the end of the golden weather education pack
Transcription
the end of the golden weather education pack
SEASON OF Education Pack Sponsors Auckland Theatre Company receives principal and core funding from CREDITS PLEASE NOTE: Subsidised school matinees are made possible by a grant from ATC Education also thanks the ATC Patrons and the ATC Supporting Acts for their ongoing generosity. The 2011 Education Packs are made possible by a grant from 2 •Schools’ performances are followed by a Q&A Forum lasting for 20 – 30 minutes in the theatre immediately after the performance. •During school matinees the refreshments bar at the theatre may be closed. We recommend students bring their own lunch but eating and drinking in the auditorium is prohibited. •Please make sure all cellphones are turned off prior to the performance and, if possible, please don’t bring school bags to the theatre. Contents 4 ABOUT THE PLAY 6 SYNOPSIS 7 NEW ZEALAND IN THE 1930s 8 BRUCE MASON ON TOUR 12 ALL KINDS OF WEATHER – the director’s vision 16 ACTING UP – a chat with the cast 20 DEFINING THE TERRITORY – design elements 24 ENSEMBLE ELEMENTS – exercises 28 ADDITIONAL READING and RESOURCES 30 ABOUT ATC EDUCATION 31 CURRICULUM LINKS 31 VENUE: MAIDMENT THEATRE, ALFRED STREET, AUCKLAND CITY SCHOOLS’ PERFORMANCES: 6 September at 6.30pm. 15 September, 21 September and 23 September at 11am. RUNNING TIME: 2 ½ hours, including an interval SUITABILITY: This production is especially suitable for Year Levels 9 - 13. 3 by Bruce Mason in a company version by Murray Lynch CAST Tim Carlsen, Keisha Castle-Hughes, Elliot Christensen-Yule, Byron Coll, Dena Kennedy, Sophie Roberts, Nic Sampson, Fern Sutherland & Matariki Whatarau CREATIVE Director — Murray Lynch | Set & Costume Design — Brian King Lighting Design — Nathan McKendry | Composer — Gareth Farr Marimba performed by Gareth Farr PRODUCTION Production Manager — Mark Gosling | Technical Manager — Paul Nicoll Assistant Technical Manager — Josh Bond | Senior Stage Manager — Fern Christie Stage Manager — Jade Turrall | Operator — Rochelle Haughton Wardrobe Supervisor — Sophie Ham | Properties Master — Diana Kovacs Set Construction — 2 Construct Publicist — Sally Woodfield | Vocal Coach — Kirstie O’Sullivan The University of Auckland Postgraduate Interns — Stephanie Cooke & Luanne Sullivan EDUCATION PACK Writer and Researcher — Amber McWilliams | Editor — Lynne Cardy Rehearsal Images – Amber McWilliams | Design drawings courtesy of — Brian King Production Images — Michael Smith | Design — Rubble Design 4 5 Synopsis A twelve year old boy welcomes us into his world: the 1930s beachside community of Te Parenga, a golden territory in the land of milk and honey. He tells of spending idyllic days on the beach, meeting the local characters, swimming and eavesdropping, heading home at the end of the day for sandwiches and charades. However, the real world starts to intrude, showing him that the golden idyll cannot last. The Queen Street riots spark rumblings of dissent in Te Parenga, which are quelled by strong words from the local policeman as the boy watches from the shadows. Christmas, however, brings all the usual trimmings – church, presents, swimming, feasting – and a Christmas pageant that the boy pours heart and soul into. When the celebrations are over, he explores a rich neighbour’s property, and finds one of the beach’s characters, Firpo, living in a bach. Frightened by Firpo’s strangeness, the boy flees. Later in the summer, Firpo runs on the beach, “getting himself fit for the Olympic Games”, much to the community’s mirth. Some local boys challenge Firpo to a race the following Sunday. The boy spends the week in a daze, hoping and praying for Firpo to win. The day of the race dawns, and history runs its course. Some weeks later, when the boy goes to visit Firpo and finds him gone, the child realizes that the summer – like his childhood – is quite at an end. About the Play THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER was written and performed as a solo show by Bruce Mason. After an initial season in 1959, the show was toured throughout New Zealand in the early 1960s, with further tours throughout the 1970s. The play, which describes a childhood summer on Takapuna beach, has become a New Zealand classic. Through the eyes of a perceptive child, the play touches on issues such as social justice, mental illness and conservatism. This ensemble version by Murray Lynch was first performed in 1987 and translates the humour, charm and energy of Mason’s original script into a theatre piece for nine players. 