Ken Griggs shot and edited this video to help prepare the
2,000 Cumberland County students who will see the show at our two student
matinees. The Classic Theatre Series provides free tickets to all
11th graders for these performances as a part of our continuing
effort to make the arts accessible for our community. We also provide study
guides and have gone into schools with our Artists in the Classroom
program.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Friday, February 24, 2012
Rehearsing Shakespeare…
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Jess Jones plays Desdemona in Othello |
Everyone has his or her different ways of doing it but it
generally goes something like this
1.
Table work
2.
Staging
3.
…and GO
In the Othello
adventure we’ve all embarked on at Cape Fear Regional Theatre with our captain
Tom Quaintance at the helm, we began our journey on calm seas with a week of
table work. For table work the actor
comes in (ideally) with the script scored, the words looked up, and a lot of
thought poured into both the piece and the character they will soon
inhabit. After this work has been
accomplished the director and the cast can sit together and pick apart the
language – find the hidden treasures that Shakespeare has put in his script for
the actors to use and prepare to use them.
During this time we hit a few waves as we figured out where to re-cut
the script, but came out on smooth seas.
This process of discovery within the language will continue throughout
the whole time we are working on Othello.
The staging piece of the puzzle adds in the physical aspect
to the production. You take the work
from breaking down the script and add to it what you are physically doing,
therein becoming your character. Now you
cannot only hear Iago but you can also see him and how he is working physically
as well as vocally to accomplish his malicious goal. We made harbor in a few places were we did
not end up staying, but that’s all part of the fun. The best processes allow for this exploration
and acceptance of ‘OK, we tried it, and that didn’t work..’ And Tom always made sure we landed on the
correct shore. (Or one of them, as there
are of course, many, many ways to stage this play.) A particularly fun part in this particular
process is the fight scenes. There are
quite a few fights in Othello and the
last scene is essentially a giant fight involving most of the cast. This in particular must be carefully planned
so no one gets landed in the hospital.
And now here we are.
From here everything just flows.
The actors have all the pieces in their hands and are left to discover
and play with the director remaining at the Helm steering us away from any
glaciers and on to beautiful horizons.
This is my favorite part of a process as you get to actually see and
experience what you are being given by your fellow actors and respond to
it. I cannot wait to jump back into
rehearsal and back into the discovery process with this lovely cast and our
‘great captain.’
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Tackling the 3rd Largest Part in Shakespeare
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Sonny Kelly plays Iago in Othello |
by actor Sonny Kelly
As if
creeping into the mind of a megalomaniac sadist psycopath like Othello's Iago
were not challenging enough, I learned quickly after being cast, that I am
required to memorize more lines than I ever have for any one play (much less,
lines written in 17th century Old English). While this daunting task has indeed
kept me up at night (and up again early in the morning), it's thrilling to see,
hear and feel how richly Shakespeare develops characters
through language that is full, complex and deeply meaningful.
I started
the process of memorizing, as I normally do, when I take on a new part:
Repetition, repetition, repetition. I tried reading my lines repeatedly, then
saying them out loud with my eyes closed (don't try this while driving---
SCARY!), and even recording myself. With each day that passed, I found myself
frustrated to no end at the huge amount of text that refused to stick in my
brain! Being a husband, father of two (a 1 year old and a 4 year old), and a
full time youth program director, my time is tight, as it is. I really can't
afford to waste time on tactics that aren't working.
When I
auditioned for Othello, I was drawn to the intensity and complexity of Iago. I
love my character, and I love the story, but I have to admit that wrote
memorization of these lines was killing me softly, and rehearsals became a
gauntlet of frustration, disappointment and a deep longing to finally get this
character up and on his feet, without a script to tether him at every turn.
Thank God,
Tom directed me to throw myself into the vivid imagery to which Shakespeare's
writing lends itself. The more passion, imagery and body motion I put into my
study and personal rehearsal, the more the words jump from the page and inhabit
my mind and body. It is amazing and quite engaging to wrestle with the text in
such a way that I walk away having engrafted it to my performance (rather than
just having memorized a bunch of words). I was tickled tonight, as I drove
through Taco Bell's 24-hour drive through passionately delivering some of my
most difficult lines-- arms flailing, face contorting, and voice booming through
the car's cabin. Totally lost in my study, I noticed the frustrated driver
behind me, looking confused (and perhaps nervous), edging up behind me to nudge
me forward to the window..."And scene! More fun with Shakespeare after this
burrito!"
Friday, February 17, 2012
SHAKESPEARE’S BEST PLAY
By Artistic Director Tom Quaintance
One
of the best things I’ve read about Othello is that while Hamlet or
Lear might be Shakespeare’s greatest Work, Othello is his best
play. The tight, well drawn cast of characters; an exciting, clear,
emotionally gripping plot; a towering hero with a tragic flaw; a fiery heroine
who dies for her love; and perhaps the greatest villain in classic literature –
it adds up to a spectacular evening of theatre.
The turnout for auditions was tremendous. There is a thirst for this kind of work, and I was thrilled to find such strong local and regional actors. The day before I was going to make an offer to an actor from New York to play Iago, I received this Facebook message from Phobe Hall, FSU professor and the Duke of Venice in this production: Tom, a former CFRT actor has returned home from Texas...
Sonny came in, with his four-year-old
son in tow, and did a cold reading that made me sit up and take notice. He came
back two days later with a prepared audition and killed it. I found my
Iago!
Big
thanks to PlayMakers Rep – for inspiring
this blog page. I had the fourth ever
post on that page during Nicholas Nickleby three years ago, and I continue
to follow their marvelous work through their outstanding
posts.
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Othello plays March 1-4 at FSU's Seabrook Auditorium
Click here for tickets and more information.
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