I just returned from an engagement with Cedar Rapids Opera Theatre, playing Leonardo DaVinci in their production of “Flight of the Lawnchair Man”. It was a great time spent with a really fun cast and the end result was well appreciated by the Cedar Rapidians. For them, it was a celebration of hometown composer Rob Nassif and writer Peter Ullian.
For the cast, it was a energetic, silly show about a guy who hasn’t made much of his life and decides to tie a bunch of balloons to a lawnchair and fly away. If you’re saying to yourself, “So it’s like that Pixar movie UP”, you’re not the only one to make that connection, but Rob Nassif will be the first to tell you that Lawnchair Man was written first!
Nassif, however, didn’t create his ballooner from scratch either. Larry Walters, or “Lawnchair Larry” made his helium powered flight in 1982. When asked by a reporter why he did it, he replied, “A man can’t just sit around.” In my opinion, it would have been much funnier if there were a question mark at the end, making it a rhetorical question.
Nassif added his own “why” at the close of the musical: “Why do we explore the air? Because it isn’t there!”
I knew I had heard that somewhere before too…
Which brings me to my point. We can’t all be the first or only ones to do something like fly a lawnchair, write a story about balloon flight, or make customizable children’s books, but we can put our personal stamp on those themes and make them ours. This is the genius behind memes like Downfall, where the original spawns thousands of offshoots, each different from the next.
This goes for life and not just art or internet memes. Being original isn’t about being the first or the only, it’s about being uniquely YOU.




















