Final Major Project
Finally the time has come
to embark on our Final Major Project at college.
The start of this process
is splitting into two groups, one of which will be performing the Blue Room by David Hare and the
other Love and Information by Caryl
Churchill, and the group I have been put into will be working on and performing
Love and Information.
So of course, the very
first task we have been faced with is to begin researching, exploring and
discussing our play, getting to know and understand it, what it’s about, and
start considering how we want to approach developing our own production of it.
Beginning to explore Love and Information
The first thing we’ve done
is look through the script together in a lesson where the whole class got the
chance to explore and share ideas on both plays. We looked through the
different scenes, the structure of the play, the way in which it’s written as
well as its content and we began to evaluate what we think of it and try to
pick out things such as the style and themes of the play.
What stood out to us most
prominently as soon as we started reading through the script is the absolutely
random nature of the play; we soon found that it is a series of random
standalone scenes, none of which link to each other in any way except for that
they may share similar themes or messages. There is no one story in this play, but
rather it focuses on a vast amount of scenes separate to one another, each
exploring their own characters, situations and stories which then don’t feature
again in any other scenes. To try and make more sense of this, we started
looking more closely at the actual structure of the play, and it became
apparent that despite the seemingly disparate nature of it, it’s actually quite
carefully plotted out.
The play is split into
seven sections, each of which include seven scenes, all of which are completely
different, even down to the length of them; some several pages long while
others only consist of a few lines. Now we were beginning to understand how the
play is organised more, we began to look at the content of the text, trying to
suss out the themes, features and techniques in it and also start thinking
about what artistic styles we could apply to it ourselves.
For example, we noticed
that the scenes are written very naturalistically.
It is plain, simple
dialogue, totally normal conversations with no specific stage directions
assigned to it or notes on how to deliver the lines, all it consists of is
lines which can then be interpreted and performed in any way we decide. There
are subheadings in each section, which we believe to be the titles of each
scene, and within each scene there are lines separated only by literal return
spaces between them on the page. Other than this, there is nothing in the
script.
There are no specific characters, the lines aren’t assigned to anyone
in particular, there is no set amount of actors for each scene, and there are
no stage directions, all of that is entirely up to us. We are given the
dialogue, and with it complete artistic license to perform it however we see fit,
choosing and creating our own characters, deciding ourselves how many people to
have in each scene and assigning the lines to people ourselves. It’s quite an
incredible opportunity to be given I must say, as although it means there is so
much more work for us to do, it also gives us the chance to really use our
imaginations and stretch ourselves to not just learn roles and lines but
actually help create and develop the very foundation of the play we’re
performing. It’s a big task, but I see it rather than as being daunting as
being a brilliant chance to push myself and work hard both individually and as
a team to reach our full potentials.
So, having seen that we
can interpret this text however we want to, we considered and discussed
different techniques and styles we may want to use in it. For example, as the
play itself is written as so naturalistic, but we want more variety and
diversity between the different scenes to create a more interesting and full
performance, we’ve been talking about performing some scenes in a naturalistic
manner and others in a more abstract way, to create a bold contrast between
different parts of the play as well as to add more layers of interest to it and
also utilise and display many performance styles and skills we have at our
disposal. One of these skills we wish to involve as you can see on the thought
shower is physical theatre, something we have all worked on a lot during our
time at college. I believe we’ve built a good understanding of the ways in
which it can make a huge impact on a piece of theatre and really add to it and
shape it in the most incredible ways, and I strongly believe that employing it
in parts of Love and Information will make bounds in strengthening the quality
of our piece.
Something that we picked
up from the text itself, the way in which it is laid out, is that we think it
needs to be very fast paced and smooth in terms of transitions from one scene
or section to another, especially when it comes to the shorter scenes, as
otherwise it could end up looking messy and disjointed, which is not the result
we want.
While looking at the
different ways in which we could develop the piece, we also considered
different practitioners whose styles we could use as influence, and we all gave
ideas of whose work we would like to take into consideration while shaping our
piece. We thought of Bertolt Brecht, using his technique of alienation at some
points to really involve our audience, and I also suggested taking this
audience involvement even further by taking inspiration from Antonine Artaud’s
“Theatre of Cruelty”, a style of theatre which assaults the audience’s senses.
However because this style usually requires material of dark matter which could
be easily disturbing to audiences, I thought we should only take the influence
of the idea of involving the senses,
in subtle ways such as perhaps through using sound effects.
On this note of approaches
to adding technical aspects to our performance, we also discussed the
possibility of using very colourful lighting at some points, most likely in our
more abstract scenes, not to distract or detract from the acting or quality of
performance but to add to visual appeal for the audience.
Group discussions and
exploration of the play is really helping me to develop an understanding of it
and particularly how we can go about interpreting it and making it our own, but
I have also been doing research myself at home into Love and Information, the
play itself, the background of it and some research on the playwright Caryl Churchill.
This research I’ve been doing is also helping me a lot and what follows is the
information I have gathered which is helping inform my creative process.
Research on Love and Information
A very unique piece of
work, Love and Information is a play which focuses on societal issues of how we
gather and process information, and how our relationships and interactions as
humans are affected by a world where information is passed and twisted and
shared in so many different ways which constantly inform and influence our
views and the actions we take. We are so
greatly influenced by the world around us, in a vast amount of ways, even by
things as simple as an advertisement, and Love and Information allows an audience
the chance to consider and reflect on how our natural humanity can be affected
by these kinds of external information which, though they aren’t intrinsic to
what we are as humans, still have a large impact on us.
However, rather than
pushing a specific message or political stand point, through her work on this
play Caryl Churchill leaves it very open to audience interpretation, allowing
people to take away from it what they want. This is one of the things I find so
compelling and in a sense very freeing about working on this text; it’s all about
exploration and interpretation both for us as a performance company and for the
audience we will have the opportunity to share it with.
Themes
Love and relationships: Each
individual scene in this play looks at, however briefly, a relationship or connection
between people. It explores the different types of love and relationships,
whether it be familial bonds such as in the scene “Mother” where a woman
reveals to a boy that she is in fact not his sister but his mother and had been
pretending his grandmother was his mum to hide the fact she’d had a baby at the
age of thirteen, friendships such as in the scene “Affair” where one friend
struggles to tell another they believe their partner is cheating on them, a
romantic relationship such as in the scene “Grass” where the characters are in
a relationship and have children together, or even the connections we have to
people less close to us who are simply co-workers or acquaintances, in scenes
such as “Lab” or “Remote” where the specific relationship between the
characters is not made explicit.
Information: As previously
discussed, one of the themes this play focuses on heavily is that of
information and how it affects us as humans, how the information constantly
bombarding us from the world around can actually violate our thoughts,
feelings, privacy, even memories.
Randomness: I think this
play also looks at the random nature of things which we see and perform as
daily rituals and routines, for me so many of the little excerpts from this
text highlight how these small day to day actions and interactions can seem so
big to us, but really so much of life is just random, and sometimes things
can’t be explained, or there is no reason for them. We all like to believe we
have control over our lives, and of course to a certain degree we do, but I
find studying this play that it just shows how even when we believe we really
know what’s going on and have everything completely in order, anything can
suddenly be thrown into the mix, and things can change drastically in a matter
of moments… life is unpredictable, but the randomness isn’t something we should
try to fight, but rather embrace and accept as part of living. That is
something I interpret from this play, and I’m even finding it’s actually
helping my approach to working on it, as it’s giving me the understanding that
even though it can be frustrating when something doesn’t really make sense, as
I find with some of this play, it doesn’t matter, it just is what it is and you
have to work with that.
Caryl Churchill
Caryl Churchill, born in
London on September 3rd 1938, is a British playwright known for her
work exploring sexual politics, feminism and sexuality.
She has written almost 60
plays, including Cloud Nine (1979), Top Girls (1982), her first ever play Downstairs (1958), and the most recent
of her works; Escaped Alone (2016).
Over the years her merits
for her work include winning several Obie awards and an Olivier, and as well as
being honoured with awards she is highly praised by many as being one of Britain’s
greatest dramatists.
She is known for creating
pieces of work which push boundaries both in terms of political messages and
themes and conventional performance styles, throughout her long and flourishing
career she has continued to constantly refresh and reshape contemporary theatre
with her style of surrealism and her boundless imagination.
This helps me to
understand more deeply her work on Love and Information, because it is so
different to anything I’ve seen or worked on before, and I now understand that
she meant for it to be that way; with it she is again reshaping theatre even in
terms of what a play is expected to be like.
Something I find extremely
fascinating and quite incredible is that from researching Churchill I have
discovered she takes inspiration from practitioners such as Bertolt Brecht with
his Epic Theatre, and Antonine Artaud with his Theatre of Cruelty, both of whom
in our very first look at Love and Information as I previously discussed we
thought of taking influence from and applying elements of their work to
developing our performance. I find it hard to imagine this is a coincidence, I
think it’s clear they must have had a big influence on Churchill’s style, as it
was so apparent to us so soon that the techniques of these two other
practitioners could work so well with Churchill’s material.
I think Churchill is
intriguing as a playwright, and doing background research into her, her
influences and her contributions to the arts is supporting my ability to do
justice to Love and Information and better comprehend what her intentions were
with the play.
Love and Information: The Creative and Rehearsal
Process
Ordering scenes and sections
Now that we had made a
great start by getting to know the play and what approaches we could to
developing it, we came to the next stage of really making it our own. We aren’t
going to be doing the entire play, as it has so many scenes and it would be too
much of an undertaking for the time allotted to complete our FMP, so what we’ve
done is gotten together as a group and chosen which scenes we would definitely
like to do and which ones we are going to cut. To do this, we read the various
scenes and each shared with the rest of the group which ones we’re interested
in keeping. We’ve now compiled a list of all of those scenes, and the others
which no one has chosen will be cut. However, if at a later point we decide we
would like to include any more we will revisit these other scenes and which
ones we may have changed our minds about,
as it’s so early in the process that
nothing is set in stone yet.
Section One: Secret, Fan,
Lab
Section Two: Affair,
Grass, Terminal, Message, Mother
Section Three: God’s
Voice, Star, Dream, the Child Who Didn’t Know Fear, Schizophrenic, Recluse
Section Four: Flashback,
Wedding Video, Savant, Ex
Section Five: Shrink,
Rash, God
Section Six: The Child Who
Didn’t Know Pain, Wife, Earthquake, the Child Who Didn’t Know Sorry
Section Seven: Fate,
Stone, Manic, Virtual, Facts.
Now we had a clear idea of
which scenes our production will consist of, it was time to cast the play. As
there are no set characters or numbers of actors in each scene, we’ve had to
sit down with our scripts and read through each scene we’ve chosen to keep,
coming to conclusions together as a team on how many people we believe should
be in each scene, casting each scene, and then assigning each line in the scene
to specific actors.
This has taken us a whole
afternoon, it’s been quite arduous work, but it had to be done and I think the
artistic choices we’ve made have been good and that having made these concise
decisions about roles and casting that we’ll now be able to head straight into beginning
to rehearse.
The scenes I am cast in
are Fan, Grass, Schizophrenic, Ex, Stone,
Virtual and Facts. I’m very happy
with this as there’s a lot of variation between these scenes and I’m excited at
the prospect of stretching myself and pushing to be completely different in
each scene. I also find it compelling that for each of these scenes I have the
opportunity to create my own characters entirely, through personal decisions
and working together with my fellow performers in each scene to help shape the
characters within it and the relationships between them.
As this whole play relies
so strongly on teamwork and ensemble though, it’s not only our own scenes we’re
going to be working on, but rather we aim to work as a team to all contribute
to and help develop every scene in the play, truly making the whole thing something
we can be proud of. We have decided that one of the most logical ways to work
on the text is to develop it chronologically, simply working on each of the
scenes we have chosen to use from start to finish until we know what we’re
doing for every one, and then we will just rehearse and rehearse until it is
perfected.
Section One
Secret
This is the first scene in
the whole play, and we know we have to use grab the audience’s attention with
it. In this scene, we see two people discussing a secret, one of them trying to
get the other to tell them what it is. The nature of this scene is very
mysterious, as even when the secret is shared between the two characters, the
audience still don’t get to find out what it is. In fact, even in the script,
we as actors are not told what it is either. It leaves it up to the imagination
of those watching, and we wanted to work with this to intrigue people and have
them interested from the get go. The whole idea of a secret is such an
enclosed, private and intimate thing, and that’s what we want to convey through
the atmosphere and the way Divina and Toya communicate in this scene. We want
for it to all feel very secretive so
that the audience are involved as soon as the play begins rather than feeling
separate from it. So we started thinking about how we can create this effect,
and the first thing which occurred to us was that the staging will be
important. We want our two actors close together on stage, making it seem very
enclosed. In the text there is discussion of them not being able to be close
because of this secret keeping them apart, but then of course that changes when
Divina chooses to eventually tell Toya what it is. One way we thought of
representing this visually is to have the two back to back at the start of the
scene, standing right behind one another; symbolising that they are so close
together yet not able to completely see eye to eye because of a secret between
them. Then, when Toya gives up trying to find out, she begins to walk away,
showing she is removing herself further from the situation. This is when Divina
chooses to tell her the secret, we’ve decided she’ll stop Toya leaving and turn
her to face her. Divina then leans in to tell her the secret, and this is where
we had the idea of using choral vocals. The rest of the cast all make the
noises of whispering as Divina leans in, masking whatever she may have said
even though there is no actual line there in the script, the audience wouldn’t
know that. Everything now goes silent, it’s out, it’s done, and our two
characters deliver the closing lines of the scene, and then it ends there; the
audience given no conclusion.
I feel this is going to be
a really effective start to our play and should draw people in.
Something which has come
up discussing the ensemble work however, and also because we’ve been thinking
about how fast our transitions are, is how we want to stage our piece. We
thought that perhaps it would be interesting if the whole cast were on stage
for the entire performance, and we used major and minor so that the focus of
each scene was clear without people who don’t have a role in it having to leave
the stage. Originally we considered having chairs lining the back of the stage,
which we could all sit on in neutral and then enter each scene from when
necessary. This is quite like something we saw that happened in the National
Theatre’s production of A Day in the Country, as we saw their set for it when
we sent on a tour there. We really like the idea of us all set on stage for the
whole thing, however we felt it wasn’t quite enough to just all be sitting at
the back; though simplistic we found perhaps it would be too plain and that
there’s more we can do with it.
We’re considering having
our chairs set around the whole stage, organised symmetrically but dotted
around upstage, downstage, stage left, stage right and even centre stage. This
way, scenes can take place between the different seats, and when there’s
ensemble work in our scenes we’ll all be more involved in the space the scenes are
taking place. This is working thus far, as in secret when we all whisper we now
have the sound going around the whole of the stage. I also think it looks good
in secret because it makes Divina and Toya look more surrounded, adding to the
atmosphere of having to keep something quiet and private.
As for lighting for
Secret, we want the focus to be on Divina and Toya, and we’re thinking what
better way to do this than to have a simple spotlight on them, which they’re
both inside, showing the intimate nature of this interaction between them.
This means they will stay
centre stage the whole time however, which changes how it was staged that Toya
would walk away and Divina would follow her; they need to be more still than
that. So, at the start of the scene, they are still back to back but sitting on
the floor, on the phone to one another, and the whole thing is a phone
conversation meaning they can be stationary instead of it being more
naturalistic where they may move around if it was in person.
The feedback we’ve
received on the lighting for this scene is advice from Sharon that rather than
a plain white spotlight we use a yellow coloured one, as it makes for a more
secretive atmosphere visually. Also, a few of us went to seek out props
backstage, including the phones for this scene, and we found some old fashioned
phones which we thought would look good in Secret. Divina and Toya tried out
using them to see how it looked in one of our rehearsals, however this hasn’t
worked, because as pointed out in tutor feedback, we want this play to be
relatable to our target audience, and we could keep this in mind even in terms
of time period by using modern phones, thus enabling our audience to be able to
better picture themselves in this situation and therefore connect more easily
to it.
Fan
In this scene, the entire
cast is involved, everyone having at least one line as well as lines as an
ensemble. This is proving to be a very tricky scene to work on, it requires
such attention to detail and perfecting to get the timing just right, as the
whole thing is a series of quite short lines divided up between the whole cast,
so cues have to be picked up quickly and correctly in order for the scene to
flow. In Fan, it is an unknown number of people discussing someone who they are
a fan of, boasting about facts they know about him and arguing saying people
are making things up when they don’t really know. This scene can be used to
highlight that rather terrifying “fangirl” or “fanboy” mentality so popular in
contemporary culture, particularly in the media and amongst young people. Cast
your mind for example for a ridiculous argument that may take place somewhere
such as a YouTube comments section, where people will bicker over who has more
claim loving a celebrity because of the amount they know about them. That is
the atmosphere we want to create with this; everyone has to be over the top,
convinced they’re absolutely infatuated with this figure they’re all
discussing, and even competitive over them.
The only person who isn’t
being like this is the person himself they are all a fan of, who Ryan plays. He
has no lines, but simply takes to the front of the stage, portraying physically
this celebrity figure they’re all so obsessed with. We thought this would be a
great time to involve the audience, as Ryan will be on his own at the front of
the stage for the whole scene, he’s going to interact with them, waving,
pretending to sign autographs, even posing for pictures with them. We’re hoping
that involving the audience this early on will keep them engaged following on
from Secret where we will have tried to grab their attention.
In this scene, we also
want to incorporate choral movement as well as choral speech, and this adds
another challenge for us as a group to overcome together. First and foremost
we’ve had to decide exactly what movements everyone will be making and when. We
want for it all to be exact and the same. As the scene starts we will all be
sitting in neutral on our chairs.
Then, at the first line
each person has, they stand up as they say it. Then on our second line, we each
stand up onto our chairs, and on our third line we stand back down onto the
floor. Even though we’ll all be standing up and down at different points, we
like this way because there’s still a pattern which everyone will be following,
so if done successfully it will look really neat and tidy.
As for choral movement, on
top of what I’ve just described, we also have synchronised movements. On the
lines which everyone says together, such as “eurgh”, “how do you know” and
“you’re making that up” we all turn 90 degrees to face a different direction.
The only time we don’t do this is on the last page of the scene on the first
and third time we all say “wait” together. Then, our last movement is choral where
we all sit back down on the chairs at the end of the scene as we say “what are
we going to do”.
We’re rehearsing and
rehearsing this every day we’re in college because it’s taking a lot to get the
timing and cues right and make sure everybody’s movements are in time, but we
are getting there.
We took a film of one of
our practice runs of the scene so we could watch it back and observe how the
movements looked, although not the whole group was in for this rehearsal so I
had to read in for some people. Below is the video.
We like the visual pattern
and neatness doing these movements and I think it’s very important to really
utilise our abilities as an ensemble in this scene which everybody takes part
in, so we’ve decided to definitely stick to the choral movement we’ve chosen.
I like that we’re
employing these bits of physical theatre in this scene, I think it’s working
really well.
As we move through
rehearsals of this scene we’re of course getting feedback as we go along, and
what has come up on several occasions is the need to pick up cues quickly and
then not rush the lie, something which can be quite confusing because when you
come in with a line so quickly your instinct is then to rush it, but we’re
definitely improving at this over time.
For my character in fan, I'm trying to work on sounding and looking really in love and infatuated with this person we're talking about. Our body language as an ensemble is fairly neutral in this scene, so it is difficult to embody that absolute passion for someone with movement limited, which is why I'm trying to portray this through my vocals as much as I can instead. For example, on my first line, as I stand up, which I'm doing very quickly to show my enthusiasm and desperation to be involved in proving my admiration of this person, I'm making my voice very loud and with almost a shrill quality to it, in order to portray that fore mentioned desperation.
For the rest of my lines, I'm adopting an altogether over the top voice for whichever emotion my character is feeling at that time; when she is sceptical and doesn't believe others I'm applying an accusatory quality to my voice, when she is frustrated that none of them know what his favourite smell is I'm prolonging my words slightly and putting on a childish and whiny voice. I'm trying to overexxagerate my vocals to make up for not expressing things physically in this scene except for with our stock movements and choral movement.
Lab
In this scene we see four
people in a lab, two of whom are scientists explaining the process of the work
they are currently doing to the other two who are fascinated and taking notes.
Considering the nature of the previous scene, we wanted this one to be quite
naturalistic, with just a few extra flourishes to add that bit more to it. So
for the majority of this scene, it is just naturalistic conversation, but we’ve
also decided to add in mime and use some cast members who aren’t playing a role
in the scene, Divina, Katy, and Toya, to represent the “chicks” being discussed
by the scientists. The scientists are explaining the research they’re doing,
how they are studying behaviour of baby chickens, then cutting off their heads
and dissecting and analysing their brains to gather information. So the
involvement of the three chorus actors playing the chicks is to act out what is
being described by Sam and Melody that the chicks do without having to leave
their chairs or distract from the dialogue or the where the major focus should
be in the scene. When Melody and Sam talk about chicks pecking at beads, Amber
and Jerome put out their hands to Katy and Toya, who mime pecking at beads in
their hands. Then when Sam says he cuts the head off a chick, he mimes slitting
Divina’s throat and she then plays dead. We didn’t want have too much going on
in this scene, so we thought that these subtle involvements of chorus members
would be just the right amount to add. This means of course, especially as it
is a fairly long scene, that it is completely up to the four actors who have
speaking roles in it to keep the audience engaged and interested the whole
time, even in lines they have which are quite long explaining scientific
processes. The main feedback which is coming up as we work on this scene is
simply about physical and vocal projection, so that the actors can really
perform the piece out to the audience
to keep them paying attention.
There is also a slightly
comical element to this scene, as Sam particularly plays his role as an
eccentric scientist, Melody being the fed up co-worker, and Amber and Jerome
absolutely hanging off their every words; it creates a funny dynamic which I
believe will help a lot also with keeping the audience interested.
When we first started to
look at this scene we were concerned that it would get dull to watch, but I’m
finding as we move through the rehearsal process that it keeps getting brought
to life more and more, especially now that everyone is off book.
We’ve also decided on the
tech we want for this scene now; green lighting and the sound effect of
bubbling to create the illusion of being in a laboratory environment. I think
that this is successfully effective in setting the scene clearly.
Section Two
Affair
As Section Two begins, we
are drawn back again to a situation between two friends, not dissimilar to that
in Secret, as one of them has something to tell the other. Wanting to link it
back to Secret, making connections of themes within the play clear to the
audience, we have chosen to stage this quite similarly; a naturalistic
conversation between these two friends. At first we thought they could perhaps be
in a social setting such as a bar, but the issue we found with this was that it
made it lose that intimate feel of it being just the two people talking about
something secret. So instead, we have mirrored Secret quite closely in another
sense in that Divina and Elvina are the only people who do anything in the
scene, the focus is completely on their dialogue.
Again with the lighting we
return to a similar colour; an orange/yellow colour cast across the two actors.
