Friday, 18 March 2016

Extras

My Name

In searching the name of my character I found it’s meaning and origin-I have managed to piece together a lot of what maybe Buchner was trying to instantly say about the character just through name.
Friedrich is of German origin and suggests ‘a born leader’, Johann is a rather macabre word. It is the idea of getting enjoyment from pain. And finally Woyzeck is a ‘warrior’ by meaning.
The only name that doesn’t have any origin or meaning is ‘Franz’- it’s just definitely of German origin. This made me question why Marie calls him ‘Franz’. An empty and vacant name. I feel it has some reasoning behind it- the meaning I have established is that being a warrior, a leader and even macabre seems something of the past for Woyzeck, he is definitely a lost and confused soul and identity. I think this is even an explanation as to why he has so many names and nicknames and different relations in the play show he is a man who is divided into different personalities to please others and therefore his predictability in the play and his rationality in decision making is minimal. I think this manages to piece together some reasoning behind the ‘paper’ or script version of woyzeck.

Accent

Due to the place in which we are setting the play, which we are still keeping open to interpretation, although it is definitely seen as a warped twenty first century council estate. I felt in order to ‘common’ myself up and to feel closer to a man that has lost everything and has very little in the way of luxuries, health and money- I decided to work an accent that would place me a little more into London territory and away from RP/ OR Surrey. I have massively enjoyed working on this- finding different levels in terms of how it can work. An amazing discovery I made last week was when not warming up my voice and having an actual ‘morning voice’- I found a really nice tone for him to be played at. Obviously I will need to warm up my voice and use my vocal strength to my full ability. So moving forward that is my challenge; to find the balance between this rough and ready vocal quality and a technically well rehearsed and used voice.

Shaving my hair

This role has been my toughest role yet in many ways. One issue I have massively felt is getting in to the mind of not only a man that has seen what he has seen, but a man of the age he is too. It was massively important for me to build a backstory for this character and to see what he looked like, where he lived, who he grew up with and why he went in to the army. When visualising this character whilst using the Michael Chekov technique in our acting technique classes, imagining wha your character would look, smell and be like- I saw a young man who had his head shaven. This image never left my head so it felt right to bring myself as close to the image I had of the character as possible. It was also the most accurate decision I could make as someone playing a man who has recently left the army- as this is often part of the duty- to have shortened hair.

Actioning

I felt it was really, really, important to action my script this term. It’s the first large part that I have been given all to myself and it felt amazing to have the journey of this character! It’s been so hard to get it right, and I don’t think I ever did. But through the work of objectives and actioning I knew why I was in every scene and what I wanted. It’s the first time that I’ve ever actioned every line in a script or applied other techniques to them in order to make them weighted in technique and hopefully truth. I also used LABAN to add physical objectives to my monologues where I was essentially alone and not speaking to anyone but myself. I have massively enjoyed using all of the techniques I learnt in year 12 and applying them to the script this term-  from breathing exercises to physical and annalytical techniques- I haven’t ever felt this prepared and confident about a performance.

The Set

THE SET IS AMAZING! When having our Michael Chekov sessions we managed to build the atmosphere’s of different rooms and scenes of the play and the set couldn’t of grasped these feelings any better than what it has. The concrete and cold feeling is present with a horrible and yet somewhat hopeful stretch of grass covers the front of the stage. The backdrop is overpowering in the best sense possible. It has the presence of a large tower block in the background that towers over the stage. The metal fencing manages to create an odd divide between the outside and inside of the flats- and again creates a cold and slightly unsafe feeling to the play,

Performance Three

This performance for me is a bit of a blur.( sorry Sarah I know that isn’t the best start to an evaluation) :) It’s the closest I got to what I wanted to achieve with the journey of the character. I loved the fact that I found fresh objectives and alive decisions during the scenes. Really spontaneous and instinctual choices were made from the cast in this performance. I remember watching ShowWoman drop a twenty pound note and I couldn’t help but want it- and I made Marie get it. The way Rhianne knew her character so well was incredible and almost distracting to watch at times- the tactics she took to get the money was so seductive and under the radar- nothing was obvious. Which looking back was so right!
As a character, I knew she was my way of getting it and that’s what I wanted.
I also remember during this performance that the Showwoman really got under my skin; more than ever. She really got on my nerves and I have no explanation why- all I can put it down to is that the words she speaks must of resonated with me the most on this performance. I just know that all i wanted to do was leave and for her to stop talking.

