Were the faces looking at my knees? I had done my best to play the knees down by wearing black trousers. I curled my legs under the chair.
Everyone in the auditorium was chatting away, looking relaxed and cool. Vaisey looked at me and gave me a little thumbs-up. Then, from the side of the hall, Gudrun sounded a big gong and Sidone Beaver entered stage left. All of the girls stood up, so we did too. Well, I did eventually once I had managed to untrap my legs.
Sidone wafted backwards and forwards. She was doing her world-renowned ‘filling the stage’ thing.
Looking round, she smiled and then swept a hand across her body towards us.
“Girls of Dother Hall, I present fresh blood. I present to you these embryos. Will they grow into infants of theatre, dance, music, art? Perhaps one or two of them will be giants of mime, or others medium-sized players of harps, others tiny but perfectly-formed backstage scene shifters. It doesn’t matter. What matters is the playing, the taking part in this wonderful adventure.”
Holy Mother of God and also Sweet Jesus!
Sidone went on. “I want you to welcome our new little embryos into the bosoms of the Mother ship or Dother ship.”
Sidone laughed in a tinkling way.
She said, “Did you see what I did there, girls?”
There was almost universal nodding from the audience.
Sidone said, “And to introduce themselves I have asked our new shipmates to come up with a word or words that sum them up. So now I ask you, new little friends, to tell us your words. And then, this is the bit you didn’t know, I want you to improvise a movement or dance to go with the word or words.”
What?
That hadn’t been in our note.
We all looked at each other.
A dance?
Oh, Holy Mother of Mercy.
I hadn’t even thought of any words! Perhaps I could just faint and that would be good. Then I’d be dragged off stage and taken…
Sidone pointed to the end of the line.
“Let’s start here. What is your outside name? Your pre-magic of theatre name.”
She was pointing at Jo.
Jo looked like an astonished (tiny) rabbit. She stood up.
You couldn’t say she hadn’t got pluck. You could say she was insane, but you couldn’t say that she wasn’t plucky. Anyway, she said, “My name is Jo.”
Sidone beamed at her.
“Jo…Jooooooo…say it loud, Joooooo.”
Jo said it loud. “JOOOOOOOOOO!!”
She’s got a loud voice for a short person.
Sidone stepped away from her a little and then went on. “And what was your descriptive word or phrase, Jooooo?”
Jo said, “Well, it’s ‘strong’.”
Sidone said, “Good, good. Jo is strong. How would you show us that, Jo? That ‘strong’. Show us your ‘strong’, Jo. Show it! Use the whole space!!!”
And in front of our amazed gaze, Jo started growling.
Sidone encouraged her, “Good, good, I am feeling your strength.”
Jo was feeling her strength as well. She started stomping around with her face all screwed up. And undoing her cardigan and puffing out her chest.
Vaisey whispered to me, “What is she doing?”
I said, “I think she’s being the Hulk.”
Vaisey was next. Alarm bells must have been ringing with Sidone because when Vaisey said “Black Beauty” she said quickly, “Now, Vaisey. We have just had a lot of charging energy from Jo and we need a change of pace. Perhaps you might like to think of prancing rather than galloping?”
Vaisey said, “I was going to do dressage.”
Sidone said, “Excellent. Trot on.”
And Vaisey did her leg-holding and criss-crossing.
I could see some of the girls in the audience laughing.
Honey chose ‘Thweet’.
Sidone said, “Pardon, dear?”
Honey’s dance was waggling her hips from side to side and going, “Mmmmmmmmmmmm, yummy! Mmmmmmmmmmmm yummy.”
Milly did ‘cheerful’ (mostly very scary smiling), Becka did ‘light-hearted’ (skipping and clapping), and Tilly did ‘thoughtful’ (frowning and skipping).
When it was Flossie’s turn she said her word was ‘grand’ in a Southern drawl and then started quietly going, “Oklahoma…Oklahoma…Oklahoma…”
Then she belted out, “The land we belong to is GRAND! And when I sayyyyyyyy…Hiyipppy yayyyyy…I’m saying you’re doing fine, Oklahoma…” And doing big arm movements and high kicks.
She would have done the whole song if Ms Beaver hadn’t caught her firmly round the arms. Some people clapped at the end.
Then it was my turn. My brain had frozen over. In terror.
I stood up and my legs felt like jelly, with jelly knees. Sidone looked at me. “Well, Tallulah, what have you chosen?”
Yes, a very good point.
I looked out at the sea of faces. And I stood there. A girl and her knees. And then for some