I think the simplicity of the staging and delivery of this scene really helps
to highlight what’s important in it without other distractions; the connection
between these two characters. This scene I think focuses quite strongly on that
theme I’ve discussed of how information can affect relationships between
people, it’s a brilliant example of that, as was Secret. Both scenes are
interesting ways to portray how even something like one person withholding
evidence from another can make a big difference to how they feel about one
another and the bond between them, and they also both look at how sometimes
it’s difficult to know if you should tell someone something because you can
think of both reasons for and against telling them. I think most people if not
everyone has been in that situation at some point or another and therefore this
will make these scenes relatable to our audience and hopefully help them connect
with the play and leave with something to think about.
Grass
This is the first scene in
which I have a role with lot of dialogue, and I’m working with Ryan in this
scene. The scene is centred on a conversation between a couple in which one of
them has “grassed” on someone they know to the cops and the other is concerned
about what the consequences to this may be. When I first read through this
scene, I felt immediately I would find it interesting to work on, which is why
I selected it myself as one of the ones to keep in our production in the first
place. Ryan and I discussed who would like to take each role, and having read
through the lines we came to the conclusion that I would play the person who
called the police and Ryan would play the concerned partner. We talked about
what stereotypes or assumptions could be made from the dialogue in this scene,
such as what people would immediately assume about the situation or the
characters just from the text. This came up when Ryan pointed out that stereotypically,
and due to sexism, when reading some of the lines many people would assume that
his role was a woman, because the kind of lines it has are those generally
given to female characters due to stereotypes surrounding gender roles about
such issues as who would be talking about the kids and fretting over a
situation like this. We talked about this and decided that because of this it
would be even better for Ryan to play that role, because it means we’re
avoiding altogether the risk of creating that stereotypically overly emotional
female character which can be found in so much fiction. Following the same
views as Churchill herself we think it’s
important to be challenging gender roles such as that, and the very fact that
there are no assigned genders to anyone in this play gives us the opportunity
to do so.
One of the first steps
Ryan and I took to developing this scene was simply to lift it straight onto
its feet and just run it through, seeing what came instinctively doing so and
what happened naturally between the two characters. I found that it flowed
naturally and easily right away, just trying it out straight off made it feel
genuine and give us the chance to play it out just moment by moment as would
happen in real life rather than having planned out anything beforehand. We
found as soon as we set off with it that the pace was quite fast, the
atmosphere frantic as Ryan’s character’s worry builds up and up and my
character’s frustration follows as she tries again and again to calm him down. This
really worked; it feels that it fits the scene well. During this heated
conversation between them both character’s emotions are very on the surface,
even though my character is trying to keep a lid on it, and I can really
already feel a sense of this when we run the scene. I think their emotions
would be added to even more because of the stressful nature of the situation,
the fact that now my character has told the police about whatever it is this
person has done the matter is now out of their hands, and especially with
Ryan’s character thinking of the worst case scenarios and being paranoid this
scene captures quite a tense moment.
Although we seemed to find
our feet with this scene so quickly, I find it important considering we’re
given no background information on the characters or stories in this play that
I take the time to work that out for myself in order to create a more in depth
and full performance and portrayal of each scene and character. So, Ryan and I
went about deciding what the background to our scene was. First we picked out
the snippets of information that the text offers us; the characters have
children together and are therefore most likely a couple, and this is what we
built on. We’ve come up with the idea that they are a couple around their
thirties, who are married and have been with each other for quite some years.
We think they have two children, both of whom are primary school age, because
there is discussion on the kids being picked up from school. We decided one of
their children would be about four and one around seven, and that we would have
been together for a while before we settled down, married and had kids, so we
would have been partners for about ten years now. Due to the line “you weren’t
at work? You could’ve gotten the kids from school”, we also concluded that in
their usual routine it would be Ryan who had to do school drop off and pick up
duties while my character worked. All of these things indicate to us that
normally they lead quite a conventional lifestyle, and that this would most
likely add to just how dramatic this situation feels for them, but we noticed
it’s definitely Ryan’s character that is more phased by it, and so we started
to ponder over why that might be. The conclusion we came to is that perhaps my
character is more used to this sort of stress because before they met they lead
quite different lives. So we’ve chosen that my character used to have a bit
more of a shady life, not necessarily she herself, but that she at least had
connections with people she used to know that disconcerted her partner, who had
never been associated with anyone “dodgy” or untoward and now found it a cause
for great concern that they may be involved in something of this manner because
to him it is unthinkable, because before he met her he never had anything to do
with people like that or situations like this.
Working out this
background information is helping our scene feel fuller and is also helping
inform me in making decisions about how my character should act and behave,
particularly her behaviour towards Ryan. She is frustrated because she thinks
he’s over reacting, but also she is sympathetic because she understands that he
isn’t as adept at handling this sort of thing as she is. She’s also concerned
herself of course because something always could happen, but it’s difficult as
she is trying to take a positive and strong approach to what’s going on as well
as trying to reassure herself that she’s done the right thing even if she isn’t
sure she has, and Ryan’s reaction to it is making all of these things that much
more difficult to keep under control.
We’ve been working on this
scene for a while now and I feel it is continually strengthening as we go
along. The tutor feedback I’ve received thus far has been technical notes such
as projection and making sure I’m not in profile, and I’ve been taking these
notes on board and trying to make sure I’m facing forward enough and that my
vocal and physical projection is strong and enables me further to really engage
with the audience and direct my performance outwards even though my character
is focused so strongly on Ryan.
Below is a short video of Ryan and I rehearsing Grass.
Being off book we’re able
to experiment more now, and we’re considering the staging and physicality of
our piece more. When I enter, Ryan’s character has just been waiting,
stressing, and we want to portray this to the audience visually so they are
able to know that right away. Would it be better for him to sit down fretting
while he waits, or do something less subtle? This is what we wondered in
rehearsal today, and it seems like a good idea for Ryan to be pacing around in
the stage space while he waits for me just as the scene begins before I enter,
as this is an effectively explicit way of portraying his character’s emotions
before the dialogue has even begun. Being restless is a clear indicator of
stress and worry, and so that is what Ryan is conveying to the audience in
these first few moments. It is also clear from this and the start of their
conversation that Ryan already knows what has happened, so we think that my
character must have contacted him to let him know before she got home and since
that he has just been waiting for her to get back so they could discuss it, or
rather, so he could question what on earth she was thinking and let out the
stress he’s been holding in while waiting on his own.
I really like how the
scene starts now with him pacing and me entering looking quite guilty and
slightly unsure of what to expect, I think it sets up the scene effectively.
We’ve also added something
else new to the scene; choral vocals from the rest of the cast and a sort of
flashback effect as my character explains what she said on the phone.
Now, instead of just
telling Ryan what I said, I go “I said-”, then we freeze, the whole cast makes
an automated beep sound effect, I step aside into where there will be a
spotlight and now I’m acting out what I said actually miming a phone as if this
is her casting her mind back to exactly what I did. We’ve added in our own line
also, so that before I say “no I won’t leave my name thank you goodbye” melody
plays the voice of the person on the other end of the phone asking “would you
like to give your name?”
Once the phone call has
ended I then freeze again, there is another beep from the ensemble, the
spotlight goes off and I step back into the conversation with Ryan and it
resumes.
We really like this
addition to the scene as it looks convincing as a flashback and we think it
will help add something different to what is otherwise naturalistic; we like to
keep adding little touches like this in order to really put to use as much of
our potential as performers as we can.
The whole scene has come
together nicely, I’m feeling really positive about it and the way we’ve worked
as a team both Ryan and I and with some influence from the rest of the group to
help shape it how we would like.
We’ve received more
feedback now further along in our process, the first time we had the chance to
run our scene in the theatre where we will be performing. Sharon observed us
and discussed with us to think about the pace and the levels in the scene, the
different moments at which the stress levels can go up and down, when the
franticness should peak and when there should be moments of quiet to create
contrast. She suggested we slow down a little as we went through so we could
think about where to make these changes in the flow of the scene, and when we
did that we found that it really helps make the scene more realistic and
believable. Before, it was very much at a high stress level of quite raised
voices and hectic tones the whole time, and now we’ve discovered at which
moments we can let that settle, and there can be more clear changes in thought
process such as Ryan pausing and then realising I could’ve picked up the
children from school and asking about it. With these more natural changes in
thought process and interaction with one another I think we’ve made bounds in
improving this scene further, I’m really happy with the progress we’ve made.
Now that we are getting
closer and closer to performing, it’s gotten to the point that we know this
scene inside out and I feel really comfortable and confident with it. We’ve
been given feedback from Sharon that now we know it so well we just have to be
careful not to fall into the rhythm of it too easily and to remember to really
listen and react to one another.
In our last few rehearsals
I’m going to keep this in mind and try to make sure that when we perform to our
audience we keep the scene feeling fresh and genuine and stay in the moment as
much as possible.
I've been spending a lot of time thinking about my physicality and vocals for this character, and so at home and on a day at college where we were given the six W's sheet to do on our characters, I've been making lots of decisions about what she is like, who she is, how she would move, speak and conduct herself, and behave towards Ryan.
As already established, she is in her thirties, has a husband, two children, a job, and we've already worked on her background and past having involved people who got caught up in bad behaviour. This is all the foundation I'm building the rest of her character on. To maintain a family life and a job especially when you have young children and a husband who is clearly quite a stressful presence at times, I believe she would need to have a lot of focus, drive, and be able to conduct herself and all of this in an organised manner. Being used to handling these things is why I am playing her in this scene as still trying hard to keep things, particularly Ryan's emotions, under control. This is why I'm making hand gestures trying to calm him, and why while Ryan is pacing around and very mobile, my character is quite still, not letting herself get into a state. Trying to keep a handle on the situation is also why I approach Ryan at the end of the scene, trying to get him to just look at me and be still for a moment, attempting to get him to pull himself together, even though this doesn't work.
In this scene I am under a lot of stress however, and as previously mentioned I think she's still trying to convince herself that she hasn't made a mistake, which adds to the strife that she is currently under. So, instead of being completely confident with my posture and body language, although I'm aiming to make it clear that she is just managing to keep herself together, I'm also trying to display little hints of uncertainty and discontent, for example being slightly tensed up in posture around my shoulders and back and allowing my concern to show through my facial expressions at different points when she is unable to mask it.
As for her voice, I am trying to be articulate and paced in my speaking, as well as trying to ground my voice so it doesn't go too high even when I'm exasperated or loud. This is because of her age; I want it to be clear through my voice that this character is mature and not young, and I think these vocal qualities are indicators of that.
At some points I do raise my voice however, or speed up my speech, and at these times my intention through this is to express her outbursts of emotion, namely frustration at Ryan's stressful reaction.
I find it interesting to play this character as I think she has quite a lot going on internally in this scene, some of which she is even trying to keep hidden, so for me as an actor there is a lot to work with in terms of physicality and voice, and I'm enjoying working out these different parts of how to portray this role convincingly.
Terminal
This is one of the scenes
from the play which is very short, but very powerful in only a few lines. In it
a patient is asking her doctor for information on how long she has left to live
because of a condition she is suffering from. We aren’t given any details such
as what the illness is, but from the dialogue the urgency and sadness of the
situation is made apparent. Not wanting the impact of the content to be lost in
this scene by the audience not noticing it enough because it’s just a short
conversation, we thought about how we could make this scene stand out so the
audience really pay attention to what is being said rather than the full effect
not being made. Rob made the suggestion that we use the technical theatre
options at our disposal to our advantage in this scene, having the character
playing the doctor pre-recorded and projected onto the back of the stage. We
really took to this idea, not only because it’s something unique, but also
because it will help add to that feeling of isolation and how impersonal things
can be even for people in a place as dire as not knowing how long they will
still be alive. Things can be so impersonal and people so disconnected in
society today, and by having someone giving news even this sad simply on a
screen rather than there as an actual human we’re making a point about that, I
think it will strike a very subtly poignant note.
Message
This scene is one with,
funnily enough, potential for a very strong message. Rob was telling us that in
one production of this play he saw this scene featured somebody who was clearly
supposed to be portraying someone of Muslim belief. In the scene, it’s two
characters, played by Ryan and Toya, discussing the notion of people living in
terror because killing people and killing yourself sends a message. We could
make a strong political choice depending on which direction we take this piece,
and we feel that it has to be something Toya and Ryan feel comfortable with
because it’s them performing it.
There are so many
different takes we could do on this, and there’s a lot to consider because
depending on what we chose to do we could make a real impact in one way or
another. We’ve been thinking about it and discussing it as a group, and we’ve
been wondering if whether because this whole play is so open to interpretation
we should keep this scene as exactly that too; rather than making a final
decision about what specifically the situation is, leave it to the minds of the
audience. This may even say more, because it allows people to think about why
they may assume one thing or another about the scene. So, we haven’t chosen any
specific agenda with it, we’re leaving it to see what people make of it
themselves. I think this is a good idea and I would be interested to know what
different people’s takes were on it; perhaps our audience reaction will
indicate what people think.
Mother
This scene is about a
woman revealing the truth to her son that she is his birth mother who had him
when she was thirteen and that the person he has believed to be his mother his
whole life is in fact his grandmother. I find this scene really interesting,
it’s such an intense moment to be captured, yet the actual conversation is so
casual as if it were simply discussing what to have for dinner. I think this is
an interest commentary on how distant and emotionally closed off people can be
even in extreme situations sometimes.
Katy and Sam act in this
scene, Sam playing a young character and Katy his mother. The scene begins with
Sam sitting on the floor playing on his game console, could be any normal
household, any normal family. Katy enters and tells him she needs to talk to
him while “their” mum is out. At first he won’t pay attention to her fully
because he is so engrossed in his game, another example of human interaction
being stunted and interrupted by external material sources, but then he leaves
his game for a moment and she tells him the truth about his parentage. We want
this to be a very still and quiet scene, so the focus is completely on these
two characters and the truth of the moment, it isn’t dressed up at all or
messed with; it isn’t contrived, it’s simply as base as it would be if
something like this happened in real life.
We’re keeping simple
lighting over the two characters and nobody else is involved in this scene, and
the tone stays very much the same throughout, leaving the dialogue as raw as it
can be, meaning there’s nothing to detract from what is actually being said.
After the previous scene
where Toya and Ryan are quite mobile on stage and almost in an argument, and
the scene before that with the large projection, this scene brings us back to
base with a simplistic conversation between two humans, all that is present
onstage them and their relationship. I think this is really good; it ends
section two on a very real human moment.
Finally the time has come
to embark on our Final Major Project at college.
The start of this process
is splitting into two groups, one of which will be performing the Blue Room by David Hare and the
other Love and Information by Caryl
Churchill, and the group I have been put into will be working on and performing
Love and Information.
So of course, the very
first task we have been faced with is to begin researching, exploring and
discussing our play, getting to know and understand it, what it’s about, and
start considering how we want to approach developing our own production of it.
Beginning to explore Love and Information
The first thing we’ve done
is look through the script together in a lesson where the whole class got the
chance to explore and share ideas on both plays. We looked through the
different scenes, the structure of the play, the way in which it’s written as
well as its content and we began to evaluate what we think of it and try to
pick out things such as the style and themes of the play.
What stood out to us most
prominently as soon as we started reading through the script is the absolutely
random nature of the play; we soon found that it is a series of random
standalone scenes, none of which link to each other in any way except for that
they may share similar themes or messages. There is no one story in this play, but
rather it focuses on a vast amount of scenes separate to one another, each
exploring their own characters, situations and stories which then don’t feature
again in any other scenes. To try and make more sense of this, we started
looking more closely at the actual structure of the play, and it became
apparent that despite the seemingly disparate nature of it, it’s actually quite
carefully plotted out.
The play is split into
seven sections, each of which include seven scenes, all of which are completely
different, even down to the length of them; some several pages long while
others only consist of a few lines. Now we were beginning to understand how the
play is organised more, we began to look at the content of the text, trying to
suss out the themes, features and techniques in it and also start thinking
about what artistic styles we could apply to it ourselves.
For example, we noticed
that the scenes are written very naturalistically.
It is plain, simple
dialogue, totally normal conversations with no specific stage directions
assigned to it or notes on how to deliver the lines, all it consists of is
lines which can then be interpreted and performed in any way we decide. There
are subheadings in each section, which we believe to be the titles of each
scene, and within each scene there are lines separated only by literal return
spaces between them on the page. Other than this, there is nothing in the
script.
There are no specific characters, the lines aren’t assigned to anyone in particular, there is no set amount of actors for each scene, and there are no stage directions, all of that is entirely up to us. We are given the dialogue, and with it complete artistic license to perform it however we see fit, choosing and creating our own characters, deciding ourselves how many people to have in each scene and assigning the lines to people ourselves. It’s quite an incredible opportunity to be given I must say, as although it means there is so much more work for us to do, it also gives us the chance to really use our imaginations and stretch ourselves to not just learn roles and lines but actually help create and develop the very foundation of the play we’re performing. It’s a big task, but I see it rather than as being daunting as being a brilliant chance to push myself and work hard both individually and as a team to reach our full potentials.
There are no specific characters, the lines aren’t assigned to anyone in particular, there is no set amount of actors for each scene, and there are no stage directions, all of that is entirely up to us. We are given the dialogue, and with it complete artistic license to perform it however we see fit, choosing and creating our own characters, deciding ourselves how many people to have in each scene and assigning the lines to people ourselves. It’s quite an incredible opportunity to be given I must say, as although it means there is so much more work for us to do, it also gives us the chance to really use our imaginations and stretch ourselves to not just learn roles and lines but actually help create and develop the very foundation of the play we’re performing. It’s a big task, but I see it rather than as being daunting as being a brilliant chance to push myself and work hard both individually and as a team to reach our full potentials.
So, having seen that we
can interpret this text however we want to, we considered and discussed
different techniques and styles we may want to use in it. For example, as the
play itself is written as so naturalistic, but we want more variety and
diversity between the different scenes to create a more interesting and full
performance, we’ve been talking about performing some scenes in a naturalistic
manner and others in a more abstract way, to create a bold contrast between
different parts of the play as well as to add more layers of interest to it and
also utilise and display many performance styles and skills we have at our
disposal. One of these skills we wish to involve as you can see on the thought
shower is physical theatre, something we have all worked on a lot during our
time at college. I believe we’ve built a good understanding of the ways in
which it can make a huge impact on a piece of theatre and really add to it and
shape it in the most incredible ways, and I strongly believe that employing it
in parts of Love and Information will make bounds in strengthening the quality
of our piece.
Something that we picked
up from the text itself, the way in which it is laid out, is that we think it
needs to be very fast paced and smooth in terms of transitions from one scene
or section to another, especially when it comes to the shorter scenes, as
otherwise it could end up looking messy and disjointed, which is not the result
we want.
While looking at the
different ways in which we could develop the piece, we also considered
different practitioners whose styles we could use as influence, and we all gave
ideas of whose work we would like to take into consideration while shaping our
piece. We thought of Bertolt Brecht, using his technique of alienation at some
points to really involve our audience, and I also suggested taking this
audience involvement even further by taking inspiration from Antonine Artaud’s
“Theatre of Cruelty”, a style of theatre which assaults the audience’s senses.
However because this style usually requires material of dark matter which could
be easily disturbing to audiences, I thought we should only take the influence
of the idea of involving the senses,
in subtle ways such as perhaps through using sound effects.
On this note of approaches
to adding technical aspects to our performance, we also discussed the
possibility of using very colourful lighting at some points, most likely in our
more abstract scenes, not to distract or detract from the acting or quality of
performance but to add to visual appeal for the audience.
Group discussions and
exploration of the play is really helping me to develop an understanding of it
and particularly how we can go about interpreting it and making it our own, but
I have also been doing research myself at home into Love and Information, the
play itself, the background of it and some research on the playwright Caryl Churchill.
This research I’ve been doing is also helping me a lot and what follows is the
information I have gathered which is helping inform my creative process.
Research on Love and Information
A very unique piece of
work, Love and Information is a play which focuses on societal issues of how we
gather and process information, and how our relationships and interactions as
humans are affected by a world where information is passed and twisted and
shared in so many different ways which constantly inform and influence our
views and the actions we take. We are so
greatly influenced by the world around us, in a vast amount of ways, even by
things as simple as an advertisement, and Love and Information allows an audience
the chance to consider and reflect on how our natural humanity can be affected
by these kinds of external information which, though they aren’t intrinsic to
what we are as humans, still have a large impact on us.
However, rather than
pushing a specific message or political stand point, through her work on this
play Caryl Churchill leaves it very open to audience interpretation, allowing
people to take away from it what they want. This is one of the things I find so
compelling and in a sense very freeing about working on this text; it’s all about
exploration and interpretation both for us as a performance company and for the
audience we will have the opportunity to share it with.
Themes
Love and relationships: Each
individual scene in this play looks at, however briefly, a relationship or connection
between people. It explores the different types of love and relationships,
whether it be familial bonds such as in the scene “Mother” where a woman
reveals to a boy that she is in fact not his sister but his mother and had been
pretending his grandmother was his mum to hide the fact she’d had a baby at the
age of thirteen, friendships such as in the scene “Affair” where one friend
struggles to tell another they believe their partner is cheating on them, a
romantic relationship such as in the scene “Grass” where the characters are in
a relationship and have children together, or even the connections we have to
people less close to us who are simply co-workers or acquaintances, in scenes
such as “Lab” or “Remote” where the specific relationship between the
characters is not made explicit.
Information: As previously
discussed, one of the themes this play focuses on heavily is that of
information and how it affects us as humans, how the information constantly
bombarding us from the world around can actually violate our thoughts,
feelings, privacy, even memories.
Randomness: I think this
play also looks at the random nature of things which we see and perform as
daily rituals and routines, for me so many of the little excerpts from this
text highlight how these small day to day actions and interactions can seem so
big to us, but really so much of life is just random, and sometimes things
can’t be explained, or there is no reason for them. We all like to believe we
have control over our lives, and of course to a certain degree we do, but I
find studying this play that it just shows how even when we believe we really
know what’s going on and have everything completely in order, anything can
suddenly be thrown into the mix, and things can change drastically in a matter
of moments… life is unpredictable, but the randomness isn’t something we should
try to fight, but rather embrace and accept as part of living. That is
something I interpret from this play, and I’m even finding it’s actually
helping my approach to working on it, as it’s giving me the understanding that
even though it can be frustrating when something doesn’t really make sense, as
I find with some of this play, it doesn’t matter, it just is what it is and you
have to work with that.
Caryl Churchill
Caryl Churchill, born in
London on September 3rd 1938, is a British playwright known for her
work exploring sexual politics, feminism and sexuality.
She has written almost 60
plays, including Cloud Nine (1979), Top Girls (1982), her first ever play Downstairs (1958), and the most recent
of her works; Escaped Alone (2016).
Over the years her merits
for her work include winning several Obie awards and an Olivier, and as well as
being honoured with awards she is highly praised by many as being one of Britain’s
greatest dramatists.
She is known for creating
pieces of work which push boundaries both in terms of political messages and
themes and conventional performance styles, throughout her long and flourishing
career she has continued to constantly refresh and reshape contemporary theatre
with her style of surrealism and her boundless imagination.
This helps me to
understand more deeply her work on Love and Information, because it is so
different to anything I’ve seen or worked on before, and I now understand that
she meant for it to be that way; with it she is again reshaping theatre even in
terms of what a play is expected to be like.
