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Life is like an enormous theatrical performance, each person having the
leading role, ready to determine his/her destiny. For each event in your
life, you can reflect upon a stimulus, a cause. Yet there are so many
events, so many years, days, hours, seconds in one's life. Which is the
one, that one moment in time which knowingly or unknowingly changed your
life to lead you to be just that, you? For many, it is impossible to
pinpoint that moment. Yet for others, that time, place, and situation
sits implanted in their mind like a snapshot in time.
Picture, if you will, a plump young boy of age ten. Never before had he,
been exposed to life outside his fifth grade classroom and his immediate
family. Timid and shy, he decided he had listened to his mother's
continuous nagging for the last time. That weekend, he would do as she
said and "just go" to see an audition for the community's production of
the musical Oliver. He arrived on time, the hustle and bustle of signing
in all very new to him. There was no way he would actually get up on
stage and sing for that skinny man with the clear acrylic braces showing
on his teeth who was seated at the piano. Yet, he had struck a deal with
his mom to wait and observe, leaving at any time he felt he wanted to.
Twenty minutes later, he watched his mother from a different
perspective: just a dot in a sea of other mothers sitting in the
audience. As he stood in that group of ten youngsters, his meager
vocabulary could not describe the fear in his body. didn't know what a
mark on his life the next few moments would make when he sang his heart
out to the skinny man. How would he have known that that "man" would be
known to him as , his music director for the next six years. Together,
they would fine tune the natural talent buried in his vocal chords and
dramatically build confidence. That fear once known to him on that stage
would come no more. Nervous he was, but afraid he was not when he
auditioned for The King and I a few months later. After landing a main
role, he set his sights on the Seven Angels Theater in Waterbury and
their production of Bright Lights, again another success. To everyone
who knew him, it only seemed natural for him to continue. So why didn't
he? Why, for three straight long years did he bury his talent for
singing and acting? Truthfully, he did not know and came to accept the
fact that maybe he had just lost his love.
So, went to high school alone and afraid as a freshman trying to find
his identity. He sang in the school choir to keep his voice in shape,
but that was the extent of his pursuit of his talent. During his high
school years he became very absorbed and totally involved in school
organizations, clubs, and sports, and he assumed leadership positions
with many responsibilities.
That day six years ago seemed so far away. Songs from Oliver were just a
dusty memory. Little did he know that day would be repeated, as if he
had gone back in time, in February of his sophomore year. He again had
that fear of performing present in him when he stepped up to the piano
to belt out "Maria" for his audition for West Side Story. At that moment
he remembered the little roly-poly adolescent singing for the first
time. He remembered the joy all his endeavors brought him and the true
love he had discovered inside. He went on to star in West Side Story,
Guys and Dolls, Grease ...
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