Reflection on the Development

Record ’97 was written very much as a collective, thanks to the experimentation and playing we did in the rehearsals before and during the writing process, somewhat akin to the method Timberlake Wertenbaker used to create Our Country’s Good: “The two weeks were set up to put a group of actors at the disposal of a writer to research any aspect of anything that might eventually relate to the play” (1996, viii). For Wertenbaker this was an opportunity to experiment with the world of The Playmaker, but for us it was an opportunity to take the characters and provide a stimulus for the actors to play with and generate material for the writers to go away and work on. For something as difficult to create as comedy can be this was the best approach and it allowed for a blending of humours presented by each member of the company. Whether it was something written that was brought in, or an improvisation activity based on a stimulus, the company was constantly receptive to what they were seeing. The company would either laugh at the joke and leave it as it is, or find a way of enhancing it, or even replacing it with something else entirely. Trial and error was a big part of creating the show and finding a balance in humour.

“He will rapidly discover if something he has written will work. If not, he and the artists can try out alternatives that will. Much rewriting can be done during rehearsals” (Stuart Griffiths, 1989, 106)

The separate comedic stylings of the cast also presented opportunities to create this absurd world, as some could be more exaggerated and weird than others in their performance, and yet the clash of styles added to the relationships and humour of the situation (Figure 1). The ability of the straight characters to look at the strange characters and acknowledge their absurdity made the absurdity that much funnier. There is something quite real to the characters exaggerated situations that the audience can empathise with, be it relationship struggles, or ambition, or concerns with finance and where to take their lives (Figure 2).

Daisy and Alex (Record 97, 2017)

Figure 1: Daisy and Alex arguing. Daisy as the more down to Earth character clashes with Alex’s out of this world personality (Rebecca Noble, 2017)

Tiff and Violet (Record 97, 2017)

Figure 2: Tiff and Violet and their exaggerated response to Daisy drinking. (Rebecca Noble, 2017)

We set out to create a comedy that explored this notion of nothing changing, and we achieved this through the story we created and the cast’s comedic ability. So much of the dialogue and humour came from spontaneous improvisations and approaches to delivery, and the ability of the cast to bounce off of each other to build upon the relationships of the characters and produce comedy from the situations. There was also a lot of humour that was created through the cast’s ability to invite the audience into the world of Record ’97 and let them in on the joke. An example would be the real world, post-1997 events involving the closure of Woolworths, the scandals involving Tony Blair, and the changes in culture (Figure 3).

Alex and Jasmine making references to Hipsters (Record 97, 2017)

Figure 3: Alex and Jasmine making references to Hipsters (Rebecca Noble, 2017)

The play was well received by the audience, which was very overwhelming and proof that the play was a success in the end, and that we as a collective had achieved what we had set out to do back when we had begun.


Works Cited:

Griffiths, S. (1989) How Plays Are Made. Oxford: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd.

Noble, R. (2017) Record ’97. [image] Lincoln Performing Arts Centre: Kick a Pigeon Theatre.

Wertenbaker, T. (1996) Timberlake Wertenbaker: Plays. London: Faber and Faber Limited.

 

The Technical Side: The Process

I am as well responsible for the technical side of Record ‘97. I will be designing the lighting and sound for our show. I will be doing this by associating the requirements of the script by working with the writers.

Sound

The cue sheets I made ready for the tech rehearsal (Cockerill, 2017)

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What the stage looked like with the general wash (Cockerill, 2017)

The director wants the lighting very naturalistic as it is set in a record store and in a world of everyday life. The opening of the show will have neon disco lights which are to signify to the members of the audience that we are having a New Year’s Eve rave to start the year 1997. We are also having transitions in to move to the next scene, so the lights will be going from a general wash to a red wash to highlight the serious issues happening around that time. In one of the scenes, I came up with the idea of showing an actual purple spotlight when the character Alex states “Imagine it. A dark stage. A single purple spotlight…” (Briggs, 2017).