Something I find extremely
fascinating and quite incredible is that from researching Churchill I have
discovered she takes inspiration from practitioners such as Bertolt Brecht with
his Epic Theatre, and Antonine Artaud with his Theatre of Cruelty, both of whom
in our very first look at Love and Information as I previously discussed we
thought of taking influence from and applying elements of their work to
developing our performance. I find it hard to imagine this is a coincidence, I
think it’s clear they must have had a big influence on Churchill’s style, as it
was so apparent to us so soon that the techniques of these two other
practitioners could work so well with Churchill’s material.
I think Churchill is
intriguing as a playwright, and doing background research into her, her
influences and her contributions to the arts is supporting my ability to do
justice to Love and Information and better comprehend what her intentions were
with the play.
Love and Information: The Creative and Rehearsal Process
Ordering scenes and sections |
as it’s so early in the process that nothing is set in stone yet.
Section One: Secret, Fan,
Lab
Section Two: Affair,
Grass, Terminal, Message, Mother
Section Three: God’s
Voice, Star, Dream, the Child Who Didn’t Know Fear, Schizophrenic, Recluse
Section Four: Flashback,
Wedding Video, Savant, Ex
Section Five: Shrink,
Rash, God
Section Six: The Child Who
Didn’t Know Pain, Wife, Earthquake, the Child Who Didn’t Know Sorry
Section Seven: Fate,
Stone, Manic, Virtual, Facts.
Now we had a clear idea of which scenes our production will consist of, it was time to cast the play. As there are no set characters or numbers of actors in each scene, we’ve had to sit down with our scripts and read through each scene we’ve chosen to keep, coming to conclusions together as a team on how many people we believe should be in each scene, casting each scene, and then assigning each line in the scene to specific actors.
This has taken us a whole
afternoon, it’s been quite arduous work, but it had to be done and I think the
artistic choices we’ve made have been good and that having made these concise
decisions about roles and casting that we’ll now be able to head straight into beginning
to rehearse.
The scenes I am cast in
are Fan, Grass, Schizophrenic, Ex, Stone,
Virtual and Facts. I’m very happy
with this as there’s a lot of variation between these scenes and I’m excited at
the prospect of stretching myself and pushing to be completely different in
each scene. I also find it compelling that for each of these scenes I have the
opportunity to create my own characters entirely, through personal decisions
and working together with my fellow performers in each scene to help shape the
characters within it and the relationships between them.
As this whole play relies
so strongly on teamwork and ensemble though, it’s not only our own scenes we’re
going to be working on, but rather we aim to work as a team to all contribute
to and help develop every scene in the play, truly making the whole thing something
we can be proud of. We have decided that one of the most logical ways to work
on the text is to develop it chronologically, simply working on each of the
scenes we have chosen to use from start to finish until we know what we’re
doing for every one, and then we will just rehearse and rehearse until it is
perfected.
Section One
Secret
This is the first scene in
the whole play, and we know we have to use grab the audience’s attention with
it. In this scene, we see two people discussing a secret, one of them trying to
get the other to tell them what it is. The nature of this scene is very
mysterious, as even when the secret is shared between the two characters, the
audience still don’t get to find out what it is. In fact, even in the script,
we as actors are not told what it is either. It leaves it up to the imagination
of those watching, and we wanted to work with this to intrigue people and have
them interested from the get go. The whole idea of a secret is such an
enclosed, private and intimate thing, and that’s what we want to convey through
the atmosphere and the way Divina and Toya communicate in this scene. We want
for it to all feel very secretive so
that the audience are involved as soon as the play begins rather than feeling
separate from it. So we started thinking about how we can create this effect,
and the first thing which occurred to us was that the staging will be
important. We want our two actors close together on stage, making it seem very
enclosed. In the text there is discussion of them not being able to be close
because of this secret keeping them apart, but then of course that changes when
Divina chooses to eventually tell Toya what it is. One way we thought of
representing this visually is to have the two back to back at the start of the
scene, standing right behind one another; symbolising that they are so close
together yet not able to completely see eye to eye because of a secret between
them. Then, when Toya gives up trying to find out, she begins to walk away,
showing she is removing herself further from the situation. This is when Divina
chooses to tell her the secret, we’ve decided she’ll stop Toya leaving and turn
her to face her. Divina then leans in to tell her the secret, and this is where
we had the idea of using choral vocals. The rest of the cast all make the
noises of whispering as Divina leans in, masking whatever she may have said
even though there is no actual line there in the script, the audience wouldn’t
know that. Everything now goes silent, it’s out, it’s done, and our two
characters deliver the closing lines of the scene, and then it ends there; the
audience given no conclusion.
I feel this is going to be
a really effective start to our play and should draw people in.
Something which has come
up discussing the ensemble work however, and also because we’ve been thinking
about how fast our transitions are, is how we want to stage our piece. We
thought that perhaps it would be interesting if the whole cast were on stage
for the entire performance, and we used major and minor so that the focus of
each scene was clear without people who don’t have a role in it having to leave
the stage. Originally we considered having chairs lining the back of the stage,
which we could all sit on in neutral and then enter each scene from when
necessary. This is quite like something we saw that happened in the National
Theatre’s production of A Day in the Country, as we saw their set for it when
we sent on a tour there. We really like the idea of us all set on stage for the
whole thing, however we felt it wasn’t quite enough to just all be sitting at
the back; though simplistic we found perhaps it would be too plain and that
there’s more we can do with it.
We’re considering having
our chairs set around the whole stage, organised symmetrically but dotted
around upstage, downstage, stage left, stage right and even centre stage. This
way, scenes can take place between the different seats, and when there’s
ensemble work in our scenes we’ll all be more involved in the space the scenes are
taking place. This is working thus far, as in secret when we all whisper we now
have the sound going around the whole of the stage. I also think it looks good
in secret because it makes Divina and Toya look more surrounded, adding to the
atmosphere of having to keep something quiet and private.
As for lighting for
Secret, we want the focus to be on Divina and Toya, and we’re thinking what
better way to do this than to have a simple spotlight on them, which they’re
both inside, showing the intimate nature of this interaction between them.
This means they will stay
centre stage the whole time however, which changes how it was staged that Toya
would walk away and Divina would follow her; they need to be more still than
that. So, at the start of the scene, they are still back to back but sitting on
the floor, on the phone to one another, and the whole thing is a phone
conversation meaning they can be stationary instead of it being more
naturalistic where they may move around if it was in person.
The feedback we’ve
received on the lighting for this scene is advice from Sharon that rather than
a plain white spotlight we use a yellow coloured one, as it makes for a more
secretive atmosphere visually. Also, a few of us went to seek out props
backstage, including the phones for this scene, and we found some old fashioned
phones which we thought would look good in Secret. Divina and Toya tried out
using them to see how it looked in one of our rehearsals, however this hasn’t
worked, because as pointed out in tutor feedback, we want this play to be
relatable to our target audience, and we could keep this in mind even in terms
of time period by using modern phones, thus enabling our audience to be able to
better picture themselves in this situation and therefore connect more easily
to it.
Fan
In this scene, the entire
cast is involved, everyone having at least one line as well as lines as an
ensemble. This is proving to be a very tricky scene to work on, it requires
such attention to detail and perfecting to get the timing just right, as the
whole thing is a series of quite short lines divided up between the whole cast,
so cues have to be picked up quickly and correctly in order for the scene to
flow. In Fan, it is an unknown number of people discussing someone who they are
a fan of, boasting about facts they know about him and arguing saying people
are making things up when they don’t really know. This scene can be used to
highlight that rather terrifying “fangirl” or “fanboy” mentality so popular in
contemporary culture, particularly in the media and amongst young people. Cast
your mind for example for a ridiculous argument that may take place somewhere
such as a YouTube comments section, where people will bicker over who has more
claim loving a celebrity because of the amount they know about them. That is
the atmosphere we want to create with this; everyone has to be over the top,
convinced they’re absolutely infatuated with this figure they’re all
discussing, and even competitive over them.
The only person who isn’t
being like this is the person himself they are all a fan of, who Ryan plays. He
has no lines, but simply takes to the front of the stage, portraying physically
this celebrity figure they’re all so obsessed with. We thought this would be a
great time to involve the audience, as Ryan will be on his own at the front of
the stage for the whole scene, he’s going to interact with them, waving,
pretending to sign autographs, even posing for pictures with them. We’re hoping
that involving the audience this early on will keep them engaged following on
from Secret where we will have tried to grab their attention.
In this scene, we also
want to incorporate choral movement as well as choral speech, and this adds
another challenge for us as a group to overcome together. First and foremost
we’ve had to decide exactly what movements everyone will be making and when. We
want for it all to be exact and the same. As the scene starts we will all be
sitting in neutral on our chairs.
Then, at the first line
each person has, they stand up as they say it. Then on our second line, we each
stand up onto our chairs, and on our third line we stand back down onto the
floor. Even though we’ll all be standing up and down at different points, we
like this way because there’s still a pattern which everyone will be following,
so if done successfully it will look really neat and tidy.
As for choral movement, on
top of what I’ve just described, we also have synchronised movements. On the
lines which everyone says together, such as “eurgh”, “how do you know” and
“you’re making that up” we all turn 90 degrees to face a different direction.
The only time we don’t do this is on the last page of the scene on the first
and third time we all say “wait” together. Then, our last movement is choral where
we all sit back down on the chairs at the end of the scene as we say “what are
we going to do”.
We’re rehearsing and
rehearsing this every day we’re in college because it’s taking a lot to get the
timing and cues right and make sure everybody’s movements are in time, but we
are getting there.
We took a film of one of
our practice runs of the scene so we could watch it back and observe how the
movements looked, although not the whole group was in for this rehearsal so I
had to read in for some people. Below is the video.
We like the visual pattern and neatness doing these movements and I think it’s very important to really utilise our abilities as an ensemble in this scene which everybody takes part in, so we’ve decided to definitely stick to the choral movement we’ve chosen.
We like the visual pattern and neatness doing these movements and I think it’s very important to really utilise our abilities as an ensemble in this scene which everybody takes part in, so we’ve decided to definitely stick to the choral movement we’ve chosen.
I like that we’re
employing these bits of physical theatre in this scene, I think it’s working
really well.
As we move through
rehearsals of this scene we’re of course getting feedback as we go along, and
what has come up on several occasions is the need to pick up cues quickly and
then not rush the lie, something which can be quite confusing because when you
come in with a line so quickly your instinct is then to rush it, but we’re
definitely improving at this over time.
For my character in fan, I'm trying to work on sounding and looking really in love and infatuated with this person we're talking about. Our body language as an ensemble is fairly neutral in this scene, so it is difficult to embody that absolute passion for someone with movement limited, which is why I'm trying to portray this through my vocals as much as I can instead. For example, on my first line, as I stand up, which I'm doing very quickly to show my enthusiasm and desperation to be involved in proving my admiration of this person, I'm making my voice very loud and with almost a shrill quality to it, in order to portray that fore mentioned desperation.
For my character in fan, I'm trying to work on sounding and looking really in love and infatuated with this person we're talking about. Our body language as an ensemble is fairly neutral in this scene, so it is difficult to embody that absolute passion for someone with movement limited, which is why I'm trying to portray this through my vocals as much as I can instead. For example, on my first line, as I stand up, which I'm doing very quickly to show my enthusiasm and desperation to be involved in proving my admiration of this person, I'm making my voice very loud and with almost a shrill quality to it, in order to portray that fore mentioned desperation.
For the rest of my lines, I'm adopting an altogether over the top voice for whichever emotion my character is feeling at that time; when she is sceptical and doesn't believe others I'm applying an accusatory quality to my voice, when she is frustrated that none of them know what his favourite smell is I'm prolonging my words slightly and putting on a childish and whiny voice. I'm trying to overexxagerate my vocals to make up for not expressing things physically in this scene except for with our stock movements and choral movement.
Lab
In this scene we see four
people in a lab, two of whom are scientists explaining the process of the work
they are currently doing to the other two who are fascinated and taking notes.
Considering the nature of the previous scene, we wanted this one to be quite
naturalistic, with just a few extra flourishes to add that bit more to it. So
for the majority of this scene, it is just naturalistic conversation, but we’ve
also decided to add in mime and use some cast members who aren’t playing a role
in the scene, Divina, Katy, and Toya, to represent the “chicks” being discussed
by the scientists. The scientists are explaining the research they’re doing,
how they are studying behaviour of baby chickens, then cutting off their heads
and dissecting and analysing their brains to gather information. So the
involvement of the three chorus actors playing the chicks is to act out what is
being described by Sam and Melody that the chicks do without having to leave
their chairs or distract from the dialogue or the where the major focus should
be in the scene. When Melody and Sam talk about chicks pecking at beads, Amber
and Jerome put out their hands to Katy and Toya, who mime pecking at beads in
their hands. Then when Sam says he cuts the head off a chick, he mimes slitting
Divina’s throat and she then plays dead. We didn’t want have too much going on
in this scene, so we thought that these subtle involvements of chorus members
would be just the right amount to add. This means of course, especially as it
is a fairly long scene, that it is completely up to the four actors who have
speaking roles in it to keep the audience engaged and interested the whole
time, even in lines they have which are quite long explaining scientific
processes. The main feedback which is coming up as we work on this scene is
simply about physical and vocal projection, so that the actors can really
perform the piece out to the audience
to keep them paying attention.
There is also a slightly
comical element to this scene, as Sam particularly plays his role as an
eccentric scientist, Melody being the fed up co-worker, and Amber and Jerome
absolutely hanging off their every words; it creates a funny dynamic which I
believe will help a lot also with keeping the audience interested.
When we first started to
look at this scene we were concerned that it would get dull to watch, but I’m
finding as we move through the rehearsal process that it keeps getting brought
to life more and more, especially now that everyone is off book.
We’ve also decided on the
tech we want for this scene now; green lighting and the sound effect of
bubbling to create the illusion of being in a laboratory environment. I think
that this is successfully effective in setting the scene clearly.
Section Two
Affair
As Section Two begins, we
are drawn back again to a situation between two friends, not dissimilar to that
in Secret, as one of them has something to tell the other. Wanting to link it
back to Secret, making connections of themes within the play clear to the
audience, we have chosen to stage this quite similarly; a naturalistic
conversation between these two friends. At first we thought they could perhaps be
in a social setting such as a bar, but the issue we found with this was that it
made it lose that intimate feel of it being just the two people talking about
something secret. So instead, we have mirrored Secret quite closely in another
sense in that Divina and Elvina are the only people who do anything in the
scene, the focus is completely on their dialogue.
Again with the lighting we
return to a similar colour; an orange/yellow colour cast across the two actors.
I think the simplicity of the staging and delivery of this scene really helps
to highlight what’s important in it without other distractions; the connection
between these two characters. This scene I think focuses quite strongly on that
theme I’ve discussed of how information can affect relationships between
people, it’s a brilliant example of that, as was Secret. Both scenes are
interesting ways to portray how even something like one person withholding
evidence from another can make a big difference to how they feel about one
another and the bond between them, and they also both look at how sometimes
it’s difficult to know if you should tell someone something because you can
think of both reasons for and against telling them. I think most people if not
everyone has been in that situation at some point or another and therefore this
will make these scenes relatable to our audience and hopefully help them connect
with the play and leave with something to think about.
Grass
This is the first scene in
which I have a role with lot of dialogue, and I’m working with Ryan in this
scene. The scene is centred on a conversation between a couple in which one of
them has “grassed” on someone they know to the cops and the other is concerned
about what the consequences to this may be. When I first read through this
scene, I felt immediately I would find it interesting to work on, which is why
I selected it myself as one of the ones to keep in our production in the first
place. Ryan and I discussed who would like to take each role, and having read
through the lines we came to the conclusion that I would play the person who
called the police and Ryan would play the concerned partner. We talked about
what stereotypes or assumptions could be made from the dialogue in this scene,
such as what people would immediately assume about the situation or the
characters just from the text. This came up when Ryan pointed out that stereotypically,
and due to sexism, when reading some of the lines many people would assume that
his role was a woman, because the kind of lines it has are those generally
given to female characters due to stereotypes surrounding gender roles about
such issues as who would be talking about the kids and fretting over a
situation like this. We talked about this and decided that because of this it
would be even better for Ryan to play that role, because it means we’re
avoiding altogether the risk of creating that stereotypically overly emotional
female character which can be found in so much fiction. Following the same
views as Churchill herself we think it’s
important to be challenging gender roles such as that, and the very fact that
there are no assigned genders to anyone in this play gives us the opportunity
to do so.
One of the first steps
Ryan and I took to developing this scene was simply to lift it straight onto
its feet and just run it through, seeing what came instinctively doing so and
what happened naturally between the two characters. I found that it flowed
naturally and easily right away, just trying it out straight off made it feel
genuine and give us the chance to play it out just moment by moment as would
happen in real life rather than having planned out anything beforehand. We
found as soon as we set off with it that the pace was quite fast, the
atmosphere frantic as Ryan’s character’s worry builds up and up and my
character’s frustration follows as she tries again and again to calm him down. This
really worked; it feels that it fits the scene well. During this heated
conversation between them both character’s emotions are very on the surface,
even though my character is trying to keep a lid on it, and I can really
already feel a sense of this when we run the scene. I think their emotions
would be added to even more because of the stressful nature of the situation,
the fact that now my character has told the police about whatever it is this
person has done the matter is now out of their hands, and especially with
Ryan’s character thinking of the worst case scenarios and being paranoid this
scene captures quite a tense moment.
Although we seemed to find
our feet with this scene so quickly, I find it important considering we’re
given no background information on the characters or stories in this play that
I take the time to work that out for myself in order to create a more in depth
and full performance and portrayal of each scene and character. So, Ryan and I
went about deciding what the background to our scene was. First we picked out
the snippets of information that the text offers us; the characters have
children together and are therefore most likely a couple, and this is what we
built on. We’ve come up with the idea that they are a couple around their
thirties, who are married and have been with each other for quite some years.
We think they have two children, both of whom are primary school age, because
there is discussion on the kids being picked up from school. We decided one of
their children would be about four and one around seven, and that we would have
been together for a while before we settled down, married and had kids, so we
would have been partners for about ten years now. Due to the line “you weren’t
at work? You could’ve gotten the kids from school”, we also concluded that in
their usual routine it would be Ryan who had to do school drop off and pick up
duties while my character worked. All of these things indicate to us that
normally they lead quite a conventional lifestyle, and that this would most
likely add to just how dramatic this situation feels for them, but we noticed
it’s definitely Ryan’s character that is more phased by it, and so we started
to ponder over why that might be. The conclusion we came to is that perhaps my
character is more used to this sort of stress because before they met they lead
quite different lives. So we’ve chosen that my character used to have a bit
more of a shady life, not necessarily she herself, but that she at least had
connections with people she used to know that disconcerted her partner, who had
never been associated with anyone “dodgy” or untoward and now found it a cause
for great concern that they may be involved in something of this manner because
to him it is unthinkable, because before he met her he never had anything to do
with people like that or situations like this.
Working out this
background information is helping our scene feel fuller and is also helping
inform me in making decisions about how my character should act and behave,
particularly her behaviour towards Ryan. She is frustrated because she thinks
he’s over reacting, but also she is sympathetic because she understands that he
isn’t as adept at handling this sort of thing as she is. She’s also concerned
herself of course because something always could happen, but it’s difficult as
she is trying to take a positive and strong approach to what’s going on as well
as trying to reassure herself that she’s done the right thing even if she isn’t
sure she has, and Ryan’s reaction to it is making all of these things that much
more difficult to keep under control.
We’ve been working on this
scene for a while now and I feel it is continually strengthening as we go
along. The tutor feedback I’ve received thus far has been technical notes such
as projection and making sure I’m not in profile, and I’ve been taking these
notes on board and trying to make sure I’m facing forward enough and that my
vocal and physical projection is strong and enables me further to really engage
with the audience and direct my performance outwards even though my character
is focused so strongly on Ryan.
Below is a short video of Ryan and I rehearsing Grass.
Being off book we’re able to experiment more now, and we’re considering the staging and physicality of our piece more. When I enter, Ryan’s character has just been waiting, stressing, and we want to portray this to the audience visually so they are able to know that right away. Would it be better for him to sit down fretting while he waits, or do something less subtle? This is what we wondered in rehearsal today, and it seems like a good idea for Ryan to be pacing around in the stage space while he waits for me just as the scene begins before I enter, as this is an effectively explicit way of portraying his character’s emotions before the dialogue has even begun. Being restless is a clear indicator of stress and worry, and so that is what Ryan is conveying to the audience in these first few moments. It is also clear from this and the start of their conversation that Ryan already knows what has happened, so we think that my character must have contacted him to let him know before she got home and since that he has just been waiting for her to get back so they could discuss it, or rather, so he could question what on earth she was thinking and let out the stress he’s been holding in while waiting on his own.
Below is a short video of Ryan and I rehearsing Grass.
Being off book we’re able to experiment more now, and we’re considering the staging and physicality of our piece more. When I enter, Ryan’s character has just been waiting, stressing, and we want to portray this to the audience visually so they are able to know that right away. Would it be better for him to sit down fretting while he waits, or do something less subtle? This is what we wondered in rehearsal today, and it seems like a good idea for Ryan to be pacing around in the stage space while he waits for me just as the scene begins before I enter, as this is an effectively explicit way of portraying his character’s emotions before the dialogue has even begun. Being restless is a clear indicator of stress and worry, and so that is what Ryan is conveying to the audience in these first few moments. It is also clear from this and the start of their conversation that Ryan already knows what has happened, so we think that my character must have contacted him to let him know before she got home and since that he has just been waiting for her to get back so they could discuss it, or rather, so he could question what on earth she was thinking and let out the stress he’s been holding in while waiting on his own.
I really like how the
scene starts now with him pacing and me entering looking quite guilty and
slightly unsure of what to expect, I think it sets up the scene effectively.
We’ve also added something
else new to the scene; choral vocals from the rest of the cast and a sort of
flashback effect as my character explains what she said on the phone.
Now, instead of just
telling Ryan what I said, I go “I said-”, then we freeze, the whole cast makes
an automated beep sound effect, I step aside into where there will be a
spotlight and now I’m acting out what I said actually miming a phone as if this
is her casting her mind back to exactly what I did. We’ve added in our own line
also, so that before I say “no I won’t leave my name thank you goodbye” melody
plays the voice of the person on the other end of the phone asking “would you
like to give your name?”
Once the phone call has
ended I then freeze again, there is another beep from the ensemble, the
spotlight goes off and I step back into the conversation with Ryan and it
resumes.
We really like this
addition to the scene as it looks convincing as a flashback and we think it
will help add something different to what is otherwise naturalistic; we like to
keep adding little touches like this in order to really put to use as much of
our potential as performers as we can.
The whole scene has come
together nicely, I’m feeling really positive about it and the way we’ve worked
as a team both Ryan and I and with some influence from the rest of the group to
help shape it how we would like.
