D Is for Drama

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Authors: Jo Whittemore

BOOK: D Is for Drama
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To my high school drama teachers,
who ALWAYS made me feel like a star

CONTENTS

Acknowledgments

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Always for God, family, and friends.

And for: my fabulous editor, Alyson Heller; my ever-supportive agent, Jenn Laughran; my irreplaceable critique partner, Cheryl Peevyhouse; and the Steeping Room teahouse staff, who put up with me every week and are as sweet as their desserts.

But especially for those who said “Go for it!” and talked me through it when I said I wanted to write a humorous book dealing with discrimination: Jessica Lee Anderson; Matt de la Peña; Bethany Hegedus; Kari Holt; Ellen Hopkins; Tricia Hoover; Varian Johnson; Jeanette Larson; Cynthia and Greg Leitich Smith; Cynthea Liu; April Lurie; Linda Sue Park; Cindy Pon; Michael Reisman; Don Tate; and Emma Virjan—you guys (and gals) rock my world!

ONE

T
HERE ARE A NUMBER OF
horrible ways to die at Carnegie Arts Academy. You could be crushed by a piece of falling scenery, strangled with piano wire, even kicked in the throat by an angry ballerina.

But the worst way to go would be under the daily stampede in the halls. To survive at CAA, you have to follow the crowd . . . literally.

When a swarm is on the move, it's either to reach something good (free ice cream in the caf) or to escape something bad (Jill Hudson practicing opera scales). You can usually guess the reason based on who's leading the charge, but there's always a voice in the crowd who shouts it for all to hear.

On the second Monday of January, mine was that voice.

“Play results are up!” I cried. “Know your fame or know your shame!”

The principal, who was leading a tour, pushed his group aside right before they were trampled.

“And
those
would be the ambitious students in our theater department,” he said, sounding annoyed.

I wasn't sure why. We'd skipped the sparklers this year, and his new wig looked
way
nicer than the old one. It was probably less flammable, too.

Plus, we had a good reason to be excited!

Every semester, CAA's theater department put on a major performance, and every spring, it was produced by the graduating class of eighth graders. This spring, the show was an updated version of
Mary Poppins
called
Mary Pops In
. And since there weren't a lot of female parts, I was beyond nervous.

CAA followed the unwritten rule of all drama departments since the dawn of time: Any theater production should star the same three or four kids each year. Always. Unless one of them dies.

Sadly, that never happened, so I remained a bit player, tackling such gripping roles as Girl in Crowd or Villager Number Three. One semester, I didn't even make it onstage. I just shouted from behind a curtain for background noise.

My parents were
so
proud.

In my defense, it wasn't that I lacked talent. Nobody at the academy had a louder voice, according to my teachers, and my best friend, Chase, assured me I was plenty dramatic. Not to mention, my mom had been a famous actress in Korean cinema. Theater was in my blood.

Yet
my
name, Sunny Kim, always fell somewhere on the bottom of the casting sheet. And when the playbill came out, I was listed under Extras, like an unpopular topping on a sundae menu.

I was the shredded coconut of the theater world.

So why was I excited about audition results this time? For starters, my friend Ilana was on the selection committee. She thought I was a good actress
and
she would keep things fair . . . unlike last year's committee.

(I burped
once
during a death scene. Like nobody has gas at a funeral.)

But this year, besides having Ilana on my side, my acting coach, Stefan, said I'd nailed my audition. It was just a matter of finding out which starring role was mine.

I sprinted toward the theater with students tussling and shoving behind me, and more joined the stampede, including Bree Hill. She and I grinned at each other, and Bree shouted something to me.

I couldn't hear her, partly because of the crowd, but mostly because of Bree's soft voice. Her shouting isn't much louder than the squeak a hamster makes when you accidentally tap-dance on it.

But Bree doesn't need volume to be a great actress. She has poise and confidence and a way of really stepping into character. I know because she and I have been audition buddies since we started at CAA. And like me, she never gets the big parts.

I leaned closer, and she shouted again.

“I'm so excited!” she said. “I'd love to be Mary Poppins . . . or even Jane Banks!” She raised her pinky and I hooked it with mine.

“I know!” I shouted back. “As long as I don't end up in the potato sack, I'll take any speaking role!”

The potato sack wasn't a theater term. It was
literally
a potato sack that had been my costume as Villager Number Three. While the main cast wore professionally tailored costumes, the ones for bit players were cheap, homemade, and badly sewn.

Bree smiled sympathetically. “You'll get something
great
. Suresh and I both think you rocked the auditions.” Suresh was Bree's boyfriend and another member of the theater crowd. He always wound up with slightly better
parts since he was a natural at dance numbers, but he still wasn't a Chosen One.

“Thanks,” I told Bree. “Maybe lucky audition five will be the winner!”

Instead of answering she squeezed my arm and pointed at the bulletin board outside the auditorium. A sheet of yellow paper was pinned to the cork . . . a sheet that hadn't been there Friday.

Bree and I both dashed forward. The other students pressed up behind us as everyone struggled to find their names on the top of the list.

