Friday, June 24, 2011

Building Beowulf: Playwright Rick Chafe’s Rehearsal Journal






16 Days to Opening: Mounting the Horse

Just finished the day’s rewrites. After falling behind yesterday I’m officially back up to date—all the scenes we’ve worked so far have been have received all the nips, tucks, line changes, and order switches that have shown up in working through them these first three days. The first half of the play turns out to be very clean, much less revision required than I would have thought. Tomorrow we run the play up to page 38 or so—very close to having worked up to the halfway point.

Warm, blue sky this morning, and the view… Roxy, who runs the camp program at the Ross Creek Arts Centre loans his house without charge to visiting artists. Its front door is a two minute walk to the beach on the Bay of Fundy. Such a beautiful day. Perfect for horseback riding.

But also for scene rehearsal. We get through five of them. And all deliver up the best kind of surprise—they all played better than I thought I’d written them. These are the times playwrights love actors.

Burgandy took her entrance into scene three, walked up to Jamie and grabbed her by the hair. Suddenly a completely different scene, playing directly against the text as written, and a hundred times better.

Scene six begins with the parents saying goodbye to their sons, untried recruits off to the first war in twenty years. I’d written it as a tender/comic scene where the parents are double-cast as their sons, so that halfway through the scene the parents would turn into their own children. Except casting to cover all the roles in the play made this doubling impossible, so that concept is on the trash heap. Within a few minutes Ken and the actors have tried three different approaches and hit on something that’s both tearful and hilarious. Jeff plays a father too verbally inept to explain how to hold the sword he never expected his son to have to use. It’s so funny you have to laugh. Except it’s so painful you have to cry.

The rest of scene six, Andrea, Chris, Jonny, and Jeff are just plain funny playing the inept recruits despite playing exactly as I’ve written it. I’ll take credit on the assist.

Burgandy and Jeremy take the first run at the scene I’ve been most worried about in the first half of the play—Beowulf sees a ghost. Ken says play with it. Mark, the composer, plays spooky bell sounds, running a violin bow over a set of strange metal rims that look like hubcaps. Burg and Jeremy run the scene five times with five completely different blocking approaches. They all work. I think all of us are surprised.

A break to outdoors in the afternoon to test the evolving technology of the horse puppet. Karen has built the beginnings of a head and a platform to be carried by the selected strong men of the cast, Jonny and Rhys, and made out of two by fours, a cloth saddle, shoulder pads, and two modified backpacks borrowed from a Mermaid Theatre show. Some adjustments for Jonny and Rhys’s differing heights, and the platform works fine. Once Jamie climbs up though, we’re into not ready for primetime territory. Back to Karen’s workshop, we’ll see the next version in the next day or two…

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Building Beowulf: Playwright Rick Chafe’s Rehearsal Journal

17 Days to Opening: Waking the Dragon

Here comes the spoiler.

Beowulf, is the thousand year old poem telling the story of an unnaturally strong hero, who as a young man fights and kills two terrorizing monsters. As an old man, a king without an heir, he fights one last dragon, while enemy nations gather at his shore, awaiting his end and their chance to take his kingdom.

For the play, I’ve stuck mainly to this last movement of the story, old King Beowulf and his last dragon. I’ve given old Beowulf the daughter he never knew he had: 18 year-old Lara comes to her father’s land seeking help. Instead, she’s put into the unwanted role of heir to the throne on the eve of war. And then there’s this dragon.

So a father and a daughter are thrown together at the same moment their country is suddenly under attack for the first time in nearly twenty years. A man whose fate has arrived too soon, a girl who has to take up her destiny before she’s ready. And an entire younger generation raised in peace that has to deal with their parents’ expectation that, without question, they will defend their land to the death.

But for most of us in the rehearsal hall, it's still only our second day into this journey. Alexis leads us through a physical warmup. Alexis plays Sissa, Lara’s new servant and confidante, but Alexis is also the one of the two puppet masters, and associate artist on the show and so is involved in a lot of the directing and design choices, and mother to two small children who are staying at the centre, and also a yoga and Pilates instructor. She works the core muscles half of us don’t even know how to find, preparing for the physical work coming over the next weeks.