We’ve received more
feedback now further along in our process, the first time we had the chance to
run our scene in the theatre where we will be performing. Sharon observed us
and discussed with us to think about the pace and the levels in the scene, the
different moments at which the stress levels can go up and down, when the
franticness should peak and when there should be moments of quiet to create
contrast. She suggested we slow down a little as we went through so we could
think about where to make these changes in the flow of the scene, and when we
did that we found that it really helps make the scene more realistic and
believable. Before, it was very much at a high stress level of quite raised
voices and hectic tones the whole time, and now we’ve discovered at which
moments we can let that settle, and there can be more clear changes in thought
process such as Ryan pausing and then realising I could’ve picked up the
children from school and asking about it. With these more natural changes in
thought process and interaction with one another I think we’ve made bounds in
improving this scene further, I’m really happy with the progress we’ve made.
Now that we are getting
closer and closer to performing, it’s gotten to the point that we know this
scene inside out and I feel really comfortable and confident with it. We’ve
been given feedback from Sharon that now we know it so well we just have to be
careful not to fall into the rhythm of it too easily and to remember to really
listen and react to one another.
In our last few rehearsals
I’m going to keep this in mind and try to make sure that when we perform to our
audience we keep the scene feeling fresh and genuine and stay in the moment as
much as possible.
I've been spending a lot of time thinking about my physicality and vocals for this character, and so at home and on a day at college where we were given the six W's sheet to do on our characters, I've been making lots of decisions about what she is like, who she is, how she would move, speak and conduct herself, and behave towards Ryan.
As already established, she is in her thirties, has a husband, two children, a job, and we've already worked on her background and past having involved people who got caught up in bad behaviour. This is all the foundation I'm building the rest of her character on. To maintain a family life and a job especially when you have young children and a husband who is clearly quite a stressful presence at times, I believe she would need to have a lot of focus, drive, and be able to conduct herself and all of this in an organised manner. Being used to handling these things is why I am playing her in this scene as still trying hard to keep things, particularly Ryan's emotions, under control. This is why I'm making hand gestures trying to calm him, and why while Ryan is pacing around and very mobile, my character is quite still, not letting herself get into a state. Trying to keep a handle on the situation is also why I approach Ryan at the end of the scene, trying to get him to just look at me and be still for a moment, attempting to get him to pull himself together, even though this doesn't work.
In this scene I am under a lot of stress however, and as previously mentioned I think she's still trying to convince herself that she hasn't made a mistake, which adds to the strife that she is currently under. So, instead of being completely confident with my posture and body language, although I'm aiming to make it clear that she is just managing to keep herself together, I'm also trying to display little hints of uncertainty and discontent, for example being slightly tensed up in posture around my shoulders and back and allowing my concern to show through my facial expressions at different points when she is unable to mask it.
As for her voice, I am trying to be articulate and paced in my speaking, as well as trying to ground my voice so it doesn't go too high even when I'm exasperated or loud. This is because of her age; I want it to be clear through my voice that this character is mature and not young, and I think these vocal qualities are indicators of that.
At some points I do raise my voice however, or speed up my speech, and at these times my intention through this is to express her outbursts of emotion, namely frustration at Ryan's stressful reaction.
I find it interesting to play this character as I think she has quite a lot going on internally in this scene, some of which she is even trying to keep hidden, so for me as an actor there is a lot to work with in terms of physicality and voice, and I'm enjoying working out these different parts of how to portray this role convincingly.
I've been spending a lot of time thinking about my physicality and vocals for this character, and so at home and on a day at college where we were given the six W's sheet to do on our characters, I've been making lots of decisions about what she is like, who she is, how she would move, speak and conduct herself, and behave towards Ryan.
As already established, she is in her thirties, has a husband, two children, a job, and we've already worked on her background and past having involved people who got caught up in bad behaviour. This is all the foundation I'm building the rest of her character on. To maintain a family life and a job especially when you have young children and a husband who is clearly quite a stressful presence at times, I believe she would need to have a lot of focus, drive, and be able to conduct herself and all of this in an organised manner. Being used to handling these things is why I am playing her in this scene as still trying hard to keep things, particularly Ryan's emotions, under control. This is why I'm making hand gestures trying to calm him, and why while Ryan is pacing around and very mobile, my character is quite still, not letting herself get into a state. Trying to keep a handle on the situation is also why I approach Ryan at the end of the scene, trying to get him to just look at me and be still for a moment, attempting to get him to pull himself together, even though this doesn't work.
In this scene I am under a lot of stress however, and as previously mentioned I think she's still trying to convince herself that she hasn't made a mistake, which adds to the strife that she is currently under. So, instead of being completely confident with my posture and body language, although I'm aiming to make it clear that she is just managing to keep herself together, I'm also trying to display little hints of uncertainty and discontent, for example being slightly tensed up in posture around my shoulders and back and allowing my concern to show through my facial expressions at different points when she is unable to mask it.
As for her voice, I am trying to be articulate and paced in my speaking, as well as trying to ground my voice so it doesn't go too high even when I'm exasperated or loud. This is because of her age; I want it to be clear through my voice that this character is mature and not young, and I think these vocal qualities are indicators of that.
At some points I do raise my voice however, or speed up my speech, and at these times my intention through this is to express her outbursts of emotion, namely frustration at Ryan's stressful reaction.
I find it interesting to play this character as I think she has quite a lot going on internally in this scene, some of which she is even trying to keep hidden, so for me as an actor there is a lot to work with in terms of physicality and voice, and I'm enjoying working out these different parts of how to portray this role convincingly.
Terminal
This is one of the scenes
from the play which is very short, but very powerful in only a few lines. In it
a patient is asking her doctor for information on how long she has left to live
because of a condition she is suffering from. We aren’t given any details such
as what the illness is, but from the dialogue the urgency and sadness of the
situation is made apparent. Not wanting the impact of the content to be lost in
this scene by the audience not noticing it enough because it’s just a short
conversation, we thought about how we could make this scene stand out so the
audience really pay attention to what is being said rather than the full effect
not being made. Rob made the suggestion that we use the technical theatre
options at our disposal to our advantage in this scene, having the character
playing the doctor pre-recorded and projected onto the back of the stage. We
really took to this idea, not only because it’s something unique, but also
because it will help add to that feeling of isolation and how impersonal things
can be even for people in a place as dire as not knowing how long they will
still be alive. Things can be so impersonal and people so disconnected in
society today, and by having someone giving news even this sad simply on a
screen rather than there as an actual human we’re making a point about that, I
think it will strike a very subtly poignant note.
Message
This scene is one with,
funnily enough, potential for a very strong message. Rob was telling us that in
one production of this play he saw this scene featured somebody who was clearly
supposed to be portraying someone of Muslim belief. In the scene, it’s two
characters, played by Ryan and Toya, discussing the notion of people living in
terror because killing people and killing yourself sends a message. We could
make a strong political choice depending on which direction we take this piece,
and we feel that it has to be something Toya and Ryan feel comfortable with
because it’s them performing it.
There are so many
different takes we could do on this, and there’s a lot to consider because
depending on what we chose to do we could make a real impact in one way or
another. We’ve been thinking about it and discussing it as a group, and we’ve
been wondering if whether because this whole play is so open to interpretation
we should keep this scene as exactly that too; rather than making a final
decision about what specifically the situation is, leave it to the minds of the
audience. This may even say more, because it allows people to think about why
they may assume one thing or another about the scene. So, we haven’t chosen any
specific agenda with it, we’re leaving it to see what people make of it
themselves. I think this is a good idea and I would be interested to know what
different people’s takes were on it; perhaps our audience reaction will
indicate what people think.
Mother
This scene is about a
woman revealing the truth to her son that she is his birth mother who had him
when she was thirteen and that the person he has believed to be his mother his
whole life is in fact his grandmother. I find this scene really interesting,
it’s such an intense moment to be captured, yet the actual conversation is so
casual as if it were simply discussing what to have for dinner. I think this is
an interest commentary on how distant and emotionally closed off people can be
even in extreme situations sometimes.
Katy and Sam act in this
scene, Sam playing a young character and Katy his mother. The scene begins with
Sam sitting on the floor playing on his game console, could be any normal
household, any normal family. Katy enters and tells him she needs to talk to
him while “their” mum is out. At first he won’t pay attention to her fully
because he is so engrossed in his game, another example of human interaction
being stunted and interrupted by external material sources, but then he leaves
his game for a moment and she tells him the truth about his parentage. We want
this to be a very still and quiet scene, so the focus is completely on these
two characters and the truth of the moment, it isn’t dressed up at all or
messed with; it isn’t contrived, it’s simply as base as it would be if
something like this happened in real life.
We’re keeping simple
lighting over the two characters and nobody else is involved in this scene, and
the tone stays very much the same throughout, leaving the dialogue as raw as it
can be, meaning there’s nothing to detract from what is actually being said.
After the previous scene
where Toya and Ryan are quite mobile on stage and almost in an argument, and
the scene before that with the large projection, this scene brings us back to
base with a simplistic conversation between two humans, all that is present
onstage them and their relationship. I think this is really good; it ends
section two on a very real human moment.
Section Three
God’s Voice
Section three opens with
God’s Voice, a piece themed around Religion, scepticism on the subject and
people believing their actions may be justified by their religion. In it we see
a conversation between two people, Ria and Jerome, one of whom is explaining to
the other how God instructed them to do something. This whole scene focuses on
God and religion, so what better setting we thought than somewhere people are
praying? We have Ria centre stage on her knees, in praying position, the rest
of the ensemble spread around the stage in various other forms of prayer,
representing lots of different types of religion rather than just one as we
think it’s best to use a platform of performance to represent a wider variety
of lifestyles and religions rather than being limited. Jerome then approaches
Ria, him being the only person on stage who isn’t praying in some way, and he
challenges what she’s telling him about having being spoken to and instructed
to act by God.
Jerome and Ria explained
that they think Ria’s character has done something bad and is saying that it’s
okay because God told her to do it, and that Jerome is sceptical and thinks it
is hypocritical to be so religious and then do something sinful, especially in
the name of God.
This creates for a bit of
a conflict in the scene, but it’s important that it is only subtle and not a
rude disagreement because of the setting and the people surrounding them. I
think it’s interesting for us to have so much peace and prayer surrounding this
situation in which there is somebody so sceptical and unsure of the whole
notion, whose words some of which almost go as far as to mock the whole idea by
asking quite ridiculous questions such as what language did God speak to her in
and did he have a regional accent.
For the lighting in this
scene we’re having it so it looks like candle light, softly glowing lights
across the whole stage creating ambience and a peaceful feel, in the very centre
of which is this disruption, which while though not particularly loud or
disturbing would be difficult to ignore especially in contrast to the absolute
serenity around it.
Star
A very calm and beautiful
scene, Star simply shows us two people discussing astronomy. It is a short and
sweet few lines of dialogue, and one of the few scenes in our production which
has absolutely no negativity in it; there is no conflict, no cause for
concern, nothing bad at all, just pure
and simple conversation over something pleasant. We aim for this to provide the
audience with a nice break from the heavier parts of the play and bring their
attention to a bigger picture than these human interactions which most of the
play is focused on. I personally see this scene as an opportunity to show that
even with all of the day to day business going on and how important material
things can seem, there is always still so much more in nature itself and in the
natural structure and design of the world and humans ourselves than in human-made
unnecessary complications to life. Reading this scene, I think of “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our
stars, but in ourselves”. Because amidst this muddle of scenes which
display the messes and mistakes we as a human race make, we are suddenly taken
away from that completely to simply on something as pure and natural as the
stars, creating such a bold and immediate contrast between something as real as
a star in the sky and something as ultimately trivial as many of the small
issues we face day to day, which can seem so huge to us until put into
perspective, and the terrible things we can sometimes choose to do. It makes me
think the fault really is in us, we can lose sight of what is truly important
so easily and get caught up in materialism and falseness, and this is affected
so much by the kind of ultimately meaningless information fed to us every day
which becomes such a big part of our lives it actually alters how we think and
behave. I have no way of knowing if it was Churchill’s intention to make people
think about things like this through this scene Star, but that is certainly
what I take from it, and I hope that when we perform this moment to an audience
they will take something from it themselves.
Aside from my thoughts on
the meaning of the scene, In terms of the actual staging, we’re using the
ensemble, the whole cast are going to be gazing up into the sky, and we’re
having small silver lights sprinkled across the whole stage, as well as a
projection of the sky and stars on the back wall, and Amber and Matthew will be
stood centre stage just looking up and talking to one another calmly. This one
scene doesn’t focus on humans so much but the world itself, and that is what we
hope for the audience to get a sense of watching it.
Dream
With Dream we are quickly
brought back to the subject of human interaction. We see two people discussing
that they wish to have an affair with one another, and by the end of the
encounter it is apparent that is what’s going to happen. This is another scene
the nature of which is relatively secretive, but we didn’t want to overuse the
structure we employed in Secret and Affair. This time we’re looking at the idea
of these two characters, Jerome and Toya, getting closer and closer together
physically at the same time as they get closer to the idea of cheating and
eventually it is clear that they’re going to. When the scene starts, they are
on either side of the stage, as Toya describes a dream she has which lead her
to believe that her partner is cheating on her. The dialogue then quickly turns
to this meaning that she wouldn’t fee guilty anymore if she cheated, and so now
they begin to walk closer to the centre of the stage as they talk, symbolising
them getting nearer and nearer to breaking and doing it. Eventually they reach
each other in the centre, the scene ending on “either way”, meaning if the
dream was about her partner or the two of them either way it meant they were
going to be together. This is where the scene ends, the lighting goes down and
the audience are left to guess at what will happen next, which seems pretty
clear considering the content of the scene. The physicality of the characters
plays such an important part in portraying what they are thinking and feeling,
as body language and gesture reveals so much, so I feel the way we see these
two moving together physically and visually reflects their inner monologues of
wanting to be closer together in many ways, and I believe that the audience
will, even if subconsciously, make that link in their minds.
Our technical aspects for
this scene are really gorgeous; they create the visual imagery which Toya is
describing in her opening monologue. She talks of her dream, in which she saw a
garden, blackberries, a butterfly, a rose, and as she describes each detail of
her dream, lights come up in colours corresponding to the things she is talking
about, until there is built up a state of green, pink, yellow, even a small
orange light portraying the butterfly, and then suddenly, when infidelity and
cheating is mentioned, the lights all go to red, a colour associated with
danger, lust, passion, all themes surrounding unfaithfulness.
I love that we’re using
everything we have to really dig into the depth of each scene and make all the
details in the text stand out, having seen it in our tech runs I think it works
very effectively and helps add a flourish of magic to the scene, bringing to
life the words as Toya speaks them.
The Child Who Didn’t Know Fear
This part of Love and
Information is very different to any of the others, the whole scene being a
monologue. Ryan was really keen to take on the challenge of this, and everyone
in the group is happy with the decision for him to perform the monologue. In
terms of how he delivers the speech itself, it’s all down to Ryan, he’s
spending a lot of time developing different physicality’s, voices and vocal
qualities to tell the story, and I and the rest of the group are giving him
feedback as he progresses. Although all of the text is said by just the one
person in this scene, we discussed that we thought it would be a good chance
for the rest of the cast to work as an ensemble.
The first way we thought
of perhaps involving the whole cast was by taking some of the lines out of the
monologue, which in it are being said by characters in the story tellers’
story, and saying them as those characters in the story. We thought we could
all adopt different parts of the story as he was saying it and act it out, and
for a while we did ponder over how we might go about this, but nothing seemed
quite right as we went through our different options. As we want the whole cast
to be involved, and there are only really a select amount of roles in the story
being told, not to mention it is a story which changes location and setting and
skips chunks of time, it all just felt it was going to be too messy to try and
organise, and we really don’t want our piece to end up looking unprofessional.
Pondering over what to do, the idea has been brought up that perhaps we
shouldn’t be part of the story, but in fact people listening to it. We built
further on this then; they should be children, we could all adopt the
physicality and reactions of children listening to this tale at story time. As
soon as this idea was brought into the mix it just seemed to fit so much better
than the previous plan, and so we have decided that this is what we’re going to
do.
We all gather together,
sitting on the floor in a group, listening closely to Ryan’s tale. We are
upstage of Ryan, but his performance is directed outwards, so he can tell the
audience the story and his vocal and physical projection isn’t lost upstage but
rather sent out as if the whole of the audience were also at this storytelling.
The rest of us react, gasp and all embody the roles of small children listening
to this tale of a child who never felt fear, and with Ryan’s brilliant
deliverance of the monologue paired with the reactions supporting him from us
as an ensemble, the scene is really coming together so nicely.
Feedback we have received
is to decide concisely the age range of the children we are playing, so that we
can make sure we’re all doing movements suitable to that age together and
making it clear to the audience. We have chosen for them to be very young
children, and are now all making a more conscious effort to ensure that our
physicality’s match one another’s.
I really enjoy these
scenes in which we work as an ensemble, I think the fact that we’re getting to
do it so much in this production is really helping to strengthen our ability to
work together in harmony, and I think this is a really important thing to be
able to do in performance of any kind.
My role in this scene as part of the ensemble means that unlike with scenes like Grass I don't find I have great depth to go into exploring the specifics of my character, as all the children in this scene are serving one purpose together, acting as a body of people rather than individuals. So I have been focusing on stereotypical things to indicate that I am a child. I've cast my mind back to work we did during our masks assignment, where we looked at how to portray different ages through physicality. At that time we did work pretending to be children, and I'm applying that to this scene, thinking about the posture and movement of young children and embodying those as much as I can; for example sitting with my legs crossed slumped down because young children don't worry about things like good posture or a straight back, playing with my fingers or shoelaces absent mindedly as small children often have a tendency to fiddle.
The only vocals I have in this scene are gasps and reactions to Ryan's story, so for these moments I am working on making my vocals quite soft and higher in pitch than usual, to help make clear that I am of a very young age in this scene.
Schizophrenic
From the moment we first
began looking at Love and Information this scene stood out to me. I’m
fascinated by psychology and I find mental illness very compelling subject
matter to work on. This scene is about somebody who suffers from mental
illness, and I thought it would be a good challenge for me as an actor to push
myself to portray a character very different to ones I have had the chance to
play in the past. In this scene is myself, Divina, Amber and Jerome. Looking at
the theme schizophrenia; split personality disorder, what came to mind for us
was the prospect of having more than one person represent each character. There
are seemingly two people talking in the scene, but why not take the very
subject of the text and apply it to how we perform it. We split into two sides,
Divina and I representing one character, Amber and Jerome the other. The number
of people speaking in the scene builds, it starting with me alone, and then the
others joining in, conveying the voices building inside somebody’s head, the
feeling of more than one consciousness being present within a person.
“How do you know I’m evil”
is my first line, which opens the scene, and as soon as I say this a secretive,
hushed whisper is passed through the rest of the people on the stage, my role
the only person left out of it, isolated; meaning to set the tone that the
themes of this scene are dark. We aim to create a feeling of unease and
discomfort, making the audience feel what the character feels, this is not
intended to be a pleasant scene but rather one which an audience would not feel
comfortable while watching; by this point they may have relaxed into simply
sitting and watching, but we want to keep them constantly engaged and on the
edge of their seat, bringing fresh and new ideas to the table as we progress
through the play.
Divina joins in on the
next line, then amber, then Jerome, and then we move together into our pairs on
opposite sides of the stage and you can see it is a standoff and there is clear
conflict between the different characters we are seeing.
Divina and I are working
on the movements and gesture of our role. She is disturbed, we want her
movements to be subtly unnatural, disconcerting, as we stand holding hands to
signify the two personalities hand in hand with one another, and we stare
blankly across the stage to Amber and Jerome, showing no remorse or concern at
the matter of us knowing we are ill. When asked “you do know you’re ill” by
Amber and Jerome, we look to each other, smile, and respond “I’ve been told
that”. The utter dismissive reply and the blatant happiness in Divina and
myself is to make our character a cause for concern to the audience, almost
creepy without it being too clichéd or over the top.
For lighting we’re having
moving spotlights surrounding the stage and at one point a bright flash of
light everywhere as the whole cast say one word together, we want our lighting
to also be unpleasant, trying to achieve our desired effect of the audience
feeling uncomfortable by everything seeming slightly distorted in this scene;
lights moving, two people portraying one person, the content of the actual
lines themselves which is sinister and discusses Divina and I having been given
“signals by traffic lights” to hurt Amber and Jerome. Everything about this
scene is twisted, and that’s what we’re trying to represent.
I’ve also been doing some
research at home into schizophrenia and how it affects people, in particular
what physical traits can be associated with the disorder, because I would like
to portray it as realistically as I can.
Some of the most common
physical symptoms of this particular disorder include having a dead and
expressionless gaze, and strange uses of words or odd ways of speaking. There
are of course also many other indicators, but having researched several
different symptoms these are a couple which I think are most accessible to
portray dramatically in such a short scene through just the way we speak our
lines and our facial expressions.
I’m applying what I have
learnt about this disorder to my portrayal of the character, hoping not only
that it will strengthen the quality of my performance but also because I
believe it’s our responsibility as actors to get to the truth of a moment on
stage and this is greatly aided by as deep an understanding of the scenes and
characters as possible.
I’ve also been looking at
the mental effects schizophrenia has on a person, particularly in young people
and teens. For example, it makes people feel paranoid and suspicious of others,
it affects day to day life making even simple functions difficult to perform
due to social troubles as well as mental disruptions such as disorganised
thoughts, even hallucinations and delusions. I’ve been looking at these effects
so that I can think of these things during the scene and try to get into the
state of mind someone with the disorder could actually be in, because as I
remember learning about in depth during our work on Stanislavski, the
psychological bleeds into the physical, and I believe if I have a clear vision
in my mind of what my character is feeling and thinking and going through, it
will inform my physicality too.
Recluse
Recluse, one of the longer
excerpts in the play, is about someone who is trying to hide away from the
media and reporters. Ryan and Sam portray two characters in a house outside of
which are the press trying to get information and invade their privacy.
Melody plays the voice of
the generic reporter outside, asking questions and trying to get as much
information as possible. Inside the house, everything is naturalistic, Sam and
Ryan acting out the scene with naturalism, and it is then the goings on outside
which we are going to use different techniques for.
We wish to create the
illusion of a lot of press being outside, of it being overwhelming for Ryan’s
character, but we don’t want to just keep using the entire cast when we need to
make the effect of a large number of people. Instead, we came up with the idea
of using vocals to make this effect. Ria joins in on the scene, reading out
Melody’s words about one second after Melody; thus creating an echoing sound,
rather than it just sounding like one person is outside. For a while we had
Melody and Ria seated on chairs, but we thought there was more we could do here
than that. We tried positioning them downstage left and right, mirroring each
other’s posture and movements, yet still this didn’t quite fit. It didn’t help
make the impression that there were several people outside Ryan and Sam’s
house, because you could clearly just see it was only Melody and Ria.
The next thing we tried
was actually having them stand in the audience, becoming part of that crowd.
We’re finding this works much better, as now it is Sam and Ryan alone on stage
and a whole crowd of people where the reporters’ voices are coming from.
God’s Voice
Section three opens with
God’s Voice, a piece themed around Religion, scepticism on the subject and
people believing their actions may be justified by their religion. In it we see
a conversation between two people, Ria and Jerome, one of whom is explaining to
the other how God instructed them to do something. This whole scene focuses on
God and religion, so what better setting we thought than somewhere people are
praying? We have Ria centre stage on her knees, in praying position, the rest
of the ensemble spread around the stage in various other forms of prayer,
representing lots of different types of religion rather than just one as we
think it’s best to use a platform of performance to represent a wider variety
of lifestyles and religions rather than being limited. Jerome then approaches
Ria, him being the only person on stage who isn’t praying in some way, and he
challenges what she’s telling him about having being spoken to and instructed
to act by God.
