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The Real And The Make-believe
by
“I’m–afraid it’s no use. You don’t seem to get it.”
“What is it I don’t get?” roughly demanded the actor.
“You’re not genuine–either of you. You don’t seem to feel it.”
“Humph! We’re married!” said the star, so brutally that his wife flushed painfully. “I tell you I get all it’s possible to get out of the scene. You wrote it and you see a lot of imaginary values; but they’re not there. I’m no superman–no god! I can’t give you more than the part contains.”
“Look at it in this light,” Phillips argued, after a pause. “Diane is a married woman; she, too, is fighting a battle; she is restrained by every convention, every sense of right, every instinct of wifehood and womanhood. Now, then, you must sweep all that aside; your own fire must set her ablaze despite–“
“I? I must do all this?” mocked the other, furiously. “Why must I do it all? Make Norma play up to me. She underplays me all the time; she’s not in my key. That’s what’s the matter–and I’m damned tired of this everlasting criticism.”
There was a strained silence, during which the two men faced each other threateningly, and a panic seized the woman.
She managed to say, uncertainly: “Perhaps I–should play up to you, Irving.”
“On the contrary, I don’t think the fault is yours,” Phillips said, stiffly.
Again there was a dramatic silence, in which there was no element of the make-believe. It was the clash of two strong men who disliked each other intensely and whose masks were slipping. Neither they nor the leading woman detected a figure stealing out from the gloom, as if drawn by the magnetism of their anger.
“My fault, as usual,” Francis sneered. “Understand this, Phillips, my reputation means something to me, and I won’t be forced out of a good engagement by a–well, by you or by any other stage manager.”
Phillips saw that same fearful look leap into the woman’s eyes, and it checked his heated retort. “I don’t mean to find fault with you,” he declared, evenly. “I have the greatest respect for your ability as an actor, but–“
The star tossed his massive head in a peculiarly aggravating manner. “Perhaps you think you can play the part better than I?”
“Irving! Please!” breathed his wife.
“Show me how it should be done, if you feel it so strongly.”
“Thank you, I will,” Phillips answered, impulsively. “I’m not an actor, but I wrote this piece. What’s more, I lived it before I wrote it. It’s my own story, and I think I know how it should be played.”
Francis smiled mockingly. “Good!” said he; “I shall learn something.”
“Do you mind?” The author turned to the real Diane, and she shook her head, saying, uncertainly:
“It’s–very good of you.”
“Very well. If you will hold the manuscript, Mr. Francis, I’ll try to show what I feel the scene lacks. However, I don’t think I’ll need any prompting. Now, then, we’ll begin at John Danton’s entrance.”
With the mocking smile still upon his lips, Francis took the manuscript and seated himself upon the prompter’s table.
It was by no means remarkable that Henry Phillips should know something about acting, for he had long been a stage manager, and in emergencies he has assumed a good many divergent roles. He felt no self-consciousness, therefore, as he exchanged places with Francis; only an intense desire to prove his contentions. He nerved himself to an unusual effort, but before he had played more than a few moments he forgot the hostile husband and began to live the part of John Danton as he had lived it in the writing, as he invariably lived it every time he read the play or saw it acted.
Nor, as he had said, did he need prompting, for the lines were not the written speeches of another which had been impressed upon his brain by the mechanical process of repetition; they were his own thoughts expressed in the simplest terms he knew, and they came forth unbidden, hot, eager. Once he began to voice them he was seized by that same mighty current which had drawn them from him in the first place and left them strewn upon paper like driftwood after a flood. He had acted every part of his play; he had spoken every line many times in solitude; but this was the first time he had faced the real Diane. He found himself mastered by a fierce exultation; he forgot that he was acting or that the woman opposite him was playing a role of his creation; he began to live his true life for the first time since he had met the wife of Irving Francis. Clothed in the make-believe, the real Henry Phillips spoke freely, feelingly. His very voice changed in timbre, in quality; it became rich, alive; his eyes caressed the woman and stirred her to a new response.