6 7 New Zealand in the 1930s • New Zealand’s total population was about 1.5 million • New Zealand money was modeled after Britain’s, so people paid their bills in pounds, shillings and pence. • The wireless (radio) became affordable in the late 1930s, bringing mass communication into most New Zealand homes. • Trams ran up and down Queen St and into the suburbs, helping the 212,000 people who lived in Auckland to travel around the city. • There was no Harbour Bridge, so people travelled from downtown Auckland to the North Shore by ferry. Takapuna was a seaside holiday destination where people could ‘get away’ from the city. For more information about Bruce Mason and Takapuna in the 1930s, refer to ATC’s Education Pack for its 2009 production of THE POHUTUKAWA TREE. 8 THE GREAT D EPRESSION During the 1930s, New Zealand felt the the Great Depre bite of ssion. Througho ut the 1920s N Zealand had be ew en struggling fin ancially; after th crash of the New e York stock marke t in 1929, countrie such as Britain s stopped import ing New Zealan produce, so sudd d enly there was ev en less money in the New Zealand economy. The Depression led to high un employment – nearly 80,000 m en out of work – and wages wer slashed as busine e sses floundered. Large numbers of men began to trav el the country look ing for paid work or opportunities to earn a meal. Th e Government se up ‘relief camps t ’ throughout New Zealand, where unemployed men built roads or chopped weeds in exchange for food and a tiny weekly payment. Conditions in th e camps were pr im itive, with men living and worki ng in cold, wet conditions withou heating or sanita t tion. Families al so suffered, with thousands of ch ildren suffering from malnutriti across the coun on try because thei r parents could no afford adequate t food. Anger at the situation led to mass protests throughout the co untry, which erup ted into riots in Auckland, Wellin gton and Dunedin in 1932. 9 “He’s not like other people… we just can’t have him in the house. He’s dirty and he upsets things… We don’t want people to know about him.” - Mrs Atkinson describes Firpo in THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER CHANGING TO MENT ATTITUDES AL ILLNE In the earl SS y twentieth Zealand century TS IO R T E E R T S N E E U Q THE In ge New Zealanders. on and Mass dispossessi protests by unemployment led to ilies across workers and their fam held in all the country. Rallies were usands of the major centres, and tho to speakers people gathered to listen ve rn me nt ’s wh o cr iti cis ed th e go ic situation handling of the econom assistance and called for more 10 for avera lies ended Auckland, the largest ral protesters in violence, with angry str ati on by tak in g ou t th eir fru and fighting smashing shop windows to ma in tai n th e po lic e wh o tri ed arrested in order. Over 80 men were ny dozens the Queen St riots, and ma were injured. “The rioting in Auckland first occurred on Thursday evening last when hundreds of people participated in unrestrained rioting and looting in Queen St for more than two hours. There was fierce fighting between a section of the rioters and police and many were injured. Protective forces were organised as soon as possible and by Friday evening nearly 1200 special constables had been enrolled from the public.” The Weekly News, 20 April 1932 ers were st , many N ew ill deeply ashamed b e m b arrassed a y any conn n d e ction with was a “lun a person w atic” or “f h o eeble mind subscribed ed”. Most to the nin st il l e teenth cen to mental tury appro illness – to a c h lock the a from socie fflicted aw ty in asylu a y m s. Asylums did on treatme nt, but on not focus restraining and keepin the mentall g them con y ill tent so they problems in could not c society. Su a use ch instituti all patients ons lumpe together, so d that people from depre ssion wou su ff e ri n g ld share a with people ccommoda with Down ti o n S yndrome; c adults; the hildren wit suicidal wit h h th e psychotic However, . by the 193 0s, attitud illness in es to men New Zeala tal nd had be Otherwise g u n healthy me to c h a nge. n had return War I with ed from W shell shock o rld and what w called “post ould now b -traumatic e stress diso to new and rder”, lead more comp in g assionate tr those who eatments fo were “distu r rb ed”. In 192 Defectives 8 the Menta Act 1911 w l a s amended between th to distingu e mentally ish ill and the handicappe intellectuall d, with se y p arate facilit up for the ies being two groups. set However, w was slow to ider society accept the new ways o general pre f thinking, judice again and st people who there’ rema were ‘not a ined strong ll for many d ecades. 