Jenny and I will be heading off to Bath, in the not too distant future, to peruse their costumes and place our order for Lear and the Tech team will be assembling up at the castle, before the first blocking rehearsal, for the feasibility study (sounds grand but it's an exercise in me telling 'em what I want and them, having stopped laughing, explaining why it might be a tad ambitious!) and to get a feel for the lay-out. Lynne is gathering a tumult of talented people about her for the Bedlam Beggar ensemble and I, in the blur and blear of bare functionality, have been led to wondering about the people we are about to try and bring to life.
Who are they? I know we know who they are - Will gave 'em names and shaped them, to a degree, with his wonderful writing - but, really, who are they?
I've taken the 'advice', if you will, of another great of English literature, one Rudyard Kipling, and applied it to my search:
'I keep six honest serving men (they taught me all I knew); Their names are What and Why and When and How and Where and Who.'
I think that, by applying these questions to the characters we will, eventually, answer that final question of 'Who' they are. What happened to them, Why did did it happen, When and How did this happen and, possibly less importantly, Where? It's a bit like an equation, so we eventually get something along the lines of (WxW)2+Wh/H-Whr = WHO.
And every character will have his or her own specific equation to wheedle out who they actually are.
Why do Regan and Goneril apparently hate their father with such virulence? What caused that hatred to blossom? When did this occur/How did this occur? Why isn't Cordelia as eaten-up by this hatred?
I've already put some character notes at the back of the scripts that the cast have, giving them my thoughts on what's going on with the major movers and shakers, but, as we progress, I hope to find out more about these people and, with the actor's help, we shall, I think, discover some interesting things about all of them. Some call it 'motivation', other's would say that it's the critical 'back-story', others might say that all we need to know is there, on the printed page. But I think that, by using our 'equation', it helps us not only understand the character we're playing but helps us help the audience understand the characters and the story better. Everything informs everything else so that, in the end (we hope!), we get a nicely rounded character that will still pose questions, still be enigmatic (if that is required) but that walks the stage as a complete person with whom everyone can get to grips.
Robert Lindsay as Edmund - was he always a sociopath? |
Charles Aitken as Edgar - always the good guy? |
And in other news...I finally managed to get up to the lock-up - despite the fug! - and see our new bits of kit! Thanks to Gil for taking them in and looking after them. They are rather special, it has to be said. We now have a portable (and it is portable) sound system that will save car batteries at rehearsals and a portable generator (and it is sort-of portable!) that will allow us to illuminate the stage area, also without draining batteries and causing general mayhem in the car park! Makes it safer too, should we need to go on past the setting of the sun.
You may recall that last year - our tenth anniversary - we were going have to some peripheral events going on, in and around Dartmouth. That, for reasons with which we are all familiar, was unable to happen...however! This year, it is a different story and there will be other stuff going on in the run-up to Dartmouth Shakespeare Week. There are several options in the pipeline, that have been researched by Lucy, and we will, quite soon it is to be hoped, be finalising some of these events and putting the news out there. It's shaping up to be the year we hoped last year might have been! All good news.
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