Surrounded By Geeklets!

Not to be outdone by her artistic 6yr old older sister, my 4yr old is now in on the act.  While working at the craft table she shoves paper and crayons in my hand, saying “Daddy, can you draw us the As You Like It picture?”

I asked her which picture she meant.  She repeated, “The As You Like It picture.”

I still don’t know what that means.   I think I read them AYLI once, and they have not seen it.  They’ve heard about it, briefly, over the summer – Kerry and I went to see it in Boston.  I may have mentioned taking them.  But she surely has no idea of the plot.

Today during game time we got out “Don’t Break The Ice”, where you have to make a grid of like 64 white ice cubes and then take turns smashing it.  “We don’t have to play the original game,” she tells me.  “We can just build stuff with the ice.  We can make a castle, or a dinosaur..or Shakespeare!”  She always wants to make “Shakespeare things”.

Later that evening, during story time, the 6yr old is reading an Angelina Ballerina book.  That’s the one where the mice are all ballet dancers.  She brings the book over to me, pointing to a certain page.  “Does that say Macbeth?” she asks.  Odd, because she is not pointing to any words, she’s pointing to the picture itself.

I look closer.

Sure enough, the scene takes place back stage in a theatre or dressing room of some sort.  On the wall is indeed a poster for Macbeth, which she has spotted (even though the artist has only sketched the letters in partially).

A Couple Of Micro-References

A long time ago when I started this blog I used to note random Shakespeare references I heard during the day, like tv commercials and such.  Given that I heard 2 in the last 12 hours or so, it reminded me to post more of them: On this week’s “Lipstick Jungle” episode (watching on Tivo, normally airs Friday night), Brooke Shields’ movie producer character is getting pitched an indie film.  “Set in Belfast in the 1960’s,” the writer says, “Romeo and Juliet stuff.  Catholics and Protestants going at each other.” That was last night at maybe 9:30 or so. This morning on the drive to work (7:30) I heard a radio commercial for Bengal Traders coffee, which I guess they’re serving at ExxonMobil gas stations now.  I missed the lead up, but the man is trying to explain some sort of deal to the woman – I think it has to do with getting a bottle of water with your cup of coffee or something.  “They go great together, like Romeo and Juliet!” he says. “Look how well they turned out,” says the woman.
That’s it.  Hey, I called them “micro” for a reason. 🙂

Breakfast, continued

Next day, same hotel, same breakfast buffet.  Geeklet has already begun coloring a picture of some sort when I say, “Hey, why not try Romeo and Juliet?” “I don’t really remember enough about that one,” she tells me.  “The other story I’d heard so many times, it was easy.” Still, she ponders how she can turn her already created drawing into something Shakespearean.  She colors for awhile, and then says, “How’s this?” On the paper is a banquet table, with a girl – labelled Juliet – at one end, and a boy – Romeo – at the other.  In the center is a goblet.  Above the goblet is the word, “Yum.” She informs me that Romeo and Juliet are having a nice dinner together.  But of course given the whole “sleeping potion” plot device, the drawing really ends up with a whole different meaning.  I love it.

Wolfson Collection To Be Donated To The Globe

http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/07/donation-sends-shakespeare-plays-home-to-the-globe/ John Wolfson, a playwright and collector of antiquarian books, has pledged to donate more than 450 works by William Shakespeare and other playwrights of his era to the Globe Theater in London, The Guardian reported. Among Mr. Wolfson’s collection is a rare first folio edition of Shakespeare’s plays, published in 1623. The donation, to be made after his death, also includes second, third and fourth editions of the Shakespeare folio, as well as works by Christopher Marlowe, Ben Johnson, Thomas Middleton and John Ford. The original Globe Theater was built by Shakespeare’s company, the Lord Chamberlain’s men, and later destroyed in a fire; the modern reconstruction of the Globe opened in 1997.

Breakfast With Geeklet

The story you’re about to hear is 100% true.

We’re on vacation, up in a hotel in the mountains.  We’re having the breakfast buffet, and as is typical, the kids have placemats and crayons to occupy them.  My oldest, at 6, shows her picture and says, “What do you think, Daddy?”

“Looks like a shoe with windows,” I say.  “Is it the old woman who lives in the shoe?”

“No,” she says, with the head tilt and eye roll that all 6yr olds master on their 6th birthday.  “It’s Miranda on the island.  See, that’s her Daddy next to her, and this is the boat that’s going to crash on the rocks.  She’s calling to them, saying that they’ll be safe on the island.  See the people?”

“….”

She flips the paper back over, colors some more, and flips it back so I can see it. “What’s the name of the monster, again?”

“Caliban?”

“Right, Caliban.  That’s him, there.”  Caliban has been drawn in red, and looks rather devilish. Again the flip, the coloring, the flip again.  Now Ariel is up in the sky, like an angel of some sort.  “What else can I draw?” she asked.

“Books,” I told her.  “You need the magic books.” “Right!” she says, and returns to drawing.  “Finished!” I look at the final picture (which I have, and plan to scan when I get home).  The books are in a tree.  “Prospero keeps his books in a tree?” I ask.

“That is the entrance to his secret hiding place,” she says, again with the head tilt and eye roll.

It may never actually happen, but I’d love to be a fly on the wall for that art class: “What did you draw, Hailey?”
“I drew a flower!”
“And how about you, Aidan?”
“I drew a dinosaur!”
“Katherine?  What did you draw?”
“I drew the opening of Shakespeare’s The Tempest.  Act I, Scene 2.”