Author Archives: Christene

The Wedding In Pictures…

Today was Cam’s wedding… These are some of the pictures. I will have more as I collect them from various people, and even more once I get the pictures from the photographer.

It started this morning around 9 a.m. at the beauty salon, with mimosas, hair styles, and make up.
Then we went to the venue and began getting ready….
I had a knack for putting my things in inappropriate places… can you tell what doesn’t belong in the picture?
Cam made this tree for the entrance table.
Another gift from then…
The bride’s maids…
The bride…
Impromptu photo…
The bride and groom… plus family….
The bride’s maids relaxing.
Pretty scenery…
It is hard to see, but there were geese all over the venue, and this is a picture of them.
One of Robert’s children putting on her floral head piece… (he is okay with me posting this one).
The bride and groom again…
The bride’s maids legs… we were bored… can you tell?
Father-daughter dance… (I don’t have any good pictures of the bride and groom dance)…
Tanya got a good picture of the back of my dress…
Tanya and I messed around in the photo booth…
The second song played Cam reserved for me… It is Elton John’s Tiny Dancer… one of my favorite songs, and the tiny people dancing the background of this photo are me and Cam.
Cake cutting….
A really bad picture of Tanya… right before I left…(Mary’s son is making bunny years on her)…

Curious Business

Faust is a serious play, but how seriously can you take Mephistopheles? At face value he is a devil, but everything about his comport, speech, and role that he plays is more reminiscent of a court jester than a vicious entity.

Yes, he tempts, and attempts to corrupt, but only because he sees the “curious fashion” in which humanity behaves.

He mocks to clarify, and his are some of the most truthful speeches in the play. He lies, but unapologetically. Basically his witty banter is the driving force of the play.

In the event that anyone missed this comparison early on, which is quite possible, in Act I of Part II he is actually disguised as a Fool in the Emperor’s court.

The set up for this begins before Mephistopheles ever appears on stage, in the Prelude to Part I where the audience meets the Director, Dramatic Poet, and Merry Man. Can you guess who Mephistopheles will resemble? Of course there is no actual indication of this during this scene, and it doesn’t become apparent until much further on, with only hints occasionally dropped. This is one of those assumptions and/or connections that your brain makes subtly and does not come to the forefront until Mephistopheles is literally portrayed as a jester in the second part. One of those “Oh!” moments.

If you still don’t get it, then I will have to convince you, and I suppose this is my attempt at doing just that.

You get to see Mephistopheles as a literal fool in the first part of Part II where, as just mentioned, he is acting as such in the Emperor’s court. What is he doing in the first part of Part I? Is he not in God’s court, similarly surrounded by subjects while he offers his advice, or better yet, his opinions regarding the current state of affairs?

In both arguably parallel scenes his speech is candid, as “fine speeches are, beg pardon, not [his] forte.” Well, as it turns out, fine speeches, rhetoric, and flattery are exactly his forte. However, what he means is that fine speeches serving no purpose are of no use to him. He blatantly informs the Lord of the human state, just as he informs the Emperor of his economy, all the while putting on quite the spectacle.

As the play continues, he questions, and in the process gets those around him to question as well. He does not always have the answers (Classical Walpurgis Night), but knows where to look, and most importantly, knows how to instruct.

There are several scenes where the direct parallel is abandoned, especially in the middle of Part II. Yet I am not arguing for an exact comparison, but rather that Mephistopheles, overall, fits within the jester pattern, and even in his most wicked moments (of which he has quite a few), he can still be learned from in his candid dialogue. He not only comments on his own deeds, but helps elucidate those of others.

His commentary entertains and instructs.

Very Important Hair Research

Cam’s wedding is tomorrow, and she has requested that her bridesmaids wear their hair up. I am not particularly fond of the updo, but it is her wedding, and if my hair worn up makes it even an iota more memorable for her, than I will gladly oblige. However, aside from my little jogging pony tail I don’t know anything about updos. I haven’t had one in years, and have never had them on a regular basis.Last night, after her rehearsal dinner I spent my time doing some research on hair styles I like and would potentially look decent on me. I reevaluated the list this morning. Here is a list of pictures of the ones I am leaning towards, so tomorrow morning when the hairdresser asks me how I would like my hair my answer won’t be “um… up?” and I will have come concrete examples to show her.

I think I am going for a braided look. Can you tell?