So every friend who is ready to watch something for his/her friend is a very good friend :)
I was even more of a good friend, because at the time we had actually sort of had a falling out and were barely speaking!
I doubt many people have had the chance to escape from this part of education :)
Indeed! I've been in many a school play...I even played the Inn Keeper in my kindergarten nativity play despite a rather large speech impediment - I still know my lines, because my mother has recounted the story so many times during my life :P
Other than that, when I was around 14, I played Demetrius in a Midsummer Night's Dream. (there were only two boys in the production, and one of them REALLY wanted to play a fairy. I got my hair cut short and was still quit boyish at the time, and apparently fooled at least one audience member - helps that my name is unisex too, so their program didn't help them.) But yes, being in a play was great fun - oddly far less nerve-wracking for me than watching one. I'm sure for most people it's the other way around. :P
Actors - the only men who nowadays don't get scared from man&man contact on regular basis.
And for this I love them.
Sauna - I hate it.
Oh man! Haha, cultural differences. I love them, but then, I have been using them since the womb.
But yes, traditional plot-based plays - I'd be more willing to see one of those on someone's recommendation than I would anything else. But still, in terms of comfort levels, I like to go with the standard plays I already know that I love...especially comedies.
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I was even more of a good friend, because at the time we had actually sort of had a falling out and were barely speaking!
I doubt many people have had the chance to escape from this part of education :)
Indeed! I've been in many a school play...I even played the Inn Keeper in my kindergarten nativity play despite a rather large speech impediment - I still know my lines, because my mother has recounted the story so many times during my life :P
Other than that, when I was around 14, I played Demetrius in a Midsummer Night's Dream. (there were only two boys in the production, and one of them REALLY wanted to play a fairy. I got my hair cut short and was still quit boyish at the time, and apparently fooled at least one audience member - helps that my name is unisex too, so their program didn't help them.) But yes, being in a play was great fun - oddly far less nerve-wracking for me than watching one. I'm sure for most people it's the other way around. :P
Actors - the only men who nowadays don't get scared from man&man contact on regular basis.
And for this I love them.
Sauna - I hate it.
Oh man! Haha, cultural differences. I love them, but then, I have been using them since the womb.
But yes, traditional plot-based plays - I'd be more willing to see one of those on someone's recommendation than I would anything else. But still, in terms of comfort levels, I like to go with the standard plays I already know that I love...especially comedies.