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Erik: What has your passion for the performing arts taught you about the power of preparation?
Simon: There is something magical about somebody, an artist, who is willing to put himself out
there, to share with am audience, to share with the world, something that they have created.
And there is the very high possibility of failure, that it won’t be good. And if any
component doesn’t work it can affect the thing as a whole. Um, preparation is interesting.
I’m a great believer in process, to a degree. Which is – you have to be good at what you’re
doing, and you have to understand your own discipline and have a technical grounding,
but that’s not where it ends. I think where passion matters is on the bookends. You know,
people start things because they’re passionate, you know? “I was passionate about this so
I decided to start my own business,” or, “I was passionate about this so I started
to take classes.” Passion’s what gets things started. And then it’s that process,
it’s that preparation that you become understanding of, where it becomes intellectualized, that
thing that you like, and that’s where I think most people fall down. “Oh my goodness
there’s a lot of work here,” you know? So that usually ends that “passion” pretty
quickly, or they get stuck in there, where it becomes only learning and only thinking.
And really, there’s a point at which you have to say, “okay, you know what? I know
how to do this; I’m good at this. I have to trust that I’m good at this, I have to
trust the training and now I’m gonna go back to that passion again.” And those are
the few who are able to truly catapult themselves, or their work, to this new level where we
say it’s great, not just good. Because they’ve allowed themselves to now accept the technical
capacity and leave themselves open to the potential for making mistakes again. Children
have passion and they’re beautiful to watch, and they make a total mess. And these few
here, they kind of have a childish way about them, they kind of act like children in some
way, where it’s a little bit reckless abandon but for the fact that they have training and
grounding and preparation. And I think those – that’s a beautiful thing to pursue.
It’s a hard thing to do, because now that you’re technically based and you have an
understanding, are you willing to fail? Yes here, because you don’t know anything [taps
table] and yes here if you can be great.