Friend #27 - Debbie
Confession: I’ve
always wanted to be an actress. I think
it started in the high school drama club, the endorphins you get performing in
front of a crowd that is fixated on your every movement and emotion. I wasn’t particularly good at it. I have a difficult time controlling my eyes
and facial movements that react honestly, in the moment and often can’t be
duplicated. But I am fascinated by those
who have that gift.
So when a friend suggested I sit down with a real life actress,
I leapt at the opportunity. There were
so many questions I had about people who live their lives portraying others. I’d always had a notion that great actors
must have, at some point in their lives, developed a skill for putting on a
façade in their real life in order to escape that reality. Debbie told me that wasn’t really the
case. Great acting is about putting on a
coat of someone else’s back story to wear during the duration of the
performance. Because of this, actors
need to have a great deal of empathy.
They need to feel for others as if they were feeling the emotion,
themselves. Debbie believes this is why
the LGBTQ community has been so accepted into the theater. It’s the nature of their jobs to provide
empathy to all people regardless of their orientation.
And Debbie should know.
She has been in the theater world for a long time. Over the past thirty years she has worked for
Childsplay, a local theater that puts on family friendly shows in Tempe,
Arizona. Because of her age, she has most
recently been delegated to more directorial duties, claiming she is too old to
be the starlet. Well…maybe…but you can
still see the vitality in Debbie’s cheeks, the passion in her eyes, the warmth
in her voice. I asked if she ever wanted
to pursue her craft in Los Angeles, figuring there must be loads of opportunity
there, but Debbie just laughed. She
claimed she was too short and curvy for what LA wanted…but she also never had
aspirations to act commercially. The
stage has always been the love of her life.
She was married once for seven years. He was a nice man and at first, he loved how
passionately she felt about the theater.
He was the type of man who would help her with sets and
behind-the-scenes work, but eventually he grew jealous of Debbie’s first
love. Debbie believes her marriage was a
sacrifice she gave up for feminism, as many women of her generation did. The feminists taught the young girls to
believe they could do anything but the young men still wanted nurturing women
like their mothers. Debbie couldn’t deny
the feminist part of herself…so she chose the stage.
As we talked, the mental pedestal
I had placed the actress on began to subside.
The light coming through the window caressed the soft lines of her face,
making them more distinct and the actress on the pedestal became more
real.
We both went to Western Kentucky
University. Debbie was a few years ahead
of me but at the time she was attending, Western had one of the most
prestigious drama departments in the nation.
She got her masters at Arizona State University and then the desert just
stuck, much like it did for me. She said
her mother should have been an actress but there wasn’t a lot of opportunity for
acting where Debbie grew up in Memphis. So
Debbie’s mother sang, instead. Debbie
has one brother who is a writer and shares the creative passion of telling a
good story that she does. She has
another brother and sister that chose more scientific paths. It was a creative family but not so different
from the family I grew up in.
And you would think as an actress,
Debbie would crave the spotlight as if it were a bit of espresso injected directly
into her veins. It is the passion that
drives her but not necessarily the thing that energizes her. Instead, Debbie admits she is a bit of
introvert finding rejuvenation within the quiet moments as she is gardening at
home or spending time with her two cats.
It’s as if the creative energy that drives her bursts forth so
dynamically from a person who is so magnificently ordinary in so many
ways.
Of course, if you were sitting
next to her in a restaurant, you might be captivated by her stories or her ability
to be animated. Debbie seems to always
carry the art of the dramatic around with her like a prized handbag, but by the
end of the conversation, we were reduced to comparing notes about the changes
at the university we both shared like two old friends. And I’d like to think we had become friends
as the mysterious aura of “actress” faded into the reality of two women who
simply had a lot in common. She tells
her stories on the stage. I tell my
stories on the page. Yet within those
differences, there is a lot of the same.
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