Friday, October 8, 2010

Seen any great theatre?

Hi All,

Just wondering if anyone has seen any great theatre lately?

I am off to see Richard the Third in Brissie next week. Directed by Tom McSweeny, so should be a good show!

If you have seen something good, let us know.

Mercury's Wings has started rehearsals for Twelfth Night. Jennifer Flowers is just lovely. She is very gentle with us...well except for the breathing! I am learning so much, often it is something that I thought I knew! It's good to know when to shut-up and listen to someone who obviously knows more than you!

The tickets go on sale next week!!! Book at the Arts Centre!!! Group bookings have been dropped to 6 people, as we figured it is easier to find an extra 2 people than it is to have to find 4 or five...

Shaping up to be a good show. Watching Andrew Trump rant and scheme as the drunken Sir Toby is a real treat!


Friday, September 24, 2010

The Russians are Back!

Hi All,

Great play readings on Tuesday, thanks to all performers and directors! Here is a link to a short video of the night:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DlH0W5FJVk

Enjoy!

Friday, September 17, 2010

Back from Melbourne

Well, here I am at the airport after 3 days in Melbourne at the Long Paddock conference. What a week! Cold! Cold! Cold! (for a Gold Coaster!) Producers of work pitching their shows to venue managers etc… Pretty full on and it was great for MWTC to see the level of the shows that were being presented. Very high quality. There was so much good stuff that we were wondering why the GC has never seen any of it?! That’s for another blog, you know what I’m like, do not get me started!

We met lots of great people and of course we had a great time with the gang from The Arts Centre Gold Coast. Many thanks to Destry, Cheryl and Brad for taking us along and showing us the ropes. Also thanks to Sue-Anne and Jayne from marketing and box office, it was great to get to know them a little better. Building these relationships is what will make the GC a strong and legitimate artistic voice in the region.

On a personal note it was also great to get back to Melbourne, the place where I spent my university days and my formative theatre days. Also nice to be there with Claudine and to show her that part of my life. We went to the Victoria Markets and got sore feet walking around the city. We went to my favourite coffee shop in the world, Pellegini’s on Bourke St. Some of you may know this coffee bar, very Italian and very Melbourne.

The trip has planted the seeds of a new work, based on King Lear and a legend of our family…more on that as it comes to hand. We have a title and a concept and that's all I’m saying for now.

When we get back we are getting reading to get stuck into the Twelfth Night rehearsals. I have been reading sonnets in preparation, boning up on my iambics and my punctuation in readiness for Jennifer. I love Shakespeare, but you can’t be complacent with him, ‘cause just when you think you have him, he manages to slip through your fingers…

There is a little video of the trip, so check it out and I will see you all soon!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dame1StNn8E

James

Saturday, September 11, 2010

APACA Conference

Hi All,

Claudine and I are off to Melbourne for the APACA conference (it's for touring groups to sell shows etc..) We will be meeting lots of people and handing over business cards and generally promoting arts on the Gold Coast.

I will have the camera, so stay tune for some footage from the trip!

Cheers,
James

Who do we think we are?

I often tell students in workshops that they have no reason to be ashamed of living on the Gold Coast. That they must find their voice first, before they can become any sort of 'character'. Part of that voice is that they are from the Gold Coast!

I recently read in the GC bulletin an article about a new local theatre company who said that their project was "a Gold Coast product from start to finish", which may be true...They then went to say they could not see why the Gold Coast could not be more like Sydney or Brisbane. I think that this is why we are perceived as a lesser artistic city. If this company wants to be more like Brisbane or Sydney then maybe they should move there and do theatre! I am very serious about this!

Why should we feel we have to compare and import people from outside the Gold Coast when it comes to the arts? I know that Harvest Rain is a good company, but is there no other organisation or person on the Gold Coast to run the summer school? Yes, yes it's a business decision, but what about the local community? Now, I'm not say Mercury's Wings should or could do it, that’s not what we do, I'm merely asking why we always feel the need to get groups from outside the Gold Coast? Instead of building on the talent and wealth of knowledge that is already here.