11 Bruce Mason On Tour nal t a professio u o h it w y tr n g in a cou ND OF ling, THE E to earn a livin b le m b e a tr n u d , n 9 a 5 r 9 “In 1 nted, in fea n illness Mason prese d 1978, whe n e a c 9 ru 5 B 9 , 1 e n tr e a mes, in the twe early 1000 ti n ATHER. Be E it d W e N rm E o D rf L THE GO out New stage, he pe halls through ent from the y m it n re u ti m re m is o h c h, d forced r on the beac e urch halls an h m c m s, ll su a h ry l a o o ’s extraordin theatres, sch art of New a young boy f o ry o s become a p st a e h h T R . E d H n T la A a Ze DEN WE xperience.” F THE GOL w Zealand e e N THE END O f o e n o st ry, a touch Zealand histo ss edition - From the 1970 Victoria University Pre R. of THE EN D OF THE GOLDEN WE ATHE BRUCE MASON TALKS ABOUT CHOOSING TO WRITE THE PLAY Bruce Mason remembers an American saying about New Zealanders, “‘you are the world’s best improvisers, and the world’s worst experts’.” At the time Mason was struggling to find a focus for his own interest in theatre, and so “I decided I would be an improviser, this being THE country of do-ityourself, and I’d do the whole job myself. Okay, it’s difficult to get plays performed and you need actors: write all the parts for yourself and you won’t have that problem. Then you need to get a producer: well, you don’t need 12 a producer if you’re just standing on stage with a table and chair. Have no scenery, because scenery is expensive to cart around – just go from place to place with your table and chair and there it is. Get people to come and see you if they want to - and I hoped, that by stimulating their imaginations, by suggesting that they work with me along a channel of sympathy […], we could have a ball. After I’d done a hundred or so performances, the thing began to get some reputation, and then it wasn’t so hard to get people to come, but at first it was something completely new, I suppose, something unprecedented in our own circle.” HOW THE ORIGINAL PLAY WAS PUT TOGETHER … AND THE BEST MOMENTS OF TOURING THE SHOW The content of the solo show came from two sources: Mason’s 1952 short story “Summer’s End” (about the boy and Firpo), and a series of talks Mason wrote for a radio programme about New Zealand writers and their lives. The play’s title comes from American author Thomas Wolfe, whose narrator in The Web and the Rock describes a book he was going to write but never did – a novel called The End of the Golden Weather, about a twelve year old boy and the end of his childhood. In a 1982 television interview, Mason described “the occasions when you have a wonderful rapport with an audience. When you and they cease to have any kind of boundary. When you are communicating in a way that makes you one continuum; that’s where it worked. It was wonderful when it happened.” Bruce felt that the piece came together very easily once he decided to do it. “I suppose it took two or three weeks to get it together, and perhaps another three weeks to learn it.” BRUCE MASON DESCRIBES THE FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE SOLO SHOW… “It was a disaster. I had a mild throat infection, exacerbated by nerves; I collapsed in hoarse shrieks, my lips stuck together, about a third from the end: Stafford Byrne, then Artistic Director of the New Zealand Players, bounded out of the audience and made a gallant, chivalrous speech. I rallied and just scraped home. One of the reviews next day was excoriating, dwelling gleefully on all the mishaps, calling it pretentious piffle…” “I invite you to join me in a voyage into the past, to that territory of the heart we call childhood.” 13 E A HISTORY OF TH LDEN WEATHER END OF THE GO wright a solo show by play as 59 19 in ed rm • First perfo Bruce Mason. rformed by Bruce cording in 1969, pe • Released as a re Mason. during d by Bruce Mason an al Ze w Ne ut ho • Toured throug ally and urs were commerci to e th – s 70 19 d the 1960s an l. critically successfu oduced ond Hawthorne pr ym Ra by n tio ta ap • A company ad 81. tre Corporate in 19 at Auckland’s Thea uce Mason Solo in of the collection Br rt pa as ed ish bl • Pu 1981. oduced with by Murray Lynch pr n tio ta ap ad ny pa • A com nd in 1987. Tantrum in Auckla at Downstage version produced ny pa m co s h’ nc Ly • Murray in 1991. e in 1991. directed by Ian Mun • Made into a film tt and ed by Stephen Lova rm rfo pe ow sh lo • Presented as a so toured the North are in 2006, which directed by Mark Cl Island in 2007. Peter Vere-Jones show performed by lo so a as d te en es • Pr 2000 to which toured from on ils W n sa Su by and directed Papa Press an audio CD by Te as ed as le re s wa d 2002 an in 2007. 