Saturday, April 24, 2010

Martin and Ibsen

I'm telling ya, performing an Ibsen drama at night and rehearsing Schmendiman in Picasso at the Lapin Agile in the afternoon is the weirdest thing in the world, but I love it.

I've been watching Steve Martin stuff on YouTube. I just finished reading Cruel Shoes, which is the weirdest book I've ever read in my life--and I'd like to think that I've read some pretty weird stuff. You have to imagine Steve Martin saying these short stories, and when that happens, I continually chuckle. It's a weird thing. I've also got Pure Drivel from the library, which is Martin more sophisticated, supposedly.

I'm also eager to read his autobiography Born Standing Up, which was only 74 cents on Amazon (but then there's three dollars for shipping--still, that's a deal).

I'm not one to really dive in and do a ton of research, but the more and more I hear about Schmendiman specifically, the more I realize that it IS sort of the embodiment of this wild and crazy guy. The whirlwind of two minutes I spend onstage is insane and quite a workout.

All in all, there's a lot of work going on, but I'm thrilled and happy with things. I'm really starting to find the groove of Erhart and Picasso rehearsals are a delight to just watch.

Friday, April 16, 2010

You know what irritates me a bit?

"You were in character the WHOLE time!"

Gee, you think?

I'm grateful for audience members.  I'm grateful for feedback and engaging in conversations with them.  It's a wonderful trademark of working in a tiny town and doing theatre.

But I don't think this is a unique quality of the size or town of the theatre.  I've heard this in college and in other theatres. For whatever reason, people MARVEL at this staying in character thing.

It's my job, folks.  I'm a professional.  Of COURSE we're going to be in character the whole time.

I just don't know how to respond earnestly. 

"Thank you?"

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Quotes from tech

We’re in tech/previews now.

The great thing is that we get 5 previews and are able to rehearse in between. As our director said yesterday: “Everything we do is 50%, the other 50 is the audience.” She also informed us to “breathe with the audience.”

We had about 20-some people for the first ever preview. It was great to have them there. They were hesitant to laugh (we’re not quite sure how funny this show is). Afterwards, I chatted with a couple and one guy said that this reminded him of a Coen brothers film. I thought that was extremely appropriate.

Here are some other fun quotes. I’m not sure how well these translate on a blog post, but here we go:

• Director to the cast: “There’s no reason to be nice to each other…let it be the most dysfunctional family in 2010…it’s not a comedy of manners.”

• Director: “Is it time? Should we be acting?” (We had been on break for a while)

• Jeffrey Hatcher, who wrote the adaptation of this script: “I think Foldal should enter holding his severed foot.” (He’s describing a character whose foot is run over by a sleigh and comes limping on stage.)

  • Director: I just messed this up.
Stage Manager: You’re right.
(The director had moved a chair onstage to explain some blocking. It moved off its spot, which had yet to be marked with spike tape)

“We’ll just work through the show—I’ve got a list that could choke a horse.”
(The director met with the cast after the first preview performance the next day for rehearsal)


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A major note I received from our second preview is this tendency to move during funny lines.  This distracts the clarity of the humor; it pulls focus and the joke is lost.  I should know better right now, but it's been difficult to ascertain which lines are actually funny.  Now that we have preview audiences, we're getting more accustomed to the laughing bits.  I shall be still from now on!

I've also had a fun challenge of acting with both a hat (a back military-type thing) and some black gloves.  The show takes place in the winter in Norway, so things are cold (duh).  There's some precision with these accessories that cannot be taken lightly.  The last thing you want is a whole bunch of glove lazzi when you're trying to tell your mother off on an exit.

A lot of the work that I'm doing with this show has been an exercise in clarity and focus.  We've been working a lot of details that make all the difference in the world.  Until now it's been a bit dodgy and inconsistent from my perspective, but I get the sense that I'm starting to lock in the character.  The director says my performance has been growing steadily.  The self-consciousness is slipping away, thank goodness.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Ibsen in 2010

I've been rehearsing regularly for the upcoming Ibsen production. We start tech on Tuesday, and I hear that we're going to do the whole "10 of 12's," which means that we rehearse for 10 hours in the span of 12. We get two hours off for dinner. This means starting at noon and going until midnight.

I have a feeling we'll be using all the time during tech week.

I'm only in two acts (out of four) and they're split up, so I'm not too worried about exhaustion (though I could be putting my foot in my mouth about that). The lines are down, but now I have more work to add in all the innuendo. Because that has been severely lacking.

The director has told me repeatedly that I'm not playing this in 2010. It's as if I'm from some other period. She told me to heighten the juice in the relationship with Fanny and to think more "preppy." I kind of obsessed over this note (because this isn't the first time I've heard this, and it's just aggravating to hear the same note and must be even more bothersome to give the same not over and over). Today's run of the act felt like a marked improvement, but the director had to move on to other bits (so I'm not quite sure what she thinks of it). We've spent MANY, MANY hours on the first act. I decided to come to work and rehearsal with nice jeans, a polo, and glasses (I know, real preppy--but it helped). I also stopped thinking about what my body was doing and imposed a kind of mental swagger to everything. We'll see how that translates, but I'm definitely not as discouraged as I have been the past couple days.

It just dawned on me that I've never played something so close to my age and time that I'm living right now. You'd think that be a piece of cake...that's not been the case so far.

Audiences begin coming to previews next Friday!

Gosh, then I start rehearsals for Picasso at the Lapin Agile in a few weeks. This is a long bout of acting!

I aim to post some more pictures of Death and the Ploughman. I think there are some good gems after a photo shoot we did last week.

The only other thing I can say is this: thank goodness the weather's getting nicer. It was over 80 degrees yesterday! This is Minnesota, people. This is awesome.