By Heart
By Heart
Some
plays are so successful that they run for years on end, in many ways, this is
unfortunate for the poor actors who are required to go on repeating the same
lines night after night. One would expect them to know their parts by heart and
never have cause to falter. Yet this is not always the case. A famous actor in
a highly successful play was once cast in the role of an aristocrat who had
been imprisoned in the Bastille for twenty years. In the last act, a jailer
would always come on to the stage with a letter which he would hand to the
prisoner. Even though the noble was expected to read the letter at each
performance, he always insisted that it should be written out in full.
One
night, the jailer decided to play a joke on his colleague to find out if, after
so many performances, he had managed to learn the contents of the letter by
heart. The curtain went up on the final act of the play and revealed the
aristocrat sitting alone behind bars in his dark cell. Just then, the jailer
appeared with the precious letter in his bands. He entered the cell and
presented the letter to the aristocrat. But the copy he gave him had not been
written out in full as usual. It was simply a blank sheet of paper. The jailer
looked on eagerly, anxious to see if his fellow actor had, at last, learned his
lines. The noble stared at the blank sheet of paper for a few seconds. Then,
squinting his eyes, he said: 'The light is dim. Read the letter to me'. And he
promptly handed the sheet of paper to the jailer. Finding that he could not
remember a word of the letter either, the gaoler replied: 'the light is indeed
dim, sire, I must get my glasses.' With this, he hurried off the stage. Much to
the aristocrat's amusement, the jailer returned a few moments later with a pair
of glasses and the usual copy of the letter which he proceeded to read to the
prisoner.
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