Friday 26 August 2016

Getting Ready to Publish - “Hen Party 1 (The First Novella)”.


With a mixture of nervousness and excitement, I’ve been getting my first romance novella ready for publishing. I’ve spent the last month teaching myself how to make a kindle book for Amazon. The hardest bits have been writing a blurb (book description), understanding what keywords really mean, and formatting my manuscript to kindle guidelines. 

I thought I would offer readers a choice of short novella format, ideal for smartphones, or later on, one complete story for kindles and other devices.
I plan to publish each novella once the editing is finished. By the end of 2017, Hen Party should be one, big long book about a girls’ night out that leads to a romance with unexpected consequences.
 
Hen Party is a contemporary story that thumped me on the head and demanded to be written. I was busy writing romance in the Victorian Age where I like to compose a little bit of poetry, and research classical mythology. I resisted writing Hen Party until the flow of words stopped in my Victorian romance, and I was writing nothing at all. I was held to ransom by the party girl muses.

Eventually, I agreed to write their story. They led me astray. I was shocked by their antics. I laughed. I shed a few tears over the heroine’s troubles. I couldn’t believe the story was coming out of my mind! It was a crazy detour from the writing path I’d chosen.   

My hope is for Hen Party to entertain readers. Give them a laugh or two. Feel-good, smile. Readers might roll their eyes at the party goings-on. Love follows a rocky course, but in the end, the cast of characters have their hearts in the right place.

Next week I’ll be posting my Father’s Day tribute, and then the following week starts my September Romance Reader and Writer posts on the Blogger. So next month, I’ll post the Hen Party book cover and blurb and write about any news that comes in.

Have a fun weekend!
Ashlyn

Friday 19 August 2016

Movie - "Absolutely Fabulous"



Last weekend, I went to see the crazy ladies from “Absolutely Fabulous” at the cinema.

When the movie opened, I was charmed by Edina’s Edwardian-like, big hat with ostrich feathers. When she tumbled out of the car backwards and landed on the ground, I was cast back to the 1990’s world of television’s eccentric Brit fashionistas.

The big Edwardian hat. Source: http://screenscoop.com

As a fan of Ab Fab, the movie succeeded in revisiting the 90's world of PR for pop stars, supermodels and high fashion. Maybe 60 famous people played cameo roles in the movie. My companion asked me what PR (Public Relations) stood for. A social media account manager might be the 21st Century’s PR person.

TV's AB FAB source: https://fr.pinterest.com


Edina & Patsy - Finest Television Moments



The movie served up the chaos that Ab Fab is known for.
Feminine humor. Edina and Patsy enjoy laughing at themselves as much as anyone else.
Getting old is bad, but these 2 ladies are not boring old farts.
Getting fatter is badder.
And a friendship between two characters that lives on and on…despite children, mothers, men, a shortage of money and jobs.

https://www.comedy.co.uk/
So what comes next for Edina & Patsy besides being “trollyed on twitter”?
Ab Fab in the 21st Century?
Yes please!

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
The Movie Synopsis…


Appropriate for their big screen debut, Edina Monsoon and Patsy Stone (Jennifer Saunders and Joanna Lumley) are still oozing glitz and glamour, living the high life they are accustomed to; shopping, drinking and clubbing their way around London’s trendiest hotspots. But when they accidentally push Kate Moss into the river Thames at an uber fashionable launch party, Eddy and Patsy become entangled in a media storm surrounding the supermodel’s untimely demise and are relentlessly pursued by the paparazzi. Fleeing penniless to the glamorous playground of the super-rich, the French Riviera, they hatch a plan to make their escape permanent and live the high life forever more!


The Movie Trailer


Have a fabulous weekend!

Ashlyn

Friday 12 August 2016

The Dance Show





Last weekend marked my nerve-racking return to amateur performing after a ten year break. I thought I would share with you a few highlights from the dance show.

From the beginning…
There I stood in the black-curtained wings of the small theater, waiting for the music to start for the opening dance act, which was a gypsy tribal fusion routine with the whole troupe. Old stage lore suggests that if the opening act sinks with the audience, then you lose them and it’s hard to get back their interest. Personally, there was a lot at stake for me, I didn’t know if I had the ability to perform again, and I still wasn’t sure why I’d agreed to be part of the show.

As I listened intently, my legs went rubbery. I knew there was a chance when I set foot on the stage, and spotted the audience, nerves could change everything. My legs could turn into stiff, lead weights. My mind could go blank and forget the choreography.

