“Just say the lines and don’t trip over the furniture.” That’s good advice from playwright Noel Coward for an actor agonizing a little too much about motivation.
But successful actors rarely stop there. Leavenworth Summer Theater actor Gary Hesse has played significant supporting roles 605 times in 49 different shows.
And even after playing The Sound of Music’s charming villain Max Detweiler in 228 performances, he still looks for nuance in this character part. In fact, he might take issue (politely) with the broad-stroke descriptors “charming” and “villain.”
“Max has learned to use that charm to his advantage; every relationship he has serves him in some way, he ‘goes along to get along’,” posited Gary in an interview about his acting life.
And villainy? [SPOILER ALERT] “Some directors place Max offstage at the end when the Von Trapps exit to their escape; others want the audience to think that he’s risked all and orchestrated it himself. He’s probably the most complex character in the play.”
He‘s awed by the power of theater to “turn pieces of paper into an experience that causes audiences to laugh or cry or think… without a net, stitching it all together in a month with people who are just getting to know each other.”
And it’s this last factor that keeps him auditioning and acting every year: working many shows with new cast members and possibly new directors and, he describes, “creating the palpable sense of community created by each show’s cast.”
Gary considers bringing people together (“Especially when we are so divided as a nation,” he adds) to be the central organizing principle of his life.
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Denne historien er fra March 2020-utgaven av The Good Life.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Nita Paine
‘I love that we provide an outlet to people to express themselves, to find out who they are’
Looking at life from a different angle now
Bout with cancer, plus pandemic made couple wonder: Why wait to really live?
Keeping family ties strong
Twelve months of COVID makes for a long year away from kids and grandkids
It's a kick to be a zebra — or a canary
When making the call is your calling
Saved family letters tell of war horrors, peacetime hopes and dreams
Loving letters from long ago
Varied Thrush: Making a bold statement
Globally, the thrush family contains 169 viable species; three other thrush species are now extinct.
Clean shots
For real estate photographer, the art is in the uncluttered details
Visiting the glory years of our parents
Obituaries – They’re really NOT for the dead
Going deep with Dan Feil
Warm crystal clear water, incredible fish, spectacular scenery, why not jump off a boat in the tropics?
Bringing a glow to the night
Who says outside lights are just for Christmas time? Drivers on Maple Street in Wenatchee will now see lights year-round.