Next up, I’ve arrived with a rewrite. I’ve reduced the large trial scene from later in the play by a third. The actors give it a cold read—cold meaning in this case unrehearsed, rather than unenthusiastic. Both kinds are known to happen of course, but this one meets general approval. I’m not convinced the new version maintains the tension the scene requires, but it’s definitely a big improvement. More work to come on that one when we spend more time with it in three or four days.

The big job of the day is the first large ensemble scene, Lara’s arrival in Beowulf’s kingdom, Geatland, just as the outbreak of war seems inevitable. It’s a 9-11 moment, a Pearl Harbour moment, director Ken tells the actors. War has arrived out of nowhere, they aren’t even sure who the enemy is or how they can possibly fight them. The characters haven’t been weighing these decisions for a week, he says, they’ve only found out in the last fifteen minutes. Jeff and Andrea play two old men trying to work out the chances of their sons surviving a battle, young men who have never had to lift a sword. Soon there are ten characters in the village long house, arguing the level of sacrifice that can or must be made. Ken and the actors run through two hundred questions and tentative decisions, choices tried out in action, modified, discarded, then another two hundred. Just before three o’clock, the whole scene is run through, twice. Not bad at all, and I have a script scratched with notes for an easy rewrite tonight.

The actors go outside to work with the dragon puppet. The work on this big scene has left me with the nagging question, what is on Beowulf’s mind this whole time? With an enemy on his coast he doesn’t have the warriors to face, he discovers now a dragon may—or may not—have awoken in the land. He hides everything he’s thinking, we’ll only get glimpses. But I know I have to get deeper at it than in his key scenes I’ve written so far for the second half of the play. Ken and I bat around ideas and possibilities in the rehearsal hall. A few of them stick really nicely. There’s at least 8 or 9 scenes to deal with before I need any answers though. A few days at least.

I go out to see the company’s first efforts with the full prototype dragon. Nine actors working out the opposing leg movements of a giant lizard scuttling across a huge field. Jeff, Alexis’s husband and our second puppet master, leads the dragon march. Jamie fills in for Alexis inside the puppet so Alexis can watch from outside. Alexis and Jeff's four year-old Timothy is also watching, very pleased with the dragon… but as the legs tangle a hundred yards across the field and the dragon backs up to start again, Timothy inevitably asks, “Why does this show take so long?”

Lucky for me, dragons just take a while waking up.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Building Beowulf: Playwright Rick Chafe’s Rehearsal Journal


18 Days to Opening: Stage Magic

Eleven actors. Sixteen characters. One musician. Two monsters. One horse. One dragon. Pond, sky, fields on all sides. A mountaintop at the edge of the Bay of Fundy. Stage magic.

Day one of Beowulf rehearsals—or day eight, depending how you count, as the five actors playing the major roles have been here since last Tuesday getting a head start—but this is day one for me and for the remaining six actors joining in.

It’s outdoor theatre but we begin indoors. We’ve shook the hands, signed the contracts, paid up the coffee fund, met all the staff at the Ross Creek Centre, seen the costume designs, wondered at the array of percussion instruments that will become the story’s musical character.

We’ve met the first three parts of the dragon puppet—the head, one leg, and two ribs. Three actors will operate those body parts, nine actors will eventually animate the whole puppet. Somehow they’ll collectively create a beast to battle Beowulf, somehow without tripping over each other, somehow within three weeks. Alexis and Jeff are the puppet masters. Jeff demonstrates operating the head and one leg of the prototype, telling us the tricks will be walking together like a lizard, and making the ribs breathe. Alexis sets the condition that there will be dragon practice and exercises every day, we’re aiming for an injury-free battle to the death.

Which naturally segues to the sword-fighting. Jamie and Ben show us the sword-training scene they worked up last week. Broadswords zinging through the air, blades on blade, swords on shields, crashing steel on steel. It’s more stage magic, but aided by Nathan playing percussion, it’s a startling scene. Nothing’s held back, Jamie’s panting by the end, not faked.

I seem to make it injury-free as well through the script’s first read-through. Playwright reactions to their first reading fall somewhere between elation and black despair. I’ll call this one tempered relief. None of the scenes hit me as disasters. Several are very good. A couple clearly need an overhaul, but a couple might be home runs. Nothing leaves me in a suicidal fit—good sign.

