A Year in the Life of a Complete and Total Genius

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A Year in the Life of a Complete and Total Genius Page 8

by Stacey Matson


  Nicole: Oh. Well, you could clean up the kitchen more often. Your dishes are always left in the sink for way longer than a day. It’s gross.

  Arthur: Thank you, Nicole.

  Nicole: You’re welcome, Arthur.

  Arthur,

  Your babysitter Nicole is very astute! I hope you found this assignment useful.

  Kennedy mentioned that you’re having trouble with your story for the competition. If you wish to speak with me about it, I’d be happy to meet with you after class. Sometimes all we need is someone to talk through our challenges in order to get them down on paper!

  Ms. Whitehead

  Dear Ms. Whitehead,

  Nicole is not my babysitter. She is my next-door neighbor who I spend time with when my dad is home late from work. Sometimes I see her socially also because she is teaching me to knit. She is my friend. This is a big difference from babysitter. A babysitter is for people like Robbie, who probably needs constant supervision or else he would likely burn his house down.

  Also, I’m not having any trouble with my story. Kennedy made a mistake there. I don’t know why she would say that, because it’s totally not true. I don’t need any help figuring out my ideas. I’m almost finished my story and I feel confident that it’s great.

  Yours truly,

  Arthur Bean

  Arthur,

  Good to hear that things are going well. I look forward to reading your story in its finished form. Don’t forget to double space your work!

  Ms. Whitehead

  • • •

  CAST LIST: Romeo and Juliet

  DIRECTOR: Mr. Tan

  STAGE MANAGER: Amelia Lewis

  ASSISTANT STAGE MANAGER: Robert Zack

  ROMEO: Arthur Bean

  JULIET: Kennedy Laurel

  NURSE: Benjamin Crisp

  MERCUTIO: Curtis Westleigh

  BENVOLIO: Latha Nantikarn

  TYBALT: Andrew Brock

  CHORUS AND OTHERS: Surya Hatta, Gemma Hemming, Tom McAulista, Liam Wilson, Sierra Barthes, Taylor Van Den Furthe, Mai Nguyen, Cristal-Leigh St. Jean-Adams., Phil Topor, Von Ipo, Audrey Eng, Taylor Tom, Fiona Chong, Ezra Galen

  UNDERSTUDY ROMEO: Robert Zack

  UNDERSTUDY JULIET: Audrey Eng

  • • •

  January 27th

  Dear RJ,

  I got it!!! I’m going to be Romeo and Kennedy’s going to be Juliet!! We get to kiss and everything! We will be the two greatest lovers of all time. I know it! The chemistry between us is so strong. I bet that Mr. Tan could feel the chemistry between us in class and knew that we would be perfect as R&J! It will be so easy to be Romeo. I think that I might be as good an actor as I am a writer. It will probably be pretty hard for me to choose how I want to be famous later. I bet they will turn my books into movies and famous directors will ask me to star as my characters. Of course, I will have work at memorizing the lines. I am not very good at memorizing stuff. But still! A kiss, forsooth!

  Yours truly,

  Arthur Bean

  • • •

  From: Arthur Bean ([email protected])

  To: Kennedy Laurel ([email protected])

  Sent: January 28, 10:30

  Dear Kennedy,

  Congratulations on your role in the play! I’m so happy for you, and I think we will make a great lead couple, don’t you? I can’t wait for rehearsals to start. Maybe we can meet this weekend and start practicing together. My friend Nicole says they call it “running scenes” in “the biz.” I’m pretty free since we had a substitute in math on Friday—no homework for the weekend!

  Yours truly,

  Arthur Bean

  From: Kennedy Laurel ([email protected])

  To: Arthur Bean ([email protected])

  Sent: January 28, 12:05

  Hi, Arthur!

  Congratulations to you too!!! I’m SO excited to play Juliet! It will be my first big break in show biz LOL! Maybe my EX-boyfriend will see us kiss and get jealous LOL! I can’t “run scenes” (look at us, talking like theater pros LOL) this weekend. I’ve got a volleyball tournament! But once we know what Mr. Tan has in store for rehearsals, we can maybe find a lunch break where we can practice! That is, in the midst of writing award-winning stories, hard-hitting journalism, and all that HOMEWORK LOL!

