Tap dancing lessons were on the bucket list I kept in my brain. Not one to have actually written a bucket list, I was also not one that you’d ever imagine dancing on a stage. But musicals and choreography have always been a love of mine. Think Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly in old musicals. Happy, upbeat and silly – a perfect antidote to life’s daily ups and downs.
The past
two years, having been rather bumpy and somewhat painful, inclined me to dust
off my tap shoes and return to dance class last September.
My class
consisted of a friendly group of mostly extroverted and lifelong tap-dancing
women. Our teacher was fun, mischievous
and able to encourage a middle-aged woman at the back of the class whose
paradiddles were not quite para-diddle-ing.
Through
the fall and winter, Monday nights found my brain and toes struggling to keep
up, to shuffle and tap at the right times, sometimes meeting with success but often
just providing me with sore muscles and a laugh at my lack of talent.
Come March
it was time to learn recital routines for the annual show. This was typically
my time to exit from class, stage right. The thought of dancing in a show for
all to see, in a garish costume, to
music too fast for my feet, struck terror in the pit of my stomach. However, this year the troupe was short of
dancers and they pleaded with me to stay and to dance – albeit in the last row,
right corner, a filler of sorts. This was peer pressure at its best, or worst, depending
on how you view things. I was in!
Two
evenings a week, we tore through step after fast step to a song I really could
not bear. After class, “River Deep,
Mountain High” would play over and over in my mind as I fell exhausted into
bed. My daughter’s “Celine” impression kept me seeing the humour in it, but oh,
to sleep without that soundtrack stuck on repeat.
In tandem
(pardon the pun), that spring time marked a very difficult journey for a dear
friend and his family. My husband and I had stepped in to help, in any little
way that we could, as Larry struggled valiantly with his Gord Downie type brain
tumour.
Larry’s
ability to speak had become very limited, his principal way of conversing being
with a beautiful smile and a thumb’s up. He and his family were a sight to
behold – the efforts made, the choreographing of his every movement from arm chair
to car for a drive, to wheelchair, to bed.
A beautiful dance of love and care, each and every day.
June arrived
and with it my ever growing anxiety.
With each rehearsal and costume fitting, I asked myself, What was I thinking
to sign up for this?
Living
between these two worlds of bright lights and loud music, juxtaposed against diminishing
life was like being suspended in an alternate universe. There were meals to be
made, pep talks and hugs to give, tears to be shared. It felt surreal.
Show week finally
arrived. Dress rehearsals, sound checks, final touches all complete. I silently
worried now, not so much about making a fool of myself, but more, I worried
about Larry. He had been moved to hospice the first day of show rehearsals.
Each day that
week as I showed up to the theatre, I felt a bit lighter, distracted from the
sad reality that existed outside of the dance show world. I muddled my way
through the nights, costume fitted, dramatic stage make up applied, toes
tapping.
Friday
arrived, a big night for the show. It
was an exquisite day, the kind one associates with the month of June. Bright
sunlight, budding gardens – all the promise of summer ahead. I decided to take
a quick swim before leaving for the performance, pausing to take in the beauty
of the moment. A bright red cardinal alighted
on the pool’s edge, and for a fleeting moment I wondered if it was a sign, if
Larry was okay. A cardinal is meant to be a good sign, wasn’t
it?
I jumped
out of the pool, dressed, grabbed my costume bag and my phone, calling out to
my husband that I was leaving, was on my way.
Midway out
the door, I saw that I had missed a text. From my very dear friend, it simply
read, “Larry is gone.”
Gone? I
thought Gone where? He was in hospice, how could he be gone? Then it dawned on
me. My heart felt as though it stopped. I called out to my husband.
What was I
to do? I wanted to run to our friends but knew this was their private time, a time
to be together in their grief as a family.
Meanhwile,
in my alternative universe, the show clock was ticking loudly inside my head. I
made a quick decision, jumped in my car, body trembling, and drove to the
theatre. Backstage, everything was
bustling, teeming with life, music, and colourful dancers everywhere.
I found my
group. I didn’t say a word other than hello, fearful that I wouldn’t be able to
keep it together. I smiled, lined up for group photos, sharing nervous glances with
my fellow dancers. We entered the dark and mysterious world that is backstage.
My heart was racing more than usual as I struggled to keep my tears at bay.
I thought
of Larry, wondering what his advice to me would be. A man small in stature but
large in presence, Larry had had a successful life in every way. A committed
community builder, he’d made many an appearance on stage. Not a grandstanding
man; rather, a measured, intelligent man.
Our music
was cued, the first beats of the “Celine loop” started up. It was time to perform.
I took a deep breath, looked up and silently vowed that this was for Larry. Miraculously,
I danced the whole way through, smiling, not missing a beat as images of Larry
happily smiling kept me on time and focused. Suddenly, it was over, the audience
applauding generously. We took a final
bow and ran from the stage as we had rehearsed.
In the
darkness that constitutes the back stage, I blew a teary kiss heavenward. “Thanks
Larry,” I breathed. “See you on the other side.”
My tap
shoes and I went home.
Paula Aicklen is a budding writer who engages in many
creative ventures and has always had a love for the written word. Paula works
in Oakville as a design consultant and floral designer and hopes to mesh her
writing with these pursuits.
See Brian
Henry’s schedule here, including
writing workshops and creative writing courses in Algonquin Park, Bolton,
Barrie, Brampton, Burlington, Caledon, Georgetown, Guelph, Hamilton, Ingersoll,
Kingston, Kitchener, London, Midland, Mississauga, Oakville, Ottawa,
Peterborough, St. Catharines, Saint John, NB, Sudbury, Thessalon, Toronto,
Windsor, Woodstock, Halton, Kitchener-Waterloo, Muskoka, Peel, Simcoe, York
Region, the GTA, Ontario and beyond.
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