My Blog

Welcome to my blog. Please read about my “ah-ha” moments as an author and how actors and directors of many different stripes work together to put on a play.

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E-Interview – December 10th,  2012

I enjoyed an interview with Cynthia Leitich Smith on her site Cynsations. Cynthia is a New York Times & Publishers Weekly bestselling author of critically acclaimed fiction for young readers.

New Voice: Hillary Hall De Baun on Starring Arabelle

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All The Book’s a Stage – September 19th, 2012

My blog entry “All The Book’s A Stage” went live on September 17th over on the EerdWord site and is now archived here.

“All the Book’s a Stage” by Hillary Hall De Baun

September 17, 2012

Hillary Hall De Baun

In this post, author Hillary Hall De Baun reflects on how her years of participating in amateur theater productions helped her breathe life into the characters of her first novel, Starring Arabelle, and she looks at a few of the unexpected  ways in which the worlds of “the stage” and “the page” seem to parallel one another.  

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For many years, amateur theater was a regular and significant part of my life, and memories of life on the stage served as the inspiration for my debut novel Starring Arabelle, which centers around a high school play. To write into my broad cast of characters the vibrancy they deserved, I had to relive my own past experiences with directors and actors.

I was a little older than freshman Arabelle Archer — the irrepressible lead character in Starring Arabelle — when I acted in my first play. My first role came my junior year in high school, as I recall. It was a terrible play, the title of which I’ve long forgotten. But I do remember the play’s director, a coach given to using sarcasm and put-down to get the best out of his hockey players.  This caustic approach didn’t work so well on his actors, though. We lived in terror of his tongue and cringed when he corrected our many mistakes in a thundering voice.

Since then, I’ve encountered different styles of directingThe gruff-but-likeable Mr. Zee in Starring Arabelle barks instruction to his actors from the house seats, but he later provides a calm and thoughtful critique that brings out the best in his players. This is my favorite style.

Most dispiriting is the director who dictates the precise delivery of every spoken line and emotion down to the last heartrending sob. He’s apt to jump up on stage in the middle of rehearsal and assume an actor’s role, insisting, “This is how it’s done! Not the way you’re doing it!”

Then there’s the director who wants her actors to “feel” their way into their parts, to dig down to the emotional core of the characters they’re playing. If an actor is playing the part of an old, downtrodden character, this director might say, “Imagine a dog, a starving dog, now imagine the dog is human, imagine the dog is you,” and so forth. These exercises might be repeated week after week in workshop until the actor achieves the emotional truth that the part requires.

I’ve never personally encountered a “murmuring” director, but I know they exist. George S. Kaufman, co-writer with Moss Hart of You Can’t Take It With You, the play featured in Starring Arabelle, directed his actors in an undertone. Finely attuned to their sensibilities, Kaufman would take them aside and suggest in a whisper how to improve their performance. No one else got to hear what he said.

Directors aren’t the only colorful characters in theater, though. There are also the actors. Ah, the actors. They make up as varied a group as you’ll find anywhere: the ad-libbers, the spotlight-seekers, the line-forgetters, and the melodrama queens and kings.

Starring Arabelle

In Starring Arabelle, Bonnie Atwood ad libs wildly, which throws everyone on stage off balance. A serial ad-libber can stop a play dead in its tracks. The prompter, who quickly loses his place in the script, has little effect.

Spotlight-seekers are like moths. No matter where they’ve been told to stand, they somehow gravitate to the brightest lit spot on stage. Getting them to budge is like moving a three-hundred-pound defensive tackle.

In every play I was ever in, there were actors who simply couldn’t learn their lines. I remember one who planted little crib notes all over the set — on tables, in ashtrays, on the floor, on the front of another actor. One time, when the crib notes mysteriously disappeared between acts, the panicked actor had to rely on his fellow actors to feed him entire speeches. Like Camille Becker in Starring Arabelle, actors usually know each other’s lines.

Then there are the actors who thrive on melodrama. They never say a line straight if they can turn it into an Academy Award performance. In the book, my heroine Arabelle is such an actor, trying desperately to prove herself by over dramatizing — and she bombs until she learns to tame her own exuberance.

Somehow, in the end, despite their many different approaches to directing a play and acting in one, despite the clash of egos on stage and the histrionics off stage, the director and the cast come together in a miraculous display of teamwork. The play’s the glue that binds them together.

My amateur theater days are long gone. Writing books for young readers has taken center stage in my life now. Yet do you, like me, see the parallels between the theater world and the book world? I see you shaking your head. But consider this. In the book world, editors (directors) point writers (actors) in the direction that will make their book (a play) better and help place it into the hands and hearts of readers everywhere (an extended run).

In the end, as in the theater world, the writer and the editor unite in a common effort. The book is the glue that binds us together.

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First Reader and First Reviewer – September 3rd,  2012

Alice is twelve and lives in Charlottesville Virginia, and received one of my advanced reader copies (ARC) of Starring Arabelle.

“I loved Starring Arabelle, it’s a great book with a lot of fun characters. I especially liked Mr. Zee (the drama teacher) because he comes across as such a tough guy but with a kind heart. The parts where Arabelle tries to help Mr. Wexler were really good too. I’m looking forward to Mrs. De Baun’s next book!” 

Alice, first reader

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Photos – May 2012

Here’s a quick glimpse of the cover and inside page of the advanced reading copy of Starring Arabelle. I’ll have more to share as it becomes available.

starring_arabelle_arc_cover
Starring Arabelle (ARC)
Starring Arabelle (ARC) inside page


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Book Signing – September 29th,  2012

I had a great book signing session at the Barnes and Noble here in Hingham Massachusetts.


____________________________________________________________________ Starring Arabelle Book Signing  – December 15th,  2012

I had a wonderful book signing, at the Charlottesville Barnes and Noble.