I once read a book by Sir Antony Sher, who wrote about the cultural boycott of South Africa in the 90s, and he said that South Africans had not had anything for so long they felt they didn’t need it. Maybe the Gold Coast suffers from a form of this…? We have not had touring shows or professional theatre very often and as such we are forced to go to Brisbane or Sydney/Melbourne, and as such we start to think that what they have is ‘real’ culture. We have this perception that what we have is not ‘real’ culture because we are forced to see it through the eyes of another city. As petrol prices get higher and money gets tighter, then we go less to the ‘culture’ of Brisbane or Sydney or even the Gold Coast and thus we forget what it professional theatre looks like and so feel we no longer need it, as “we are doing fine without it”.

Anyway that’s all I’m going to write on that at the moment. Please comment, please argue, agree, disagree, whatever, but don’t be passive, be active. I keep saying that if you want to be taken seriously, then you have to be serious and do something.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Behind the scenes of the Play Readings

Hi All GC Theatre lovers!

Here is a little behind the scenes footage from Mercury's Wings play readings night:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UklkoxTEpN0

Check it out!!

We have a Twelfth Night blog happening also:

http://mercuryswingstwelfthnight.blogspot.com/

Cheers,
James

www.mercuryswings.com.au

Thursday, August 26, 2010

What do we have to do?

Mercury's Wings has missed out another grant from the Australia Council. I think that makes close to 13 applications since November last year to various funding bodies in an attempt to get something happening on the Gold Coast and we have been successful in 2 and the money from those project goes away from the Gold Coast. Arts Qld and Australia Council wouldn't give us enough money to actually pay the actors proper wages!

What does the Gold Coast have to do to attract funding???????

Recently I heard that the Gold Coast is now being referred to as an autistic cousin or the drunk aunty that always takes her shoes off and jumps in the pool with her clothes on. Where do people get these assumptions from? Have they ever lived here or do they just visit? Is their experience of the Gold Coast merely Jupiters, Shooters and theme parks?

An article I read in the SMH about the opening of Versace said that there was many 'platinum blondes', and was the Gold Coast going to have any substance? I became angered at this narrow minded point of view. So, is the journalist saying that if the Versace Hotel was in Sydney then the opening would be a classy affair with lots of 'substance'? What was the writer expecting? A gathering of elite platinum blonde model Stephen Hawking clones? They went on to say that only time will tell if the Gold Coast can sustain the Palazzo Versace. Why did Sunland bother to build it here, so it would fail??

Why when politicians and arts funding bodies are talking about regional development does the Gold Coast continually miss out? Yes we did get regional stages funding, but that is the first glimmer of hope in years. However, $300,000 over three years is not enough, it is a start however. What about smaller to medium size projects? Projects that are too big for the RADF?

Mercury's Wings applied for 2 artist in residence programs to Arts Qld. One for Southport State High and one for Benowa Primary. Out of 57 applications 12 were funded and not one on the Gold Coast. Our applications were checked by Gold Coast City Council grants officers and carried letters of support from Griffith lectures and former artistic directors of major theatre companies in Australia as well as internationally renown artists who have trained us in what we do and yet we were unsuccessful. And at this point Arts Qld has been promising us feedback for 3 weeks and it is yet to arrive!

Mercury's Wings does not want to be famous, we want to produce work here on the Gold Coast for the people who live here. Yes, the work is for us well, we do love what we do, and we make no apology for that.

If would love to hear from you, please respond, have a say, and maybe we can change this misguided perception of our city

James

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Somerset

Hi All,

Just finished 3 day residency at Somerset. Another great bunch of students. They were the group who Southport High edged out in the Drama Festival so I copped a bit of ribbing...all in fun of course!

The workshop I had tonight had 4 lovely and courageous students in it. I really love to work with motivated students, they keep me inspired and I always end up creating and seeing something new.

I am planning a workshop over the next school holidays. I am not sure if it will be one day or two this time...stay tuned.

James

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Mercury's Wings Play Readngs

We had a fun night last Tuesday with our play readings. I was a little OTT in The Bear, I kept "laughing"(thats what I do instead of saying ummmmm when I am lost!). I couldn't find my place in the script, I was so busy "acting". It was fun however and I think the audience liked it.

