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I had a premonition this performance would not end well. It wasn’t because this was an impossibly big-and-spectacular Easter production that my relatively small-and-homespun church had been rehearsing for months. And it wasn’t because there were two smoke machines in the tomb that kept malfunctioning and the feathers on the angel wings refused to remain glued. No. It was because there was a live animal in the cast – and as the director, it would fall to me to … well … direct it.
Hi.Larious.
As you well know, Ms. Fine, I think you should write a book of these stories, collected from across the country. Titled – “My God, Man, You Stabbed Me”* and Other Church Musical Disasters.”
Fantastic! My wife and I had tears from laughter.
What a wonderful story.
I agree with Songwriter. Please collect these stories. I’m picturing a small book that is passed along with love from one music director to the next.
Thank you for telling that story.
I would think that at least Flo would have discussed that this might be an inadvisable direction to go. One would assume she might know enough about animals and mules to know this was a very bad idea. But, it was very entertainingly told, and thank you for sharing it.
This conversation is part of our Group Writing Series under March’s theme of Feats of Strength. Maybe it should be repeated again next month, the theme of which will be The Course of Wisdom. If you have a story to share about strength, we still have a few openings on the calendar. Or you can sign up to share your tales of wisdom gained.
Oh, Lord. Funny.
Hadn’t you ever heard that mules are notorious for being stubborn? Good lord, how funny.
Yes, one would think Flo would have known – and I believe she did; I put the blame on Carl the deacon who apparently told her Buster would just be “part of the scene.” Btw, Flo did loan the church other critters from her farm for future productions – but we dressed her up in a Biblical robe (with glasses – which she refused to remove) and she always accompanied the animals on stage and kept them calm. We had all learned our lesson.
One of my fellow Brownie leaders was a Sunday school teacher at our small local Congregational church. Diane was the go-to person for arts and crafts for the kids. She was very talented.
One year she and her Sunday school kids made a paper mache cave for the church altar for Easter. It was magnificent. Then the kids crafted a big rock to put in front of it. At sunrise on Easter morning, the kids gathered at church to roll the rock away.
An awe-inspiring moment for the little church and its congregation.
Oh. My.
Talk about an ass on the stage.
True.
I’ve sometimes used the above photo as an avatar. Judy and I (you get to guess which is which) were sharing the stage, er street, with Michael Landon in Creighton, Nebraska on its 75th anniversary in 1959. Landon (Little Joe on Bonanza) was the Grand Marshall of the parade.
I seem to remember that at first she just took off and passed several other parts of the parade, and then turned down a side street.
Looks like you were fighting out of your weight class.
Wonderful. I’m thinking of getting a couple of donkeys (probably not American Mammoths) to put in with the sheep, for a couple of reasons. One is that dogs/coyotes are less likely to intrude; the other is that, at certain times of the year, I have some rather noisy neighbors, and our urban technique of putting the speakers by the window, turning the volume up, and blasting out Schubert Lieder at about 3AM doesn’t work so well when the nearest neighbor is 1/4 mile away. Donkeys at the bottom of the field, however . . .
Being me, I started my search with the rescue organizations, and was charmed to find “Save Your Ass” Rescue in New England. Probably too far away for me to travel, but I appreciate the sentiment on a number of levels.
Made me smile! (And think about Bottom in Midsummer.)
Burros can bray, too (as well as betray).
The church where my father was three miles north of Creighton, and had 40 acres of mostly pasture back from the days when the pastor would keep a milk cow and maybe some other livestock. A close look at the photo here will show that the pasture fence comes quite close to the back of the church. There was at least one church service during which Judy decided to bray away on the other side of the fence, close to the church. Some people may have been amused, and some were not.
This scene was close to one corner of the 40. At the other corner a neighboring farmer was working on the fence one day, not knowing that we had acquired a burro. Judy came up behind where he wasn’t looking. He told us he jumped pretty high when she started braying at him.
It was a great place to grow up. Besides the church you can see our house, and the old Lutheran school no longer used except for Saturday confirmation classes and summer Vacation Bible School, various outhouses from the days before the church got indoor plumbing, a garage, and a cob shed (for corn cobs, used to supplement the heat from the coal furnace). Down the hill towards the creek (every kid should have a creek to play in) is a small barn with hayloft, and a poultry shed where we sometimes kept a few chickens or some Muscovy ducks. The public school, an old, two-room building, was a quarter of a mile away, out of sight behind the church.
Judy was too stubborn to ever let me lead her across the creek, but she would cross it herself when she felt like it.
The betrayal came one day when I was out in the pasture, nearer the church, between Judy and the fence. We both walked along toward the house as she nonchalantly closed the distance between me and the fence. When I realized what she was doing I quick ducked under the bottom strand of barbed wire while I still could. I was quite disappointed that she would try to kill me.
Duplicate comment deleted
mule•skinner (also mule skinner) n. A muleteer, or one who drives mules.
The term skinner might be derived from the informal skin, or outsmart. In order to outsmart a mule, one must be smarter than the mule.
This is a higher bar than might be readily apparent.
Mules are smarter than horses, but then there are tree stumps are smarter than some horses.
That was priceless and so was @seawriter‘s comment! Happy Palm Sunday (to Buster too)!
Happy Palm Sunday to you (and everyone) too, FSC! Btw, I am happy to report that Buster is still alive (and kickin’!) and is enjoying his retirement in central Missouri.
Oh my gosh!! I nearly had to pick myself up off the floor!! This had me roaring:
Jesus was doing his best to remain astride the massive creature, but Buster was not prepared for his encounter with our twelve-member dance team. Every time Buster turned his head he was smacked with a palm; every time he tried backing up he was whacked on the backside with a spiky branch. His legs stiffened, his nostrils flared, and his ears went straight back. Jesus was attempting to dismount when a cymbal crashed in the orchestra. And with that, Buster had had enough.
Poor thing. [snicker]
Hysterical! Thanks for telling us the story!
@I.Am.Fine – I think you can win this Mark Twain House and Museum Humor Contest with this story!!
https://marktwainhouse.org/royal-nonesuch
Go for it – and any of our other Ricochet humorists!
Oh my. Thank you so much @frontseatcat. Gracious words – especially from such a fine writer. I’ve never considered myself much of a humorous author – more of a person to whom humorous things happen. I actually give full credit for this little frolic to Buster; this all falls under the you-can’t-make-this-up genre of literature.
And thank you for the link. If I get my courage up and enter and anything happens – you will be the first to know!
We, all of Ricochetti wants to know!