  Also, have you talked to Robbie? He’s pretty bummed about not getting the role of Romeo :( He was soooo into the drama class, and I think he’s really good at acting too. Anyway, if you talk to him soon, be extra nice to him. He was so sad on the way home. He came over yesterday and we made popcorn and watched Jim Carrey movies. They were so dumb, but so funny!

  Off to WIN a volleyball competition LOL!!

  Kennedy :)

  From: Arthur Bean ([email protected])

  To: Kennedy Laurel ([email protected])

  Sent: January 28, 12:21

  Dear Kennedy,

  Actually, I’m glad you can’t make it. I’d forgotten that I’m actually really busy this weekend too. I have all kinds of activities to attend and a party as well. But we’ll totally have to reschedule for a time when we are both free!

  I don’t think Robbie was that interested in getting a part; he was probably just upset for a minute. I think being an understudy is a pretty big thing, and assistant stage manager is also really important. Like Mr. Tan said…no part is too small!

  Good luck at your volleyball tournament!

  Yours truly,

  Arthur Bean

  FEBRUARY

  Assignment: Dramatic Scenes

  Conversations can be tricky in story writing, and writers often have trouble moving a story forward using dialogue instead of description. After looking at scenes of plays today in class, please use these works as inspiration for your own short play! Write a short scene for a play where two characters meet and solve a problem together. These characters can be real people from your life, based on previous assignments, or new characters who share personality traits with people you’ve met, or even yourself! Try and weave these details into the conversation seamlessly; don’t just come out and tell your reader directly. Your scene should be at least two pages long, double-spaced.

  Due: February 4

  • • •

  Peer Tutoring Program—Progress Report

  Session: February 2nd

  Worked On: Dramatic Scenes

  Ms. Whitehead, I suggest that Robbie see someone for his violent tendencies in his work. Seriously, that guy has some issues that need to be worked out, and I am afraid that he might kill me the same way his “character” kills me in his scene. I doubt that I will sleep well tonight.

  —Arthur Bean

  Artie helped me with my sene, to make one of the caracters responsable for the problem. The problem is that one of them is staring in the play and the other one wants to star to. Together they kill the other star and never get caught. It’s pretty funny. I also got to use the word “cleave”—like “to cleave someone’s head open with an ax.”

  —Robbie

  • • •

  February 3rd

  Dear RJ,

  Today we had our first read-through of Romeo and Juliet. It was so great. Now Mr. Tan wants us to rehearse scene by scene. He said that it’s best if we can find the driving emotion (he called it the character’s motivation) and act that. He said that it is best if we relate that emotion to something in our own lives and write about it in our notebooks. I drew a picture of a heart with a bloody sword sticking through it on the cover of mine, with an empty poison bottle next to the heart. I think it will remind me of the tragedy of the play each time I see it.

  I can’t wait until we get to the part where I get to kiss Kennedy though. I bet her lips are super soft, because she uses a lot of lip gloss. I just wish I got t
o work with only her, but Mr. Tan said that we were going to rehearse with Audrey and Robbie there too, since they “need to know the blocking,” where you have to stand onstage for each scene. (It’s very technical.) But it’s so crowded when there are four of us trying to do everything. Plus, I got paired with Robbie on this other drama scene in class. Why do I always have to work with him? Is there a conspiracy against me?

  Yours truly,

  Arthur Bean

  • • •

  Assignment: Dramatic Scene

  CAST LIST:

  Nancy, a girl

  Darian, a boy

  Nancy: Hey! Hey, you there! Who are you?

  Darian: I’m Darian. I live down the street. We just moved here from Ohio. My parents are getting divorced.

  Nancy: OK. Can you help me with my problem?

  Darian: Maybe. What is your problem?

  Nancy: I’m trying to get my little sister out of the sewer.

  Darian: How did you sister end up in the sewer?

