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*Ready Player One* had arrived more recently, and she consumed it with the absorption of a teenager finding a digital world where the limitations of the physical body—and the voice—were entirely irrelevant.
But the music had been the true revelation. A school friend had smuggled the *Marvin 1* EP to a noisy sleepover back in November. Emily had listened to the five wordless tracks sitting perfectly cross-legged on the carpet, applying the absolute attention she only ever gave to things that demanded full intellectual engagement.
When the tape had clicked to a stop, Emily had been completely unable to speak for several long minutes. Her friend had nervously asked if she was alright. She had quickly forced out a strained, "I'm fine," but what she had actually meant was something more profound.
The music had struck a deeply personal chord.
The wordless tracks proved to her bruised psychology that immense, staggering emotional depth could be communicated flawlessly without the need for syntax, without the obstacle of speech. It was the ultimate, liberating freedom.
The live Oscar performance tonight was doing more of the exact same thing, but in a way that made the original recording feel like a mere shadow. Watching him strike the keys on live television, she could hear exactly what the music was attempting to do. But it was the voice that completely shattered her.
The magical voice was creating *intimacy*, yes, but to Emily, it was doing something infinitely more miraculous: it was demonstrating absolute, frictionless *fluency*.
To a girl who had spent the last eight years fighting a desperate, daily war just to pronounce her own name, watching someone wield their voice with such terrifying, unobstructed mastery was breathtaking. There was no hesitation, no fear, no blockage between Marvin's soul and the sound leaving his lips. The music poured out of him like a river. He wasn't just performing; he was completely, unapologetically free.
Recently, a perceptive teacher had suggested Emily try acting, encouraging her to put on different accents to trick her brain out of the stutter. It was a terrifying experiment that was slowly, tentatively working, offering her a fragile, borrowed confidence. But watching Marvin on that stage fundamentally shifted her understanding of what performance could actually be. He wasn't using performance as a shield to hide behind, the way she was trying to. He was using it as a sword.
She sat in her dark bedroom, hugging a pillow tightly to her chest, watching the Oscar broadcast glow. She simply let the devastating performance happen to her, fully and abandoning the cynical, intellectual distance she usually used to protect herself.
When the standing ovation finally rolled across the screen, Emily was crying.
She was crying quietly, in the controlled way she cried when she was not actively managing her emotional response—not dramatically sobbing, not making a sound. Just thick, hot tears tracking silently down her face while the rest of her beautiful, observant expression remained entirely, elegantly composed.
She gently wiped her cheeks with the back of her hand after a long moment, her chest heaving with a deep, cleansing breath.
She sat in the quiet of her room and thought intensely about the massive, unbridgeable difference between a sterile document of something, and the bleeding, terrifying thing itself. She thought about her own fragile, developing voice, and the tentative power she was just beginning to find in acting. And as she stared at the boy holding the golden statue on her screen, she thought about exactly what it meant for the universe to be in the active presence of someone who had completely, utterly mastered the art of being heard.
---
Berkshire, England.
Twelve-year-old Emilia Clarke was watching from the Clarke family home in Berkshire.
She was watching the exact same slightly delayed BBC Two broadcast, significantly past her strict bedtime, graciously permitted by her parents on the grounds of cultural education.
But Emilia was watching with the bouncing, hyperactive energy of someone who possessed explosive feelings about the things she cared about, and she was currently, caring about this.
Beneath that vibrant, expressive exterior, however, lay the tender, overactive imagination of a girl who felt everything with a raw, nearly overwhelming intensity. Emilia was a creature of profound emotional sensitivity. Her baseline was a deep, instinctual empathy, wrapped in a slightly chaotic, extroverted warmth that she used to navigate her world. She was the girl who laughed a little too loudly at her own awkward jokes, who used humor as a gentle shield to mask the nagging, normal insecurities of a pre-teen desperately wanting to be liked.
Her mind didn't just absorb stories; it lived in them, building massive, romanticized castles in the air where everything was grander, more poetic, and infinitely more beautiful than the quiet, structured realities of Berkshire.
