Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Jiggety Ever After


“Everything will be all right in the end… If it’s not all right
then it’s not the end.”
~ Sonny in The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

Everybody loves a happy ending. Come on, admit it  you know it’s true.
Shakespeare knew it, too.
Sure, he wrote a bunch of tragedies  about a dozen of them, in fact.
And hmmmm… let’s see, the body count ranges from one to four in the final scene for most.
I've recently had the opportunity to see one of them  Julius Caesar. Now, that’s a bloody mess if ever there was one! And when all was said and done, the play ended with one body and a blackout of the stage lights.
Whoa.
That’s what it felt like…
Whoa.
However, back in Shakespeare’s day, things were done a little differently. In the Globe, where most of his plays were premiered, there was no curtain to close and no fancy blackouts, so those final scenes were nothing but slaughter on the stage.
What to do? What to do?
The answer 
A jig!
Yes, jig… as in lively, happy dance!
If I had experienced Julius Caesar at the Globe, Brutus would have leaped up and danced a merry jig with Antony and Octavius. Romeo and Juliet would have done the same. And all four bodies from Hamlet would have resurrected in a jolly way to the sounds of a happy tune.
And so, whenever a play ended  no matter how gory  the audience smiled! The audience laughed! The audience clapped and danced along!
What’s more 
The audience went home happy…
and more than willing to return
to shell out shillings for another good time.

You were a shrewd one, Willy… wickedly shrewd.

PROMPT: Create a happy ending today. Perhaps you could rewrite a few tragedies just for a bit of cheery fun. However, if you wish to keep your blue funk, then I suggest you learn to jig. Remember bawling your eyes out to Toy Story 3? Well, err… maybe that was just me. Anyway, I’m sure you remember Jessie and Spanish-mode Buzz’s paso doble to Hay Un Amigo En Mi during the end credits. Well, that is what dried my tears and sent me home smiling.
Trust me, the jig still works.

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