14 WE ATHER Hear Bruce Mason talking about THE END OF THE GOLDEN in a radio interview on the Te Ara website. FULL CIRCLE Both Colin McColl and Murray Lynch stage managed for Bruce Mason when he was touring the original solo show of THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER. 15 All Kinds Of Weather Director Murray Lynch talks about his various experiences of THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER, and his approach to this ATC production. Murray’s first experience of THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER was hearing a recording of Bruce Mason performing it – but it wasn’t the last. While working at Centrepoint Theatre in Palmerston North in the mid-70s, Murray stage-managed Bruce’s touring solo shows, including THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER. When Murray formed his own theatre company, Tantrum, in 1987, THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER was the first piece they presented. Murray explains: “I’d seen an earlier company version of the play that Raymond Hawthorne had created at Theatre Corporate here in Auckland. I enjoyed that, but I saw there was a different way of doing it. Bruce did it as a solo show and played 40 characters; in Raymond’s version there is a separate narrator, and each actor was allocated specific roles.” By contrast, in Murray’s ensemble version for Tantrum, “the ten actors were storytellers in the same way that Bruce was, so some of the narration was delivered by the characters as well. For example, nearly all of the actors played the boy at some point. It was not about watching one person play an individual character – you were involved 16 with the story being conveyed by all the actors.” The play kept cropping up in Murray’s career. “A couple of years later, Colin, who is now the director at ATC, was the director of Downstage Theatre in Wellington, and he asked me to redirect the production with a different group of actors. Late last year Colin called me and asked me about redirecting the show again – so this is 20 years later! I was thrilled to be asked, because it’s such a beautiful piece.” Each of the three productions Murray has directed has been staged differently. “For the 1987 production, the audience was seated in a circle of chairs that was then reconfigured for some of the acts. For example, the ends were opened up and it became traverse performance, with the audience on both sides, for the running race. It was very intimate, and the audience was involved in reconfiguring the space. That worked really well; we served cucumber sandwiches and cordial at interval, and it was quite a domestic theatrical experience. In the Wellington production, we staged it in traverse all the way, with a raised stage. The first production had no lighting changes; it was just the room lights. In Wellington, Tony Rabbit’s design worked to subtly shift the focus when the action moved to another part of the stage.” For this ATC production, Murray will be working with a standard proscenium arch theatre in the Maidment, which offers “a different kind of experience.” Elements such as music and lighting will play a more theatrical role. “There was no music in the first production. The second one had one of the performers playing the piano, while one of the other actors mimed the concert. This time we’ve got a score; there’s underscoring of scenes, plus music composed for between the sections of the play. Also, there will be lighting changes for atmospheric effect. This is still in development at this stage; Nathan and I have some conceptual ideas but how those will be realized we don’t quite know.” The company is exploring ways of keeping the storytelling connected with the audience, such as having actors enter through the auditorium and remain visible onstage throughout the show. The cast has played a vital role in shaping the presentation of each production. Murray explains: “There’s a script that’s followed through in all three, though there have been variances between them, but the way it’s staged has been created with the actors, so we’ve worked out how we might present certain metaphors physically, or certain physical action that’s described in the narration. We’ve used similar edits, in terms of what narration is tweaked and what is taken away from the script, so sometimes it just becomes a short dialogue, and where an actor can play something like ‘he twitched’ or ‘he nods’ we don’t say those words; they’re simply represented by the actor.” 