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See the hilarious
10-minute play
adapdation written for a
showcase performance at Theater 150.
As published in the Santa Barbara
Independent, circulation 40,000, December, 2004:
Two thousand zero zero party over oops out of
time . . .
The band was doing the
obligatory, albeit pathetic, rendition of Prince's '80s essential dance tune. The hotel sold
out the "Package of the Millennium" and all of the guests were now
clamoring to the dance floor, hideously gyrating to a beat that was
clearly more useful to them in their younger days. Middle-aged men
with their shirts unbuttoned to reveal decades-old piles of graying
chest hair and women stuffed into dresses that fit them better in
their 20s bumped and grinded into one another painfully. I sniffled
and wiped my dripping nose with my
sleeve.
"You got the lights,
right?" Hiram shouted over the band leader's impromptu guitar solo, tearing it up
miserably.
"Yeah, yeah, I got it, no
problem," I hissed, my throat punishing me with every
syllable.
Of all nights to be sick,
this was definitely the worst. As the hotel's director of guest relations, my
prestigious assignment for the night involved being stationed next
to a Klieg light tower at the back of the ballroom, running on
generator power. Hiram, my boss, the general manager and a Y2K
compliant geek, insisted that the western power grid was scheduled
to go "off-line" at 11 p.m. PST. When it didn't, Hiram looked deflated; he figured
somehow that the time-warp continuum would catch up to us at
midnight, so I'd better
not leave my post. I surrendered myself to the inevitable and cozied
up to my date, Mr. Klieg, and surveyed the crowd of idle rich
trust-funders.
When the recruiter called
me up six months earlier for "the job of a lifetime," I had no idea
he actually meant "the job that will suck the life out of you." But
the seduction of salary, title, signing bonus, and relocation
assistance grabbed hold and didn't let go. I jumped at the chance, as I
did with every other hotel job since college graduation. It was
always 24/7/365, full of promises of excitement and glamour and at a
pace that would stop an Olympic athlete dead in his tracks. But
being starry-eyed and impressionable, it's the career path I consciously chose.
Now, years later, staving off pangs of regret, with
Prince's wannabe
charlatan crooning in my ear, fogged by a cloud of confetti and too
much cold medicine, I floated away into a
daydream.
Tonight
I'm gonna party like
it's 1999 . .
.
The music had an undeniable
beat that took over my gawky limbs and for once made them move in
perfect harmony. My head finally knew what my feet were doing and my
arms were fluid, no longer flailing about wildly. At
5'9" and 120 pounds,
awkward came naturally, but grace was elusive, if not impossible. I
was 15 and mostly looking forward to having my hair permed and
getting my braces off soon. Jan hopped and spun across from me and
every time her head bobbed, her glasses smacked her on the nose, but
that didn't seem to
bother her a bit.
Cisco scooted over my way
and said, "Hey, we're
gonna ... and ... right, Lis?"
"What? I can't hear
you!"
He took a deep breath and
yelled, "We're gonna all
get together and party in 1999,
right?"
"Oh, yeah, definitely, we
just have to, right Lis?" Jan screamed her allegiance while her hips
swiveled and her arms hovered over her
head.
Without a
moment's hesitation, I
nodded in agreement and said, "Yeah, cool, we all have to swear
we're gonna get together,
no matter what!" And we all
high-fived.
Then there was a loud pop;
the DJ had just backed into one of the balloons that spelled out
"1983" over the stage.
1999,
don'tcha wanna go, 1999,
don'tcha wanna go
...
A balloon fell into the Klieg
light and the heat made it explode over my head. I jumped and Hiram
came over and sneered, "Are you okay, didn't you hear me on the
radio?"
"Oh, no, sorry, I guess the
band was too loud."
"You don't look so
good."
No kidding,
I'm at
death's door. "Oh, yeah,
I've got a
cold."
"Look, I know
you're sick, but I just
can't let you go until
after the countdown." And with that he immediately turned on his
heels and sauntered toward the champagne
fountain.
Just then one of the guests
stumbled over to me with her boobs pouring out of her dress, waving
a broken plastic tiara at me with one hand and sloshing champagne
out of a glass with the other. "My tiara broke, I need a new one and
I also never got a kazoo, how do you expect me to properly ring in
the millennium?"
Oh, honey,
don't get me started.
"I'm so sorry.
I'll get you a new one
right away." One of her false eyelashes was making its way down her
cheek and it was all I could do to keep from staring, so I grabbed
the broken tiara and started off on my new
assignment.
As I was walking away, she
shouted, "And the kazoo, don't forget the kazoo!"
Across the room, a party of
eight looked as though a hurricane hit their table. The centerpiece
of Casablanca lilies was torn to
shreds and everyone was wearing napkins on their heads and arguing
about the meaning of "Auld Lang Syne." One of the men stood up and
blew into his kazoo so hard it flew into his half-eaten plate of coq
au vin. Seizing the opportunity, I snatched up his plate and said,
"Sir, let me clear your plate for you." He didn't even notice me and was already
singing, "Should old acquaintance be forgot and never get too
drunk," while the others applauded and laughed at him. Since the
ladies had donned their napkin chapeaus, I slyly scooped up one of
their tiaras off the floor, where chunks of Dauphinaise potatoes and
spears of asparagus lay after being catapulted off the table.
I handed the plate to one
of the waiters and borrowed a corner of his apron to wipe the
slobber off the kazoo as he rolled his eyes at me. I then proudly
presented the goods to Liz Taylor's
clone.
"It's about time, my gawd, it's nearly midnight already!" Her false
eyelash was long gone and the other one was now stuck to her
eyebrow.
"So sorry to have kept you
waiting. I hope you enjoy your evening." And I hope you wake up with
a raging hangover in the
morning!
I went back to my post and
thought about the path I had chosen. I worked hard in college and
graduated with honors. And now, after investing more than 10 years
in this business, I was again seriously considering leaving it all
behind. Just last week I had been to see a career counselor, and
after giving her $150 and enduring test after test, she concluded I
was in the wrong business. You don't say? Even I knew I had more to offer
than kowtowing to the more fortunate.
It was 10 minutes to
midnight. A new millennium. A new chance. A pact with old friends. I
glimpsed at my watch nervously. I looked at Hiram, visibly grinding
his teeth with anticipation, as if he were in charge of detonating a
nuclear warhead. It was then that I resolved to find something
better.
I wondered where Cisco and
Jan were now. I had just enough time to find out. Liz Taylor was
waving at me and teetering her way over. It's now or
never.
Behind me was a door. I
quickly took the radio off my belt and clipped it to the light
tower. I took a deep breath, slipped out the door ... and began my
new life. See the hilarious 10-minute play
adapdation written for a showcase performance at Theater
150. |