The closest I ever came to being struck stupid when meeting
a real star was when I wangled a backstage interview with Sid Caesar. He was in
San Francisco
appearing onstage in LITTLE ME. I was a new stringer for the Fresno Bee and
the minute I walked into his dressing room I knew I was out of my league.
I pulled out my steno pad and fountain pen and promptly
dropped the pen. It rolled over to Caesar's chair. He picked it up and handed
it to me. I looked into the bluest eyes I had ever seen and was struck stupid.
I kept a death grip on my steno pad but didn't take a single
note the whole time. Every time I stumbled through a question, Caesar would
open his mouth and his "handler" would reply. Only once did Caesar
actually get a word in edgewise.
That’s a lesson I never forgot and I pass it on to anyone
who quakes at the prospect of appearing before an audience. What the great
comedian told the green reporter is as true as ever. The audience is not your
enemy. The audience is part of your presentation. Whether they know it or not,
the people behind those smiling faces want you to succeed. The interaction that
Caesar described is 99 percent of a successful program. With a little
preparation and practice you can handle the other one percent.
**Adapted from my post to the DorothyL list serv on Dec. 19,
2013, and my article in the SouthWest Sage of August, 2007.
**Photo scanned from a PR handout when I met Sid Caesar.
Loved this, Pat! How cool that you actually got to meet Sid Caesar, and I think his comment about audience participation is spot-on :-)
ReplyDeleteAlice, he was cool, and very kind to this hick from Fresno. I'm sure he wondered what I was doing there, and I wondered the same thing. LOL.
DeleteGreat advice about that audience being with you. It works unless the audience is made up of teens and you are a substitute teacher trying to get through the last class of the day.
ReplyDeleteWell, Carolyn, Caesar was an entertainer, not a teacher, and there's a world of difference -- or should be. lol
DeleteLoved your blog. Loved Sid.
ReplyDeleteHe was one of a kind. Thanks for stopping by.
ReplyDelete