Archive for the ‘theater’ Category

Director’s Blog: Working with professionally trained designers

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

For Raconteur Theatre’s debut production After the Afterglow, we relied upon Board Members and personal friends to design the set, lights, costumes and sound. Each of the designers brought experience, creativity and expertise to the table and our final product was great. Not all of those designers were available for our second production so we have had to widen our circle of participants. Luckily two new designers have teamed up with the Raconteur production team for Ghosts and my experience with them has been nothing but positive.

White model of setI was delighted when Scenic Designer Richard May sent me photos of a “white model” a couple days after joining the Ghosts design team. This 3D scaled model gave me a clear picture of his concept so we could have a detailed discussion about what would work and what would need to change.

Skirt for Mrs. AlvingSkirt for Mrs. AlvingI was equally pleased and impressed during my first meeting with Costume Designer Jaylene Henderson. Instead of just asking what I wanted, she presented me a colorful array of sketches, fabric swatches and printouts of period costumes. We discussed details of fabric colors, dress lines and shoes. I came away from the meeting excited about the beautiful costumes I could actually envision. Then, after just a week, Jaylene sent me photos of the skirt she had already started sewing!

It feels greatto have designs before we’ve even started rehearsals. Richard and Jaylene are raising the bar of our design standards, setting a wonderful example for the rest of us. This is how we should be designing shows. Drawings, renderings, models, fabric swatches - visual representations of any kind are essential to a successful design process!

-Tricia Jones
Director, Ghosts
Running October 9 - 25, 2008 in Columbus, OH. Details at
http://raconteurtheatre.com

Director’s Blog: I’m afraid of GHOSTS

Friday, August 8th, 2008
“Jacob Adler said that unless you give the audience something that makes them bigger - better - do not act… [Acting should] open up the vastness in you as a human being, to understand your place more than you do - not to be led by the Bible or anything else but the truth of modern life as given to you by certain genius-authors in the theatre who can make you into something tremendous”  -Stella Adler, Stella Adler on Ibsen, Strindberg and Chekov

As soon as I agreed to direct Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts, I realized I was terrified.  Sure, I have directing experience but how do you compare a middle school production of Aesop’s (Oh So Slightly Updated) Fables with a play written by “genius-author” Henrik Ibsen,  the father modern theatre?  The opportunity to direct Ghosts is certainly a privilege but I questioned whether I’d be able to live up to such great responsibility.

Well, the question has yet to be answered but I’m gaining confidence.  And the confidence is not coming so much from belief in my directorial skills but rather from discovering first hand the brilliance of Henrik Ibsen’s playwriting.  I read and reread the script and discover new, wonderful insights each time - each character and plot twist has so many layers.  I’ve read several essays that expound upon the near perfection of Ibsen’s dramatic form and “ah ha!” lights go on in my head like fireworks.

 I am being reminded that a director’s job is not to hatch the perfect “concept” and cram the play into her perception of what it should be.  Rather, by staying intimately in tune with the script, the text and the subtext, the play will lead me and in turn lead the actors.  This is the path that will lead us to creating theatre that “gives the audience something that makes them bigger.”  I’m a little less afraid of Ghosts now.  In fact, Ghosts inspires me.  

 -Tricia Jones
Director, Ghosts
Running October 9 - 25, 2008 in Columbus, OH.  Details at
http://raconteurtheatre.com

I have to kiss Holger 3 times in a 30 minute play? And I have to initiate at least one of these kisses?

Monday, August 4th, 2008

This was one of the many thoughts running through my head the first time I read Justin Toomey’s Aster, Holger Gunn after being cast as Aster. Little did I know I was headed for a turbulent process involving a change in actors leaving us less time than originally planned for rehearsals. By the time we got around to rehearsing that kiss, it had become bigger than necessary and as someone who hadn’t been on-stage recently I was nervous.

I should have known better. I should have realized that this was a very natural and realistic emotion given the scene at hand. What I did know what that I needed to just get it over with. And what I came to realize is that both that kiss and the last kiss are such pivotal moments in the story that they were truly enjoyable.

