essaysbysean.blogspot.com
President Abraham
Lincoln had a tiresome horde of strangers flocking to the White House seeking a
job. Of course he had to reject nearly all of them, as there were few openings.
Once, when someone asked Lincoln why he had rejected a certain man, Honest Abe
replied, “Because I didn’t like his face.”
“But a man can’t
help his face!”
Not so. Lincoln
explained that we are all responsible for our faces by middle age.
The story has
stuck in my mind. As a writer, I try to know something about faces, as an actor
does. I agree with Lincoln: My belief is that while the very old and very young
may look alike, the folks in between have a muscle memory of many years that
comes to shape their faces, or at least their expressions. Some folks frown
easily; some smile at the drop of a hat. Some have some stiffness around their
eyes, like the worldly characters and near-criminals in a Doonesbury cartoon, with
their stiffness indicated by black shading. I suppose folks growing up in an
abusive Mafia family would have only a few basic expressions ingrained.
Can a “drop of a hat” easy expression be changed? I
have never tried, but I would think so. I remember a man from Arrette Comedy
Troupe telling me he got really burning cheeks as he became able to droop his
mustache. He looked so funny. I remember a dancer from Up With People answering
me that it had only taken one season to be able to raise her leg to shoulder height
as she danced. I liked how she had dedication to her dance craft. The best
always do.
As a writer, I
know that for our craft of using words, the best of us can rattle off grammar
terms and the titles of books to learn from—books they have read. For actors,
where their body is their instrument, the best can touch their toes and control
their faces. I remember being taken out of a movie when Jodie Foster, in two
seconds, rapidly put her facial muscles through a range that her character
wouldn’t have—but I don’t think anybody else noticed. This was for a splendid scene
in Elysium where she is being triumphant
and pleased and forceful and predatory.
I wouldn’t want
anyone to be over-conscious of her face, but I think it’s good to have some
awareness. As Dale Carnegie might say, when his wife mentioned wanting a fur
coat, “The expression on a woman’s face shines brighter than the clothes on her
back.” And then immediately buy her
the coat!
You may have
already guessed what this week’s poem is:
Erosion
by E. J. Pratt
It took the sea a
thousand years,
A thousand years
to trace
The granite
features of this cliff
In crag and scarp
and base.
It took the sea an
hour one night,
An hour of storm
to place
The sculpture of
these granite seams
Upon a woman’s
face.
Sean Crawford
February
2015
Calgary
Footnotes:
~For the past
month my most popular post by hit count, to my surprise, is Fears of Elysium, an essay built around
the Matt Damon and Jody Foster movie. (Archived June 2013) No one has commented
about why they like it. Blogger and writer Steven Pressfield, upon starting his
blog, noted that a post with a thousand hits would get only two or three
comments. My Elysium piece, with well
under a thousand hits, has no comments, I have no idea why it would be “the post
of the month.”
~The dark around
the comic strip character’s eyes is not just so they can hide: The stiffness might
be more accurately described as due to a dark signal delay—They have to process
before they react. See my essay Sarcasm
and Lies archived August 2010.
No comments:
Post a Comment