Tuesday 24 April 2012

Can beauty have better commerce than with honesty?

This post is slightly different from the others and links in with the publication of Fiona Robyn's book 'The Most Beautiful Thing.'   http://www.writingourwayhome.com/2012/04/my-most-beautiful-thing-blogsplash.html.  this is what it is about - Today I'm taking part in the My Most Beautiful Thing Blogsplash to celebrate beautiful things - inspired by Fiona Robyn's new novel, The Most Beautiful Thing. Bloggers from all over the world are taking part and writing or posting pictures of their most beautiful things today. Find out more here and see everyone else's blog posts here.


Now you may think it strange, but it does connect with Melting Pot's production of Hamlet.  There is that moment when, waiting in the dark at the side of the stage, heart beating, head going over and over the first line (once that line comes the rest flows like a river), mouth dry, costume hot and uncomfortable, then..you hear your cue, look up and see the actor next to you move to take their place on the stage.  You move together, almost one creature, both lost in the dynamics and rhythmics of the play.  There is that moment when you are on stage, lines are coming fluently, you suddenly realise where you are, how much you rely on the actor opposite coming in at just the right time, moving to just the right spot and your brain is working on at least five levels -1. what's my next word 2. where's the prop I need in 2 pages time 3. I wonder if the bar will stay open after. 4. how are we going to pick up the daffodils Ophelia just threw all over the stage. 5.  I wonder if I put enough change in the parking machine- all the while the action continues.  This is what it is to be most thoroughly alive.  This is what it is to feel completely in the present.  You fluffed your last line?  forget it.  The audience has, and if you let it worry you, you'll spoil your lines now.  You are someone else and you are yourself.  You have licence to act completely differently to normal, if only for 2 and a half hours.  


Think back two months...all there was, was a rehearsal schedule, a cast, a script and an illimitless well of faith...setback after setback, cast members dropping out, venues not available, no budget, no energy, family and work intruding and yet we kept on...even at the end things went awry but we overcame and, even more than that, turned setbacks into triumphs.  And now the play is in our bones, each one of us.  I hear the words in ordinary everyday speech and cannot forbear to quote, and I know the rest of the cast feels the same.  And this is beautiful.

Monday 23 April 2012

the play's the thing!

We're 3 performances down with 2 to go in Birmingham next weekend (28th and 29th at the Lamp, Barford Street) and we are buzzing!  It has certainly been a challenge (especially when our venue for Friday changed at the last minute from the Arthouse to The Bradbury Centre - ironically proving our most popular night in Worcester) what with getting the lights rigged at the start and taken down at the end, props packed away, and costumes taken home every night, never mind actually performing!  it is a full on play at the best of times but when there is only 7 of you, with no wing space to hide in, having to concentrate for the whole time - well, it consumes your whole being!  I think I can talk for each cast member when I say we are living, eating and breathing Hamlet....Audiences have been very appreciative but I shall forbear to quote the responses here - we still have performances to go and I don't want to jinx them!!! come and see for yourself - we'd love to see you in Elsinore, on the battlements, waiting in the 'nipping and eager air' for the coming of the ghost....

Friday 13 April 2012

Look, my lord, it comes...

Well, it's approaching and the final details are falling into place!  We have publicity going on (check out Worcester News, The Standard and BBC Hereford and Worcester on Monday 16th) and the cast are 'getting in the zone'.  But there is still time for musing on its meaning.....



The play is full of contradictions. Just one obvious example - Horatio is supposed to be Hamlet’s best mate, and knows all about current Danish politics which he explains at some length in the first scene. A couple of scenes later, though, Hamlet doesn’t recognise him at first, and is surprised to see him in Denmark at all. Later Hamlet has to explain details of Danish life to him as if he was a first-time visitor.

There are plenty of other contradictions, many in the character of Hamlet himself. And the language is still complex and layered. But that is part of the beauty of it. A lot of very clever literary people have used a lot of ink trying to explain what Shakespeare was getting at, and much of it has been inflicted on students at school at one time or another. Questions like is Hamlet really mad, has he got a complex about his mother, is the ghost real, how old is Hamlet, did the Queen know about the murder, and why does Horatio appear not to know what’s going on, simply cannot be answered because the play doesn’t actually provide any information to do so. What it does do, though, is to give us some sense – sometimes as a result of the obscurity and contradictions in the language – of people struggling with the same bewildering conflicts around questions like the possibility of life after death, what is the basis of moral behaviour, what’s the right thing to do in a tricky situation, as we do now – oh, and of course, love, death, swordfighting and ideally a bit with a dog.

In the end the reason we and so many others keep doing Shakespeare is not because it’s great or beautiful poetry, or even because it’s great drama that works brilliantly on stage, nor the fact that it’s hugely entertaining and you don’t have to pay for the rights to perform it, though these are all good and valid reasons. In the end it’s because Shakespeare’s plays tend to tell us that four hundred years ago people were as fascinated by the questions of what is the right way to live and behave, how to deal with people who do bad things and cause suffering to others, and what does it all mean anyway, as we are now – and had, actually, similar responses.

Finally, a couple of technical points which we hope will help. One - Hamlet is famous for featuring a duel towards the end. However, it’s not possible to use real swords in a confined space. Not only is it very far from safe, but it’s often not realised that you need a certain headroom for a four-foot rapier. So we’ve taken a different approach. Two - there just isn’t a bit with a dog. Sorry.

Friday 6 April 2012

Presently...




Let’s face it, Shakespeare’s language can be difficult. Some of Shakey’s words have changed meanings, some are no longer in use at all.

It’s not just that Shakespeare had the formal you and the informal thou (rather like the French still have vous and tu, where we democratic Brits have got rid of all that).  There are other more subtle changes as well. For example, the word presently, as in “Do it presently”, now sounds like a rather old-fashioned way of saying “Do it later”. In Shakespeare’s time, though, it meant “do it now, immediately”, and is frequently used by Shakespeare to convey a sense of great urgency.

The word “terrific” meant not “jolly good” but terrifying. “Wonderful” is another interesting one. At one point in the play a character asks Hamlet “What news?” and he replies “Oh, wonderful”. To our ears that sounds rather like a sarcastic rejoinder meaning “nothing worth talking about” but in Shakespeare’s time it meant “inspiring wonder or awe” – so something very shocking. As for “awesome” – well, we’ve all probably overused the word awesome at one time or another. Language changes not so much from generation to generation but from school-year to school-year, so it’s amazing (astonishing, surprising, awesome) that Shakespeare is as understandable as it is. But there is no denying that some of it is difficult or obscure.

We’ve cut most of the more obscure writing.  The full text of the play if acted runs to about four and a half hours anyway, so we had to cut fairly drastically. Another feature of Shakespeare’s writing is repetition – the Elizabethan stage had no scenery (rather as we don’t) so pictures were created by painting with words. We’ve kept some of this – we aren’t using scenery either - but we have cut quite a lot of it. So our version runs for about half that time. We are proud that, although we have cut some text, we have kept all the characters (especially when there are only seven actors!).  It was certainly a challenge as to what to cut.  We are very aware that Shakespeare-buffs and Hamlet-aficionados may have difficulties with what we have left out (or kept in!) - we shall let you, our audience, be the judge.  We look forward to hearing your opinion at the bar afterwards - and if we had done the full 4 and a half hour version, there would be no time for post-show drinking!  not that that was a consideration.....