  Nancy: That’s a long story.

  Darian: I’ve got time. My parents are divorced, and I don’t know anyone here yet since I just moved from Ohio.

  Nancy: Well, I put her in the sewer. She was annoying me. She keeps repeating everything I say.

  [From below the stage]: She keeps repeating everything I say.

  Nancy: SHUT UP!

  [From below the stage]: Shut up!

  Nancy: I MEAN IT!

  [From below the stage]: I mean it!

  Darian: Are you sure you want to get her out? She seems pretty happy down there. She should be fine as long as she doesn’t see a crocodile.

  Nancy: Do you think there are crocodiles down there?

  Darian: I know there are. I’m super smart. I learned about crocodiles that live in the sewers. They can grow to be up to twenty-five feet long.

  Nancy: How long is that in meters?

  Darian: I don’t know. I’m from Ohio.

  Nancy [yelling down the sewer]: Do you hear that, Franklina? There are crocs down there! You had better be quiet in case they can find you using sonar tracking like bats use!

  Darian: So how do you think we should get your sister out of the sewer?

  Nancy: Well, I knitted this scarf.

  Darian: You can knit? That’s the coolest thing I have ever heard. You must be really cool. My friend Arthur in Ohio could knit too, and he was the greatest person to ever live.

  Nancy: He sounds dreamy. Maybe instead of getting my sister out of the sewer, I should move to Ohio and marry your friend Arthur.

  Darian: You had better move soon. He’s going to be very famous soon because he’s a really great writer too. He’s going to write the next bestselling novel.

  Nancy: I will give him this scarf and make him spaghetti and meatballs even though I am a vegetarian. But since I love him so much, I will still make meatballs for him.

  Darian: I am a vegetarian too!

  Nancy: We have so much in common! We are both vegetarians, and we both think Arthur is the greatest!

  Darian: Maybe you should stay here.

  Nancy: No. I have to go to Ohio. You could come too and live with your mom.

  Darian: Okay. I like Ohio.

  [Nancy and Darian leave]

  [Voice from below]: Hello?

  [Screaming and the sound of a girl being eaten by a crocodile.]

  The End

  Arthur,

  Your interpretation of the assignment is very imaginative. However, most of your character description is still being told through your characters’ exposition, and you abandon your “problem” of the sister in the sewer in the middle of your scene. I’m also not certain what character traits you are trying to portray in your characters. Keep working on blending personality traits into your work. Remember, SHOW the readers something, don’t TELL them!

  Ms. Whitehead

  • • •

  February 5th

  Dear RJ,

  I don’t suppose you have written any stories for me HA-HA-HA. I know that’s asking a lot, especially since you are an inanimate object. But seriously, RJ, enough with the jokes. I’ve really got to write a story. Once I start I won’t be able to stop writing. The words will just flow from my fingers onto the page. I probably won’t even have to edit it much. It’s just that I can’t get my fingers going! Plus, I have all these rehearsals too. It’s very tricky to write my own words when I’m trying to memorize someone else’s.

  I tried asking Nicole for ideas and she said that I should write about a sad rabbit making friends with other animals in the forest. It was the stupidest idea ever. I told her that and she got offended and said that a great allegory is often the simplest story. Then I had to look up allegory, and I think she was making fun of me. Whatever. She’s not trying to be a great writer. I am.

  Yours truly,

  Arthur Bean

  • • •

  Romeo and Juliet—a Star’s Reflection

  By Arthur Bean

  Act 1, Scenes 1 and 2

  In this first scene, I play a man in love. And oh! What a love it is! It is intense and passionate. I imagine myself like I am a fire, and I have been doused in gasoline. I burn and burn and burn!

  (Is this what you mean, Mr. Tan? I’m not sure what I’m supposed to be doing in this reflection journal.)

  Romeo/Arthur,

  You’re on the right track and I’d like to see more emotion. Really feel what Romeo is feeling… Is Romeo really in love in this scene? How does he feel about being in love? Is he happy about it? Does it make him sad? Does it make him angry? Read over your lines, and try and find something in your life that helps you connect with how Romeo is feeling. It can be a memory or present-day feelings… Don’t hold back; Romeo is very dramatic, but he is also very nuanced!