The idea of having Alex in a spotlight so the audience are in the moment with her (Noble, 2017)

The idea of having Alex in a spotlight so the audience are in the moment with her (Noble, 2017)

 

For the sound, we wanted no music before 1990 and no music after 1997. And sourcing most sounds was fairly simple. The writer and director confided in me what they wanted. So far, I am finding this job slightly terrifying as I am doing it by myself and I have never done lighting and sound design before.

Works Cited:

Breakfast At Tiffany’s- Deep Blue Something. (1995). Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QSgJ5On8Zso [Accessed 29 May 2017].

Cockerill, A. (2017) Cue Sheets[image] Lincoln Performing Arts Centre: Kick A Pigeon Theatre.

Cockerill, A. (2017) Set[image] Lincoln Performing Arts Centre: Kick A Pigeon Theatre.

First BBC News Report – Princess Diana crash (Saturday 30th August 1997). (2015). Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2YCQIPNuOE [Accessed 29 May 2017].

Noble, R. (2017) Spotlight Idea. [image] Lincoln Performing Arts Centre: Kick A Pigeon Theatre.

Building the Foundations. 3rd February 2017

 

Building a successful theatre company is similar to building a house, both need a strong foundation to support the end product and the foundations of a theatre company starts with it’s hierarchy. Each member in the theatre company needed a role and these roles needed a structure.

(Bailey, N. 2017)

Figure 1

In Kick a Pigeon Theatre company majority of our members were keen to act, therefore when we discussing the roles we soon realised majority of the company would have to take on a production and acting role. We decided the only two roles which should not be partnered with an acting role were the director and the producer.

The role of producer caught my eye, as I did not want to act within the company nor did I want to take on a creative role such as directing. The role of producer plaid to my strengths and previous experiences as a leader. The role required dedication, organisation, confidence, communication skills and of course money management, these being skills I knew I possessed. Yet, I was still unsure of what any theatre company or show required from a producer, so I found myself researching the role and other blogs from various theatre company producers. From my research I discovered ‘the producer is responsible for delivering a good show, on time and in budget’ (Seabright, 2010), it was my responsibility to ensure our show was a both financially and entertainingly great.

Our first task as a theatre company was to decide on our name, we already knew we wanted our name to reflect our genre and the personalities of our company member whilst being different and unique. We decided to take a day to think of a list of names which each member brought to the following production meeting. Yet, it was Kick a Pigeon which stood out the most to us, perhaps because of the back story which endlessly had us in laughter or because the name suited our farcical style of comedy, the name stuck with us and felt like a right match to the collection of individuals who built this theatre company.

 

Words cited:

Seabright, J. (2010) So you want to be a theatre Producer? London: Ashford Colour Press.

Figure 1: Bailey, N, Kick a Pigeon, (2017) Hierarchy Diagram. Lincoln: University of Lincoln.

Character meeting with the director

“Becoming acquainted with a part is a preparatory period in itself. It begins with one’s very first impressions from the first reading of the play” (Stanislavsky, 1989, 3).

Sebastian Speeds, my character who is best friends with David. I found my character very complicated until I had my character meeting with the director, my character developed immensely. The director and the writer wanted us, as actors, to write ten points about our character which will make the writer’s job easy for him and make the characters easy for us to understand because we made them up. Considering our show is about escaping from the serious issues which occur outside the record store, I wanted my character to be evolved around him being bisexual as it was still very much a big deal in the 1990s. My character developed as the script was developing.  My character developed into being juvenile and comes across as daddy’s boy and very spoilt. We spoke about watching Some Mothers Do ‘Ave ‘Em and Little Britain within fleshing out a character in which we created key moments within Sebastian’s life. With this Sebastian’s backstory began to surface;

  • Sebastian Speeds
  • Age 22
  • Spoilt
  • Has a crush on his best friend, David
  • Follows his heart without thinking twice about it; he thinks he is doing the right thing to please others, but he ends up emotionally hurting them
  • Jealous
  • Childish
  • Wants everybody to know that he has a special relationship with his dad
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(Bowe, 2017)

Within having such a great character, having the character meeting with Emily was necessary and extremely beneficial, by looking into Sebastian’s given situations, I started to bring my character together.

