A Midsummer Night's Scream
make good choices in this case.“
“You think so?“ Shelley was perplexed. “They don’t even have the same colored eyes. Both the Buntings are blue eyed, and the older son’s eyes are brown. That’s impossible, I think.“
“Shelley, we see them up close. The audience won’t see the color of their eyes. I wasn’t crazy, I have to admit, about Denny.“
“What’s wrong with Denny? He was right about his character’s background and was dead on about ‘Angeline and me.’ “
“But it was wrong of Denny to tackle him that way in front of all of us. He should have taken Imry aside and told him that his grammar was wrong in private instead of showing off in front of all of us. I think I’m having heatstroke,“ Jane said, sorry that she’d brought up the subject of casting. She stood up. “We don’t have to sit out here in the heat any longer, do we?“
“I just dragged you out here to air a few opinions. Since we agree, we can wait inside.“ Shelley glanced at her watch. “The caterer will be parking the van in the back alley any minute now.“
Four
While Shelley was letting the caterers in through the back of the theater and showing them where to prepare and serve the snack supper, Jane took out the canvas bag she’d brought along and removed her needlepoint project. She’d been working on it all day. Looking at the patterns in the book she’d been given, she realized quickly that most of them, except the bargellos, were in sets of four or six stitches. She’d roughed out a basic pattern that could accommodate either multiples of four or multiples of six.
She’d only done two patterns so far. One was a square block of jacquard in light and dark blue in the upper left corner. The pattern beneath it was a cashmere diagonal in a long strip down the left side in a dark pink and dark purple. She was contemplating which colors and patterns to do next when Gloria Bunting, who had no dialogue in the scene they were reading through, walked over and sat down beside Jane.
“That’s lovely,“ she said. “I was a friend of the actress Sylvia Sidney and she was always needle-pointing on the set. She did lovely work. I envied the skill. She showed me the basic stitches, but I didn’t follow through.“
Jane smiled. “You know she did at least one instructional book about needlepoint, don’t you? I have a copy at home. I bought it when I tried this years ago and failed. Now Shelley and I are taking lessons.“
“When are the lessons? And are they close by?“
“The first was this morning. There are two sessions a week, one each Tuesday and Thursday morning for four weeks, right here in town. The woman limits the class to five. But maybe she’d be willing to add a celebrity.“
Gloria was pleased at this description. “Could I catch up tomorrow? Maybe you could take me to the shop and tell me what I need to buy. Although I think I should start something smaller than what you’re working on. The arthritis in my hands might make it impossible.“
“Are you going to be here long enough to take the whole course?“
“Good Lord, I hope so. We contracted for two weeks of rehearsals and three weeks of performances. I don’t think this dog of a play will last that long, but I’d stay over to finish the course anyway if it doesn’t.“
Jane reached in her canvas bag and showed Gloria the instruction book. “It’s fifty dollars for the bound canvas, this book, the needles, and enough thread to make something this size. I think that’s a bargain. Then the lessons are ten dollars for two hours of help and advice. At least you’d have all the information to take along when the play is done.“
“I need something to do while I’m here. We don’t normally do these amateur things in which all the rehearsals are in the evenings. I like to put in almost a full day’s work, then relax at night until the play starts. This is the opposite. This time we’re working at night and I need something to fill the mornings. Of course, both John and I grew up here and now our daughter lives here, too. So we have grandchildren to visit with on weekend mornings.“
Shelley reappeared from the next room and said, “The snack supper is ready. I hope it’s a good time for a short break. You’re welcome to fill your plates and bring your food back in here, if you like.“
“Excuse me, Ms. Nowack?“ Imry said. “I don’t remember carrying around food being part of the arrangement.“
Shelley
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