starting Up Again

Filed under: Laura (All About) — lzigman @ 9:20 am

Whenever Laura takes a long unintentional break from branting and finally gets ready to go back, she becomes completely overwhelmed with the mountain of material she has to cover in order to get her brant up to date. Not that so much interesting stuff happens in Laura’s life — quite the contrary! — but still, it’s been almost three months without a new brant and quite frankly, Laura’s at a loss for words.

It’s fall, Laura’s favorite season, especially living in Massachusetts, and the weather has been unbelievably beautiful — bright sun, clear blue skies, dry, which is just another way of saying perfect non-frizzy-Jewish-hair weather. But despite such optimal conditions, Laura is very unhappy with her hair and has just entered that horrible stage of realizing she must get it cut as soon as possible. The problem is, she wants something layered and messy with a lot of, as hair stylists say, “movement,” and Laura just doesn’t know where to go to get a decent cut. If she’d had a paycheck in the last three years, she’d consider blowing one of them on a fantastic cut and color at her most favorite salon, Salon AKS in New York, but cuts and colors at Salon AKS are, sadly, a thing of the past, so she’s going to start hunting around closer to home as soon as she gets a minute.

School has started again, Ben is now in second grade, and speaking of hair, picture day is today. Laura can’t wait to see this year’s photo since Ben’s hair is so long he looks like a muppet with a mushroom-cap wig. But he couldn’t be cuter and Laura doesn’t care how long his hair is and how disproportionately big its poofiness makes his head look compared to the rest of his long skinny body. She can’t get enough of him just the way he is.

As always, Laura’s multi-tasking as she writes this — watching new episodes of the Barefoot Contessa. Today, Ina is making cream of wild mushroom soup and blinis and parmesan chicken and needless to say, Laura can’t get enough. But perhaps this is true because as usual when Laura is completely engrossed in an episode of Barefoot Contessa, she’s usually trying to avoid thinking about something else. Which is the case today. Laura’s proposal on FAILURE is finally on submission and Laura is convinced she is going to fail at FAILURE. Watching Ina taste Stilton cheese in some fancy cheese shop in the Hamptons is so much easier than contemplating her own future…

This post was read by 324 people until now.