I like watching houses being built especially if they have basements and the ground has to be dug out. I like watching the pouring of the foundation and the laying of the cornerstones. I like watching the leveling and anchoring. I like seeing the little by little progress that eventually ends up being a finished house ready for furnishing. I like knowing what the inners look like…
The new dream house for the Home and Gardens network looks like a cabin on the outside but when you go inside, it is a completely modern house. It’s beautiful (as they always are) but I was shocked by the blatant contrast between the outside and the inside of the house. I actually gasped and not in a good way because I was thrown for a loop. But, I was totally intrigued by the contrast and beauty of the house so I could not help looking at every nook and cranny… And for that split second – at the moment of my gasp – I thought about theater, how the most effective pieces make you gasp as well. They catch you by surprise and take you to places you never thought you would go to or move you in a way you never thought would be possible. My first viewing of the house was like watching the revelation of a character whose outward appearance does not accurately depict who he/she is – “the secret”. But, looking a little closer at the inners when exposed, you suddenly know who they are and why the façade. And more exactly, why this façade in its inaccurate depiction of the character is still spot on with regards to the secret.
Secrets – they always cause some kind of friction when revealed. Quietly or out loud, privately or publicly, a secret revealed changes the atmosphere… Secrets are always enough in my book to drive a good story or build a good character. They also make for good gasping moments.
I’ve been thinking…about capturing that gasping moment somehow in my new play… So, I’m digging deep. I have started building this house – this play – from the earth out…