The music played. I walked on wearing a tribal fusion bra, black top and body stocking, big purple and black tie-dyed cotton skirt and hip belt. I gazed at the audience until the bright stage lights hit my eyes and then all I could see were the people sitting in the front row of seats. 

I hand-sewed the decoration on these 2 tribal fusion bras for myself & another dancer
Adrenaline rushed through me. I turned in a circle as part of a presentation of each dancer to the audience. The moment of panic arrived and I did want to walk off the stage again. I forced myself to keep going and take my position in the semi-circle of women.

Then I waited for the tribal style cue from the leader to invite me out of the group line-up to perform some individual moves. Yep, the leader changed her sequence and I didn’t know when I was supposed to come out. All I could do was trust and wait until she made eye contact. Eventually the leader gave me the visual cue, I stepped forward to do the tribal moves, and I made some mistakes with my hand movements. Afterwards, with relief, I moved backward into the semi-circle to blend in with the troupe and continue the dance. 

tie-dyed tribal skirts and hip belt
The next routine was a flamenco tribal fusion dance which I loved. We’d wore two ruffled full skirts for the opening act. Now we had less than 5 minutes in the stage wings to take off the outer skirt, fix the hems and waistlines of our colorful chiffon skirts, before we walked back onstage.

I stood in the front row with my long-term dancing friend. She’d plucked me from the back row of dancers in rehearsals where I was comfortable and ordered me to dance beside her.  She made me feel like we were doing the flamenco-ish dance together and relying on each other to pull through the choreography. I hadn’t danced with my friend for over ten years, and yet she still believed in me as a dancer. Again, I made some minor mistakes in the dance. 

red chiffon and satin skirts with brass coin belt
Many mistakes were confessed in the dressing room, and the audience and organizers didn’t seem too worried about them. The troupe hadn’t performed a stage show for a few years and the night was also their comeback. Perfection wasn’t expected, the troupe leaders wanted to give the women of mixed ages, the experience of stage dancing to develop the troupe.

Further into the show, I did a duet with my friend. It was a Spanish style dance that was set in a desert. We wore a cropped top and a full, ruffled skirt. My costume was greens and blues—the colors of the ocean.

I wasn’t fully confident with the choreography, and I danced a step behind my friend so I could see her moves. There were several times when we both drew a mental blank with the choreography. She improvised, and I followed her. In the moments when we made eye contact, our eyes were big and round because we both knew we had lost the steps. We danced on regardless. At the end of the dance, she caught me by surprise and gave me a big hug on stage. No matter what had happened, we got through the dance together. I hugged her back. It was our way of saying thanks to each other.

The show continued and we danced across several genres and styles of music. I learned more about myself with each dance. When I’d last performed, a decade ago, the mind-set instilled in us, was to dance for the enjoyment of the audience. Over the years that have passed, I’ve become older and more introverted. Lurking in the back row of dancers, and without an audience watching is my preferred state. Why am I even dancing at all?

My dancing sword (it's blunt) and thanks to my child's friend for acting as a model for the sword and bras (he's a cool young man)
I have a passion for dancing. Dancing is a movement of energy, an expression of emotion, fun to do and good for health. While I was performing in the show, threads of invisible energy connected me with the other women. We were nervous and unsure together. There was friendship and camaraderie. We made mistakes. Empathy and support was shared. The women generously lent me costumes for every dance I did. All of these intangible things were what I liked most about performing.

The dance show was a break from communicating with words as a writer. Dancing is communication through movement and body language. The show took me right out of my comfort zone to look within at the sort of dancer I had become.


I don’t need an audience. I need to feel the music pass through me and express my emotions to it. Dance barefooted with flowers in my hair. Wear a velvet top in a jewel color with floaty sleeves. Whirl, with a big full skirt. Center the dance from my hips and ripple out waves of energy. My hands and arms to convey a feminine language of grace and beauty that I’m still learning about. I want to let go of the anxiety and enjoy the company of the troupe, beside me and all around me.

All those years ago, when I used to complain about my own dancing and body imperfections, a different old dancing friend, Christine, used to say to me, “You are the dance, don’t let the dance do you.” (they were words inspired by Gabrielle Roth)

Have a happy weekend doing what you love.
Ashlyn

Friday 5 August 2016

Gone Dancing




Hello friends,

Tonight, I have a technical rehearsal at a local theater for a dancing show we're performing on Saturday evening. My nerves are jumping around like a kangaroo and I’m too scatter-brained to write a post. So I’ll be back on the blogger next week. Maybe with some dancing news, that’s if I don’t make a great gallah of myself on stage. It's my first time after a 10 year break.

I hope you can drop by again.
‘ave a good weekend,
as the Aussies say.

Ashlyn