Jerome and Ria explained
that they think Ria’s character has done something bad and is saying that it’s
okay because God told her to do it, and that Jerome is sceptical and thinks it
is hypocritical to be so religious and then do something sinful, especially in
the name of God.
This creates for a bit of
a conflict in the scene, but it’s important that it is only subtle and not a
rude disagreement because of the setting and the people surrounding them. I
think it’s interesting for us to have so much peace and prayer surrounding this
situation in which there is somebody so sceptical and unsure of the whole
notion, whose words some of which almost go as far as to mock the whole idea by
asking quite ridiculous questions such as what language did God speak to her in
and did he have a regional accent.
For the lighting in this
scene we’re having it so it looks like candle light, softly glowing lights
across the whole stage creating ambience and a peaceful feel, in the very centre
of which is this disruption, which while though not particularly loud or
disturbing would be difficult to ignore especially in contrast to the absolute
serenity around it.
Star
A very calm and beautiful
scene, Star simply shows us two people discussing astronomy. It is a short and
sweet few lines of dialogue, and one of the few scenes in our production which
has absolutely no negativity in it; there is no conflict, no cause for
concern, nothing bad at all, just pure
and simple conversation over something pleasant. We aim for this to provide the
audience with a nice break from the heavier parts of the play and bring their
attention to a bigger picture than these human interactions which most of the
play is focused on. I personally see this scene as an opportunity to show that
even with all of the day to day business going on and how important material
things can seem, there is always still so much more in nature itself and in the
natural structure and design of the world and humans ourselves than in human-made
unnecessary complications to life. Reading this scene, I think of “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our
stars, but in ourselves”. Because amidst this muddle of scenes which
display the messes and mistakes we as a human race make, we are suddenly taken
away from that completely to simply on something as pure and natural as the
stars, creating such a bold and immediate contrast between something as real as
a star in the sky and something as ultimately trivial as many of the small
issues we face day to day, which can seem so huge to us until put into
perspective, and the terrible things we can sometimes choose to do. It makes me
think the fault really is in us, we can lose sight of what is truly important
so easily and get caught up in materialism and falseness, and this is affected
so much by the kind of ultimately meaningless information fed to us every day
which becomes such a big part of our lives it actually alters how we think and
behave. I have no way of knowing if it was Churchill’s intention to make people
think about things like this through this scene Star, but that is certainly
what I take from it, and I hope that when we perform this moment to an audience
they will take something from it themselves.
Aside from my thoughts on
the meaning of the scene, In terms of the actual staging, we’re using the
ensemble, the whole cast are going to be gazing up into the sky, and we’re
having small silver lights sprinkled across the whole stage, as well as a
projection of the sky and stars on the back wall, and Amber and Matthew will be
stood centre stage just looking up and talking to one another calmly. This one
scene doesn’t focus on humans so much but the world itself, and that is what we
hope for the audience to get a sense of watching it.
Dream
With Dream we are quickly
brought back to the subject of human interaction. We see two people discussing
that they wish to have an affair with one another, and by the end of the
encounter it is apparent that is what’s going to happen. This is another scene
the nature of which is relatively secretive, but we didn’t want to overuse the
structure we employed in Secret and Affair. This time we’re looking at the idea
of these two characters, Jerome and Toya, getting closer and closer together
physically at the same time as they get closer to the idea of cheating and
eventually it is clear that they’re going to. When the scene starts, they are
on either side of the stage, as Toya describes a dream she has which lead her
to believe that her partner is cheating on her. The dialogue then quickly turns
to this meaning that she wouldn’t fee guilty anymore if she cheated, and so now
they begin to walk closer to the centre of the stage as they talk, symbolising
them getting nearer and nearer to breaking and doing it. Eventually they reach
each other in the centre, the scene ending on “either way”, meaning if the
dream was about her partner or the two of them either way it meant they were
going to be together. This is where the scene ends, the lighting goes down and
the audience are left to guess at what will happen next, which seems pretty
clear considering the content of the scene. The physicality of the characters
plays such an important part in portraying what they are thinking and feeling,
as body language and gesture reveals so much, so I feel the way we see these
two moving together physically and visually reflects their inner monologues of
wanting to be closer together in many ways, and I believe that the audience
will, even if subconsciously, make that link in their minds.
Our technical aspects for
this scene are really gorgeous; they create the visual imagery which Toya is
describing in her opening monologue. She talks of her dream, in which she saw a
garden, blackberries, a butterfly, a rose, and as she describes each detail of
her dream, lights come up in colours corresponding to the things she is talking
about, until there is built up a state of green, pink, yellow, even a small
orange light portraying the butterfly, and then suddenly, when infidelity and
cheating is mentioned, the lights all go to red, a colour associated with
danger, lust, passion, all themes surrounding unfaithfulness.
I love that we’re using
everything we have to really dig into the depth of each scene and make all the
details in the text stand out, having seen it in our tech runs I think it works
very effectively and helps add a flourish of magic to the scene, bringing to
life the words as Toya speaks them.
The Child Who Didn’t Know Fear
This part of Love and
Information is very different to any of the others, the whole scene being a
monologue. Ryan was really keen to take on the challenge of this, and everyone
in the group is happy with the decision for him to perform the monologue. In
terms of how he delivers the speech itself, it’s all down to Ryan, he’s
spending a lot of time developing different physicality’s, voices and vocal
qualities to tell the story, and I and the rest of the group are giving him
feedback as he progresses. Although all of the text is said by just the one
person in this scene, we discussed that we thought it would be a good chance
for the rest of the cast to work as an ensemble.
The first way we thought
of perhaps involving the whole cast was by taking some of the lines out of the
monologue, which in it are being said by characters in the story tellers’
story, and saying them as those characters in the story. We thought we could
all adopt different parts of the story as he was saying it and act it out, and
for a while we did ponder over how we might go about this, but nothing seemed
quite right as we went through our different options. As we want the whole cast
to be involved, and there are only really a select amount of roles in the story
being told, not to mention it is a story which changes location and setting and
skips chunks of time, it all just felt it was going to be too messy to try and
organise, and we really don’t want our piece to end up looking unprofessional.
Pondering over what to do, the idea has been brought up that perhaps we
shouldn’t be part of the story, but in fact people listening to it. We built
further on this then; they should be children, we could all adopt the
physicality and reactions of children listening to this tale at story time. As
soon as this idea was brought into the mix it just seemed to fit so much better
than the previous plan, and so we have decided that this is what we’re going to
do.
We all gather together,
sitting on the floor in a group, listening closely to Ryan’s tale. We are
upstage of Ryan, but his performance is directed outwards, so he can tell the
audience the story and his vocal and physical projection isn’t lost upstage but
rather sent out as if the whole of the audience were also at this storytelling.
The rest of us react, gasp and all embody the roles of small children listening
to this tale of a child who never felt fear, and with Ryan’s brilliant
deliverance of the monologue paired with the reactions supporting him from us
as an ensemble, the scene is really coming together so nicely.
Feedback we have received
is to decide concisely the age range of the children we are playing, so that we
can make sure we’re all doing movements suitable to that age together and
making it clear to the audience. We have chosen for them to be very young
children, and are now all making a more conscious effort to ensure that our
physicality’s match one another’s.
I really enjoy these
scenes in which we work as an ensemble, I think the fact that we’re getting to
do it so much in this production is really helping to strengthen our ability to
work together in harmony, and I think this is a really important thing to be
able to do in performance of any kind.
My role in this scene as part of the ensemble means that unlike with scenes like Grass I don't find I have great depth to go into exploring the specifics of my character, as all the children in this scene are serving one purpose together, acting as a body of people rather than individuals. So I have been focusing on stereotypical things to indicate that I am a child. I've cast my mind back to work we did during our masks assignment, where we looked at how to portray different ages through physicality. At that time we did work pretending to be children, and I'm applying that to this scene, thinking about the posture and movement of young children and embodying those as much as I can; for example sitting with my legs crossed slumped down because young children don't worry about things like good posture or a straight back, playing with my fingers or shoelaces absent mindedly as small children often have a tendency to fiddle.
The only vocals I have in this scene are gasps and reactions to Ryan's story, so for these moments I am working on making my vocals quite soft and higher in pitch than usual, to help make clear that I am of a very young age in this scene.
Schizophrenic
From the moment we first
began looking at Love and Information this scene stood out to me. I’m
fascinated by psychology and I find mental illness very compelling subject
matter to work on. This scene is about somebody who suffers from mental
illness, and I thought it would be a good challenge for me as an actor to push
myself to portray a character very different to ones I have had the chance to
play in the past. In this scene is myself, Divina, Amber and Jerome. Looking at
the theme schizophrenia; split personality disorder, what came to mind for us
was the prospect of having more than one person represent each character. There
are seemingly two people talking in the scene, but why not take the very
subject of the text and apply it to how we perform it. We split into two sides,
Divina and I representing one character, Amber and Jerome the other. The number
of people speaking in the scene builds, it starting with me alone, and then the
others joining in, conveying the voices building inside somebody’s head, the
feeling of more than one consciousness being present within a person.
“How do you know I’m evil”
is my first line, which opens the scene, and as soon as I say this a secretive,
hushed whisper is passed through the rest of the people on the stage, my role
the only person left out of it, isolated; meaning to set the tone that the
themes of this scene are dark. We aim to create a feeling of unease and
discomfort, making the audience feel what the character feels, this is not
intended to be a pleasant scene but rather one which an audience would not feel
comfortable while watching; by this point they may have relaxed into simply
sitting and watching, but we want to keep them constantly engaged and on the
edge of their seat, bringing fresh and new ideas to the table as we progress
through the play.
Divina joins in on the
next line, then amber, then Jerome, and then we move together into our pairs on
opposite sides of the stage and you can see it is a standoff and there is clear
conflict between the different characters we are seeing.
Divina and I are working
on the movements and gesture of our role. She is disturbed, we want her
movements to be subtly unnatural, disconcerting, as we stand holding hands to
signify the two personalities hand in hand with one another, and we stare
blankly across the stage to Amber and Jerome, showing no remorse or concern at
the matter of us knowing we are ill. When asked “you do know you’re ill” by
Amber and Jerome, we look to each other, smile, and respond “I’ve been told
that”. The utter dismissive reply and the blatant happiness in Divina and
myself is to make our character a cause for concern to the audience, almost
creepy without it being too clichéd or over the top.
For lighting we’re having
moving spotlights surrounding the stage and at one point a bright flash of
light everywhere as the whole cast say one word together, we want our lighting
to also be unpleasant, trying to achieve our desired effect of the audience
feeling uncomfortable by everything seeming slightly distorted in this scene;
lights moving, two people portraying one person, the content of the actual
lines themselves which is sinister and discusses Divina and I having been given
“signals by traffic lights” to hurt Amber and Jerome. Everything about this
scene is twisted, and that’s what we’re trying to represent.
I’ve also been doing some
research at home into schizophrenia and how it affects people, in particular
what physical traits can be associated with the disorder, because I would like
to portray it as realistically as I can.
Some of the most common
physical symptoms of this particular disorder include having a dead and
expressionless gaze, and strange uses of words or odd ways of speaking. There
are of course also many other indicators, but having researched several
different symptoms these are a couple which I think are most accessible to
portray dramatically in such a short scene through just the way we speak our
lines and our facial expressions.
I’m applying what I have
learnt about this disorder to my portrayal of the character, hoping not only
that it will strengthen the quality of my performance but also because I
believe it’s our responsibility as actors to get to the truth of a moment on
stage and this is greatly aided by as deep an understanding of the scenes and
characters as possible.
I’ve also been looking at
the mental effects schizophrenia has on a person, particularly in young people
and teens. For example, it makes people feel paranoid and suspicious of others,
it affects day to day life making even simple functions difficult to perform
due to social troubles as well as mental disruptions such as disorganised
thoughts, even hallucinations and delusions. I’ve been looking at these effects
so that I can think of these things during the scene and try to get into the
state of mind someone with the disorder could actually be in, because as I
remember learning about in depth during our work on Stanislavski, the
psychological bleeds into the physical, and I believe if I have a clear vision
in my mind of what my character is feeling and thinking and going through, it
will inform my physicality too.
Recluse
Recluse, one of the longer
excerpts in the play, is about someone who is trying to hide away from the
media and reporters. Ryan and Sam portray two characters in a house outside of
which are the press trying to get information and invade their privacy.
Melody plays the voice of
the generic reporter outside, asking questions and trying to get as much
information as possible. Inside the house, everything is naturalistic, Sam and
Ryan acting out the scene with naturalism, and it is then the goings on outside
which we are going to use different techniques for.
We wish to create the
illusion of a lot of press being outside, of it being overwhelming for Ryan’s
character, but we don’t want to just keep using the entire cast when we need to
make the effect of a large number of people. Instead, we came up with the idea
of using vocals to make this effect. Ria joins in on the scene, reading out
Melody’s words about one second after Melody; thus creating an echoing sound,
rather than it just sounding like one person is outside. For a while we had
Melody and Ria seated on chairs, but we thought there was more we could do here
than that. We tried positioning them downstage left and right, mirroring each
other’s posture and movements, yet still this didn’t quite fit. It didn’t help
make the impression that there were several people outside Ryan and Sam’s
house, because you could clearly just see it was only Melody and Ria.
The next thing we tried
was actually having them stand in the audience, becoming part of that crowd.
We’re finding this works much better, as now it is Sam and Ryan alone on stage
and a whole crowd of people where the reporters’ voices are coming from.
Section Four
Flashback
From one stressful moment
straight into another, we want to make the transition between Recluse and
Flashback smooth and hold the tension present in both scenes. Flashback
features Elvina trying to catch her breath, unable to because of the things she
has seen that have disturbed her, and Jerome trying to comfort her and assure
her that she is okay. To make this frantic feeling of hyperventilating and
feeling caught up in short, sharp breaths, we have chosen to have the scene
beginning with heavy breathing from the entire ensemble, creating loud enough
sound effects vocally that it shows how overwhelmed Elvina’s character feels.
We are all slung over in our chairs, bent double, breathing heavily, creating
the sense of being trapped, representing Elvina.
“Breathe” says Jerome, and
in unison all of us stop breathing, silence falling, and the only noises left
the dialogue between Elvina and Jerome.
This scene is needed to be
snappy and frantic, only a small number of lines, the only calm thing in it
Jerome’s attempt to comfort Elvina, everything else conveying a sense of
urgency and inability to escape one’s thoughts and imagination. This is why we
have adopted quite a fast pace for Flashback, immersing the audience in that
sense of panic and fear, trying to get them to relate to the emotions of
Elvina’s character.
I think this is working
successfully, you can feel that atmosphere build in the stage space when we run
this scene and with the volume and energy in our choral sound effects this
should be sent out to the audience with a strong impact.
The technical challenge
I’m finding working on this scene is the difficulty to really project vocally
when doubled over with my diaphragm trapped. It is difficult to project as
loudly as I could with the correct posture, so I’ve been doing breathing
exercises to work on this, breathing in for a count of five, holding it for
five, and then releasing it for as long as I can. This is helping me to control
my breathing which aids greatly with holding in the breath when we all collapse
down in our seats suddenly and to preserve that air strongly enough to be able
to release it in that position while projecting.
Working like this I’m
finding it much more comfortable and it’s working well for me now, because
prior to developing this way of controlling my breath and vocals for this scene
I found there was strain on my throat and diaphragm as I was actually breathing
very heavily and uncomfortably to create the effect which can be achieved
without having to really breathe so heavily that it’s hard not to run out of
breath.
Wedding Video
This is another scene
which involves the entire cast. It shows a group of people watching a home
movie of a wedding from their past. We want to make a nice comfortable
atmosphere in this scene, in stark contrast to its successor. This is a happy,
cosy scene with family and friends sharing, and we want the ambience to be
relaxed and pleasant. First and foremost we thought about staging, and what
makes most sense to us is that we all look out to the audience as if the film
we are watching is there; this way all facing forward and all the dialogue
directed out to the audience.
We all sit in a sort of
line, some of us on chairs, others on the floor, all crowded around leaning,
lying or sitting in comfortable and relaxed positions, everyone’s body language
portraying that of people who feel completely at ease and content. I think
having the whole group of us there all together makes such a welcoming and
friendly environment which should extend to the audience as well.
For this whole scene I am making my body language and voice very relaxed, to show that my role is just chilling with friends and family and feeling completely at ease.
This scene needs to flow
naturally as if a big group conversation actually would, and this is proving to
be quite a challenge for us. The main issue we’re experiencing is picking up
cues fast enough, and then we find that when we do there is a tendency for us
to accidentally rush through the scene.
To avoid this we’ve been
running the scene again and again, just trying to get used to the flow of it
and the order of every line better so that we know when exactly to come in
without then rushing our lines.
This is getting much
better as we progress through the rehearsal process, and we’ve also been
looking at making our lines almost spill over one another at some points to
give the conversation a more realistic feel; like when there is a large group
talking people don’t wait for a pause to speak but end up interrupting by
mistake and chattering along at the same time.
We’ve been doing this
particularly at the middle section of the scene, in which we all start listing
things from history which could’ve been filmed if everybody that ever lived had
been recorded. This is the point at which we all spill in over one another as
our contributions to the list of things that could’ve been filmed come to mind.
We use choral vocals in
this scene at the start, where we all laugh together at exactly the same time,
but other than this we aren’t using any surrealism or stylistic or abstract
techniques, although we did try some out at first and changed our minds because
we felt it didn’t work well enough. When we first looked at the scene it was
only meant to be about four people who had roles of humans, and the rest of us
were supposed to represent Sam’s thoughts when he goes off on a tangent in his
mind about whom he wishes there were videos of. We tried taking a line each
from that excerpt of the scene, standing behind Sam and saying them as he
looked to be in deep thought and the other actors on stage froze, but this just
wasn’t working. It was not clear enough that we were supposed to be Sam’s
thoughts and the whole concept of it was lost because it wasn’t easily
understandable enough for an audience to pick up on what was happening. This is
the reason we decided to move onto the more naturalistic style which I have
described, and this works much better and makes far more sense both for us and
I’m sure those watching too.
We’ve been given feedback
that now we have our cues and the structure of the scene organised clearly we
need to maintain that neatness right to the end. At the end of the scene we all
get up and leave to our separate seats around the stage, but we’ve not all been
getting up at exactly the same time, meaning it looks disorganised. To rectify
this we have put in a count of three at the end of the scene where we all stay
frozen, immediately after which we then all get up and depart the scene in
unison. This is making it much neater.
Savant
The idea we had for the
earlier scene Affair that we could have the setting of a bar or a pub we have
now thought fits this scene better, as the subject matter is lighter hearted
and better suited to this public setting.
We see two friends here,
one with the ability to remember everything in absolutely perfect detail and
the other asking them to describe different days.
We thought this scene
could be used as light relief amidst some reasonably heavy subject matter in
the other scenes, which is one of the reasons why we have chosen to set it in
the friendly and comfortable setting of a bar/pub.
The rest of us work as a
chorus in minor, miming conversations and drinking, creating the backdrop to
the scene, and Jerome plays a bartender, who after listening into the
conversation chimes in at the end of the scene, curious of Elvina’s unique
ability and asking for another example. I like this scene, I think the mood we
create is going to make it pleasant and easy to watch, and I believe it’s very
important that the audience are allowed some of these moments as well as the
more poignant or dark ones to keep a good balance and strike bold contrasts
between the different tones within the text.
Ex
This scene features
Jerome, Toya and I, discussing our past relationships. In the actual script the
first thing you would assume is that it is two people reminiscing about when
they were a couple, but we thought we would develop our own take on this,
pushing it a step further. We came up with the idea that instead of it being
just the two, both Toya and I had been seeing Jerome at the same time without
knowing, and now afterwards, on meeting up with him and going over old
memories, Jerome begins to struggle to remember which memories were with which
woman. How we have gone about trying to make this clear is by dividing the
scene into four sections, Jerome speaking every other line for the entirety of
it, and Toya and I taking two quarters of it each, I the first and third
quarter and Toya the second and fourth.
I think this is an
effective way of showing how intertwined the two relationships were, and that
Jerome confuses moments with the two different women because it was hard to
keep track of.
This is quite a sad scene,
all three characters, although finding it within them to laugh a little at past
memories, ultimately feeling nostalgic and sad about past memories and what
could’ve been. The dynamic is very interesting with all three of us, it gives
you a glimpse immediately into what may have happened; hinting that the reason
both relationships ended could’ve been that Jerome’s character was seeing both
women simultaneously.
To portray visually that
Jerome is at the centre of this, the person who links them all, he stands
centre stage, Toya and I on either side of him. Though the topic of
conversation so intimate, there is space between both of us and him, Toya and I
stage left and stage right, signifying the distance between us and him after
what happened. We all begin upstage, and together, at a slow and steady pace,
we’re going to walk forward together downstage until eventually we reach the
front and all stop. We’ve been given feedback that this looks symmetrical and
aesthetically good, and also I find personally it’s symbolic of them all moving
forward, but then stopping; never quite able to move on.
The very final line of the
whole scene is “sometimes”, referring to the fact that they used to cry a lot.
Toya and I say this line together, ending on a note which shows that the result
of both relationships is the same; everyone is left feeling unresolved, which
could be the reason they all decided to meet up again after all the time that
has passed.
At the sections in the
scene where Toya or I aren’t speaking, we don’t freeze, but rather go into
minor; a technique we learnt about when working on our mask assignments earlier
in the year. This is to show that both of us were always present, even when the
attention of Jerome was focused on the other.
I’m really happy with these little nuances and subtleties we’ve devised
to symbolise sub textual qualities within the scene, and the feedback we’re
being given is that there is a very nice tone and feel to it.
I have been trying to decide for a while what direction I want to take to approach my role in Ex. My first instinct was to try making her happy to see Jerome again, and finding reminiscing pleasant for the most part, only a little awkward around him but still able to laugh and smile comfortably. However, this hasn't been working for me, it just doesn't feel natural that in this moment, with this dialogue, she would be in this sort. So I've thought more about it, and decided that she is in fact more awkward and sad than happy. I tried to put myself in her shoes and make it relatable, imagining how I would feel if I was meeting up with an ex partner after years and years, and taking a trip down memory lane with someone who used to mean so much to me and now wasn't even a part of my life.
That would be so odd, it would feel quite a delicate situation to be in, and this is what I want to portray in my embodiment of this role.
So I am making my body language quite closed, displaying insecurity and holding back, I'm being quite tender and cautious with my movements, even walking with light steps. At many points I'm showing that she is unable to even look at Jerome much, only making eye contact with him occasionally, at other points finding she has to look away because it's too hard to be that direct with him. I'm not being completely still either, fiddling with my hands sometimes or shuffling my feet subtly to indicate nervousness she feels around her ex because of how many emotions she still holds about him and what happened between them.
