Ava takes a seat as I tell her that I agree.
“It’s like this intimate peek at life through all these details, and that’s part of why the sets are so important, even more important than they are in other films, because so much of how the characters see the world is through these small objects and observations that other people wouldn’t make.”
“This looks good,” Charlotte says, and when I join her behind the camera I discover that “good” is an understatement. Maybe she is talking about the lighting and the framing of Ava’s face, but as Ava goes over her lines I find myself captivated. Some people who are great looking in real life just don’t look right on-screen. The attractiveness doesn’t translate. But Ava looks even more beautiful through the camera. Even without makeup, even though she isn’t aware of us at the moment as she turns the pages of the screenplay, she is luminous.
But the question hovers over the room: Can she act?
“Should we run through it?” I ask her.
“We can record it a few times, right?”
“Sure,” Charlotte says.
“Then let’s just start. I practiced a lot today and I just want to dive in. If that’s okay.”
“Yeah, that’s fine,” I tell her. “I’ll read George’s lines from over here. And when you look up, look toward me instead of directly into the camera.”
She takes a deep breath. She sets the screenplay in her lap. “I’m ready.”
Charlotte presses a button and the red light of the camera begins to flash. She nods at Ava.
“My name is Ava Garden Wilder and I am reading for the part of Juniper.”
She shifts in Toby’s orange chair and sits a little straighter. She glances at the screenplay. Closes her eyes. Opens them again.
She begins.
JUNIPER
Listen. I don’t think it’s stupid. I think that sometimes people want something so much that they manifest it. Or at least they try to.
GEORGE
That’s kind of you.
JUNIPER
No. It’s not kind of me. It’s just what I think.
(Pause)
Okay. I’m going to tell you about this thing that happened to me once. I’ve never told anybody.
GEORGE
All right.
JUNIPER
This was, like, two years ago. I was taking Botany 101 and we were studying Ranunculaceae and I was obsessed with them. Like, they were all I ever wanted to look at. And I was walking home, up Divisidero to my shitty little rented room, and I passed a flower stand, and there was a bouquet of them. Really gorgeous ones. They weren’t cheap and I was almost broke. It was a choice between dinner and flowers and I chose flowers because it was a dark time in my life and my room was hideous and my heart was broken and I needed something beautiful. The florist was an immigrant, probably in her thirties, and her English wasn’t great. I told her I wanted the flowers and she nodded and said something to me that I didn’t understand. And then she said, “I love you, okay?”
GEORGE
Really?
JUNIPER
Yes. And she repeated it. “I love you, okay?” she said. And this thing happened. I suddenly got the sense that everything was going to be okay, that I was going to be okay. It might have felt to me like the world was crumbling. I may have been totally alone and broke and doomed in all my relationships, but this could happen. This florist could see something in me that would make her profess this. I didn’t have to understand where it was coming from; I could just accept it. So I said, “Thank you.” And I smiled at her. And she looked confused for half a second but the confusion passed and she took the flowers and wrapped them up and I gave her the money. She said good-bye, and I thought, How amazing. To tell me she loved me and then just go on with her job.
GEORGE
That’s a great story. Nothing embarrassing about it.
JUNIPER
I’m not finished. I started walking home. It was raining by then and I kept thinking about the florist. I wondered what country she was from, how long her journey to California had been, who she left behind and who she took with her. For once, the rain wasn’t cold and the panhandlers weren’t begging. I stopped and looked at myself in the reflection of a café. I remember thinking that I looked like the kind of person I would want to know if I just happened to meet myself. That might not sound like a big deal to you, but . . .
GEORGE
No. I understand how that could be a big deal.
JUNIPER
Suddenly, everything was so pretty. The rain, the shiny sidewalks, the downtown skyline. And especially my ranunculus. I lifted them up to see them.
(Pause)
They were wrapped in this terrible tissue paper with tacky pink cursive that said “I love you” all over it.
GEORGE
(Softly)
Oh.
JUNIPER
Yeah. She hadn’t been asking my permission to love me. She had just assumed that the ranunculus were a gift for someone I loved. And who, presumably, loved me, too.
GEORGE
So what did you do?
JUNIPER
(Pause)
I threw them away.
Everything Leads to You
Nina LaCour's books
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