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Austin Pendleton

February 26th, 2011 No comments

Was watching an interview/discussion with Austin Pendleton on Theater Talk. It is a wonderful interview with plenty of insight into acting, directing, and theater relationships. Pendleton was talking about his upcoming productions of both Three Sisters and Detroit. Detroit is on the cover of American Theatre, either this month or last month, including the full text of the play. With Three Sisters I can only think of the Wooster Group production and Willem Dafoe speaking in his wispy, mellow way.

Anyway, the other night I was watching Zoldessy choreograph the movements of the actors in the East Storefront. He kept having them move and the he’d stop and think about it for a bit and then he’d talk about it and then he’d have everyone go back and run through the movement again. Zoldessy must have spend :30 minutes or :40 minutes on a page-and-a-half of the play, and I could tell the actors were getting antsy and there were only 10 pages left in the play and the hour was getting late, etc.

It was at this moment that I remembered the interview with Pendleton. In that interview he recounted how Jerome Robbins, during a 1964 production of Fiddler on the Roof spent 6 hours staging and re-staging a scene that was all of 5 minutes on stage. Now, Robbins could get away with it because he had paid actors who were acting as their job. Nonetheless, Robbins was, according to Pendleton, very committed to telling the story, that is, making the reality of the characters and their relationships truthful and real. The 5 minute scene was the family preparing for the Sabbath, and Robbins felt that the scene showed relationships and established character and was important enough to examine and block again and again until it was just right.

Pendleton then talked about his first gig as a director and how he blocked out the whole play in his mind. And then, with some other play that he was directing he didn’t get the chance to do that and felt awful about it, and unprepared, but, to his chagrin, discovered an organic approach, what he referred to as “expressive blocking.” Pendleton felt that this kind of experimenting is important and characterized it as working with clay, but you’re working with actors. And once the actors are interacting you begin to see things.

Jarod and I were at Happy Dog the other day talking about how much Zoldessy is bringing out in the play that is not apparent in the text, and much of this has to do with this process.

Pendleton also attributed a heuristic to Kazan, I think, that when it comes to successfully staging a play that it’s 80% casting, and 18% the ground plan: a ground plan that is expressive of the story.

Pendleton also talked about approaches to directing actors, including spending a certain amount of time at the table discussing the scene. What’s the event in the scene that moves the story forward. How are things different at the end of this scene than they were at the outset. Very traditional in that respect.

Rehearsal Report 4

February 12th, 2011 No comments

Rehearsal Report

Date: 2/11/2011
Start Time: 6:30
Break: 8:15 – 8:25
End: 9:00

Summary:
-With the absences, we walked through the scenes and reviewed blocking, pages 1-28 with those who attended in detailed fashion.

Director/Playwright:
-All off on Monday!

Props:
-For the Doc’s short scene, we added a stethoscope to the prop scene, and we have since decided to do away with it.

-Originally it was determined to have 3 chairs on each side for the company while they are not in scene. We would like to make that 4 per side, making that a total of 9 chairs including Aisa’s rolling chair in her workspace. And remember, 2 of the chairs that will be moved to the center platform on multiple occasions must be as close to a 90-degree angle as possible to hold the plywood.

-Does the dressmaker’s form roll? We are under the impression that it is indeed on wheels.

-Add a screwdriver to the props list.

Costume:
-For the father (Michael Regnier), he will need a robe with two ample pockets to fit a beer can and a newspaper in each. Also for Michael, his Doctor’s coat should also have two pockets for his head mirror and videocassette.

-Add a hat for Father character and Guard character and Frau Holda character. Brian is not concerned about what kind of hats, details to follow…

Set:
-The 3 tables needed at Aisa’s workspace have to be very small. We’ll place the typewriter table diagonally USL. Ideally, the typewriter and dollhouse tables will be small enough to just fit the objects. The sewing machine table can be slightly larger to accommodate small sewing props.

Misc:
-Changed Sunday’s meeting time from noon to 1pm. Debbie will come in first, then Michael and Lynna will follow at 2pm. Debbie will work all monologues, then the three will work any scenes that concern them all.

Sunday, Feb 13th 1 pm
Review Debbie, Michael, and Lynna’s scenes only. Jim, Sharmon, and Laura will be absent. John is excused.