For my voice I am following the same tone, making my vocals quite soft and unsure, almost stuttering at times just with little pauses mid sentence to give the audience the impression she is even trying to hold back from sounding upset or letting her voice break. With the unsure sound to my voice I also intend to convey that she is unsure exactly of what to say or do, not sure how he would react, and this for her would be so sad because there would have been a time when she could be so natural and open with him, and that had all changed now.
Altogether I want to show that she feels wistful, sad, that she misses old times, she's nervous, and these are the main things I'm trying to show through my characteristics and mannerisms in this scene.
Section Five
Shrink
Sam and Ryan act together
in this scene, Ryan trying to explain to Sam that things from his past which
used to just be pain now have meaning, and Sam’s response asking him to explain
what he means frustrating him.
They sit at the front of
the stage, in what can be seen quite clearly as a stereotypical therapy session,
patient and doctor sitting opposite one another, Sam’s body language open and
trying to engage Ryan while Ryan sits insecurely, looking on edge and not as
relaxed.
We try to find comedy
wherever it is in this play, as it is quite subtle in some places, and in this
scene Ryan and Sam have chosen to highlight it by really playing up the
stereotypical aspects of their roles; Sam’s voice posh, slow and
stereotypically “professional”, Ryan more shaky and seeming a little unstable
as he talks, and we see the conversation escalate to the point where Ryan
throws a little strop and Sam comes in with a sarcastic comment about how Ryan
should go to his analyst and have something “turned into meaning”. This is a
comic moment, the sarcasm on Sam’s part and the dynamic between the two
characters helping transform this scene into something more entertaining and
not taking itself too seriously.
Rash
A rash, something which
can spread, not only on one person but from one person or place to another;
this is what we thought of coming up with ideas on how to do this scene. The
dialogue takes place between only two people, but we’re involving the whole
cast, showing the rash they’re talking about isn’t isolated. We want to
generate that feeling you get when you think of something like a rash where you
almost start to feel itchy yourself just imagining it. So as an ensemble as the
dialogue takes place we all itch and scratch ourselves, and then repeat the
last line of the scene all together; “did you get the new cream?”, showing
everyone is being affected by the same
problem and that it’s widespread.
God
We had a group discussion
about what to do with the scene God, reading through it and wondering who it
could take place between. The dialogue is one person questioning another about
God and having meaning, the other person clearly annoyed by the conversation
and not interested. This brought to mind for many of us the people who stop you
in the street or in public places either preaching, handing out fliers or
leaflets or trying to convert you to a particular religion. Especially in
London, this is something which people encounter a lot day to day, all of us in
the group having experienced it at least once. This means it’s something
relatable to our audience, so we’ve gone with the idea of using this as the
situation taking place. First we thought of having it set on a street, with
Toya trying to walk past and getting stopped by Matthew. We tried this out, but
found it difficult to stage and saw that it looked a bit messy. So we began
thinking of other locations this could take place, and this is when we thought
of the people you sometimes encounter hovering around supermarkets,
particularly near the checkouts, stopping people who pass to preach or talk
about whatever religion they are devout to. We were going to have Toya doing
her shopping and Matthew following her around, but again this looked untidy and
therefore didn’t work.
Often the people who
approach you in public try to corner you, so we thought using this to eliminate
the issue of the scene looking too messy by having them somewhere they wouldn’t
be moving around.
So we started creating the
setting of the supermarket, with checkouts in the foreground, the idea in mind
that we could have Toya working at the till, and Matthew in the line bothering
her with this conversation while she just tries to get her job done and get him
to move along and keep the line moving.
This works much better, as
the stage isn’t too busy and the focus is on the actual conversation rather than
Matthew following Toya around which was distracting from the content of the
dialogue and made it harder to follow.
To make the setting clear
and create the rest of the supermarket around the two main characters, the rest
of us set up the stage clearly as a shop, some shopping in the background,
pushing trollies or carrying baskets, Melody working on another till, some of
us going through Melody’s till and purchasing our shopping.
Sharon has said this looks
much better than us all just walking around on a street which wasn’t as clear
as this is, and has also given the suggestion of making supermarket till “beep”
sounds of scanning items to add to the illusion of the setting. We’re doing
this now and it is successfully adding to making it more realistic.
Section Six
Flashback
From one stressful moment
straight into another, we want to make the transition between Recluse and
Flashback smooth and hold the tension present in both scenes. Flashback
features Elvina trying to catch her breath, unable to because of the things she
has seen that have disturbed her, and Jerome trying to comfort her and assure
her that she is okay. To make this frantic feeling of hyperventilating and
feeling caught up in short, sharp breaths, we have chosen to have the scene
beginning with heavy breathing from the entire ensemble, creating loud enough
sound effects vocally that it shows how overwhelmed Elvina’s character feels.
We are all slung over in our chairs, bent double, breathing heavily, creating
the sense of being trapped, representing Elvina.
“Breathe” says Jerome, and
in unison all of us stop breathing, silence falling, and the only noises left
the dialogue between Elvina and Jerome.
This scene is needed to be
snappy and frantic, only a small number of lines, the only calm thing in it
Jerome’s attempt to comfort Elvina, everything else conveying a sense of
urgency and inability to escape one’s thoughts and imagination. This is why we
have adopted quite a fast pace for Flashback, immersing the audience in that
sense of panic and fear, trying to get them to relate to the emotions of
Elvina’s character.
I think this is working
successfully, you can feel that atmosphere build in the stage space when we run
this scene and with the volume and energy in our choral sound effects this
should be sent out to the audience with a strong impact.
The technical challenge
I’m finding working on this scene is the difficulty to really project vocally
when doubled over with my diaphragm trapped. It is difficult to project as
loudly as I could with the correct posture, so I’ve been doing breathing
exercises to work on this, breathing in for a count of five, holding it for
five, and then releasing it for as long as I can. This is helping me to control
my breathing which aids greatly with holding in the breath when we all collapse
down in our seats suddenly and to preserve that air strongly enough to be able
to release it in that position while projecting.
Working like this I’m
finding it much more comfortable and it’s working well for me now, because
prior to developing this way of controlling my breath and vocals for this scene
I found there was strain on my throat and diaphragm as I was actually breathing
very heavily and uncomfortably to create the effect which can be achieved
without having to really breathe so heavily that it’s hard not to run out of
breath.
Wedding Video
This is another scene
which involves the entire cast. It shows a group of people watching a home
movie of a wedding from their past. We want to make a nice comfortable
atmosphere in this scene, in stark contrast to its successor. This is a happy,
cosy scene with family and friends sharing, and we want the ambience to be
relaxed and pleasant. First and foremost we thought about staging, and what
makes most sense to us is that we all look out to the audience as if the film
we are watching is there; this way all facing forward and all the dialogue
directed out to the audience.
We all sit in a sort of
line, some of us on chairs, others on the floor, all crowded around leaning,
lying or sitting in comfortable and relaxed positions, everyone’s body language
portraying that of people who feel completely at ease and content. I think
having the whole group of us there all together makes such a welcoming and
friendly environment which should extend to the audience as well.
For this whole scene I am making my body language and voice very relaxed, to show that my role is just chilling with friends and family and feeling completely at ease.
For this whole scene I am making my body language and voice very relaxed, to show that my role is just chilling with friends and family and feeling completely at ease.
This scene needs to flow
naturally as if a big group conversation actually would, and this is proving to
be quite a challenge for us. The main issue we’re experiencing is picking up
cues fast enough, and then we find that when we do there is a tendency for us
to accidentally rush through the scene.
To avoid this we’ve been
running the scene again and again, just trying to get used to the flow of it
and the order of every line better so that we know when exactly to come in
without then rushing our lines.
This is getting much
better as we progress through the rehearsal process, and we’ve also been
looking at making our lines almost spill over one another at some points to
give the conversation a more realistic feel; like when there is a large group
talking people don’t wait for a pause to speak but end up interrupting by
mistake and chattering along at the same time.
We’ve been doing this
particularly at the middle section of the scene, in which we all start listing
things from history which could’ve been filmed if everybody that ever lived had
been recorded. This is the point at which we all spill in over one another as
our contributions to the list of things that could’ve been filmed come to mind.
We use choral vocals in
this scene at the start, where we all laugh together at exactly the same time,
but other than this we aren’t using any surrealism or stylistic or abstract
techniques, although we did try some out at first and changed our minds because
we felt it didn’t work well enough. When we first looked at the scene it was
only meant to be about four people who had roles of humans, and the rest of us
were supposed to represent Sam’s thoughts when he goes off on a tangent in his
mind about whom he wishes there were videos of. We tried taking a line each
from that excerpt of the scene, standing behind Sam and saying them as he
looked to be in deep thought and the other actors on stage froze, but this just
wasn’t working. It was not clear enough that we were supposed to be Sam’s
thoughts and the whole concept of it was lost because it wasn’t easily
understandable enough for an audience to pick up on what was happening. This is
the reason we decided to move onto the more naturalistic style which I have
described, and this works much better and makes far more sense both for us and
I’m sure those watching too.
We’ve been given feedback
that now we have our cues and the structure of the scene organised clearly we
need to maintain that neatness right to the end. At the end of the scene we all
get up and leave to our separate seats around the stage, but we’ve not all been
getting up at exactly the same time, meaning it looks disorganised. To rectify
this we have put in a count of three at the end of the scene where we all stay
frozen, immediately after which we then all get up and depart the scene in
unison. This is making it much neater.
Savant
The idea we had for the
earlier scene Affair that we could have the setting of a bar or a pub we have
now thought fits this scene better, as the subject matter is lighter hearted
and better suited to this public setting.
We see two friends here,
one with the ability to remember everything in absolutely perfect detail and
the other asking them to describe different days.
We thought this scene
could be used as light relief amidst some reasonably heavy subject matter in
the other scenes, which is one of the reasons why we have chosen to set it in
the friendly and comfortable setting of a bar/pub.
The rest of us work as a
chorus in minor, miming conversations and drinking, creating the backdrop to
the scene, and Jerome plays a bartender, who after listening into the
conversation chimes in at the end of the scene, curious of Elvina’s unique
ability and asking for another example. I like this scene, I think the mood we
create is going to make it pleasant and easy to watch, and I believe it’s very
important that the audience are allowed some of these moments as well as the
more poignant or dark ones to keep a good balance and strike bold contrasts
between the different tones within the text.
Ex
This scene features
Jerome, Toya and I, discussing our past relationships. In the actual script the
first thing you would assume is that it is two people reminiscing about when
they were a couple, but we thought we would develop our own take on this,
pushing it a step further. We came up with the idea that instead of it being
just the two, both Toya and I had been seeing Jerome at the same time without
knowing, and now afterwards, on meeting up with him and going over old
memories, Jerome begins to struggle to remember which memories were with which
woman. How we have gone about trying to make this clear is by dividing the
scene into four sections, Jerome speaking every other line for the entirety of
it, and Toya and I taking two quarters of it each, I the first and third
quarter and Toya the second and fourth.
I think this is an
effective way of showing how intertwined the two relationships were, and that
Jerome confuses moments with the two different women because it was hard to
keep track of.
This is quite a sad scene,
all three characters, although finding it within them to laugh a little at past
memories, ultimately feeling nostalgic and sad about past memories and what
could’ve been. The dynamic is very interesting with all three of us, it gives
you a glimpse immediately into what may have happened; hinting that the reason
both relationships ended could’ve been that Jerome’s character was seeing both
women simultaneously.
To portray visually that
Jerome is at the centre of this, the person who links them all, he stands
centre stage, Toya and I on either side of him. Though the topic of
conversation so intimate, there is space between both of us and him, Toya and I
stage left and stage right, signifying the distance between us and him after
what happened. We all begin upstage, and together, at a slow and steady pace,
we’re going to walk forward together downstage until eventually we reach the
front and all stop. We’ve been given feedback that this looks symmetrical and
aesthetically good, and also I find personally it’s symbolic of them all moving
forward, but then stopping; never quite able to move on.
The very final line of the
whole scene is “sometimes”, referring to the fact that they used to cry a lot.
Toya and I say this line together, ending on a note which shows that the result
of both relationships is the same; everyone is left feeling unresolved, which
could be the reason they all decided to meet up again after all the time that
has passed.
At the sections in the
scene where Toya or I aren’t speaking, we don’t freeze, but rather go into
minor; a technique we learnt about when working on our mask assignments earlier
in the year. This is to show that both of us were always present, even when the
attention of Jerome was focused on the other.
I’m really happy with these little nuances and subtleties we’ve devised
to symbolise sub textual qualities within the scene, and the feedback we’re
being given is that there is a very nice tone and feel to it.
I have been trying to decide for a while what direction I want to take to approach my role in Ex. My first instinct was to try making her happy to see Jerome again, and finding reminiscing pleasant for the most part, only a little awkward around him but still able to laugh and smile comfortably. However, this hasn't been working for me, it just doesn't feel natural that in this moment, with this dialogue, she would be in this sort. So I've thought more about it, and decided that she is in fact more awkward and sad than happy. I tried to put myself in her shoes and make it relatable, imagining how I would feel if I was meeting up with an ex partner after years and years, and taking a trip down memory lane with someone who used to mean so much to me and now wasn't even a part of my life.
That would be so odd, it would feel quite a delicate situation to be in, and this is what I want to portray in my embodiment of this role.
So I am making my body language quite closed, displaying insecurity and holding back, I'm being quite tender and cautious with my movements, even walking with light steps. At many points I'm showing that she is unable to even look at Jerome much, only making eye contact with him occasionally, at other points finding she has to look away because it's too hard to be that direct with him. I'm not being completely still either, fiddling with my hands sometimes or shuffling my feet subtly to indicate nervousness she feels around her ex because of how many emotions she still holds about him and what happened between them.
For my voice I am following the same tone, making my vocals quite soft and unsure, almost stuttering at times just with little pauses mid sentence to give the audience the impression she is even trying to hold back from sounding upset or letting her voice break. With the unsure sound to my voice I also intend to convey that she is unsure exactly of what to say or do, not sure how he would react, and this for her would be so sad because there would have been a time when she could be so natural and open with him, and that had all changed now.
Altogether I want to show that she feels wistful, sad, that she misses old times, she's nervous, and these are the main things I'm trying to show through my characteristics and mannerisms in this scene.
I have been trying to decide for a while what direction I want to take to approach my role in Ex. My first instinct was to try making her happy to see Jerome again, and finding reminiscing pleasant for the most part, only a little awkward around him but still able to laugh and smile comfortably. However, this hasn't been working for me, it just doesn't feel natural that in this moment, with this dialogue, she would be in this sort. So I've thought more about it, and decided that she is in fact more awkward and sad than happy. I tried to put myself in her shoes and make it relatable, imagining how I would feel if I was meeting up with an ex partner after years and years, and taking a trip down memory lane with someone who used to mean so much to me and now wasn't even a part of my life.
That would be so odd, it would feel quite a delicate situation to be in, and this is what I want to portray in my embodiment of this role.
So I am making my body language quite closed, displaying insecurity and holding back, I'm being quite tender and cautious with my movements, even walking with light steps. At many points I'm showing that she is unable to even look at Jerome much, only making eye contact with him occasionally, at other points finding she has to look away because it's too hard to be that direct with him. I'm not being completely still either, fiddling with my hands sometimes or shuffling my feet subtly to indicate nervousness she feels around her ex because of how many emotions she still holds about him and what happened between them.
For my voice I am following the same tone, making my vocals quite soft and unsure, almost stuttering at times just with little pauses mid sentence to give the audience the impression she is even trying to hold back from sounding upset or letting her voice break. With the unsure sound to my voice I also intend to convey that she is unsure exactly of what to say or do, not sure how he would react, and this for her would be so sad because there would have been a time when she could be so natural and open with him, and that had all changed now.
Altogether I want to show that she feels wistful, sad, that she misses old times, she's nervous, and these are the main things I'm trying to show through my characteristics and mannerisms in this scene.
Section Five
Shrink
Sam and Ryan act together
in this scene, Ryan trying to explain to Sam that things from his past which
used to just be pain now have meaning, and Sam’s response asking him to explain
what he means frustrating him.
They sit at the front of
the stage, in what can be seen quite clearly as a stereotypical therapy session,
patient and doctor sitting opposite one another, Sam’s body language open and
trying to engage Ryan while Ryan sits insecurely, looking on edge and not as
relaxed.
We try to find comedy
wherever it is in this play, as it is quite subtle in some places, and in this
scene Ryan and Sam have chosen to highlight it by really playing up the
stereotypical aspects of their roles; Sam’s voice posh, slow and
stereotypically “professional”, Ryan more shaky and seeming a little unstable
as he talks, and we see the conversation escalate to the point where Ryan
throws a little strop and Sam comes in with a sarcastic comment about how Ryan
should go to his analyst and have something “turned into meaning”. This is a
comic moment, the sarcasm on Sam’s part and the dynamic between the two
characters helping transform this scene into something more entertaining and
not taking itself too seriously.
Rash
A rash, something which
can spread, not only on one person but from one person or place to another;
this is what we thought of coming up with ideas on how to do this scene. The
dialogue takes place between only two people, but we’re involving the whole
cast, showing the rash they’re talking about isn’t isolated. We want to
generate that feeling you get when you think of something like a rash where you
almost start to feel itchy yourself just imagining it. So as an ensemble as the
dialogue takes place we all itch and scratch ourselves, and then repeat the
last line of the scene all together; “did you get the new cream?”, showing
everyone is being affected by the same
problem and that it’s widespread.
God
We had a group discussion
about what to do with the scene God, reading through it and wondering who it
could take place between. The dialogue is one person questioning another about
God and having meaning, the other person clearly annoyed by the conversation
and not interested. This brought to mind for many of us the people who stop you
in the street or in public places either preaching, handing out fliers or
leaflets or trying to convert you to a particular religion. Especially in
London, this is something which people encounter a lot day to day, all of us in
the group having experienced it at least once. This means it’s something
relatable to our audience, so we’ve gone with the idea of using this as the
situation taking place. First we thought of having it set on a street, with
Toya trying to walk past and getting stopped by Matthew. We tried this out, but
found it difficult to stage and saw that it looked a bit messy. So we began
thinking of other locations this could take place, and this is when we thought
of the people you sometimes encounter hovering around supermarkets,
particularly near the checkouts, stopping people who pass to preach or talk
about whatever religion they are devout to. We were going to have Toya doing
her shopping and Matthew following her around, but again this looked untidy and
therefore didn’t work.
Often the people who
approach you in public try to corner you, so we thought using this to eliminate
the issue of the scene looking too messy by having them somewhere they wouldn’t
be moving around.
So we started creating the
setting of the supermarket, with checkouts in the foreground, the idea in mind
that we could have Toya working at the till, and Matthew in the line bothering
her with this conversation while she just tries to get her job done and get him
to move along and keep the line moving.
This works much better, as
the stage isn’t too busy and the focus is on the actual conversation rather than
Matthew following Toya around which was distracting from the content of the
dialogue and made it harder to follow.
To make the setting clear
and create the rest of the supermarket around the two main characters, the rest
of us set up the stage clearly as a shop, some shopping in the background,
pushing trollies or carrying baskets, Melody working on another till, some of
us going through Melody’s till and purchasing our shopping.
Sharon has said this looks
much better than us all just walking around on a street which wasn’t as clear
as this is, and has also given the suggestion of making supermarket till “beep”
sounds of scanning items to add to the illusion of the setting. We’re doing
this now and it is successfully adding to making it more realistic.
Section Six
The Child Who Didn't Know Pain
This again only has two
main roles, played by Ryan and Sam. They are two children discussing what pain
is because one of them has no signal going to their brain from anywhere in
their body, so he has never experienced pain and doesn’t know what it feels
like. Being quite a long scene, as a group we think it’s necessary to make the
most of the humour in it for the entertainment value so we don’t risk the
audience zoning out part way through.
Sam and Ryan are doing
this really well, making it comical, and completely adopting the voices and
physicality of children as well.
As for the rest of us, we
don’t play a part in this scene except for one moment where we’re involved, as
Ryan pinches Sam, Amber, Toya, Jerome and I mirror their movements and the line
“ah, get off”. Because we’re sitting on the chairs at the front of the stage
and therefore in the foreground and look as if we’re part of the scene we
thought it best to have us interact in it even just at that one point, and it’s
also another good opportunity to utilise our chorus work skills.
Wife
We have put a lot of
thought into wife, how to stage it and use the lines as effectively as possible
to really make an impact with this scene.
In it are Jerome, Amber,
Melody and Toya. In it a woman is trying to convince a man that she is his
wife, while he remains convinced that he has lost his wife and everyone who
loves him and that she isn’t really her. Our initial reaction was that he
could’ve been in some kind of accident and be suffering from memory loss, so at
first we were going to have Jerome lying in a hospital bed, with the three
women all playing the exact same role, showing that in his mind his vision was
blurry and he was either hallucinating or seeing multiples of the same thing,
like when your vision doubles up. We thought we could make something unnerving
out of this, so the audience aren’t sure who is telling the truth, if these
women are really there, are they one person or more than one, is Jerome crazy
or imagining things, or is he actually being tricked and lied to? There is
definitely such potential for mystery in this scene and that’s what we want to
achieve. We tried having Jerome lying across several chairs for them to
represent a hospital bed, but it didn’t look right, so we scrapped that idea.
It would have meant he was
restricted physically too, and when trying out different things with this scene
we found that Jerome breaking away from the other characters on stage and
trying to get away from them looked really effective, so we want for him to be
able to be mobile rather than limited in movement.
In fact, the physicality
in this scene has a lot to do with the impact we’re trying to make; we want all
three women trying to reach out to Jerome and reassure him that they’re his
wife, with him suspicious and untrusting, not even wanting to be near them.
This shows strongly the conflict in the scene and the mistrust.
Another way in which we
wanted to make this undercurrent of unease and suspicion is with the lines the
“wives” say. We have them all reciting some parts together in complete unison,
while at other times speaking on their own and arguing their own corner, all of
this adding to that uncertainty for the audience of what to believe the truth
is or what’s going on. Using technical theatre to add even more to this eerie
air, while all three women speak together joining in with what one another are
saying, we’re having flashing white lights over them, the speed of the flashing
getting more frantic as they go on speaking and each of them join in. this
looks quite chilling, the oddness of it putting you on edge; feeling this even
as a cast member I’m certain the same effect will be made on our audience.
Furthermore, at the end of
the scene they’re left with no conclusion, only wondering what is actually
happening and what will happen next;
and there is something quite unnerving and almost sinister about the end as we have Jerome surrounded by the
three women, saying he is frightened and asking what they are. We hope the
result of this to be that the audience are left feeling that same uncertainty
which is building up throughout the whole of the scene.
Earthquake
We are taking this
opportunity to make a change of tone completely. This scene could be done in
quite a manner of different ways, as it is essentially just two people talking
about an earthquake they’ve been hearing about. It is Elvina and Katy talking
about it. Originally they tried out Elvina being genuinely distressed by the subject
as she talked about it, but they’ve been developing it differently throughout
our rehearsal process, now it becoming more comical and them interpreting it in
their own way for humorous effect.
The matter of their talk
is so serious, but the two characters discuss it as if it’s just chitter
chatter about something trivial. Their dismissive attitude towards it and
apparent inability to really connect on any level about what they’re actually
discussing is not only funny theatrically, but also quite a comment on one of
the themes of this play being that humans can become so disconnected and
switched off from genuine emotional responses because we’re so desensitised.