The leads—Jeremy and Jamie as Beowulf and Lara—are fantastic. All five who have been here a week already are. The six who started today sound close to, or even already great on day one. Tons of palpable chemistry already. I can get away with an awful lot with a cast this good. The pluses are adding up.

It’s too long though. Probably 20 minutes to lose, we’re agreed it really needs to run without an intermission. Director Ken says 20 minutes will come out easy. Directors always say that. I say 12 will come easy. The other 8 will come one way or another.

Last two hours of the day we’re outside in the playing space, staging the opening. Alexis—puppet master, actor, and associate director—introduces the eleven to the opening sequence worked out in the first week. Song, movement, percussion, explosive percussion, running and ducking, we’re in a war zone. And Jamie’s opening story, the first lines of Beowulf. Beautiful. Half a dozen short cuts to make, easy.

I meet the dragon puppet designer, Karen—pronounced CARR-in, “German,” she says. “Or English.” She’s brought a couple more dragon parts and a length of rope, probably five meters, to represent the length of the tail, to see if it seems the right proportion with actors manipulating it. We share the perspective that it’s great to be able to work out and build the puppet—and the script—in response to the actors’ work, instead of building the whole show in advance and forcing all the pieces to fit. As we talk, Alexis re-thinks the blocking on the fly and sends half the actors into the woods to the left, the other half to pond’s edge to the right, while composer, Mark, sings out for them a new variation on the opening song.

Burgandy, veteran of—I’ll have to check how many Two Planks and a Passion productions and get back to you—pulls me aside. From the readthrough, she says the trial scene is still wrong. Burgandy was in the script workshop a year ago, where the scene was considerably different. She suggests a direction for a rewrite. My wife, Martine, had the same problem and suggested the same sort of change. Independent verification is pretty convincing. Ken agrees. I’ll try to have a quickie new version of the trial scene for tomorrow, sort of a prototype, just in case we get to it.

Good running start.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Launched!

Last Sunday saw the launch of our production and the anticipation (and weather-related anxiety) were thick in the air. We couldn't have asked for a more special night- a sold-out house with the L.G. in attendance, every kind of weather save for rain and a wonderful performance from all concerned.

Sunday's performance was the culmination of three years of work by Allen Cole, the company, and many of the artists who had been instrumental in its development. Here's to all of them and the great collaborative effort our opening represents.
The production has garnered perhaps the most glowing praise of any presentation in our 18 -year history, and we are thrilled to be sharing it with audiences at Ross Creek until the 9th of August.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Coming Together


The set for Rockbound is taking shape-we'll be working on our new outdoor stage after Canada Day! A massive wooden Island adjacent to a 30-foot long launch in a secluded forest clearing. It's being put together by our intrepid property manager Mike McMahon and an army of workers who are working feverishly (it's pretty hot) until opening. Here's a sneak peek.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Spaces


Every year I choose a different spot on our 186 acre site to present our Theatre Off The Grid productions- this year it's a spot nestled out of site of the road or the centre- and over time the site reverts to its original overgrown state.

Today I visited the stage from Our Town last year, and there isn't a trace of our production left. How wonderfully transitory the whole thing is- and how strangely sad too.

Over time the fields and forests of this place will fill with the ghosts of Homer, Wilder, Day and McKay- and the people who listened. At the same time the cycle of life here-Coyotes, turtles, birds, deer- comes eating its way through our stages. I think the impermanence of it all makes the drama we stage here more poignant. We're constantly reminded that, no matter how we try, it will all change.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Gatherings


Artists from across Canada are coming to our small corner of the world this week to begin rehearsals for Rockbound. It's incredible how in a few short weeks the Ross Creek Centre is transformed into a bustling hive of creativity in the middle of the forest. 14 performers and 8 other creative artists will gather here in June, along with many other artists-in-residence who are teaching and exploring here over the summer.

Each year we create a family- of sorts. Although for a brief time, artists do become very close while working here-it's a powerful experience very unlike working in a Canadian city, and one we are very proud to create.

Only 36 days until opening-the countdown begins.