To Be or Not To Be: The Actors Read online




  Table of Contents

  Excerpt

  Praise for Cathrine Goldstein

  To Be or Not To Be: The Actors

  Copyright

  Dedications

  A Note from the Author

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Epilogue

  A word from the author…

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  “Perchance to dream, Jenna.”

  She smiled, biting the corner of her lip, exactly where his fingers had been only moments before. He reached up to touch her hair.

  “Careful of the wig,” she joked.

  “And with that sugar addiction of yours, I figured Valentine’s Day candy was a given.”

  “Oh, you know me so well, Mr. Hughes.” Jenna fanned herself coquettishly.

  He smiled. Trevor tossed the container aside and scooped Jenna into his arms. He held her tight.

  “It feels like the nunnery scene.” Jenna’s voice was soft and breathy.

  “Yes, but does this happen in the nunnery scene?” Trevor pulled her closer to him and his lips nearly brushed against hers.

  “Maybe it should?”

  “Are you telling me…?” Trevor studied her, his gaze locked on hers. “You want me to—?”

  The stage manager stuck his head through the door. “Hamlet? Ophelia? Places, please.”

  Her body ached as he released her.

  “Damn it.” Trevor shook his head, jumping up and down in place. He stopped and smiled at Jenna, taking her hand and kissing it, before letting go. “Here we go.”

  “Break a leg, Trevor.” She smiled at him, adrenaline rushing through her.

  “You too, Jenna.”

  She made her way to the door and turned back. “Trevor? Here’s to not sucking and having to do dinner theatre in the middle of nowhere.”

  Chuckling, Trevor tossed his head back and Jenna scooted out the door.

  Praise for Cathrine Goldstein

  “I’ve enjoyed previous work of Cathrine, but that was within a different genre—lucky me her talent knows no bounds.”

  ~Shawna Shauntia Blog

  ~*~

  “This book was beautiful. It has its funny moments and it has its sad moments… Amazingly written & well portrayed.”

  ~Haddies Haven (5 Stars)

  ~*~

  “A sweet summer romance, perfect for a day at the beach! A Rock Star romance, a whirlwind love affair, an ending that will leave you breathless!”

  ~Margie’s Must Reads

  ~*~

  “Love this… A wonderfully written, touching story.”

  ~Books are Love

  ~*~

  “A sweet romance… Malcolm Angel—The Rock Star bad boy every girl wants…”

  ~The Phantom Paragrapher (5 Stars)

  To Be or Not To Be:

  The Actors

  by

  Cathrine Goldstein

  The New York Artists Series

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  To Be or Not To Be: The Actors

  COPYRIGHT © 2018 by Cathrine Goldstein

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: [email protected]

  Cover Art by Angela Anderson

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Champagne Rose Edition, 2018

  Print ISBN 978-1-5092-1710-6

  Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-1711-3

  The New York Artists Series

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedications

  As always, for Jay, Penelope, and Pickle (Sarah)

  ~*~

  And thank you to my parents

  who sat through countless productions of Hamlet

  in an old, decrepit theatre in the middle of Manhattan

  A Note from the Author

  The author wishes to thank the late William Shakespeare for his writing of the play scenes used within this work:

  Hamlet (Act 3, Scene 1; Act 5, Scene 2)

  and

  Macbeth (Act 1, Scene 7)

  Chapter One

  Brrrinnnngggg!

  Jenna Joyce covered her ears. Maybe, if she avoided it, maybe her phone would just stop ringing. It was too early to be her sister Olivia, so it had to be her mother. There was no doubt. It was time for their weekly argument about Jenna’s choice to become an actor.

  Jenna craned her neck so she could see directly from her tiny bathroom to the clock on her kitchen wall. Three-thirteen. Damn. Her audition was in just over an hour. She squeezed her eyes shut and mercifully, the ringing stopped.

  “Thank God.” Jenna exhaled and yanked her hairbrush through her hair. No, she wouldn’t be able to dodge her mother much longer, but she was giving herself permission to avoid this particular argument until after her audition. Staring at her reflection, she took a deep breath. Forget fluttering, the butterflies in her stomach raged.

  Brrrinnnngggg!

  There it was again. Damn. This time she couldn’t ignore it. With a shaking hand, Jenna made her way from the bathroom into the main space of her tiny studio apartment. She picked up the black receiver that dwarfed her hand and cheek. “Hel—?”

  “Are you wearing makeup? Just wear some makeup, please.”

  Jenna exhaled. It was her agent, the lovely but ruthless, Kat Price. “Of course.”

  “You’re not wearing makeup, are you?”

  Jenna snickered.

  Kat let out an exasperated sigh. “I don’t know why you think this is funny. He’s picking Ophelia himself. Himself, Jenna.”

  As if Jenna weren’t nervous enough. “I know that,” she mumbled.

  “This isn’t still over those damned turtles, is it?”

  Kat had many wonderful qualities, however, compassion was not one of them.