She had devoured *Kung Fu Panda* at age ten, excitedly chattering about its talking animals and deep philosophical undercurrents for approximately three consecutive weeks straight, heavily testing her parents' polite, British patience. She had then read *Ready Player One* this year, passionately spinning vivid fantasies about virtual reality for another three weeks straight, resulting in her exhausted parents developing a sophisticated, diplomatic strategy of warmly acknowledging her relentless enthusiasm while managing its daily duration.
The music had arrived in the house via her older brother, who had randomly bought the EP, and from whose bedroom walls she had been hearing the thumping basslines since the autumn. She had politely knocked on his bedroom door one afternoon, her fingers twisting nervously in her jumper, and shyly asked, *"Can I please come in and listen?"*
He had grunted a yes, and she had sat completely frozen on the floor of his messy room for forty-five uninterrupted minutes, listening to all five tracks in a row. And then, she had said nothing for quite a long, terrifying time.
Her older brother had finally looked over from his comic book. *"Bloody good, isn't it?"*
She had whispered, *"It's like something arriving from a completely different world."* To her overactive imagination, it wasn't a poetic metaphor; it felt like a literal truth. The wordless tracks had bypasses her social defenses, speaking directly to the deep, swirling pool of romantic idealism she hid behind her goofy smiles and dramatic gestures.
Tonight, she was watching the Oscars with the complete, uncurated enthusiasm of a girl who had definitively decided that Marvin Meyers was the absolute center of her vast internal universe.
But she was also watching his live performance with the quality of a fan who was also, terrifyingly, a direct biological peer. Because Emilia was twelve, and Marvin was twelve.
It was a unique psychological cocktail exclusive to encountering someone your exact own age who was publicly operating at a level that you intellectually understood to be completely impossible. It ignited a fierce, burning mixture of intense romantic identification, profound awe, and a sudden, sharp wave of vulnerability.
Looking at him, her usual defense of lighthearted humor completely evaporated, leaving behind a raw, wide-eyed craving for a connection that felt entirely out of reach.
When the live performance began, she sat still on the couch, her breath catching in her throat as the Celtic melody flooded the room.
When the song finally ended, she made a high-pitched, choked sound that was entirely involuntary, her chest tight with an emotional intensity she didn't know how to voice.
As the standing ovation began in Los Angeles, Emilia practically vaulted off the couch and clapped so enthusiastically in her family's living room that her mother looked over in genuine alarm.
"Emilia, darling, are you quite alright?" her mother asked gently, setting down her teacup.
"He's twelve, Mum!" Emilia practically shrieked, pointing at the television screen with a wild-eyed, disheveled quality, her voice cracking with the relatable outrage of someone encountering absolute excellence at their exact own age. "He's literally twelve years old and he just did THAT! In front of James Cameron!"
"He's very, very talented, sweetie," her mother offered the standard, calm parental response.
"He is twelve!" Emilia repeated, crossing her arms defensively to hide how deeply the performance had shaken her. "I can barely tie my trainers right the first time!"
She watched the rest of the sprawling ceremony with a restless quiet that replaced her usual chaotic energy. Her entire worldview, her comfortable sense of childhood, had been permanently disrupted. The beautiful, terrifying ease with which Marvin commanded that room had pierced right through her normal insecurities, making her feel incredibly small, yet inspired.
As the screen went black and the humid British night closed in, she simply sat on the edge of the couch, clutching her knees, her heart hammering a frantic rhythm in her chest as she silently vowed to understand that boy.
---
Scottsdale, Arizona.
Ten-year-old Emma Stone was watching the television from the warm, comfortable living room of the Stone family home in Scottsdale.
She was sitting squarely between her parents, her small knees pulled tight to her chest, exhibiting the quality of attention that Emily Jean Stone always brought to things that demanded her focus. She wasn't halfway watching while doing homework or playing with a toy. She was watching the screen with the available, perceptive focus of her ten-year-old intelligence.