17 So will the representations be the same in this production as in the previous two? “There are one or two elements that work so well I’ve introduced them into subsequent versions. One is the way the policeman on the horse is represented, with one actor on the shoulders of another actor. Another is in the scene where the boy is performing the concert: the actors represent the curtain, so they’re actually moving in synch as the curtain. But there are other things that are completely differently staged. It’s alive to the cast that is working on it at that moment.” One of the key decisions for this production has been “to work with an entirely young cast. There was a bit more of an age range in the first two productions I did; in this one the cast is pretty much all under 30 years of age.” Murray is excited by the possibilities this opens up for performance. “The way it is staged is fairly physical – the actors are representing inanimate objects, like rocks, that somebody’s climbing up on, so it helps if everyone in the cast is physically able to serve all of that easily. Also, there’s something about being in the middle range of the characters in the play – you’ve got characters like Mr and Mrs Atkinson, who would be in their 60s, say, and then you’ve got the children, like the narrator, the boy, who’s twelve, and the brother and sister who are nine and younger – if you’re around your 20s and 30s you’re kind of placed in the middle of that range, so it makes sense.” The ensemble work together to present the full range of characters, playing both the old and the young throughout. For Murray, the ensemble version of the play takes you to a place “where you’re not aware of the individual. Where it seems to be coming from one voice – everything’s focused and channeled towards your reception of the story. I mean, that’s what good theatre is in any case, whether it’s a text with a number of allocated parts or not...” Murray cites Bruce’s own recording, saying “you get caught up in the period, the environment, and the characters in the way you do with a good novel, and it all comes alive in your head. Bruce got up there and played all those characters. He would narrate the action as well as giving some of the dialogue, and you would get totally caught up in the world that he was drawing. I think the same thing happens when you’ve got a group of people presenting that same voice.” Thus the audience will be expected to use their imaginations, rather than the production doing all the work. For instance, there will be no costume changes in this production, “so a female actor playing the boy is still wearing a dress, or a male actor playing a female character is still wearing trousers. Somebody might be playing a policeman and then a twelve year old boy, and there’s no costume change between those.” Even after many experiences of this play, Murray still finds it fresh and relevant. He believes it still speaks to us because it’s themes are “absolutely universal. It’s about when the world shifts on you, when you start to learn about yourself. The boy 18 is twelve and he discovers the world is not what he thought it was: that there are uglier things going on that he’ll have to deal with. He has to step up to the plate. He discovers his father can be against him having anything to do with Firpo, and yet at the end of it all, his father praises him for what he’s done for Firpo.” In terms of social issues, too, Murray is quick to point out parallels with modern experience. “The scene where the title comes in – “that night marked the end, the end of the golden weather” – is around the riots that happened in Queen Street in 1932. Well, we don’t have to go far today to know what riots are about, when people are looting… The reality is that the riots were coming from a sense of frustration, of not having a voice, of wanting to be heard, and of dispossession. That parallel with the current London riots is quite strong.” 19 Acting Up Our cast - Tim Carlsen, Keisha Castle-Hughes, Elliot ChristensenYule, Byron Coll, Dena Kennedy, Sophie Roberts, Nic Sampson, Fern Sutherland & Matariki Whatarau - talk about the ensemble approach to THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER. What does being part of an ensemble mean to you? FERN: “Making it about the work, rather than your own insecurities, issues, thoughts, feelings or deep seated fears. Being able to throw out ideas without being offended or taking it personally.” KEISHA: “It’s about everybody contributing.” BYRON: “Every offer is legitimate.” SOPHIE: “It’s energizing to be part of a big group of people on stage, when so often it’s just you and one or two others. You’ve got lots of support to lean on. There are lots of different