Works Cited:

Bowe, K. (2017) Character[image] Lincoln Performing Arts Centre: Kick A Pigeon Theatre.

Stanislavsky, K. (1989) Creating a role. 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

Record ’97’s Story

“Story is a sequence of a certain kind of events, occurring in a special relationship with each other. Some plays have no story or only a vestige of one” (Sam Smiley, 2005, 101)

The world of Record ’97 has at times been described by members of our company and our tutor Mark as a Beckettian farce. Waiting for Godot was an early inspiration that was maintained throughout due to its cyclical and non-progressive plot, and it helped us to develop our own story and an approach to telling it until we were able to do our own thing and create our own style of storytelling. To say that nothing happens would be inaccurate, as the focus of the story is on the ensemble and their response to the situation rather than the situation itself. The situation is more of a catalyst for the characters to realise what they might lose, and it brings them closer together by the end.

“The subject of a play amounts to the total activity of the characters as they respond to their surroundings. A subject also involves social, professional, and personal relationships” (Sam Smiley, 2005, 11)

The themes of home and prison that added to the nature of our play and its structure are woven throughout and added to characters actions and choices. My previous concerns regarding exposition prevented us from exploring this theme in more depth, but where it was featured it did add depth to the characters and their relationships with each other and the store, which in its own way was a character both visually and symbolically. In no character was this more prominent than Daisy, who held the strongest attachment to the store and it came to represent a prison for the memories it held, and a home for what she wanted it to be and was making it with her maternal responsibility over the other characters (Figure 1).

“TIFF. Why did you stay here?

DAISY. Because this place is the only thing I’ve got left of him. Memories. Same with these (Indicates vinyls). And because I had nowhere else to go. (Beat) Like you don’t have anywhere else.”

(Jack Briggs, 2017)

Daisy (Record 97, 2017)

Figure 1: Daisy (Rebecca Noble, 2017)

“Characters don’t exist in a vacuum. They’re a product of their environment” (Linda Seger, 1990, 5)

Beyond Beckett, the play also takes inspiration from the average episode of most sitcoms; in the sense that the events of the plot are self-contained and by the end the equilibrium is restored, even if something has changed for the characters. Some examples would be Sebastian entering another unrequited love triangle, Alex still serving as a terrible musician looked down on by everybody, and Daisy still stuck with her adopted family of misfits in a place she had only just come to terms with losing. Even characters that have made a progression in their lives enter a new stage that lends a different opportunity for comedy. David and Sherice would be the best example of this; starting as a stereotypical will-they-won’t-they relationship that generated humour through their awkward attraction and attempts to do something about it (added to by Sebastian’s disruption), to comedy that flows from their awkwardness as a couple and the effects of their relationship on those around them and themselves (Figure 2).

The Love Triangle (Record 97, 2017)

Figure 2: David & Sherice during their time as part of the love triangle (Rebecca Noble, 2017)

Even the ending draws parallels to a typical sitcom episode, as the story isn’t resolved until the very last minute, and suddenly the events of the play are almost irrelevant to most of the characters (Figure 3). This circles back to the concept of nothing ever changing that we as a company had at the beginning of the process, and I believe we were successful in this through the characters behaviours and responses to the world around them.

The Ending (Record 97, 2017)

Figure 3: The Ending (Rebecca Noble, 2017)


Works Cited:

Briggs, J. (2017) Record ’97. Lincoln.

Noble, R. (2017) Record ’97. [image] Lincoln Performing Arts Centre: Kick a Pigeon Theatre.

Seger, L. (1990) Creating Unforgettable Characters. New York: Henry Holt and Company, LLC.

Smiley, S., Bert, N.A. (2005) Playwriting: The Structure of Action. Expanded Edition. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.