Twice A Pedro Pan From Memoir, A Dot In Time
For all the Pedro Panes I know and for all those I'll never know.
I sat in a chair at the
circle of twelve people in the room that held acting and dancing classes. I
waited for him to call me while something rattled within me. Would I be next?
I could hear the voices of the others taking
the class. Some whispered, some muttered. A mixed group of different ages and
races. Most fidgeted. I sat quietly, staring at one of the windows at the top of the front wall of the
room. This was my third acting class and my eyes always seemed to go to the
same comforting object standing regal out the window when I waited for the
teacher to give us the next instruction. A very tall royal palm tree. An icon
from my past.
I heard another name
called and it wasn't mine. I glanced at our instructor, his white T-shirt
creating a beautiful contrast with his ebony black skin. I smiled. He appeared
to be the only one relaxed. Not us. We had learned to expect the unexpected in
the class. Those impromptu assignments he sprung up for us to think through
fast.
"Amarilys." I
saw the young fellow leaving the seat in front of our instructor and the
teacher motion for me to come and sit. I plunked down on the cold metal chair
and he smiled. That smile had a dance going with his eyes. I felt pulled right
into it and for a moment that magic chased my nerves away.
"Finished the
first part? The assignment for this week?" He drew his hand to the pad
ready to write. "What part then?"
"A Pedro
Pan. I'm going to be a Pedro Pan
child."
He looked up from his
pad. His eyebrows furrowed. "You said that's how you came here?"
I nodded.
He placed his pen down
on the pad. "You sure?"
I bit my lower lip and
nodded.
"Why?" He
looked at me and gave me another of those smiles.
I pressed my lips
together and sighed. I felt my throat tightening.
"Never mind,"
he said. "I'll help you." He started to write.
"Here. To write
the part. Consider what I've written." He turned the pad around.
"Read it."
"Number one: The
moment before. Number two: The moment after." It was my turn to furrow my
brow. "What do you mean?"
"Your assignment
is to write a character in a short scene, right?"
"Yes?"
"While you write
it hold close the moment the character experienced before the scene. And, hold
close the moment the character experienced after the scene. Understand?"
The room was filled
with silence. The group had heard what the instructor spoke and knew something
of value had been said.
"Write your character. Remember, the
character has to want something. What is it? And, then, write dialogue. The
whole scene. Not long. Just strong. Bring it to class next week. Any prop that
will help you, bring. I'll read it and then feed you lines. They'll draw the
character out." He did that dance with the eyes and mouth again.
"I'll help you."
Every day that week I labored on the
assignment. I wrote the character, a nine year old girl leaving in a Pedro Pan flight from Cuba with her five year old sister. What did
she want? To stay close to her sister. What was the character to perform? The
nine year old communicating to authorities receiving her that she wants to stay
with her sister.
I wrote
the scene holding fast the moment before it. The moment both girls found
themselves in the airplane alone without their parents. A scene I once lived. I
wrote the scene holding close the moment after the scene I would perform. The moment
the older girl was separated from her sister ... a picture that unraveled in me all kinds of
tearing emotions. Why was I attempting this? Would I fall apart performing the
part in a wrong way? Would I numb myself to the pain of the character to
protect myself and not do justice to the acting?
The next week our
instructor called out for volunteers to act out their character in the scene
written. I held to my prop, an empty cigar
box, like the one I brought from Cuba, with one hand, and raised the other high
... "Me!"
I stood before the
instructor, clasping my invisible little sister's hand with my one hand and
holding tightly to the cigar box with the other, ready to play the Pedro Pan, Maria del Carmen.
"Your name?"
"Nombre? Maria del Carmen."
"Ah, you speak
English."
I swayed slowly from
side to side, swinging the hand of my little sister. Looking down, back and
forth, to my little sister. "Sí,
Jes! Un poquito. Mi hermana, sis-ter, con me, sí?
"What's your sister's name?"
"Liliana.
Lili." I swayed my body faster, side to side. "Lili, conmigo. Me." I pushed the cigar
box against me. Hitting my chest. "Juntas. To-ge-ther." I kept
looking at my little sister. "Sí, Lili? Junticas siempre. Sí, Señor?"
The instructor shook
his head. "No. So sorry."
Tears rolled down my
face. "No, señor. Ay." I looked down at my little
sister. "Ay, no. Lili." I
swayed faster and faster and pulled my little sister to my side. "Ay, no,no.Mami!,Papi." I sobbed.
Then ...
I wiped my face and
bowed my head. For an instant I felt a lifting of a weight from my heart. I
knew why I had to write and play that
part. They were out there and in some way writing and playing the part had
connected me with them. The Pedro Panes
I would never know.
The Instructor
whispered. "Well done, Amarilys."
I wiped away more
tears.
"We'll take a
break now," he said.
Chairs screeched as
people got up to take the break outside. A lady stayed behind.
"That was brutal.
I had to turn away or lose it. How could you act like that?"
I dug a Kleenex out of
my pocketbook, blew my nose, and smiled. "I wasn't acting."
"What?"
"I was a Pedro Pan child."
She shook her head.
"Really?"
I nodded. Her arms went
around me. "I'm sorry," she said.
After a few minutes the
lady left. I sat on a chair facing the high windows on the front wall. I fixed
my sight out the window at an object. An icon from my past.
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