Swansong was simply beautiful. Great to see Steven Crockett back on stage after 28 years away! I feel a Lear coming on.....(he was wonderfully supported by John Rees-Osbourne in a generous performance)

The Shakespeare readings are next, so tell your friends and come along for a relaxed and fun evening in The Basement at the Arts Centre. I think the Macbeth's will be there, Kate and some Italian dude Peter, some star crossed lovers, some cross lovers and a mystery couple...

Huzzah! to the Arts Centre for letting us use the space!!!!

Thank you Destry and Brad!

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Well Done Southport

Southport High won the senior Drama Festival with their production of "Wolf Lullaby"!! I was so proud to have been a part of the is wonderful show and really positive school in the arts. I assisted the Drama Teacher and Director Kelly Sparke with movement and character development and took the students through Suzuki training and Frank Theatre training as a way to ground them.

Congrats to all involved!! I am looking forward to seeing what they bring to our playreading season of Greek Drama in October!!

Hurrah for SSH!

James

Sunday, July 25, 2010

The State of Southport

I recently went to Southport State High (SSH) for a one week artist-in-residence program. This was the second time I had been to SSH and the second time I have been totally blown away.

The drama teachers at this school work tirelessly teaching and driving their students to excel. I worked with them on physical theatre and on deepening the work they were doing for their drama festival shows (which by the way is a cut-throat business!). By the end of the week I was sad to leave, it is so enriching to work with such motivated people and dare I say more motivated and less tainted than most 'professionals' out there...It was also great to see teachers that were trying to get top quality training for their students. So many teachers use the same old lessons that have used for decades...a teacher a school I taught at said to me that I was the only teacher he had seen in years actually reading something that pertained to their subject and not "just for a lesson"...I don't know it all, never will, and that drives me to keep learning and interrogating what it is I do. I'm in a Robert Wilson phase at the moment, bloody fascinating...

Where do they go from here? Off to various universities I guess...My hope is to inspire some of them to make great theatre here, there and everywhere they can.

Anyway HURRAH! for SSH!


Tuesday, July 13, 2010

It's a Game and it's Life and Death

Dear GC Theatre lovers,

I was asked by John Nobbs of Frank Theatre to contribute a few words for his new book on my experiences of training in both Meisner Technique (2 years) and Suzuki Actor Training and Frank Theatre Performance Aesthetics (6 years and counting!). What follows is my contribution, I have no idea if it will be in the book, but I thought I would post it to see what people thought.

It’s a Game and it’s Life and Death

Acting is a serious profession and for those of us who consider it a vocation it goes beyond, “play” or a “job” or even a “craft”. It is the dedication of one’s life to a journey that has no apparent end and if there was and end, we probably wouldn’t notice it. The 20th/21st century western actor appears to be locked into a legacy of acting that is cemented in the mind and clouded with “emotion”. It is what we have come to understand as “Method” acting. This idea is strongly linked to the work of Lee Strasberg, an American acting teacher who became almost mythological for his work on “emotion memory” or “emotional recall”. However, this technique was later to be redefined by the work of Sanford Meisner, a contemporary of Strasberg, who moved away from “recall” and into a more spontaneous , but no less truthful, method of training actors. Taken on its own the Suzuki Actor Training Method and the Frank/Suzuki Performance Aesthetics can provide the actor with all the “truth” or “emotion” they need. However, for those, like myself who have been in both schools there is a proposition that the two ways of working and training actors will marry well, given the right creative context.

The concept of “emotional recall”, at its most basic, requires the actor to use some part of their own past as a trigger for an emotion required for a particular scene. If one needs to produce anger, despair or happiness in a scene, all one would need do is recall a past situation that made them feel this way and start the process of “feeling” that emotion again and then transpose it into the current scenario. In this way the actor will have produced a truthful emotion and the scene will be in a sense, more “real”. The goal is that the scene will convey ultimate truth. No easy task. The flaw in this work is that after a period of time the “memory” ceases to have the same effect on the actor. They have in a sense, dealt with the emotion surrounding the event and it becomes harder for the actor to find the trigger within the memory and so they have to go to greater lengths to “feel” the same way. This is where the actors may find themselves in very dangerous psychological territory.

