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Some Things I've Read This Week

5/29/2016

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How Daveed Diggs of ‘Hamilton’ Spends His Sundays


  • I’m on the couch, with “SportsCenter” or music on, and when I have thoughts I write them down in Google Docs on my phone. I used to work in notebooks exclusively, but I lost so many of them. I don’t think that quickly. There’s no reason for somebody who’s good at writing rap to be good at freestyling. They’re different parts of your brain. You can develop both skills. I’m a much better writer.​
  • I love detective shows. I’ve seen every episode of “Agatha Christie’s Poirot.” I never go to sleep before 3. Right before falling asleep I like to watch this old British court show, “Rumpole of the Bailey.” I find it comforting.

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How to Be Rejected
Justin Taylor at HowlRound
  • ​Your voice as an artist is not on your list of responsibilities. Like your singing voice, your voice as an artist is given. You cannot choose it. Conversely, it is our responsibility to discover it, embrace its unique sound, set it free and share it with those who go gaga for it. 
  • Artists ascend horizontally, not vertically. We thrive when we are entrepreneurs, which literally translates from French as “takers from between.” Our careers grow by working with who is beside us, not who is above us. Put your time and energy into the people who say yes to your work already. Make a list. Get to 100. (You’d be amazed how fast you can get to 100 in one go). Put it on your fridge. Read it every day. Star the ones you want to work with, especially directors. Arrange theatre love affairs—match specific directors you adore to specific plays you think they’d line up to lick off the pavement. Call them. Make a plan for your dream project. Reach out to theatres together, theatres also dying for a play (and a director) like yours. Go to their shows. Ask for info coffees. Take your career into your own hands.


An Interview with Jessica Hecht and Alexandra Silber
The Interval

(currently playing mother and daughter in the 2016 Tony-nominated revival of 
Fiddler on the Roof)
  • [Jessica] but I’ve done a lot of revivals of what people would consider American masterpieces or contemporary masterpieces. What’s interesting to me is not looking at it from a contemporary standpoint—I know there are many directors that do that—but I worked with a director named David Cromer, who has an incredible aesthetic for looking at revivals that really changed the way I thought about it. Because what happens is that people forget what the actual story is of the play. They do revivals and they think so much about this idea of contemporizing it that they don’t look at just the story. So people that would do a play that is in the public library of plays they know or stories they know are basically sometimes reviving a thought about the play.
  • [Alexandra] I remember when we were doing the scene where I sort of say, “I don’t want to marry him,” and was playing it with a great deal of contemporary strength. And Bart said, “Try this. Try taking your time. Really, really taking your time”—I’ll never, ever forget this—“And recognizing that this is 1905. This has not only never been uttered before, ‘I don’t want,’ it’s never been thought before. And so when this comes out of her, the world needs to explode. It needs to open up. This is the inciting incident of all the changes. And I know that’s a lot of pressure, but that endemically makes Tzeitel strong no matter how it comes out. The fact that it does come out and comes from her, from this young, young girl. Allow that to sort of be what it is.” And I think that’s what you’re saying. Don’t play strength. Don’t play feminism. Play the truth, and the strength and feminism is innate.



Creativity Is Much More Than 10,000 Hours of Deliberate Practice
Scott Barry Kaufman at Scientific American

  • Creativity does draw on a deep knowledge base, and deliberate practice can certainly contribute to many aspects of creativity, but ultimately creativity involves much more than just deliberate practice. Creators are not necessarily the most efficient, but their messy minds and messy processes often allow them to see things others have never seen, and to create new paths that future generations will deliberately practice. I have immense respect for Ericsson's body of work on deliberate practice, and do believe that deliberate practice can help you get better in virtually any skill. However, I also believe that an accurate understanding of creativity is important for how we recognize, nurture, value, and ultimately, reward it, across all sectors of society.


A Writer's Room: Irvine Welsh
New York Times

The space itself is really four areas: a library-type room with a large desk I can cover with a manuscript; an alcove with my decks and music; a smaller office with a whiteboard and reference books; and a balcony where I can sit outside and write in the sun, counting my blessings that I don’t have a real job to do. As much as I like this place, I try not to get too attached to it, and I therefore do a lot of work in coffee shops and on public transit. It’s important for me to be able to write anywhere and not get too precious about trying to chase the fool’s gold of optimum conditions.
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