Even Elvina who is saying she cried when she thought about it is in this scene
just talking as if it were any old gossip. The casual nature of their talk
warrants an equally casual setting, and we’ve thought of putting the in the
hairdressers, just going about their day to day, and I suppose in the scheme of
things rather shallow routine while they talk about this absolute tragedy where
people have actually died, the both of them just flicking through magazines as
they chat.
As well as this scene
being funny, them even adding to it by putting on regional accents
stereotypically associated with the kind of characters who would interact like
this, I think it also makes quite a strong point about desensitisation in
contemporary culture particular in relation to the media, which we can even see
them consuming in this very scene as they read their magazines.
Following the casual nature of this scene and it's setting, and the stereotypes in place as well, being a hairdresser working on Elvina's hair in this scene, I'm adopting relaxed, casual posture, and doing mime which is a clear indicator of who I am and what I'm doing, styling Elvina's hair.
The Child Who Didn’t Know Sorry
Here we see melody and
Ryan trying to get their son Jerome, who is playing a child, to apologise for
hurting someone. This is a really short scene, so we’ve done as much as we can
with only five lines in it. Melody and Ryan divided up between themselves the
parents lines and Jerome responds each time that he’s not sorry, Melody is the
mother pulling him along trying to engage him, Jerome breaks away from her
throwing a strop, and Ryan is the father slumped over in a chair acting drunk
and not really giving Melody any support; a commentary on the information fed
to someone throughout their life, such as Jerome as a child always seeing his
father’s lack of involvement and empathy, influencing people to behave in certain
ways and think different behaviour is acceptable.
This scene concludes
section six as well, and we’ve chosen to all join in on the very last line in
it, shouting “you have to say it” at Jerome, making a loud impactful ending to
the scene and the section.
Section Seven
This again only has two
main roles, played by Ryan and Sam. They are two children discussing what pain
is because one of them has no signal going to their brain from anywhere in
their body, so he has never experienced pain and doesn’t know what it feels
like. Being quite a long scene, as a group we think it’s necessary to make the
most of the humour in it for the entertainment value so we don’t risk the
audience zoning out part way through.
Sam and Ryan are doing
this really well, making it comical, and completely adopting the voices and
physicality of children as well.
As for the rest of us, we
don’t play a part in this scene except for one moment where we’re involved, as
Ryan pinches Sam, Amber, Toya, Jerome and I mirror their movements and the line
“ah, get off”. Because we’re sitting on the chairs at the front of the stage
and therefore in the foreground and look as if we’re part of the scene we
thought it best to have us interact in it even just at that one point, and it’s
also another good opportunity to utilise our chorus work skills.
Wife
We have put a lot of
thought into wife, how to stage it and use the lines as effectively as possible
to really make an impact with this scene.
In it are Jerome, Amber,
Melody and Toya. In it a woman is trying to convince a man that she is his
wife, while he remains convinced that he has lost his wife and everyone who
loves him and that she isn’t really her. Our initial reaction was that he
could’ve been in some kind of accident and be suffering from memory loss, so at
first we were going to have Jerome lying in a hospital bed, with the three
women all playing the exact same role, showing that in his mind his vision was
blurry and he was either hallucinating or seeing multiples of the same thing,
like when your vision doubles up. We thought we could make something unnerving
out of this, so the audience aren’t sure who is telling the truth, if these
women are really there, are they one person or more than one, is Jerome crazy
or imagining things, or is he actually being tricked and lied to? There is
definitely such potential for mystery in this scene and that’s what we want to
achieve. We tried having Jerome lying across several chairs for them to
represent a hospital bed, but it didn’t look right, so we scrapped that idea.
It would have meant he was
restricted physically too, and when trying out different things with this scene
we found that Jerome breaking away from the other characters on stage and
trying to get away from them looked really effective, so we want for him to be
able to be mobile rather than limited in movement.
In fact, the physicality
in this scene has a lot to do with the impact we’re trying to make; we want all
three women trying to reach out to Jerome and reassure him that they’re his
wife, with him suspicious and untrusting, not even wanting to be near them.
This shows strongly the conflict in the scene and the mistrust.
Another way in which we
wanted to make this undercurrent of unease and suspicion is with the lines the
“wives” say. We have them all reciting some parts together in complete unison,
while at other times speaking on their own and arguing their own corner, all of
this adding to that uncertainty for the audience of what to believe the truth
is or what’s going on. Using technical theatre to add even more to this eerie
air, while all three women speak together joining in with what one another are
saying, we’re having flashing white lights over them, the speed of the flashing
getting more frantic as they go on speaking and each of them join in. this
looks quite chilling, the oddness of it putting you on edge; feeling this even
as a cast member I’m certain the same effect will be made on our audience.
Furthermore, at the end of
the scene they’re left with no conclusion, only wondering what is actually
happening and what will happen next;
and there is something quite unnerving and almost sinister about the end as we have Jerome surrounded by the
three women, saying he is frightened and asking what they are. We hope the
result of this to be that the audience are left feeling that same uncertainty
which is building up throughout the whole of the scene.
Earthquake
We are taking this
opportunity to make a change of tone completely. This scene could be done in
quite a manner of different ways, as it is essentially just two people talking
about an earthquake they’ve been hearing about. It is Elvina and Katy talking
about it. Originally they tried out Elvina being genuinely distressed by the subject
as she talked about it, but they’ve been developing it differently throughout
our rehearsal process, now it becoming more comical and them interpreting it in
their own way for humorous effect.
The matter of their talk
is so serious, but the two characters discuss it as if it’s just chitter
chatter about something trivial. Their dismissive attitude towards it and
apparent inability to really connect on any level about what they’re actually
discussing is not only funny theatrically, but also quite a comment on one of
the themes of this play being that humans can become so disconnected and
switched off from genuine emotional responses because we’re so desensitised.
Even Elvina who is saying she cried when she thought about it is in this scene
just talking as if it were any old gossip. The casual nature of their talk
warrants an equally casual setting, and we’ve thought of putting the in the
hairdressers, just going about their day to day, and I suppose in the scheme of
things rather shallow routine while they talk about this absolute tragedy where
people have actually died, the both of them just flicking through magazines as
they chat.
As well as this scene
being funny, them even adding to it by putting on regional accents
stereotypically associated with the kind of characters who would interact like
this, I think it also makes quite a strong point about desensitisation in
contemporary culture particular in relation to the media, which we can even see
them consuming in this very scene as they read their magazines.
Following the casual nature of this scene and it's setting, and the stereotypes in place as well, being a hairdresser working on Elvina's hair in this scene, I'm adopting relaxed, casual posture, and doing mime which is a clear indicator of who I am and what I'm doing, styling Elvina's hair.
Following the casual nature of this scene and it's setting, and the stereotypes in place as well, being a hairdresser working on Elvina's hair in this scene, I'm adopting relaxed, casual posture, and doing mime which is a clear indicator of who I am and what I'm doing, styling Elvina's hair.
The Child Who Didn’t Know Sorry
Here we see melody and
Ryan trying to get their son Jerome, who is playing a child, to apologise for
hurting someone. This is a really short scene, so we’ve done as much as we can
with only five lines in it. Melody and Ryan divided up between themselves the
parents lines and Jerome responds each time that he’s not sorry, Melody is the
mother pulling him along trying to engage him, Jerome breaks away from her
throwing a strop, and Ryan is the father slumped over in a chair acting drunk
and not really giving Melody any support; a commentary on the information fed
to someone throughout their life, such as Jerome as a child always seeing his
father’s lack of involvement and empathy, influencing people to behave in certain
ways and think different behaviour is acceptable.
This scene concludes
section six as well, and we’ve chosen to all join in on the very last line in
it, shouting “you have to say it” at Jerome, making a loud impactful ending to
the scene and the section.
Section Seven
Fate
In total opposition to the
last long conversation we saw take place which was delivered so dismissively
and without much investment from either person, here we have two people almost
debating over how much as a human is our choice and how much we’re bound to do
because we’re made that way and it is just part of who we are.
It’s an interesting
excerpt of text to have in this play as it breaches the very subject I was just
discussing in relation to the child who didn’t know sorry, about how much we
make our own choices and are ourselves and how much we are changed by the
influences around us and our natural builds as humans, is there such a thing as
fate and if so what is it decided by, the whole subject of nature vs nurture,
the psychological and the sociological.
We’re really making this
scene as different to Earthquake as we can, a lot of our work on Love and
Information trying to draw parallels between different people, situations and
attitudes. Elvina and Katy were quite absent minded, seemingly laid back and
normal people just having a casual chat, and so instead of repeating that, in
Fate we see Elvina and Divina debating in quite a scholarly way, representing a
different kind of people, those who feel that their opinion is right and makes
them more intelligent or above others, rather than Katy and Elvina’s characters
who disagreed but didn’t feel competitive about it, whereas Divina and Elvina
are both so sure they’re right that there’s quite an argumentative feeling
between them.
Taking this parallel
further, we’re also setting this in a public setting, but again one completely
different to the last, this setting supposed to represent a high end, posh
restaurant and a different crowd of people to those we saw in the hairdressers. To show the demographic and perhaps even class of people in this scene, I am being stereotypically "posh" in movement and gesture; my posture straight and proper, my legs crossed neatly as I sit at my table, my gestures polite and gentle, conducting myself very tidily altogether.
Of course, as in Earthquake the rest of us are in minor so as not to distract
from the major focus of the scene, so we are all in mime again rather than
making any sounds like we did earlier in the play in Savant, and we are finding
this works to make the setting around Elvina and Divina’s realistic without
taking away from their performance.
Stone
Stone shows one person who
is clearly the victim of bullying and has some sort of personal issues, and
what appears from the text to be at least a few people talking about him and
then participating in bullying him.
Everyone wants to be in
this scene, we’re going to make a kind of mob mentality of a big group of
people all ganging up on someone, showing the severity of the bullying that
takes place. It makes most sense to us for them to be young people, as it is
amongst young age groups that you most commonly witness this manner of bullying
taking place.
We wish to portray the
isolation and loneliness that victims of bullying face as well, so we have
every one of us playing a bully all together in a big group and Ryan on his own
in the corner being their target.
To really generate the full effect of people being mean, menacing bullies, as an ensemble for this scene we have been working together on physical traits and how to all move and stand. We're al grouped together quite tightly to display that pack mentality, we're quite brutish and careless with our movements, for example when I push Sam forward forcefully. We stand with casual, stereotypically "teenage" posture, all physically embodying the confident, cocky, bullish nature of these people in the way we stand and move.
For my voice I am also trying to portray this, making my voice deeper and less refined or friendly sounding, and my manner of talking more lazy and thoughtless than for example when I'm playing a thoughtful adult character like in Ex. Especially all together as a chorus, I think we're creating a realistic group of these characters, ones you would believe capable of cruelty and hopefully the audience can see from the way we're behaving and moving as well as our words and actions that we are a threat.
We’ve interpreted the
middle of the text in this scene to indicate that they steal the “special stone”
they say this boy has from him and start playing with it, we thought this could
be the point at which they start bullying him in this moment even though it’s
clear from the way they talk about him and behave that it’s a regular occurrence
picking on him.
We’re all grouped together
centre stage, Ryan downstage right alone, sitting in a spotlight playing with
his stone, which we have decided to mime to avoid any accidents or mistakes
involved in using an actual prop.
When we start talking
about should we get it from him, we all push Sam over to go and do it, again
displaying the kind of nastiness you see in these groups, people even ganging
up and pressuring one of their own, as Sam is the only person who seems sympathetic
and not wanting to take the stone or be mean to Ryan.
A lot of the times we’ve
rehearsed this scene and tried to block it and work out the staging, because
there are so many of us, it looks really messy and exactly what’s going on is
confusing, so we’re putting a lot of work into our ensemble for this. We’ve
come up with the idea to use slow motion, choral movement and choral speech to
create a strong, clear chorus and make the scene professional and organised. Sam
is pushed to get the stone from Ryan, and up til this point everything has been
naturalistic. Now however, as Sam throws the stone back over to the rest of us,
we all go into slow motion together. Sam throws the stone, I catch it, I throw
it to Jerome, and then Jerome throws it off stage. As he does so, he leans
back, and still in slow motion, we all lean back with him, then as he releases
the stone and throws it, we all lunge forward in unison and resume normal
speed. All this time Ryan, who adopts the same speeds as us to keep the choral
movement consistent, stands up and tries to stop us, then goes offstage to get
his stone. We all start talking about him getting it, again Sam saying he
thinks he might need that one and not be able to find it, still clearly sympathetic,
while the rest of us disregard his comments entirely and continue to build up
the cruelty to the point where we start hurling stones at Ryan and shouting at
him.
At this point originally
we all starting picking up stones, laughing, throwing them at Ryan as he
crosses back over the front of the stage, and calling out different variations
on “here have a stone”.
This was always such a
jumble though, and we’ve been told that it looks messy and ruins the work we’ve
put so far into the strong ensemble work.
It was suggested by Sharon
that to tidy it up we all throw one stone at the same time, saying “have a
stone”, and then we all freeze throwing it.
We’ve tried this out and
it feels much better for us and apparently looks better too, so this is what we’re
sticking with because up until this point we haven’t been quite satisfied with
our ending to the scene because it felt a bit all over the place. Now however
it is much more together and it feels like a stronger end.
Manic
When we first compiled the
list of scenes we wished to have in our version of this play, Manic was one of
the ones we wanted to keep in. Ria was
cast in this, however she has expressed her discomfort with the length of the
lines she would have to do as it has some very large paragraphs in it, and so
we’ve come to the decision as a group to cut this scene from the play, because
Ria wasn’t happy with it and no one else was keen enough on this scene in
particular to re cast it and take on the role she would have played.
Virtual
This scene has intrigued
me from the very first time we did a read through of Love and Information. It reminds
me of the film “Her”, set in a futuristic world in which the mobile device Siri
has evolved to the point that everyone uses it for everything all the time, and
in the film one man falls in love with his Siri.
It’s a fascinating
concept, and it is very similar to what is happening in this scene. One person,
the part of whom Jerome plays, is arguing about how real their relationship
with a virtual being is, claiming that she is able to love him even though
fundamentally, being virtual, she doesn’t actually have the capacity for
feeling. However, because of the absolute intelligence of the technology, it
seems real enough to convince this man beyond all reason that somehow it has
developed human abilities and emotions.
The people with speaking
parts in this are Jerome, Elvina, Sam and I.
We considered for a while
what would be the best approach to take to this, and it felt most right to us
that we really use the virtual theme and actually have the voices in the scene
that aren’t Jerome as computers. Jerome’s character is in this world where he
is so engrossed in technology that he has fallen in love with and has virtual
sex with a computer game, he’s completely surrounded by a virtual reality, and
that’s what we want to convey; this is why Sam, Elvina and I are going to be
playing virtual entities ourselves.
Jerome is the only person
is the whole situation who is actually human, he has no real connection to
anyone else here; he’s basically alone although he couldn’t accept that. So we
are placing Jerome centre stage by himself, I, as I start speaking first am
positioned centre stage also but set behind him, and Sam and Elvina are on
either side of him. The rest of the cast surround us all in a symmetrical
formation, remaining motionless and expressionless for the duration of the
scene, as do Sam, Elvina and I.
We are all emotionless and
virtual, only saying words we are created to know and be able to say, and
Jerome is expressing himself emotionally and physically while none of the rest
of us do. I begin the scene, Sam joins in a third of the way through, and then
Elvina joins as well the next third of the way through, we all speak our lines
in total unison, with deadpan emotionless and robotic voices, displaying
clearly what we are, nothing more than devices of technological intelligence.
This dynamic portrays how
different Jerome is to the computer he thinks he is in an actual romantic and
sexual relationship with, and shows the extent of his delusions, because even
surrounded by beings which while able to speak to him have no genuine or real
connection to him, he still can’t see that this is the case with his virtual “girlfriend”
too. I think the artistic decisions we’re making with the staging of this scene
and the roles that Elvina, Sam and I play are going to really send that
message; it’s almost a warning about the way we’re moving further and further
away from a place of natural humanity and closer to a world completely
dominated by technology.
Feedback we’ve received which
we’re working on is for everyone who isn’t Jerome to really focus on consistent
stillness, making sure that even stationary we don’t make any movements such as
even slight twitches; we want to be as statue-like in our physicality as
possible. To work on this I’m focusing a lot on my breathing and relaxing my
muscles for this scene, so I can adopt a complete stillness without any tension
that may cause little movements.
As well as being completely still and expressionless to show I am just a computer in this scene, I've been practising my vocals a lot to really get into changing from the last scene where I am so animate and my emotions are clear in my voice, to this scene where my voice has to sound totally robotic and completely devoid of any emotional qualities. It's an interesting challenge, having to dismiss everything we work on about how to use your voice expressively in acting, now that all has to be stripped away and my tone, pitch, pace, everything has to be completely neutral.
I'm enjoying the challenge of it; one of the things I really adore about Love and Information is the sheer variety and range within ourselves we get to explore and improve by being so many different types of characters and roles all in one production.
Facts
The last scene in the
entire play is a series of questions and answers.
We pitched a few different
ideas for this; it could be study partners, some kind of challenge, maybe a questionnaire
game show, and the one that stuck is the game show idea, because as it is the
last scene we want a way to have everybody participating, and this idea allows
for a large number of people, facilitating our full cast.
We’ve chosen Katy and Ryan
to play the hosts of the Game Show, asking questions alternately.
The rest of us are split
into two teams, all of the answers divided out and at least one assigned to
each cast member so the whole company participate in this scene both physically
and vocally. We were going to have one person from each time playing the team
buzzer to use physical theatre; however this idea hasn’t stuck because we think
it will be better for everyone to have an actual character in our very final
scene.
In terms of staging, we
have one team downstage left and one team downstage right, with Katy and Ryan centre
stage upstage. For this scene only we’re having no chairs at all, clearing them
all to upstage in the transition between virtual and this scene. This will give
us a completely clear space to use for our final scene and our bow as well.
First we had our teams
facing one another, looking at Ryan and Katy as they asked the questions, but
the feedback we’ve been given advises that each team face diagonally forward,
the team on stage right facing the opposite corner of the auditorium and vice
versa, and we now don’t look over at Ryan and Katy at all. This means our
performance is directed much more out rather than being as contained as it was,
and also none of us are in profile which is far better.
We would very much like to
end the play on a happy and entertaining note, so this scene is going to be fun
for both us and the audience watching, it being light hearted and enjoyable. So
for the whole of this scene we’re having very high vocal and physical energy
levels, creating an atmosphere of excitement and tension as we all scramble to
answer the questions and win the game. This is working well; it means the whole
show will end on a high note which I think is a really positive way to finish.
To make the show more
believable we’re having sound effects, but creating them vocally rather than
with technical sound effects. Sam makes the sound of the buzzer each time
someone reaches forward and hits their buzzer to answer, and I am making a “ding”
sound effect when someone answers a question to indicate that it was correct, and
then at the only question anyone gets wrong, Jerome is making the incorrect
answer sound effect.
We’re also having music to
start the scene, as we all cheer, and bright, colourful lights flashing all over
and spinning on the stage, everything about this scene bright and lively.
Throughout this whole
scene we’re building up a competitive mood on stage, all of us showing how desperate
we are to answer the questions and beat the other team, and this mood peaks at
one point quite near the end of the scene, where Sam breaks away from his team
and walks up to our team to answer a question, completely confident that he’s
right and trying to make a big show of it. We’re using this as a joke, as he
has such cockiness answering and coming over and then the incorrect answer sound
is made to indicate he was wrong. At this point, while returning to his side of
the stage, he just keeps walking off, too embarrassed to stay on. It is funny
moments like this which are helping as well to make this last scene really fun.
We struggled to figure out
how to fit one line into the scene however, where one character asks “do you
love me”. This is of course something which wouldn’t make sense as a game show question,
and later on in the scene it is answered with “yes, yes I do”. We considered
cutting it, but then thought that perhaps as there are two hosts, maybe this
could be an exchange between the two of them. Ryan asks Katy if she loves him
mid all of the questions, and we all turn to look over, confused at what is
going on. She replies “don’t do that”, and the questions resume. Then however,
just before the last answer, she tells him that she does, and they embrace one
another in a hug. This is a way to have a very sweet actually human moment on
stage, bringing nicer meaning to this scene; something else which I think makes
it a lovely way to end the play.
Then, after she says this,
both teams at the same time lunge forward for our buzzers and all scream out
the final answer. Everyone on stage now freezes in this position, and the
lights go down.
I really love this ending,
the whole scene has been vibrant and now it ends on an equally energised
moment, concluding our whole production with a bang.
We know what we’re doing
for all of our scenes, the transitions from scene to scene are smooth, and our
seating order is organised well so that everyone knows where on stage in which
chair they should be sitting at any given moment, but something that we want to
make clear is the transition between the different sections of the play. Because it is divided into seven sections, we
want some way to signify where one section changes to another, to break it up a
bit more instead of having one constant speed of changes between every single
scene. However, we still need for it to be smooth.
We considered the option
of having everybody change seats at a section change, but this was too complicated
and liable to go wrong, and didn’t look clear enough. Instead, we’re going to
put in pauses between the sections, a pause of ten seconds each time one
section ends before the next begins.
To do this, at the end of
each scene that closes a section, all of the actors on stage freeze in their
last position and maintain that freeze for the whole ten seconds while music
plays over the top, then they all disperse and the next set of actors get up
and start the next section.
The music playing over
this is very helpful, because otherwise we found people were breaking from the
freeze frames at different times and there was too much room for error with
everyone just counting in their heads. The clips of music are timed to be
exactly ten counts, so now we know to freeze until the music finishes and then
move.
Feedback we’ve been given
tells us that this is working well, and that especially now we’re all freezing and
then continuing at exactly the same time, these pauses between the sections not
only are still smooth but also help with the pace of the whole play to make
sure it isn’t rushed and give it some moments where we aren’t just going from
scene to scene to scene.
Setting up the stage in rehearsals
In our company as well as
our roles as actors and all contributing to the creative process and the making
of our production, we’ve also all had individual roles to fulfil in our
company.
My role is Assistant Director, which has consisted of trying to keep everyone
in order, organising things such as making sure everyone in the company is
responsible and in for rehearsals on time, and chasing people up contacting
them to find out why they’re late if they are and when they would be going to
arrive.
This role has been a lot about trying to keep things running smoothly,
whether it be by keeping tabs on where the other company members are, gathering
people for warm ups at rehearsals or helping setting up and taking down the
scenery and props, as well as finding props and costumes from backstage for our
production.
Of course with every role
we each have in the theatre company comes responsibility, but I am taking it as
an opportunity to rise to the challenge of stretching myself beyond the role of
acting and creating and using and developing further skills in organisation and
communication. The chance we’ve all had to fill different roles in this theatre
company for our FMP has been really interesting and beneficial, and is also
helping a lot with keeping everything running smoothly because there’s someone
covering everything that needs to be done.