“Mary Poppins, Mary Poppins, Mary Poppins,” Bree chanted over and over. Her finger settled on the name, but before I could see what was written beside it, a tall, redheaded guy stepped in my line of sight.

“Chase!” I bent from side to side, trying to see around him.

“Hey! What part did you get?” he asked.

“I don't know.” I pushed him aside. “Bree! What's it say?”

Bree turned to look back at me, her expression one of sheer disappointment. “Sunny, you—”

I didn't need her to finish that sentence. The look on her face, the “S” I could clearly see her pointing at . . . I gasped and dug my nails into my cheeks.

I was Mary Poppins!

My excited shriek sounded far and wide, much to the annoyance of the kid standing beside me. With an apologetic smile, I reached for my cell phone to snap a pic of the casting sheet. Photo number one in my dust-covered album of success!

“Sunny?” Bree tapped me on the shoulder.

I shooed her away while I pulled up the camera feature on my phone. “Pay attention, people!” I bellowed to the crowd. “Something amazing has happened!”

“You've learned violence isn't the answer?” asked Chase.

I punched him and held my phone up to the bulletin board, trying to pick the best angle for my victory photo.

“Sunny . . .” Bree tugged on my arm.

“Oh! Take my picture!” I thrust the phone at her and stood against the wall, reaching up to point at Mary Poppins. “I want to . . . uh . . .”

I paused and leaned back to study the board. Now that I was closer, something seemed off. “Wait,” I said, frowning. “Sunny isn't spelled S-a-r-a.”

I turned to Bree, whose crushed expression had returned.

“That's what I was trying to tell you,” she said, her voice quieter than usual. “Neither of us got it.”

“Oh,” I said. The joy that had been bubbling inside me was rapidly cooling to a sludge of shame. “Well, maybe . . .”

I searched the board for my name, hoping, praying for something almost as good. But I wasn't Jane Banks. Or Mrs. Banks. Or Mr. Banks. The sludge in my stomach thickened to a hard lump. My eyes scanned down, down,
down
the list and finally spotted my name at the bottom.

Sunny Kim . . . Villager Number Two.

I stared at the bulletin board, willing it to rearrange the letters into something else. Or to explode into a billion pieces.

Even with a friend on the selection committee, I couldn't get better than an extra. Was I really that bad?

Chase bumped against me. “All right! Villager Number Two!”

I gave him a pained expression. “I thought I was Mary!”

His forehead wrinkled. “Married? I guess you could be
Mrs.
Villager Number Two.”

I stared at him. “
Mary!
As in Mary Poppins?”

“Ohhh.” Chase's confused expression turned into a frown. “I'm sorry, Sunny.” He put an arm around me.

“Thanks,” I said. “What part did
you
get?”

Chase stiffened. “Nothing.”

“What?”

“No one,” he tried again, stepping away. “Definitely not the male lead.”

I rolled my eyes and glanced at the casting sheet. He was Bert the Chimney Sweep, Mary Poppins's quasi-boyfriend.

Of course.

Chase
was
one of the Chosen Ones, partly because of his talent and partly because of his scruffy red hair and green eyes. He was pretty cute, and girls willingly forked over allowance to see “pretty cute.”

“Awww, think of it this way.” He put an arm around my shoulder. “At least you're not Villager Number
Three
!”

I took his face in my hands and smiled sweetly at him. “Hold very still. I'm going to headbutt you.”

“Not his nose,” murmured Bree, who was still staring at the bulletin board. “That's our moneymaker.”

Chase pulled my hands away. “All I'm saying is that this role is an improvement.”

“But I wanted a
lead
!” I groaned in annoyance and joined Bree. “This is so lame.” I flicked the casting sheet with my fingers. “Sara doesn't even
like
being onstage. And the first time she tries out,
she
gets the spotlight?”

“Maybe she has natural talent,” said Bree.

I shook my head. “Remember when she read
Macbeth
in class? I thought Shakespeare was going to dig himself up and smack her with the shovel.”

“I don't think Shakespeare was buried with a shovel,” said Chase.

“My point,” I said, giving him a look, “is that the casting is always wrong and always unfair. I'm Villager Number Two, Bree's the . . .” I looked closer at the sheet.

“Village whisperer,” she supplied.

“You see?!” I threw my hands in the air. “And we're not the only ones in ridiculous roles.” I rattled off names as I scanned the rest of the audition results. “Suresh is a backup dancing chimney sweep, Anne Marie's the pigeon lady in the park, Wendy Baker's Villager Number One . . .” I paused. “How come she gets to be Number One?”

“I think because she's actually British,” said Bree.

I frowned. “But she doesn't even
like
tea.”

“Focus, Sunny,” said Chase, eyeing the clock on the wall. “I've got five minutes before baseball practice.”

CAA didn't have an athletics program, but Chase's dad wanted him to have a “sensible hobby” to balance “this acting nonsense.” So Chase pitched for an intramural baseball team. He wasn't bad, either.

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