Sandford Meisner rejected this technique and went on to devise his own techniques with regard to living fully under imaginary circumstances. Having been immersed in the Meisner Technique for two years and training with Frank for six years, I have found that certain Frank exercises have the Meisner technique inside them. The difference is that the Frank exercise offers total mind/body/voice development and with Meisner body and voice happen in another room, at another time.

A key concept of the Meisner Technique is “doing”, ie, actually “do” the thing you are doing rather than “act” the thing you are doing. By focusing on an objective rather than a script the actor is better placed to focus on his fellow cast and thus be more “in the moment”. In the Suzuki/Frank matrix adding certain physical constraints that places the actor in a “über” or “hyper” moment intensifies this idea of connection. When doing the “Minder/Blinder” exercise both actors are physically and emotionally connected. The actor with their eyes closed performs the extreme improvised movements while connecting to the hand of the actor who holds their waist and guides them across the space. The two actors must connect through their centres and also through the sensitivity of each other’s touch. They are, like any actors in a play, on separate but similar journeys and must be connected in order for that journey to have a transformative/performative outcome. The exercise further heightens the experience for the actor/s when text is added to the exercise. The text can be added at any time during the exercise, but will always be performed at the end. The text that is spoken, wether a training speech or from a current production, will reflect the accumulation of the entire experience of the exercise. The actor/s have used their physical, moral, and psychic energy to perform the exercise, to “do” the thing they are doing, and through this extremity the barriers of “emotionality” have been removed, revealing the essence of the actor.

If the goal of “method acting” is to produce real emotion then one must get to the one’s soul, the inner essence of the self to find it. If we attempt some form of self-psychoanalysis to get there then we run the risk of not being able to escape from “our-selves”. Therefore and exercise such as “Minder/Blinder” allows us to access the vastness of the self while at the same time providing a framework or matrix for the experience to occur safely. There is also the added benefit of the physical language that is being developed along with the unification of the voice with the body and the mind.

Another facet of Meisner Technique is the “Repetition Game”, where two actors "repeat" their observations about one another back and forth. An example of such an exchange might be: "You're smiling." "I'm smiling." "You're smiling!" "Yes, I'm smiling." Actors are asked to observe and respond to others' behavior and the subtext therein. If they can "pick up the impulse" — or work spontaneously from how their partner's behavior affects them — their own behavior will arise directly from the stimulus of the other. My own experience of this exercise was beneficial in that it taught me how to connect and respond with another actor, without the pressure of remembering lines. The goal of this exercise is to produce free and spontaneous responses based on what your partner has given you. The exercise does develop over time into a more complex scene, however the basic structure of repetition is the same.

It was while doing “Statues” in pairs at training one night that it struck me I was doing the Meisner repetition exercise, however it had been, as we like to say “Frankified”. The exercise itself is quite simple, you stand opposite a partner of approximate height and you are “bridged” together by broom handles in each hand. The “Statues” music is played and on the appropriate count a free-form statue is made. One must remain grounded and have eye contact at all times with your partner. The statues are “repeated” for around three minutes. In this exercise it is vital that you stay connected to your partner, but also respond to the statue that your partner has made. This is totally spontaneous as there is no set “kata” or pattern for the statues. You must however respond physically as opposed to verbally, to the statue your partner has made. You do not copy their statue but create your own statue based on your response to and connection your partner. The different levels of vocal production are then added to the exercise and like the Meisner version this exercise grows to become more complex. A version of recent times brings up to six or seven people into the exercise via a circle and eye contact and connection flows freely around the group creating an exciting dynamic within the ensemble.

As a teacher I am often asked about the difference between the two worlds of “Method Acting” and “Physical Theatre”, the idea being that they are mutually exclusive. There are some distinct differences but also on closer exploration some remarkable similarities, which contained with the right matrix, could create a symbiotic relationship that is facultative to both ways of working.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

No longer easy as ABC

Well, folks, we have lost our weekly ABC radio chat spot for Gold Coast community theatre. It was a good run while it lasted - over three years without a miss. Where do we go from here? Another radio station - anyone in the 16 to 35 demographic listen to 4CRB?????????? Never mind, still good for the mature generations - they make up a sizable slice of the theatregoing audience anyway.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

WELCOME

Hello to anyone well versed enough to get us started. JB Sec