You Don't Mean...?

May 24 '12
Nobody cares what you think. Once a creation has been put into the world, you have only one responsibility to its creator: Be supportive. Support is not about showing how clever you are, how observant of some flaw, how incisive in your criticism. There are other people whose job it is to guide the creation, to make it work, to make it live; either they did their job or they didn’t. But that is not your problem. If you come to my show and you see me afterward, say only this: “I loved it”. It doesn’t matter if that’s what you really felt. What I need at that moment is to know that you care enough about me and the work I do to tell me that you loved it, not “in spite of its flaws”, not “even though everyone else seems to have a problem with it”, but simply, plainly, “I loved it.” If you can’t say that, don’t come backstage, don’t find me in the lobby, don’t lean over the pit to see me. Just go home, and either write me a nice email or don’t. Say all the catty, bitchy things you want to your friend, your neighbor, the Internet. Maybe next week, maybe next year, maybe someday down the line, I’ll be ready to hear what you have to say, but at that moment, that face-to-face moment after I have unveiled some part of my soul, however small, to you: that is the most vulnerable moment in any artist’s life. I beg you, plead with you to tell me what you really thought, what you actually, honestly, totally believed, then you must tell me “I loved it.” That moment must be respected.

Stephen Sondheim, to Jason Robert Brown (via sundayintheparkwithsondheim)

This will never not be gorgeous.

(via thelittlesondheimthings)

So, so true.

188 notes (via charlottemalcolm & sundayintheparkwithsondheim)

May 24 '12
That’s how I live! But I mostly don’t blog. I mostly stalk tumble-people and do weird stuff with names.

That’s how I live! But I mostly don’t blog. I mostly stalk tumble-people and do weird stuff with names.

(Source: i-am-the-oracular-spectacular)

1,313 notes (via say-it-to-me-now & i-am-the-oracular-spectacular)

May 24 '12

peculiar-passing-moments:

There’s just so much about this…

I was just, you know, watching every SNL episode from the beginning, and this made me so happy. I love it when my NBC world and my theatre world collide.

(Source: 30rockasaurus)

776 notes (via celestewazowski & 30rockasaurus)

May 24 '12
<3

20 notes (via so-theres-hell-to-pay)

May 24 '12
Something about this book breaks my heart. Like, every sentence. Even the not sad ones. But I love it so.

Something about this book breaks my heart. Like, every sentence. Even the not sad ones. But I love it so.

12,622 notes (via celestewazowski & h-e-r-o-i-n)

May 24 '12
Everyone must be dreaming about me, always.

Everyone must be dreaming about me, always.

(Source: i-am-the-oracular-spectacular)

7,645 notes (via say-it-to-me-now & i-am-the-oracular-spectacular)

May 24 '12

I want to go to there.

62,971 notes (via celestewazowski & myedol)

May 24 '12
Always.

Always.

(Source: fiercefabulousflawless)

8 notes (via fiercefabulousflawless)

May 22 '12

scottxlogan:

James Marsden and Tina Fey filming 30 Rock in NYC

I am in love with them.

24 notes (via nycforme & scottxlogan)

May 22 '12

Men get to feel hornier because they’re socially supported in this. The whole of society is geared toward titillating men and discouraging female sexual desire. It’s inherent to the Nice Guy® complaint, where men are entitled to feel physical attraction, but a woman who wants more than “nice” is shallow. It’s evident in the way men and women dress, with women always mindful to wear stuff that makes them sexually attractive, whereas men have the opposite problem, and have to avoid being too sexualized lest they seem feminine. Naked women are draped over every inch of public space, and the internet is full of visually interesting porn for men, but our society barely can imagine what it would be like to try to attract a female eye.. Men seem hornier in no small part because their sexuality is celebrated and codified. It’s easy for men to know right away how to be sexual, whereas women are still largely expected to figure it out for themselves—-and even that’s a recent invention, because pre-feminism, women were mostly just expected to do what men wanted.

But even with the small amount of freedom we have, it’s worth noting that a 30-year-old woman who admitted obliquely to having had non-procreative sex in Congress created a month long, nationwide scandal. Until that kind of pressure disappears completely, we can’t even begin to measure what the “natural”, unadulterated female sexuality would look like, and how it would compare to the celebrated and constantly titillated male sexuality.

Either way, stop blaming sex for misogyny. If all men wanted was women to fuck them more, the English language wouldn’t even have the word “slut” in it.

1,432 notes (via nycforme & ellielamothe)