Emma was an imaginative, wildly funny, and incredibly smart child. But beneath the jokes, the loud enthusiasm, and the charming extroversion, she was carrying a psychological burden far heavier than her parents fully understood.
Emma suffered from debilitating panic attacks.
Since she was seven years old, her mind had frequently betrayed her, flooding her system with paralyzing terror and the absolute, unshakable conviction that something catastrophic was about to happen—that the house was burning down, or that someone was going to die. She lived with her nerves constantly exposed to the air, making her hyper-aware of the emotional atmosphere of every room she walked into.
She was currently in therapy, using theater and improv comedy as tools to ground herself in the present moment, weaponizing her sharp wit against the overwhelming fear. But the anxiety was always there, a little green monster sitting on her shoulder..
She had joyfully encountered *Kung Fu Panda* at eight years old, loving it with the unbridled enthusiasm of a child who found its humor hilarious, but secretly clinging to its profound message of finding "inner peace."
She had encountered Marvin's wordless music significantly more recently. And she had quickly found that it did something to her chest that completely disrupted her normal anxiety loops.
The music produced a sensation in her nervous system that was both incredibly wonderful and slightly terrifying. It was the exact emotional equivalent of stepping out of a dark, scary closet and staring directly into a beautiful stage light. It was so bright it made her squint, but it was the only thing that made the fear completely stop.
She was acutely aware that this physical reaction was unusual. Most pop music she heard on the radio just played in the background. But *this* specific music—she responded to it. The music frequencies seemed to reach straight through the panic, holding her fast to the earth. Usually, after listening to his CD, she had to go sit outside in the quiet Arizona air just to process the sudden, shocking absence of anxiety.
The live Oscar performance tonight produced this exact, physiological response at an intensity that vastly exceeded the plastic recording.
She had naturally expected the televised version to be *good*, primarily because absolutely everything about Marvin Meyers was flawlessly good. But she hadn't expected the live vocal to be doing something to her that the CD had only been weakly reaching toward.
The sheer, frictionless fluency of his voice, the absolute emotional control he possessed over the room—it was the exact opposite of the chaotic, out-of-control feeling she constantly battled inside her own head.
She sat perfectly still, her small hands gripping her knees. She watched the screen unblinking, letting the performance wash over her, feeling the tight, anxious knot in her stomach slowly unfurl for the first time all day.
When the song finally ended and the crowd roared, she was sitting silently in the living room with completely wet cheeks and a glowing smile on her face. It was the most accurate visible description of the internal relief she was experiencing.
Her father looked over at her, smiling gently at her tears, likely thinking she was simply moved by the pretty song.
"Good song, Emmy?" he asked softly.
"Really, really good, Dad," she whispered, her voice thick but remarkably steady.
"Do you want a tissue?"
She took the offered tissue and dabbed her eyes. "He's only exactly two years older than me," she stated, her perceptive brain doing the quick mental subtraction. "I'm ten, and he's twelve."
"Yes, honey," her father agreed.
"He wrote absolutely all of that," she continued, her green eyes wide with awe, staring at the television. "He wrote all the massive books, and all the music, and the... all of it. He doesn't look scared of anything up there. And he's twelve."
"He's extraordinary," her father said simply.
"Yeah," Emma nodded slowly, her chest rising with a deep, grounding breath. The little green monster on her shoulder was completely silent.
A fierce, sudden determination blossomed in her chest—a profound realization that if someone only two years older than her could command that much emotional power and remain completely, beautifully in control, maybe she could learn to do it too. "He really, really is."
---
Greenwich, Connecticut
Seventeen-year-old Bryce Dallas Howard was watching the Oscars from the sprawling, historic Howard family home in Greenwich.
She was watching the telecast with the insulated quality of someone who had literally grown up inside a legendary Hollywood film family. She didn't watch the Academy Awards with the starry-eyed wonder of an outsider; she watched it with a structural, deeply ingrained understanding of exactly what the massive ceremony was, and what the shiny surface presentation actually represented.
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