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Smile book
Smile book








smile book

Photographers yelled at her on the red carpet: “What’s wrong with you – you can’t smile for your Tony?” When she saw the photo, she couldn’t bear her expression of existential pain, and resolved not to be photographed again. Soon after they were born, Vanity Fair asked her to do a Tony awards photoshoot. She had been anxious about the impact of twins on her career (she already had an older daughter, aged three).

Smile book professional#

While most sufferers recover in weeks or months, Ruhl was one of the unlucky few in whom it endures.Īt the time, Ruhl was on a professional high one of her plays had just transferred to Broadway, and was nominated for a Tony award. After looking in the mirror, entirely different.” Bell’s palsy can be brought on by childbirth, although the link is not well understood.

smile book

“Before I looked in the mirror, I was the same person. That moment marked a profound shift in her life. When she looked in the mirror, she was astonished to see that half her face had fallen. The morning after she gave birth to twins, a lactation consultant remarked that her eye looked droopy. Ruhl lost her smile for more than 10 years due to Bell’s palsy, which caused the left side of her face to be almost completely paralysed. What do they mean to us? Does the physical act of smiling create joy, or the other way around? What happens if you can’t smile, even though you want to? These are questions that the distinguished American playwright Sarah Ruhl explores, with a winning combination of wisdom and erudition. While that may be true, few would deny that life without smiles would be diminished in ways we can scarcely imagine. “S miling doesn’t win you gold medals,” the gymnast Simone Biles famously retorted when a judge told her to smile more.










Smile book