textures and 20 colours with so many people in the room.” TIM: “For me it’s like a sports team… We’re all going out there and in our different ways aiming for the same thing. One minute we’ve got the ball; the next minute we’re on defense or attack and supporting the other person.” Do you each have a favourite character in the piece? KEISHA: “He absolutely steals the entire show.” MATARIKI: “She a pearl. I’m enjoying playing her, and wondering how she will grow over the season.” Christmas stocking, and I think that’s the character I want to perfect the most. We all had to choose a toy, so I thought ‘I want to be really interesting, I’ll be a ball’. Actually, I’m really terrible at being a ball! My limbs are all in the way, and I can’t get my head in the right position!” BYRON: “I like the speeches from the narrator, because the language is so beautiful it just tastes good to say it.” Is the story of the beach at Christmas familiar and evocative to all of you? ELLIOTT: “I like the image of the twenty Davids versus Goliath.” EVERYONE: “Yeah, pretty much.” ELLIOT: “Miss Effie’s great too.” FERN: “Everything surrounding Christmas is really beautiful, too – because you just get it. You know that feeling.” KEISHA: “Yeah, there’s great spirit to the Christmas section. I play a ball in the BYRON: “I think that even if you didn’t grow up at the beach at Christmas you’d still have that sense of being at the beach and summer.” FERN: “It is every beach, not just Takapuna: the pohutukawa trees and the sand – everything about it feels EVERYONE: “I like Uncle Jim!” SOPHIE: “Uncle Jim is this character that Byron plays. He has about two lines, but he’s amazing.” a research visit Murray and the cast on to Takapuna 21 were running out of money, so they had a meeting on Monday and said ‘we need another play, and it needs to be cheap’. So he wrote it from Monday to Thursday, learnt it from Friday to Sunday, and performed it the following Monday.” What has been the most interesting thing you’ve found out about the 1930s in your research on the period? familiar to me, and I grew up in New Plymouth.” What did you already know about Bruce Mason or the play before you started work on this production? BYRON: “I knew absolutely nothing!” ELLIOTT: “I knew there was a theatre named after Bruce Mason.” MATARIKI: “I knew there was a writer’s award that a couple of my friends have won, which was named in his honour.” NIC: “I’d seen the play when I was eight, performed by Peter Vere-Jones. I barely remember it, but I remember the feeling.” 22 SOPHIE: “I knew a little. Byron might’ve forgotten, but we did do it at drama school! Also, I grew up around the corner from Takapuna. I think everyone in the area is aware of the play; it’s performed every Christmas at the beach.” KEISHA: “I found it interesting that the structure and system of education was very much the same then as it is now: education was free, and secular, and compulsory – though the atmosphere in classrooms was completely different, of course.” found out about the police.” NIC: “One of the police officers’ jobs was to clear orange peel off the road. To avoid hilarious slippages... Also, a police officer on the beat had to walk at a steady pace of two and half miles per hour around his beat, so if anyone wanted the police all they had to do was stand in one spot long enough.” FERN: “And a policeman could only use his whistle in extreme situations, and using the whistle was so serious it had to be documented.” Any last words? ELLIOTT: “If you get the chance to perform this play at school, be Uncle Jim!” ELLIOTT: “I liked the stuff Nic So what have you found out about Mason on this project? BYRON: “One thing that intrigued me about Bruce Mason was that he performed THE END OF THE GOLDEN WEATHER over a thousand times. Also, there were other plays that he only took a week to write and learn to perform.” ELLIOTT: “FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE, I think it was… Downstage 23 Defining The Territory Set and costume designer Brian King discusses his design concepts. As a student at Otago University, Brian saw Bruce Mason’s solo presentation of the play. Brian recalls, “I hadn’t seen very much theatre, and the initial shock of Bruce’s very sort of plummy BBC voice was what struck me first, but within a minute or two you disregarded that and were sucked totally into Bruce’s storytelling…” Brian remembers that the solo show had a minimal set – “one table and one chair” – and that the table was really only there so Bruce had a place to put his glass of water! Brian says “it’s a slightly daunting prospect for a designer to