Another of those
“House of Mirrors” reality explorations readers constantly clamor for.
Or is it just me?
Or it is not even me,
but an idea arrives and adamantly demands to be written.
I have no idea how
this process works.
But here goes anyway.
In a leap of mystified
confusion.
Drawing from my beloved – by me – homage “Saddle Up!”, I delivered the
reminiscences of a “Stock Character” from old-time westerns – “The Rancher’s
Daughter”, AKA… well, a lot of
people, all of whom embodied the essential “Good Girl” persona and the only one morally suitable for the “Good Guy” to end up with, although even then, he was as likely to respectfully
tip his hat and ride off into the sunset, alone, or with a longtime male companion.
(And leave us not read too much into that.
They didn’t.)
Recalling her onscreen experiences, the “Leading Lady” revealed
that she was, in real life, more, shall we say, behaviorally exuberant than the
staid, stereotyped character she was regularly contracted to play.
Its not unusual in that business. You play – again and again – the character
the audience, based primarily on physical appearance, imagines you to be.
It’s call “‘Type’ Casting.”
I found interest in that “onscreen-offscreen” contradiction. The actor was stuck playing the pure and
pristine “Leading Lady”, when she was actually more of a visceral “Hell Cat” –
that descriptive derives from the fifties; it looked great on movie posters – a role she would never be
hired for because she looked disqualifyingly “Nice.”
So there’s that.
An actor’s hired for their outward appearance even though,
in reality, that is unequivocally not “Them.” And ditto, in the other direction – a
“Voluptuous Bombshell” – another fifties
blurb blaring visually from posters – who, on her own time, is behaviorally “nun-like”, and in fact winds up in a
convent after her career, cultivating vegetables, mumblingly berating her smoldering
physique. (Or if there is a “Vow of
Silence” involved, just thinking
that.)
This limiting predicament reminds me of an actor I once
hired whose quirky physical demeanor consigned him to colorful – often
scene-stealing – supporting roles.
I remember him sensibly proclaiming – in what context, I no
longer recall –
“I would rather be ‘Type cast’ than not cast at all.”
The guy seemed to be serious.
And yet I always wondered about that.
Is it just me who, despite what I see in the mirror – not
just performing in movies but in
everyday life, as well – imagines myself being the heroic and wonderful “Star
of the Show”?
Is that “Crazy Time”?
Or purely normal and natural?
I have a feeling we all
do that, seeing ourselves as “The
Romantic Lead”, not the ancillary
“Best Friend.” Think about it. Do you think anyone ever grew up, dreaming of
becoming Vice President of the United States?
And yet, in the ultimate “Battle of Perceptions”, which
“You” more frequently wins out?
Be honest. Is the sum
total of your life the product of who you inwardly believe yourself to be? Or the result of the pidgeonholing way others
perceive you and stubbornly require you to remain?
It seems stupid, doesn’t it, that that would be the
determining factor? Imagine what
wonderful achievements – onscreen and beyond – we are deprived of because the
person who could do it does not,
unfortunately, “Look the part.”
It just came to me that the third newspaper column I ever
wrote when I was twenty-four was the “politically incorrect”,
“Can A Dwarf Become President of the United States?”
What does it mean, I wonder, to be plowing the same
theoretical terrain almost half a century later?
I don’t know…
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