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8 pages, Audiobook
First published March 12, 2019
Andrew Rannells - star of The Book of Morman and Girls - writes an atypical memoir about his life and struggles in his pre-famous years.
"But here is something I discovered quickly about ambition and achieving your dreams: Once you taste it, you want more."
We start with Rannells' childhood - a typical and idyllic time in Omaha, Nebraska.
"These missing years were messy and confusing and filled with questionable choices, and for a long time I was happy to omit them. But I realize now just how much happened during that period of my life..."
To his first time:
"My family was mostly, what's the best way to say this? Not shocked. I knew all the words to Grease 2 by the time I was six."
To leaving Omaha for college in New York:
"So much pressure was put on this moment. I was supposed to love him, right? I was supposed to feel something, but I didn't. I felt shame and relief...I felt in control and out of control..."
Along the way, we hear about the auditions and the plays he manages to snag.
"I shut the door and locked it behind me. And then I cried. I cried like I had never cried in my life. This was my dream, moving to New York and starting my life as an adult, and it was horrible."
And, throughout all of this, Rannells keeps close to his premise - always talking about his plans and his goals, even when he felt like he would never reach them.
"I'm not proud to say this, but I will admit it, Pokemon Live! was the first time I experienced a blackout from drinking."
Overall - I enjoyed this one more than I thought.
"This plan had to work. Why wouldn't it? All my other plans had worked. Now I just had to wait."
And, above all, I loved the author's connection to family. I really think the author managed to capture a generation. This one was well-written and I'm so glad to have read it.
"If you walk into a theater and there is free wine, consider it a preemptive apology..."
“Eyes on your own paper, folks!”






