There is a superstition that if an emptied theater is ever left
completely dark, a ghost will take up residence. To prevent this, a
single "ghost light" is left burning at center stage after the
audience and all of the actors and musicians have gone home. Frank
Rich's eloquent and moving boyhood memoir reveals how theater
itself became a ghost light and a beacon of security for a child
finding his way in a tumultuous world.
Rich grew up in the small-townish Washington,
D.C., of the 1950s and early '60s, a place where conformity seemed
the key to happiness for a young boy who always felt different.
When Rich was seven years old, his parents separated--at a time
when divorce was still tantamount to scandal--and thereafter he and
his younger sister were labeled "children from a broken home."
Bouncing from school to school and increasingly lonely, Rich became
terrified of the dark and the uncertainty of his future. But there
was one thing in his life that made him sublimely happy: the
Broadway theater.
Rich's parents were avid theatergoers, and in
happier times they would listen to the brand-new recordings of
South Pacific, Damn Yankees, and The Pajama Game over and over in
their living room. When his mother's remarriage brought about
turbulent changes, Rich took refuge in these same records,
re-creating the shows in his imagination, scene by scene. He
started collecting Playbills, studied fanatically the theater
listings in The New York Times and Variety, and cut out ads to
create his own miniature marquees. He never imagined that one day
he would be the Times's chief theater critic.
Eventually Rich found a second home at
Wash-ington's National Theatre, where as a teenager he was a
ticket-taker and was introduced not only to the backstage magic he
had dreamed of for so long but to a real-life cast of charismatic
and eccentric players who would become his mentors and friends.
With humor and eloquence, Rich tells the triumphant story of how
the aspirations of a stagestruck young boy became a lifeline,
propelling him toward the itinerant family of theater, whose
romantic denizens welcomed him into the colorful fringes of
Broadway during its last glamorous era.
Every once in a while, a grand spectacle comes
along that introduces its audiences to characters and scenes that
will resound in their memories long after the curtain has gone
down. Ghost Light, Frank Rich's beautifully crafted childhood
memoir, is just such an event.
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