  “Kat—”

  “Jenna, listen to me. I know you think you have a right to a personal grudge against this man, but this is show biz. Get a tougher skin. I’m sure whatever he did, or didn’t do, was not personal.”

  “I was counting on his endorsement.”

  “And I’m counting on a beach house before I turn seventy.”

  “But my father had one dying wish. To support that damned charity and Trevor Hughes was the celebrity who was supposed to help. Kat, he pretends to be this great guy—”

  “He’s a soap star, Jenna. And he’s damned good at what he does. And what, or should I say whom, he pretends to be, is Caspian Locke, villain extraordinaire.”

  “And—”

  “And what he did was to give you the chance of a lifetime.
Jenna. The man is giving you the opportunity to audition for Ophelia to his Hamlet—in an Off-Broadway show—and you’re not even a year out of acting school.” Kat sucked in a deep breath. “Do you know how lucky we are?”

  “Yes, I do.” Jenna rubbed the bundle of nerves in her belly. “It’s just…they’re all beautiful soap opera people. There’s no use—”

  “Oh Lord, save me. Is this going to be another one of those speeches about you not being beautiful so you want to be ‘taken seriously’?”

  “I’d want to be taken seriously if I was beautiful or—”

  “I don’t know what your issue is.” Kat tapped her acrylic fingernails against her desk. This was what Kat did whenever she was deep in thought, and she did it with equal amounts of enthusiasm, whether she was pondering eyeliner or war. “Damn,” she muttered. “I wish I had thought to call in your friend Loretta; that girl could make you a knockout in sixty seconds.”

  “Mm-hm—”

  “Not that you’re not already.” Kat sighed again. “Listen to me, Jenna. You are incredibly beautiful. And Meryl Streep is the only actor ever to be taken seriously, so schmear some lip gloss on those damned lips, and call me when it’s over.”

  So Jenna did. She slicked on a thin layer of light pink lip gloss, picked up a pile of headshots and résumés from the stack of papers on her desk, and grabbed her worn, light brown, canvas messenger bag. She stuffed the pictures inside and pulled her faded army jacket from her one tiny closet. She made her way to the door just as the phone rang again.

  “You need a cell.” Kat screamed as Jenna answered the phone.

  “I—”

  “Don’t worry about that now. Are you wearing a dress?”

  Jenna looked down at her uniform of old faded jeans, a white t-shirt, and combat boots. “I—”

  “You’re wearing those boots, aren’t you?”

  “No…?” Jenna shuffled from foot to foot.

  “Wear the one damned dress you own.”

  Jenna looked over at her clothing rack pushed tightly into a corner. On the rack hung the one dress she did own, a knee-length, dark blue dress covered in tiny flowers, a gift from her mother when Jenna had graduated from the acting academy. It was an incredibly nice gesture, but it came with definite strings attached. Make it big within one year, or move back to upstate New York to help her mother run the family laundry business. Jenna closed her eyes and shook off a wave of terror.

  “Kat, it has flowers on—”

  “I know. And don’t wear your boots with it. Too Nineties.”

  Jenna hung up the phone, stripped out of her clothes, leaving them in a heap on the floor she mentally labeled as “semi-clean,” and pulled the dress off the hanger. She tucked her lips in tight not to get lip gloss on the dress, and pulled it over her head. She looked around. Without combat boots, the only thing she could wear was a pair of previously unworn, black, synthetic ballet flats her mother bought along with the dress.

  Jenna slipped on the flats and spun around to take one quick look in the cracked full length mirror that stood near her clothing rack. “Ugh.” Jenna rolled her eyes, grabbed her bag, and escaped before her agent could find her again.

  ****

  “Ooo, ow. Ow. Ow.” By the time she made her way to the subway, she was already cursing her mother and her agent for forcing her into these shoes. Jenna limped her way up the subway steps and full into New York City cold. She shuddered, pulling her coat closed tightly and wrapping her arms around herself. December in New York meant she was freezing in her flimsy dress and flimsier shoes. Truthfully, if it weren’t for the stupid outfit she was wearing, she wouldn’t have cared. She took a deep breath and as the frigid air stung her lungs, gazed up and down the avenue. People rushed by. Hotdogs vendors danced in the meager sunlight, trying to stay warm. Young men buzzed past, pushing wheeled wardrobes with the latest top-secret summer fashions. The street was brimming with energy and life. Despite the pain in her heels, she was happy. This crazy, wild, mixed-up city was home. And she was terrified at the idea of ever having to leave.

  Jenna pushed on. She walked carefully, trying to keep her heels lifted from her shoes, avoiding direct contact with her blisters. Thankfully, the audition building was nearby.

  She hobbled past the statue of the giant button and needle, and crossed the street, finding the old, red brick building. Signing in to the guest book at the front desk, she said hi to a disinterested security guard in a stained and wrinkled white uniform shirt then stepped into the elevator. After a harrowing ride in an elevator that stalled halfway to the seventh floor, she stepped out into a dark hallway.

