I was going to play the lead in a stage play about Alice in Wonderland.
I don’t think I was me in this dream. I was much
younger than my present age, and in fact, much younger than I have ever been. I
was some sort of innocent, almost a waif. I was running around with long blonde hair flying
behind me. Other people from the play were kind of milling around in various
settings, mostly in a high school (I think this was an amateur performance), but I had no idea who they were, even though we
had apparently been rehearsing this play together for months.
Though I remembered the rehearsals and I seemed to
remember knowing the play very well, I suddenly realized I had no idea how the
play started, what the first couple of pages of dialogue were. It was simply
blank. Since I was playing the lead, I
had to know. I knew I was in it somehow and wondered if it was kind of like
the scene where the White Rabbit (always late) rushes past her before she falls into the
rabbit hole. Or did she step through the mirror?
There was a director of the play somewhere but I couldn’t find him. No one seemed to know where he was, but I could picture him, what he was like. None of the other players seemed to recognize or acknowledge me and brushed off all my anxious questions. At one point I (who at this point looked like a little girl living in the 1960s) went on a sort of strange computer that reminded me of the Wizard of Oz's contraption behind the curtain, and tried to find out something about the play on the internet. I thought I could download the script so I could at least read it onstage and not be a total fool. I pictured myself just improvising my lines but realized it would throthe other actors completely off and infuriate them and bring the play to a grinding halt.
Then I found a plastic bag and it had some sort of
report written on it, printed on it. It said something along the lines of: when she first arrived
here, she looked very unkempt and dishevelled. Now she has improved her
appearance greatly and is obviously much more attractive. I realized I was
reading a psychiatric report and that it was about me.
I kept trying to figure out who the director was.
He had an unusual voice and it seemed English. I kept thinking of the
movie/book 1984 and George Orwell. Though I never saw him, I kept thinking I
heard his voice. I thought that if I asked HIM if he had a copy of the script,
I could at least get the first page. I knew he didn’t have one however, because nobody did. Then I
decided he must be that guy on Mad Men, the Englishman they called Moneypenny,
Lane Pryce. Lane Pryce committed suicide by hanging himself in his office during the last
season. He tried to commit suicide with carbon monoxide in a new Jaguar his wife
had just given him (Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce had just landed the prestigious Jaguar acoount), but it wouldn’t start, one of the drawbacks to effectively marketing it.
Just now I realize I only saw this Lane Pryce
actor in one other thing, the movie about Sylvia Plath with Gwyneth Paltrow. It
was a very poorly-done thing and Paltrow was pallid and uninteresting as Plath,
but in one scene, this Moneypenny was talking to her about suicide and how he
had tried it once, “but you’ve got to keep going!”. This seemed ironic in light
of the Lane Pryce character’s suicide.
But maybe it wasn’t Moneypenny at all: it seemed
more like Oliver Sacks, the bizarre genius who studies people with mental
disorders like so many insects impaled on pins.
The whole dream was a vague nightmare of pointlessly bustling
around, realizing that the play was about to begin, that I was playing the lead, and that I had absolutely no idea of what was in the script. I was trying to scrape together some sort of knowledge of Alice in Wonderland and kept coming up with a rabbit. At one point all the cast members were supposed to produce a picture of what their spouses looked like, and I tried to find a picture of a rabbit, just the face, a brown one.
It wasn’t until I woke up and grogged out of bed
that I made another connection, with the Marina Bychkova Enchanted Dolls. My
current favourite is a doll named Alice, who represents Bychkova’s
“reimagining” of Alice in
Wonderland. The doll has enormous blue eyes brimming with tears, elaborate costumes and
long blonde hair. She both enchants and scares me because along with
abandonment and terror, I see anger in her eyes, even a hint of rage.
Unlike Dorothy
in The Wizard of Oz, Alice does
not have comrades or companions, just a series of encounters with
grotesque figures like the hookah-smoking caterpillar, the Queen of Hearts and
the Cheshire Cat whose smile hangs disembodied in the air. She fell into this
twilight nightmare down a hole, or, in another story, was sucked into a reverse world
behind the mirror. In neither case did she choose the journey.
And then, the final realization. My mother's name is Alice. It's also my middle name.
BLOGGER'S NOTE. I had a lot of trouble with this post. It just did not want to co-operate. Since I love fonts, I sometimes try to transfer a post from Word into Blogger, and usually the "foreign" font transfers OK. This time it seemed to work - God, how I hate "seemed to", it's the story of my LIFE - until I previewed it and saw that it had flipped back into boring old Times New Roman, my least favorite font.
I fucked around with it, screaming, as it jumped all over the place. Google Chrome has its advantages, but it does weird things. I notice that if I go back on Internet Explorer, however, half my recent gifs don't work or don't even appear at all. They view fine on Chrome but either don't move on Internet, or just jump a little bit, half a gif. WTF??? It can't look one way on Explorer and another way on Chrome, can it? A post is a post, isn't it? What sort of demon lurks in my computer?
I fought and fought and compromised, but then saw that parts of the text hadn't changed over to Georgia (the least-obnoxious fonts on Blogger) or had even changed size. I hate to look even now, for fear of what else it has done to my post. The gifs may be totally useless, after spending all that time making them.
Anyway, I hope the spirit of this transfers somehow, because it was one of the more interesting dreams I've had lately, with a few of those "ohhhhhh" moments, odd bits of significance that still don't add up to very much.
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