  Mr. Tan

  • • •

  A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME…

  Help support the drama department’s costume fund by buying a rose for your Valentine! Roses will be on sale in the cafeteria at lunch hour every day this week.

  Cost: $2 a rose

  Show someone you care! Two colors available!

  Red Roses: True Love. Pink Roses: Secret Admirer

  All roses will be delivered on February 14th during sixth period.

  • • •

  February 7th

  Dear RJ,

  I’m going to talk to Kennedy at school tomorrow. Not just in class or in rehearsal, but at lunch or something. I’m going to do it. Something light and funny to remind her of how funny I am. I can’t decide if I should get her a rose for Valentine’s Day either. I think that maybe if I start just talking to her then maybe she will send me a rose! This is the first time on Valentine’s Day where Valentines count. In my elementary school we always had to give a Valentine to everyone in the class. Then everyone would count up their cards to see who got the most. Big reveal, RJ: it was never me. Somehow I never got as many as the other kids in my class, even though it was a rule that you had to give one to everyone. I guess not everyone played by the rules. I sure didn’t. I mean, I never gave one to Robbie or any of his friends. My mom made me write them out, and would keep track to make sure I did the whole class, but I threw out the ones for kids I didn’t like on my way to school. But this year they mean something! And you never know, RJ, maybe I’ll get a secret-admirer rose from someone!

  Ha! That would be awesome, but I doubt it. Kennedy doesn’t know that she loves me yet. I just like to pretend sometimes as if she does. It’s a lot easier than doing anything else. For example, right now, I should be writing my story for the competition. But I don’t feel like it. Every time I come home, I have these really great intentions to get something done, but it seems as though walking through the door sucks all the energy out of me to do anything. This weekend I
tried to get my dad to go to the movies with me, but he gave me money to go alone and said, “Not really feeling it, buddy.” I could have gone, but who goes to the movies by themselves? Instead I went to the wool store with Nicole and listened to her talk about dating with her friends who work there. It was so boring. Girl talk is so boring.

  And the whole time we were there I felt guilty for not writing. Nicole says that even when you’re procrastinating, you’re thinking about the project you’re putting off. But it’s not true.

  I think about anything but that.

  Yours truly,

  Arthur Bean

  • • •

  Peer Tutoring Program—Progress Report

  Session: February 9th

  Worked On: Romeo and Juliet

  Ms. W: Artie fixed my speling on a comic strip for the r&j journal mr t is making us keep. Like we didn’t have enuf homework…

  —Robbie

  Ms. Whitehead, it’s weird that Robbie can make a comic strip out of pretty much anything. Did you know that he can do that?

  —Arthur Bean

  • • •

  JUNIOR AUTHORS CONTEST

  REMINDER: All entries are due for the Junior Authors Contest on April 1st! Please submit your stories to your English teacher directly, or to the office. All stories must have a title page with your full name, your teacher’s name, and your class in the right-hand corner.

  Example:

  John Doe

  Mrs. Ireland

  Class 8B

  Good luck, everyone!

  • • •

  Hiya, Arthur,

  I’ve got an assignment for you, Romeo! Can you tap into your inner romantic, and cover the poetry reading for the paper? Mrs. Ireland’s eighth-grade English class will be performing their poems in the drama room, and it sounded like an event that’s right up your alley.

  Cheers!

  Mr. E.

  PS Why couldn’t the poet get a bank loan? Because he already “ode” too much!

  • • •

  February 12th

  Dear RJ,

  Another week gone, and still no story and no girlfriend. I was going to talk to Kennedy this week. I really was. But then I found the sequel to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy in the library so I read that over lunch hour sometimes, and then I was helping Mr. Everett with the newspaper layout a couple of times, and I had rehearsal and I have so many lines to learn! I mean, I really was going to do it, RJ. I really was! I was just so busy!

 

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