  A small handwritten sign saying, “Hamlet,” with a tiny arrow showed the way. She limped down the hallway, stepping around the hazards of the worn frayed areas of the rug and the tiny piles of chipped plaster that had fallen from the broken ceiling and peeling walls. Finally, she found the door to the waiting room.

  “Huh.” Jenna mumbled to herself. She had been in this building many times before and she was pleasantly surprised Trevor Hughes held auditions in a place like this—a real, honest place—and not some shiny, fake building like Trump Tower. She pushed open the door to find a roomful of other young women, all holding the same sides as she was. She looked at each of them and had to suppress a giggle; one was more beautiful than the next. It was like walking into a casting for a men’s magazine. “What am I doing here?” Jenna whispered.

  The blonde sitting by the door shifted in her seat. The light floral scent of the girl’s perfume wafted by. Good grief. There was no way, no way, someone who looked like Jenna could ever possibly fit into this beautiful cookie-cutter world. But she needed this job. Desperately. Jenna resigned herself, right there and then, to be fabulous. She had no choice. Just like at school, when the beautiful blondes were signing contracts for shampoo commercials and soap operas of their own, Jenna had to shine during her final plays. When she took her curtain call after performing Irina in Three Sisters, she got a standing ovation.

  Kat Price came right up and gave her business card to Jenna. “Call me. Talent like yours doesn’t come along very often. You can be great. You just need some makeup.”

  Then Kat swooshed her black silk wrap over her shoulders and sauntered away, leaving Jenna to wonder if she had just been complimented or insulted. She didn’t ponder it long before Don Oleesa, already her coach, ambled up to Jenna and invited her into his advanced classes. It had been a good day.

  This day, however, she wasn’t so sure about. As she looked around again, Jenna was certain a few of the girls snickered at her. She thought long and hard about turning and leaving. After all, the audience would have to believe Hamlet was in love with Ophelia—so to star opposite Trevor, they would need someone much more beautiful than she. But to leave meant giving up.

  No way. Jenna steeled her nerves, adjusted her army green jacket, and signed herself in. Wincing from the pain of her new blisters, she tip-toed gingerly over to an empty seat and plopped down. She did not put on lip gloss and a dress just to chicken out. Besides, giving up wasn’t an option. After forty minutes of running lines in her head, she was finally called into the audition room.

  Jenna took one look at Trevor and gasped. For a moment, all her anger dissipated, replaced with a warm flush reminding her she was female. She shook her head, and as her body reflexively fought for its next breath, she discreetly studied him. His head was bowed as he sat on a high stool, clutching a faded acting edition of Hamlet. She let her gaze run up him—his boots and jeans, his faded dark gray t-shirt—right up to the scruff on his chin and the dark brown hair that was perfectly wavy and messy, framing his chiseled cheekbones and tanned skin. Like Hamlet himself, Trevor was dark and brooding but good Lord, he was handsome. No wonder millions of women tuned into his show daily to watch him as soap opera villain, Caspian Locke. Really, who could blame them?

  Her body leaned forward. She stared at the long strong muscles of his exposed forearms and his large hands gras
ping a copy of Hamlet, and suddenly grew very sad. It was as if he were the unattainable remedy to all her pain. He turned his head slowly and she stepped backward. She smiled a tiny dejected smile at him and he nodded, offering a small smile back. His face seemed to crack with his smile, as if it hadn’t held this particular expression in a very long time. His smile seemed honest but she knew better…he was, after all, an actor. And she, more than anyone, knew what an actor’s job was—to manufacture emotions for a living.

  Jenna shook her head. What the hell just happened? She felt like a ship being tempted toward a rocky shore by the call of this particular siren. Screw that. That smile he just offered was fake, as was everything else about him. He was playing a character, that’s all, and she was not about to be sucked in for real. So kudos to him for being a better actor than she anticipated.

  Jenna glared at Trevor, sizing him up with a clearer head. No doubt his jeans alone cost more than her month’s rent. But still…it was hard not to be lured in. He appeared so pensive and preoccupied, yet when he smiled, a small half-grin, really, it was like he owned her and everything in the room. He wore his darkness like a suit of armor, but underneath, his whole being became the personification of the word “charm.”

  To see him here, a real person, and not just a character on television, was troubling. He was too good-looking for real life. And frankly, the only way to contain the raw sexuality he oozed was to keep him in a tiny box, locked away in a made-up world. Here…here he was too much. No wonder he was so cheap and slick. What unsuspecting woman could say no to him? Jenna bit her lip, trying to calm her nerves and the feeling of tiny pin pricks surging through her arms and legs. As she inhaled and grounded herself, a searing pain shot up from the raw blisters bulging on the backs of her heels. Just staring at him made her angry; how could he sit there like he was an innocent? Didn’t he care at all? He had to know he had let people down, people like her who had counted on his celebrity endorsement to back her charity, the charity she supported to honor her dying father’s wish. Jenna shook her head. No. She had to try to be civil, because the ugly truth was, hypocrite or not, she needed this job.