try and design something to present the play in a more dramatic way and make a space for nine people.” The Set “The action takes places on a built-up area which consists of two flat platforms running the full length of the front of the stage, and one platform mid-stage. This reflects the manmade environment of the play: the interiors, the porches, things like that, and will be reminiscent of tongue and groove flooring. Rising from the back of that is a raked stage, which goes back to an outline of Rangitoto. The raked stage is more like the natural environment, so it will be rough sawn timber; it will be shaded, and the timber will have a kind of forced perspective to it. There will also be gaps in it so that Nathan can light from underneath it. Behind that we’re hanging a cyc cloth painted in a stained watercolour in this sort of abstract skyscape. Hanging over midstage there’s a pohutukawa tree which will be printed onto Perspex, so we can light through it.” He feels this production’s design “reflects the original way Bruce performed this piece. We want to strip back the theatre, to avoid any pretence or attempts at hiding the mechanics of the theatre, so everything is exposed: the lighting will be exposed, and the theatre walls.” There will be nine chairs, one for each actor. These will be used to represent items described or needed in the play. 24 25 The Costumes “Because the idea is that actors will play multiple parts, and several people will play one part, in the costumes I’ve not tried to portray any particular character. What I have tried to do is evoke a feeling of the 1930s. The costumes are age appropriate to the actors – I’ve not tried to make adult actors look like twelve year old boys. I’ve tried to stylize it a little bit: we’ve reduced the colour palette, so the costumes will be in tones from cream through sepia and tan to dark brown. The shoes are all flat and easy to move around in.” Some specific 1930s features of the costumes: • dresses with waists, as the fashion changed after the “waistless” 1920s • longer skirts – again, reflecting a fashion change after the flapper’s shorter skirts in the 1920s • plus fours – a type of sporty knickerbockers • working man’s clothes, with overalls and a cloth cap • polo shirts – which were just coming into fashion in the 1930s. 26 27 Ensemble Exercises A compelling ensemble is greater than the sum of its parts. Actors within the ensemble need to trust one another so that they can make bold offers with their voices and their bodies. Developing a cohesive ensemble is about creating a playful yet rigorous atmosphere in the rehearsal room that encourages actors to support one another. This game encourages actors to respond to each other, to become spatially aware, to listen, to observe, to use their peripheral vision and to play. Here are a few fun exercises that you can use as starters with your students. These exercises use movement to promote play and trust. CROSSING THE ROOM – encourages ensemble MUSICAL STATUES WITH PROVOCATIONS – physical warm-up promotes playful atmosphere Everyone in the group must get from one side of the space to the other without touching the floor. You can start this in smaller groups (starting in various parts of the space) and build to use whole group. Play just like the classic musical statues game (freezing when the music stops) but during the dancing introduce provocations: you are dancing at home, alone, in front of the mirror; you are at a crowded party trying to get someone’s attention. STOP/ START – encourages focus; develops trust & ‘listening with the whole body’ Extend the game so that players start moving on their own, but gravitate to a partner & play/freeze together. One person stops and the whole group must stop and stay still until someone else (not the person who stopped), starts a new movement. Encourage players to relax when they stop but retain the energy of their movement, to be alive to the possibility of what might change in the room. Extend again to groups of 3 or 5 or 9...until eventually the whole group is moving & freezing together. Note: It is useful to find unexpected music that takes students out of their comfort zones & to vary tempo throughout the exercise. DOT, LINES, CLUMPS – a movement exercise, with music, to promote the ensemble A DOT is one person moving alone. A LINE is two or more people moving in a line of any configuration (ie: side by side, one behind the other) A CLUMP is at least three people moving in a formation like a bunch of grapes. Everyone starts as a DOT – travelling through space. At any time they can join others in either a LINE or