Things I Learned During After the Afterglow:
* Sam Blythe (Duck from Aster, Holger Gunn) is the biggest goofball ever.
* Kafe Kerouac has delicious coffee.
* If you park illegally on North Campus they will tow your car astonishingly quickly!
* RTC is perhaps the nicest group of people ever (who else would bring you a birthday cake to tech week?)
* I am very hard on myself.
* It is unenjoyable to wait in the rain for intermission when there is no backstage available!
* There was a strange man across the alley. Every night he showered while the cast of Aster, Holger Gunn ran lines, he either never noticed us or didn’t care that we could see him.
* A smile on-stage can change the entire show.
* Operation and Apples to Apples are the best games in known existence.
* Sometimes a mid-performance line flub can be a confidence booster.
* Huzzah is not as annoying of a word as I originally thought.
-Molly

Hey you! Want to be in a show? Come to the Ghosts auditions!

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Just a quick shout to those of you who are reading this who weren’t currently aware - but we’re getting ready to cast our next show.

We’re putting up Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts, translation done by Lanford Wilson, directed by none other than our own Tricia Jones.

(She directed the Roulette half of After the Afterglow, ya know.)

Now, if you’re reading this blog, I know you want to be a part of this production. So, you’re probably saying “Tell me the details.”

Gladly!

Auditions are Sunday, August 3 from 3-5 and Monday, August 4 from 7-9 at the Main Library’s auditorium. (96 S. Grant Avenue)
The show dates are from October 2-18, Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 p.m., with Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. the first two weeks of the run.

You want to know more? Of course you do! And fortunately, you can find out more at our website.

Now, we want to see all of you there with bells on. (Bells optional).
-Aaron

After the Afterglow - Suellen Reflects

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

I have a hard time talking about our last show without talking about the Board who brought everyone together. I came into this experience not really knowing what to expect. I only knew half the group of the founding members when we first got together. It was a strange place to be, this past November, when the eight of us met at Cup O’ Joe’s to discuss what was to become Raconteur Theatre – just as another theatre company many of us were a part of was closing its doors. I was incredibly sad to lose Bison and yet incredibly hopeful with what this new company would bring, not only to me but to the rest of the Board and Columbus Theatre. We wanted a company that would last – we didn’t want to go through the incredible sadness that comes with seeing yet another Columbus Theatre have to fold for any of the number of reasons that many Columbus Theatres do. And yet goodbyes are inevitable regardless. Whether they are the closing of a theatre or the closing of a show, the goodbyes give a little tug at your heartstrings. And yet at the same time, that is the nature of the business.

But our debut show was about hello’s. Our company was incredibly lucky to have 8 very different artists, whose talents run the gamut of the sphere of talents it takes to make a production possible - directors, actors, writers, techies, stage managers and businessmen. We spent several months working up to our first show and it was an incredible feeling seeing everyone’s hard work brought together. We were blessed with a fantastic cast and crew who came on board knowing that things were going to be a little bumpy on our first show, and they embraced it.

In terms of my own personal experience on the production, I would say stage managing this show was probably more demanding than most shows I’ve worked on in the past. The Flex Series was set up as 2 one-act plays that offered flexibility to the audience who could see one or both of the one-acts. The plays worked together as a whole and yet also demanded the attention as if they were independent beings. I was always trying to find a balance between the two shows, figuring what I should approach independently and what I should look at as a whole. I had worked with one-acts before, but not in the same way that these two came together. Both shows had very similar themes and yet were very different technically – Roulette had 7 scene changes where Aster had none. Roulette was about an hour and fifteen minutes while Aster was almost half that. Roulette had a film feel to it while Aster was very black box theatre. The theme united them and yet these two pieces came together in the end to offer two very different theatre experiences. Another challenge was working in a non-theatre space. Kafe Kerouac is an awesome coffee shop on High Street near OSU campus with a side room stage where poetry readings often take place on Wednesday nights. It’s not typically a theatre space and yet with the guidance of our Set Designer and Tech crew, we managed to convert that room into a theatre space and make it work. It took a little bit of time and patience, but the final transformation was a pretty cool to see. It goes to show that you don’t need an actual theatre space to do theatre.

Despite these challenges it was probably one of the coolest shows I have ever put on. We didn’t have the comforts of home that established companies have and yet we made it work. I learned so much about what it takes to make theatre possible, how to accept the challenges that arise and how do the best we can with what we have to work with. And even after our afterglow ends, there’s still another show on the other side waiting for us to embrace it. And I look forward to it.

-Suellen