Monthly Archive for December 2009

 

Other Theater Creators on the Process

posted by Joanie Schultz

I just read this great little article by Tim Etchells about their creation process in The Gaurdian.

He certainly speaks to what we’re trying to accomplish at The Building Stage with our mission that “theater is made, not written”.  The Building Stage certainly doesn’t claim to be the only theater company creating in this manner, but the tradition of having a script and doing a play remains the majority of theater work. 

The sort of work Tim Etchells does, with his company Forced Entertainment, which is in England, is incredibly innovative and fascinating.  Most creators of work outside of the script/rehearsal paradigm are the ones making the most exciting work in the world.  That’s not always the case, but I believe that the work that is pushing forward theater as a medium is from people who are experimenting with process and creation.

Ring Cycle: Open Rehearsal #2

posted by Blake Montgomery

Be a part of the creation!
Join the cast and crew of The Ring Cycle for an evening of work on the show as well as an introduction to the project and a chance to mingle with the artists over drinks and snacks. This is your final opportunity to witness the development of our latest creation before we dive into the challenge of adding music, lights, costumes, and props. Come see what we’re up to, we can’t wait to share.
Open Rehearsal
Thursday, January 7
7:00 – 9:00pm
$5 suggested donation
No reservations needed.
at
The Building Stage
Entrance and parking at 412 N. Carpenter Street, Chicago

Meeting the challenge of the text

posted by Daiva Bhandari

When I first read The Ring Cycle I was so excited to have the opportunity to work with such dense text, conveying such huge emotions. And then in the first month of rehearsal, I felt so empty – totally unable to fill any of the text my mouth uttered. Natural enough for the first weeks, right? All of the cast and crew were just getting to know each other and we were all just getting to know the text. And most importantly we were getting to know our own bodies – standing upright and moving around an empty space. (…why does that always seem so foreign when beginning a play process?? I always feel capable during a table reading, but then the first few rehearsals of getting scenes “on their feet” I feel like I’m acting for the first time in my life.) We’ve gone through our first full week of all actors off-book and now I feel the momentum of the action on stage. Now that we don’t have paper mucking up our spatial relationships and gestures we can really work. Now I feel the possibility of drama on the stage.
So now that we are all here – at this place of ultimate potential as actors – how can we be sure we’ll excel in telling a clear and exciting story? How can we be powerful enough actors for this text? How can we make this text beat in our pulse and roll off of our tongues so that it moves an audience to really experience the story with us? I believe we can accomplish this by grounding ourselves in our physical relationships to other actors and architecture on stage. When I manage to find myself in a strong spatial relationship I feel the music of the scene and I do my best to stay there as long as I can. I get a little nervous before every rehearsal – filled with anticipation of finding new and engaging moments. And I know if we all keep our eyes, bodies, and hearts open to the space and each other we will make a powerful performance.
And in doing this we must never forget what a huge story we’re telling. Our gestures, our movements – everything that is done on the stage must happen for a purpose.

David Byrne on LA’s Ring/Funding in Arts

posted by David Amaral

I think Byrne would dig the way we’re tackling the Ring Cycle!  And we’re gonna do it with considerably less that $32 million!  (They’re staging the Cycle over two seasons!  We do it in a day!)  Check out his post here!

Two stand out quotes:

Support ongoing creativity in the arts, and not the ongoing glorification and rehashing of the work of those dead guys.

I sense that in the long run there is a greater value for humanity in empowering folks to make and create than there is in teaching them the canon, the great works and the masterpieces.

More images from the LA production are here.