a CLUMP. Encourage ‘happy marriages and happy divorces’: it’s fine to keep moving on. When in doubt its useful to return to being a DOT. 28 Often a spontaneous whole group LINE or CLUMP will emerge, but if students need support you can encourage them to make these formations by coaching. The whole group walks in space, taking care not to bump into each other. When a new movement starts the group echo the energy or intention or pace or sounds of that movement but don’t directly copy it. When someone stops – we all stop. When another starts – we all start. This is a powerfully simple exercise that works well with or without music. It is useful to split the group in half and have an audience watch as the group changes as it often becomes difficult to see who is stopping or starting each movement. It can be played completely neutrally but with varying pace and energy. It can be played as a game where someone is sent out of the room and a ‘starter’ and ‘stopper’ are pre-selected - the person returns to the room and watches the movement, trying to guess the starters & stoppers. It can be played with text layered over the top: lines from a play or excerpts of poetry. 29 Additional Reading / Resources ABOUT BRUCE MASON David Dowling. ‘Mason, Bruce Edward George - Biography’, from the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 1st September 2010 URL: http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/biographies/5m37/1 Dowling, David. Introducing Bruce Mason. Auckland: Longman Paul Ltd, 1982. “Mason, Bruce.” The New Zealand Book Council. URL: http://www.bookcouncil.org.nz/writers/masonb.html Mason, Bruce. The End of the Golden Weather. Victoria University Press: Wellington, 1970. Mason, Bruce. The End of the Golden Weather (Audio recording). Auckland: Kiwi Pacific Records, 1981. About ATC Education ATC Education promotes and encourages teaching and participation in theatre and acts as a resource for secondary and tertiary educators. It is a comprehensive and innovative education programme designed to nurture young theatre practitioners and future audiences. ATC Education has direct contact with secondary school students throughout the greater Auckland region with a focus on delivering an exciting and popular programme that supports the Arts education of Auckland students and which focuses on curriculum development, literacy and the Arts. Auckland Theatre Company acknowledges that the experiences enjoyed by the youth of today are reflected in the vibrancy of theatre in the future. Parker, George. “Actor Alone: Solo Performance in New Zealand”. PhD thesis. URL: http://ir.canterbury.ac.nz/bitstream/10092/1035/1/thesis_fulltext.pdf ABOUT NEW ZEALAND IN THE 1930s Barnett, Stephen (compiler). Those Were the Days: A nostalgic look at the 1930s from the pages of the Weekly News. Moa Publications: Auckland, 1987 Edwards, James. Riot 1932: an eyewitness account of social upheaval in New Zealand in 1932. Whitcoulls: Christchurch, 1974. Simpson, Tony. The Sugarbag Years: an oral history of the 1930s Depression in New Zealand. Hodder and Stoughton: Auckland, 1984. “Social Welfare and the State: Great Depression”. Museum of New Zealand: Te Papa Tongarewa. URL: http://www.tepapa.govt.nz/WhatsOn/exhibitions/SliceofHeaven/Exhibition/ SocialWelfare/Pages/GreatDepression.aspx Curriculum Links ATC Education activities relate directly to the PK, UC and CI strands of the NZ Curriculum from levels 5 to 8. They also have direct relevance to many of the NCEA achievement standards at all three levels. All secondary school Drama students (Years 9 to 13) should be experiencing live theatre as a part of their course work, Understanding the Arts in Context. Curriculum levels 6, 7 and 8 (equivalent to years 11, 12 and 13) require the inclusion of New Zealand drama in their course of work. The NCEA external examinations at each level (Level 1 – AS90011, Level 2 – AS90304, Level 3 – AS90612) require students to write about live theatre they have seen. Students who are able to experience fully produced, professional theatre are generally advantaged in answering these questions. 30 31 ENGAGE WITH ATC ONLINE You can view photos of all our productions, watch interviews with actors and directors, download the programme and education packs, read about what inspires the playwrights we work with and post your comments and reviews. Places to find out more about ATC and engage with us: Our website: www.atc.co.nz facebook.com/TheATC Username: @akldtheatreco AUCKLAND THEATRE COMPANY 487 Dominion Road, Mt Eden PO Box 96002, Balmoral, Auckland 1342 Ph: 09 309 0390 Fax: 09 309 0391 Email: [email protected]