The whole company and play
is completely organised now, everyone knows exactly what we’re doing for each
scene, and I feel the bounds in progress we’ve been making as a team over the
last number of months are tremendous. We’re now in our last few days of
rehearsal and everything is really coming together, even though things were a
bit wobbly when we first came back after our two week break. I’m feeling confident
with our piece, especially now we’ve had the chance to rehearse in the theatre
and do tech and dress rehearsals.
Now it is just about going
over it again and again to really fine tune the whole thing and just make it
the absolute finished product in time for our performances in a few days’ time.
Evaluation
We have finally performed
our Final Major Project now, both our matinee and evening performance are done
and dusted and now all that’s left to do is evaluate our work and also how we
feel the performance itself went.
This whole process has
been one which has required so much work and effort, at times it has been quite
challenging, and of course we have faced little issues and bumps along the way
as is always the case when creating a piece of work, especially one of this
scale. Despite the hard work it has required though, it has been a thoroughly enjoyable
experience as well, all the effort we’ve been putting in feeling completely
worth it and now I feel it has really truly paid off.
Particularly the last two
weeks have been rather stressful, but I feel proud of our group that our work
ethic, harmony as a team and dynamic as a theatre company hasn’t been affected
by this; we’ve been persevering and getting the job done.
And the final pay off to
all of this really has been our actual performances, which I truly feel
tremendously pleased with and proud with all of us for.
I believe both went
successfully for several reasons; I feel that the energy was brilliant, I can
say with confidence that I feel I completely gave my all to both shows, putting
in 100%, and I felt that the whole cast put in this effort too and there wasn’t
a single person letting the side down. We kept scenes lively, there were no
disasters with lines, even when people made little mistakes we all managed to smooth
over them easily and therefore they wouldn’t have been noticeable to the audience;
I feel we handled the whole performance very professionally. Our transitions
were smooth, each scene flowed to the next without any hiccups, and between
each section everybody maintained the freezes and I think this made the breaks
between the sections successfully clear.
Our ensemble work was
strong, everybody absolutely knew what they were doing and our moments of
choral speech and movement all went well, making me feel so happy with the
quality of our work as a body of performers together.
Our reactions from the
audience, both the student audience and the different demographic of people who
came to watch in the evening, where what we hoped for. I believe that we
achieved our goals in creating our desired atmosphere such as for example
humour or more thoughtful moments, as the audience laughed when appropriate and
were silent when there were the sadder or quiet moments in the play. This indicates
to me that they were engaged and I felt a good connection to the audience
throughout, I believe we did a good job of maintaining this connection and
their focus for the duration of the shows.
Personally, I am happier
with my individual performance in the evening, as I feel that both physically
and vocally I projected more and was even more confident, consequently giving
my absolute all in our second performance more so than I felt in our first one.
However, though I feel that my second performance was stronger personally, I do
feel very happy with my input in both.
In conclusion, I’m proud of the work that I have put in throughout the creative and rehearsal process and the performances, and I genuinely feel that both individually myself and as a team with the rest of the group, our Final Major Project has been one of the strongest pieces of work we have produced, and it has been something I’ve fully committed to from start to finish, and it has all been absolutely worth it. This experience has helped me to grow as an actor and performer, as a team worker, a company member, and these are things which will continue to help me in whatever work I do from this point forward.
It has also been a truly unique experience working with this amazing group, and I will never forget this or indeed the whole of our college experience, being part of this wonderful class has been very special.
Bibliography
Bibliography
In total opposition to the
last long conversation we saw take place which was delivered so dismissively
and without much investment from either person, here we have two people almost
debating over how much as a human is our choice and how much we’re bound to do
because we’re made that way and it is just part of who we are.
It’s an interesting
excerpt of text to have in this play as it breaches the very subject I was just
discussing in relation to the child who didn’t know sorry, about how much we
make our own choices and are ourselves and how much we are changed by the
influences around us and our natural builds as humans, is there such a thing as
fate and if so what is it decided by, the whole subject of nature vs nurture,
the psychological and the sociological.
We’re really making this
scene as different to Earthquake as we can, a lot of our work on Love and
Information trying to draw parallels between different people, situations and
attitudes. Elvina and Katy were quite absent minded, seemingly laid back and
normal people just having a casual chat, and so instead of repeating that, in
Fate we see Elvina and Divina debating in quite a scholarly way, representing a
different kind of people, those who feel that their opinion is right and makes
them more intelligent or above others, rather than Katy and Elvina’s characters
who disagreed but didn’t feel competitive about it, whereas Divina and Elvina
are both so sure they’re right that there’s quite an argumentative feeling
between them.
Taking this parallel
further, we’re also setting this in a public setting, but again one completely
different to the last, this setting supposed to represent a high end, posh
restaurant and a different crowd of people to those we saw in the hairdressers. To show the demographic and perhaps even class of people in this scene, I am being stereotypically "posh" in movement and gesture; my posture straight and proper, my legs crossed neatly as I sit at my table, my gestures polite and gentle, conducting myself very tidily altogether.
Of course, as in Earthquake the rest of us are in minor so as not to distract from the major focus of the scene, so we are all in mime again rather than making any sounds like we did earlier in the play in Savant, and we are finding this works to make the setting around Elvina and Divina’s realistic without taking away from their performance.
Of course, as in Earthquake the rest of us are in minor so as not to distract from the major focus of the scene, so we are all in mime again rather than making any sounds like we did earlier in the play in Savant, and we are finding this works to make the setting around Elvina and Divina’s realistic without taking away from their performance.
Stone
Stone shows one person who
is clearly the victim of bullying and has some sort of personal issues, and
what appears from the text to be at least a few people talking about him and
then participating in bullying him.
Everyone wants to be in
this scene, we’re going to make a kind of mob mentality of a big group of
people all ganging up on someone, showing the severity of the bullying that
takes place. It makes most sense to us for them to be young people, as it is
amongst young age groups that you most commonly witness this manner of bullying
taking place.
We wish to portray the
isolation and loneliness that victims of bullying face as well, so we have
every one of us playing a bully all together in a big group and Ryan on his own
in the corner being their target.
To really generate the full effect of people being mean, menacing bullies, as an ensemble for this scene we have been working together on physical traits and how to all move and stand. We're al grouped together quite tightly to display that pack mentality, we're quite brutish and careless with our movements, for example when I push Sam forward forcefully. We stand with casual, stereotypically "teenage" posture, all physically embodying the confident, cocky, bullish nature of these people in the way we stand and move.
For my voice I am also trying to portray this, making my voice deeper and less refined or friendly sounding, and my manner of talking more lazy and thoughtless than for example when I'm playing a thoughtful adult character like in Ex. Especially all together as a chorus, I think we're creating a realistic group of these characters, ones you would believe capable of cruelty and hopefully the audience can see from the way we're behaving and moving as well as our words and actions that we are a threat.
To really generate the full effect of people being mean, menacing bullies, as an ensemble for this scene we have been working together on physical traits and how to all move and stand. We're al grouped together quite tightly to display that pack mentality, we're quite brutish and careless with our movements, for example when I push Sam forward forcefully. We stand with casual, stereotypically "teenage" posture, all physically embodying the confident, cocky, bullish nature of these people in the way we stand and move.
For my voice I am also trying to portray this, making my voice deeper and less refined or friendly sounding, and my manner of talking more lazy and thoughtless than for example when I'm playing a thoughtful adult character like in Ex. Especially all together as a chorus, I think we're creating a realistic group of these characters, ones you would believe capable of cruelty and hopefully the audience can see from the way we're behaving and moving as well as our words and actions that we are a threat.
We’ve interpreted the
middle of the text in this scene to indicate that they steal the “special stone”
they say this boy has from him and start playing with it, we thought this could
be the point at which they start bullying him in this moment even though it’s
clear from the way they talk about him and behave that it’s a regular occurrence
picking on him.
We’re all grouped together
centre stage, Ryan downstage right alone, sitting in a spotlight playing with
his stone, which we have decided to mime to avoid any accidents or mistakes
involved in using an actual prop.
When we start talking
about should we get it from him, we all push Sam over to go and do it, again
displaying the kind of nastiness you see in these groups, people even ganging
up and pressuring one of their own, as Sam is the only person who seems sympathetic
and not wanting to take the stone or be mean to Ryan.
A lot of the times we’ve
rehearsed this scene and tried to block it and work out the staging, because
there are so many of us, it looks really messy and exactly what’s going on is
confusing, so we’re putting a lot of work into our ensemble for this. We’ve
come up with the idea to use slow motion, choral movement and choral speech to
create a strong, clear chorus and make the scene professional and organised. Sam
is pushed to get the stone from Ryan, and up til this point everything has been
naturalistic. Now however, as Sam throws the stone back over to the rest of us,
we all go into slow motion together. Sam throws the stone, I catch it, I throw
it to Jerome, and then Jerome throws it off stage. As he does so, he leans
back, and still in slow motion, we all lean back with him, then as he releases
the stone and throws it, we all lunge forward in unison and resume normal
speed. All this time Ryan, who adopts the same speeds as us to keep the choral
movement consistent, stands up and tries to stop us, then goes offstage to get
his stone. We all start talking about him getting it, again Sam saying he
thinks he might need that one and not be able to find it, still clearly sympathetic,
while the rest of us disregard his comments entirely and continue to build up
the cruelty to the point where we start hurling stones at Ryan and shouting at
him.
At this point originally
we all starting picking up stones, laughing, throwing them at Ryan as he
crosses back over the front of the stage, and calling out different variations
on “here have a stone”.
This was always such a
jumble though, and we’ve been told that it looks messy and ruins the work we’ve
put so far into the strong ensemble work.
It was suggested by Sharon
that to tidy it up we all throw one stone at the same time, saying “have a
stone”, and then we all freeze throwing it.
We’ve tried this out and
it feels much better for us and apparently looks better too, so this is what we’re
sticking with because up until this point we haven’t been quite satisfied with
our ending to the scene because it felt a bit all over the place. Now however
it is much more together and it feels like a stronger end.
Manic
When we first compiled the
list of scenes we wished to have in our version of this play, Manic was one of
the ones we wanted to keep in. Ria was
cast in this, however she has expressed her discomfort with the length of the
lines she would have to do as it has some very large paragraphs in it, and so
we’ve come to the decision as a group to cut this scene from the play, because
Ria wasn’t happy with it and no one else was keen enough on this scene in
particular to re cast it and take on the role she would have played.
Virtual
This scene has intrigued
me from the very first time we did a read through of Love and Information. It reminds
me of the film “Her”, set in a futuristic world in which the mobile device Siri
has evolved to the point that everyone uses it for everything all the time, and
in the film one man falls in love with his Siri.
It’s a fascinating
concept, and it is very similar to what is happening in this scene. One person,
the part of whom Jerome plays, is arguing about how real their relationship
with a virtual being is, claiming that she is able to love him even though
fundamentally, being virtual, she doesn’t actually have the capacity for
feeling. However, because of the absolute intelligence of the technology, it
seems real enough to convince this man beyond all reason that somehow it has
developed human abilities and emotions.
The people with speaking
parts in this are Jerome, Elvina, Sam and I.
We considered for a while
what would be the best approach to take to this, and it felt most right to us
that we really use the virtual theme and actually have the voices in the scene
that aren’t Jerome as computers. Jerome’s character is in this world where he
is so engrossed in technology that he has fallen in love with and has virtual
sex with a computer game, he’s completely surrounded by a virtual reality, and
that’s what we want to convey; this is why Sam, Elvina and I are going to be
playing virtual entities ourselves.
Jerome is the only person
is the whole situation who is actually human, he has no real connection to
anyone else here; he’s basically alone although he couldn’t accept that. So we
are placing Jerome centre stage by himself, I, as I start speaking first am
positioned centre stage also but set behind him, and Sam and Elvina are on
either side of him. The rest of the cast surround us all in a symmetrical
formation, remaining motionless and expressionless for the duration of the
scene, as do Sam, Elvina and I.
We are all emotionless and
virtual, only saying words we are created to know and be able to say, and
Jerome is expressing himself emotionally and physically while none of the rest
of us do. I begin the scene, Sam joins in a third of the way through, and then
Elvina joins as well the next third of the way through, we all speak our lines
in total unison, with deadpan emotionless and robotic voices, displaying
clearly what we are, nothing more than devices of technological intelligence.
This dynamic portrays how
different Jerome is to the computer he thinks he is in an actual romantic and
sexual relationship with, and shows the extent of his delusions, because even
surrounded by beings which while able to speak to him have no genuine or real
connection to him, he still can’t see that this is the case with his virtual “girlfriend”
too. I think the artistic decisions we’re making with the staging of this scene
and the roles that Elvina, Sam and I play are going to really send that
message; it’s almost a warning about the way we’re moving further and further
away from a place of natural humanity and closer to a world completely
dominated by technology.
Feedback we’ve received which
we’re working on is for everyone who isn’t Jerome to really focus on consistent
stillness, making sure that even stationary we don’t make any movements such as
even slight twitches; we want to be as statue-like in our physicality as
possible. To work on this I’m focusing a lot on my breathing and relaxing my
muscles for this scene, so I can adopt a complete stillness without any tension
that may cause little movements.
As well as being completely still and expressionless to show I am just a computer in this scene, I've been practising my vocals a lot to really get into changing from the last scene where I am so animate and my emotions are clear in my voice, to this scene where my voice has to sound totally robotic and completely devoid of any emotional qualities. It's an interesting challenge, having to dismiss everything we work on about how to use your voice expressively in acting, now that all has to be stripped away and my tone, pitch, pace, everything has to be completely neutral.
I'm enjoying the challenge of it; one of the things I really adore about Love and Information is the sheer variety and range within ourselves we get to explore and improve by being so many different types of characters and roles all in one production.
As well as being completely still and expressionless to show I am just a computer in this scene, I've been practising my vocals a lot to really get into changing from the last scene where I am so animate and my emotions are clear in my voice, to this scene where my voice has to sound totally robotic and completely devoid of any emotional qualities. It's an interesting challenge, having to dismiss everything we work on about how to use your voice expressively in acting, now that all has to be stripped away and my tone, pitch, pace, everything has to be completely neutral.
I'm enjoying the challenge of it; one of the things I really adore about Love and Information is the sheer variety and range within ourselves we get to explore and improve by being so many different types of characters and roles all in one production.
Facts
The last scene in the
entire play is a series of questions and answers.
We pitched a few different
ideas for this; it could be study partners, some kind of challenge, maybe a questionnaire
game show, and the one that stuck is the game show idea, because as it is the
last scene we want a way to have everybody participating, and this idea allows
for a large number of people, facilitating our full cast.
We’ve chosen Katy and Ryan
to play the hosts of the Game Show, asking questions alternately.
The rest of us are split
into two teams, all of the answers divided out and at least one assigned to
each cast member so the whole company participate in this scene both physically
and vocally. We were going to have one person from each time playing the team
buzzer to use physical theatre; however this idea hasn’t stuck because we think
it will be better for everyone to have an actual character in our very final
scene.
In terms of staging, we
have one team downstage left and one team downstage right, with Katy and Ryan centre
stage upstage. For this scene only we’re having no chairs at all, clearing them
all to upstage in the transition between virtual and this scene. This will give
us a completely clear space to use for our final scene and our bow as well.
First we had our teams
facing one another, looking at Ryan and Katy as they asked the questions, but
the feedback we’ve been given advises that each team face diagonally forward,
the team on stage right facing the opposite corner of the auditorium and vice
versa, and we now don’t look over at Ryan and Katy at all. This means our
performance is directed much more out rather than being as contained as it was,
and also none of us are in profile which is far better.
We would very much like to
end the play on a happy and entertaining note, so this scene is going to be fun
for both us and the audience watching, it being light hearted and enjoyable. So
for the whole of this scene we’re having very high vocal and physical energy
levels, creating an atmosphere of excitement and tension as we all scramble to
answer the questions and win the game. This is working well; it means the whole
show will end on a high note which I think is a really positive way to finish.
To make the show more
believable we’re having sound effects, but creating them vocally rather than
with technical sound effects. Sam makes the sound of the buzzer each time
someone reaches forward and hits their buzzer to answer, and I am making a “ding”
sound effect when someone answers a question to indicate that it was correct, and
then at the only question anyone gets wrong, Jerome is making the incorrect
answer sound effect.
We’re also having music to
start the scene, as we all cheer, and bright, colourful lights flashing all over
and spinning on the stage, everything about this scene bright and lively.
Throughout this whole
scene we’re building up a competitive mood on stage, all of us showing how desperate
we are to answer the questions and beat the other team, and this mood peaks at
one point quite near the end of the scene, where Sam breaks away from his team
and walks up to our team to answer a question, completely confident that he’s
right and trying to make a big show of it. We’re using this as a joke, as he
has such cockiness answering and coming over and then the incorrect answer sound
is made to indicate he was wrong. At this point, while returning to his side of
the stage, he just keeps walking off, too embarrassed to stay on. It is funny
moments like this which are helping as well to make this last scene really fun.
We struggled to figure out
how to fit one line into the scene however, where one character asks “do you
love me”. This is of course something which wouldn’t make sense as a game show question,
and later on in the scene it is answered with “yes, yes I do”. We considered
cutting it, but then thought that perhaps as there are two hosts, maybe this
could be an exchange between the two of them. Ryan asks Katy if she loves him
mid all of the questions, and we all turn to look over, confused at what is
going on. She replies “don’t do that”, and the questions resume. Then however,
just before the last answer, she tells him that she does, and they embrace one
another in a hug. This is a way to have a very sweet actually human moment on
stage, bringing nicer meaning to this scene; something else which I think makes
it a lovely way to end the play.
Then, after she says this,
both teams at the same time lunge forward for our buzzers and all scream out
the final answer. Everyone on stage now freezes in this position, and the
lights go down.
I really love this ending,
the whole scene has been vibrant and now it ends on an equally energised
moment, concluding our whole production with a bang.
We know what we’re doing
for all of our scenes, the transitions from scene to scene are smooth, and our
seating order is organised well so that everyone knows where on stage in which
chair they should be sitting at any given moment, but something that we want to
make clear is the transition between the different sections of the play. Because it is divided into seven sections, we
want some way to signify where one section changes to another, to break it up a
bit more instead of having one constant speed of changes between every single
scene. However, we still need for it to be smooth.
We considered the option
of having everybody change seats at a section change, but this was too complicated
and liable to go wrong, and didn’t look clear enough. Instead, we’re going to
put in pauses between the sections, a pause of ten seconds each time one
section ends before the next begins.
To do this, at the end of
each scene that closes a section, all of the actors on stage freeze in their
last position and maintain that freeze for the whole ten seconds while music
plays over the top, then they all disperse and the next set of actors get up
and start the next section.
The music playing over
this is very helpful, because otherwise we found people were breaking from the
freeze frames at different times and there was too much room for error with
everyone just counting in their heads. The clips of music are timed to be
exactly ten counts, so now we know to freeze until the music finishes and then
move.
Feedback we’ve been given
tells us that this is working well, and that especially now we’re all freezing and
then continuing at exactly the same time, these pauses between the sections not
only are still smooth but also help with the pace of the whole play to make
sure it isn’t rushed and give it some moments where we aren’t just going from
scene to scene to scene.
Setting up the stage in rehearsals |
My role is Assistant Director, which has consisted of trying to keep everyone in order, organising things such as making sure everyone in the company is responsible and in for rehearsals on time, and chasing people up contacting them to find out why they’re late if they are and when they would be going to arrive.
This role has been a lot about trying to keep things running smoothly, whether it be by keeping tabs on where the other company members are, gathering people for warm ups at rehearsals or helping setting up and taking down the scenery and props, as well as finding props and costumes from backstage for our production.
Of course with every role we each have in the theatre company comes responsibility, but I am taking it as an opportunity to rise to the challenge of stretching myself beyond the role of acting and creating and using and developing further skills in organisation and communication. The chance we’ve all had to fill different roles in this theatre company for our FMP has been really interesting and beneficial, and is also helping a lot with keeping everything running smoothly because there’s someone covering everything that needs to be done.
The whole company and play
is completely organised now, everyone knows exactly what we’re doing for each
scene, and I feel the bounds in progress we’ve been making as a team over the
last number of months are tremendous. We’re now in our last few days of
rehearsal and everything is really coming together, even though things were a
bit wobbly when we first came back after our two week break. I’m feeling confident
with our piece, especially now we’ve had the chance to rehearse in the theatre
and do tech and dress rehearsals.
Now it is just about going
over it again and again to really fine tune the whole thing and just make it
the absolute finished product in time for our performances in a few days’ time.
Evaluation
We have finally performed our Final Major Project now, both our matinee and evening performance are done and dusted and now all that’s left to do is evaluate our work and also how we feel the performance itself went.
This whole process has
been one which has required so much work and effort, at times it has been quite
challenging, and of course we have faced little issues and bumps along the way
as is always the case when creating a piece of work, especially one of this
scale. Despite the hard work it has required though, it has been a thoroughly enjoyable
experience as well, all the effort we’ve been putting in feeling completely
worth it and now I feel it has really truly paid off.
Particularly the last two
weeks have been rather stressful, but I feel proud of our group that our work
ethic, harmony as a team and dynamic as a theatre company hasn’t been affected
by this; we’ve been persevering and getting the job done.
And the final pay off to
all of this really has been our actual performances, which I truly feel
tremendously pleased with and proud with all of us for.
I believe both went
successfully for several reasons; I feel that the energy was brilliant, I can
say with confidence that I feel I completely gave my all to both shows, putting
in 100%, and I felt that the whole cast put in this effort too and there wasn’t
a single person letting the side down. We kept scenes lively, there were no
disasters with lines, even when people made little mistakes we all managed to smooth
over them easily and therefore they wouldn’t have been noticeable to the audience;
I feel we handled the whole performance very professionally. Our transitions
were smooth, each scene flowed to the next without any hiccups, and between
each section everybody maintained the freezes and I think this made the breaks
between the sections successfully clear.
Our ensemble work was
strong, everybody absolutely knew what they were doing and our moments of
choral speech and movement all went well, making me feel so happy with the
quality of our work as a body of performers together.
Our reactions from the
audience, both the student audience and the different demographic of people who
came to watch in the evening, where what we hoped for. I believe that we
achieved our goals in creating our desired atmosphere such as for example
humour or more thoughtful moments, as the audience laughed when appropriate and
were silent when there were the sadder or quiet moments in the play. This indicates
to me that they were engaged and I felt a good connection to the audience
throughout, I believe we did a good job of maintaining this connection and
their focus for the duration of the shows.
Personally, I am happier
with my individual performance in the evening, as I feel that both physically
and vocally I projected more and was even more confident, consequently giving
my absolute all in our second performance more so than I felt in our first one.
However, though I feel that my second performance was stronger personally, I do
feel very happy with my input in both.
In conclusion, I’m proud of the work that I have put in throughout the creative and rehearsal process and the performances, and I genuinely feel that both individually myself and as a team with the rest of the group, our Final Major Project has been one of the strongest pieces of work we have produced, and it has been something I’ve fully committed to from start to finish, and it has all been absolutely worth it. This experience has helped me to grow as an actor and performer, as a team worker, a company member, and these are things which will continue to help me in whatever work I do from this point forward.
It has also been a truly unique experience working with this amazing group, and I will never forget this or indeed the whole of our college experience, being part of this wonderful class has been very special.
Bibliography
Bibliography