But, as intimated, we are back in the rehearsal room and working as hard (if not harder) as ever.
After the resounding success of Dartmouth Shakespeare Week in 2014, we were always going to be hard-pushed to come up with something equally as adventurous and entertaining but also something that pushed our creative limits and buttons.
As you know, we have a committee that works incredibly hard during our 'down' time, to bring together all the components that comprise a production. And one of the things they do is, whilst one production is rehearsing and getting put in place, they are deciding what the following year's play will be.
And so it was while The Shrew was coming together, they were chewing the fat as to what we would do in 2015...and who would direct. This time round, they asked the person they wanted to direct to have a look at three plays and make a couple of decisions: A) Do you want to direct? and B) If the answer to A) is yes then which of these do you fancy?
A) YES!
B) The Merry Wives of Windsor.
And here we are, back in the rehearsal room with Jill Brock at the helm steering us through another first for the Company. A modern dress production of Shakespeare's ridiculously anarchic comedy.
You may remember Jill from previous productions...
Jill as Katherina, with Rich Turley as Petruchio, in the 2014 production of The Taming of the Shrew |
Jill as Regan in King Lear - 2013 |
Jill has managed something quite astounding: she dragged us into the 20th century with her vision of The Merry Wives of Windsor. The play was written in or around 1594 and tells the convoluted tale of Sir John Falstaff - low on cash, self-esteem and options - and his plan to woo two wives and have his way with them and their husband's money. There are plenty of other things going on as well, in typical Shakespearean fashion. The young lovers who are being thwarted by parental wishes; the suitors (an idiotic young nobleman and a mad French doctor) both vying for the hand of the young lady; a scheming go-between in the shape of Mistress Quickly; Falstaff's side-kicks, Pistol and Nim, adding to the chaos and the wives themselves, along with their husbands, all plotting and planning to achieve their own ends.
Jill wanted to do something radically different for this production - so she decided to set it in the 1950's...so it's modern-dress, but not that modern: one step at a time, please!
Along with her assistant director, Lynne Deller, Jill's guiding everyone in the cast through the complex story and enthusing them all with the way she sees things coming together. We have a real live choreographer for various scenes (I shall get shot if I give too much away) and there will be specially commissioned music, performed by a live band that will be on stage for the performances.
And for those who love all the spectacular costumes that are usually associated with one of our productions, fear not! The costumes this year will be of an equally spectacular nature, just from a different era.
James Osben (Reverend Huw Evans) and Max Brandt (Sir John Flastaff) back in the room. |
Shaunagh Radcliffe and Gina Carter as Mistresses Page and Ford...or is it Ford and Page? |
Gil Garland (Justice Shallow) and James Osben. |
Once again we have come up with something, for us, that is very different and something that, we hope, the audience will love...they haven't let us down in all the years we've been doing this.
We are also more than little proud of the fact that, once again, we are affiliated to the Royal Shakespeare Company and also that we have, since last year, acquired our very own patron.
Michael Corbidge - senior voice and text coach with the RSC |
And Michael will be working with us again this year, running workshops for the cast and working with individual members to hone their characterisations and give the entire production another special facet.
It really is a very exciting time for the company as a whole. We have some amazing new young performers joining us for the first time this year as well as some old friends renewing their acquaintance with us, including the lovely Jenny Gould, who has the unenviable task of over-seeing the costumes for the Merry Wives production.
Get your tickets for The Wives by going HERE!
AND IN OTHER NEWS...
Not only are we back in the room for The Wives but, for our sins, we are back there for a final run at The Dream.After a huge amount of too-ing and fro-ing (which is another story entirely, and one too long and boring to go into here!) we are also doing a special, one-off performance of A Midsummer Night's Dream on 27th June at Pecorama in East Devon...it's just outside Beer. So not only is Jill having to wrestle and wrangle with all the complexities of The Wives, she's also refreshing her memory (along with everyone else involved) for playing Titania.
You can see on the poster where to get tickets for this last ever production of The Dream (last ever by us, at least!) - so if you missed it last year at Hazelwood House or The Bike Shed or the special charity gig at Hole Farm, NOW is the time to rectify that error and come and enjoy a a brilliant production in a really magnificent setting! Bring a picnic and get carried away by it all!
AND FINALLY...
You may recall, early in the blog, that the committee make a decision about the next year's production while working on the present one? So, just to whet your appetite for 2016 - the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death - here is what we will be presenting then. No director as yet, we await the word from that person. It's a big decision for them to make: time-consuming and life-consuming. Watch this space.
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