Even the mistakes that happened in this performance were new ones- mistakes that have never happened before e.g. forgetting to splash the lake at the start of the show. I think this was the closest thing we were going to get to experiencing longevity too. It would have been lovely to perform it a couple more times just to get a sense of repeating the same thing and it getting better and worst- but this is something I’m sure we will get to learn further down the line. Overall I feel like the journey of this performance was more tiresome because I made changes to how much I was going to stretch both ends of sanity and insanity at the start compared to the finish, and I would hope this was successful.



Wednesday, 10 February 2016

SECOND SHOW EVALUATION

Second Performance Evaluation 

This was by no means a bad show, but it was the most messy show so far. We all know the show really well, so we can all deal with when small things go wrong. I think the strength in our ensemble is so clear, and has been a comment from many audience members. 

This performance saw a lot of room for movement. 'Confessions' for rhianne and I was so new and instinctual. However some dips occurred in lines between oscar and I at times. 

I think there was a lot of listening going on in this performance. Due to the break I feel we all managed to rehear the words like the first time again. Overall I feel that this was the show probably at its weakest and it still strived to be a polished piece. I felt our voice work on this performance had also massively improved, from no small help to the music being turned down slightly too. 

Sunday, 24 January 2016

FIRST SHOW EVALUATION

As a whole, the end product seemed to go very well. For me personally the journey of my character was slightly lost on our opening night. The grip of reality that Woyzeck has was slightly lacking in the show. This has just forced me to look back over the opening few scenes, and have a think about how to play them for our second show

Another note was the dance. Rhianne and I just need a little rehearsal of the dance before the final show, because the emotion is all there but some of the moves were slightly shaky at times. I think a general note for the cast is to work voices harder in the space when an audience is present.
I think the good notes for the piece was the strength in our ensemble work; I've never felt more safe on a stage with actors before. I completely trust in my cast that everything is going to be dealt with, and the fear of things going wrong can actually be more supported and exciting if anything.

Tuesday, 29 December 2015

DANCE HURT ME

Confessions

I think the physical theatre sequence that Rhianne and I have been working on during the process of Woyzeck has been so stretching and hard work, but is 100% worth it! The argument that Marie and Woyzeck have is super super quick and almost impossible to access the true depth of it all in the ten lines we have each. There is SO much subtext and the stakes are higher than ever in this part of the play- and the physical section that we have created has managed to give us the best access we could possibly ask for. After actioning the script and doing all the work we have on it- I feel that the scene is now in an amazing place to work instinctually and impulsively.

The stimuli that we have worked on has been this dance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpVf5-aTgys , the song Hurt me- Lapsley and the subtext of our scene.

- The video has been amazing to work from because by no means are we dancers but we have manage to capture the balance between dance and theatre.

- It's been amazing to work with Theia on the project because she has done an amazing job of nurturing our ideas- the process has very much felt like a collaborative devised piece of work and I feel that is why Rhianne and I feel so deeply rooted to the work we are performing.

- The song and the lyrics are ridiculously relatable to the position of both characters in the play and I have found the song so easy to relate to and helps me to get into the emotional position that I need to be for my character in the following scene.

Monday, 21 December 2015

LABAN EFFORTS AND WOYZECK

Today we did lots of work on LABAN. I've found over the last two years that I actually love working with the LABAN efforts and should therefore use them more. 'The place is cursed, you know, Andres' now has a float, slash and a punch in it. I think it works well in refreshing patterns that you've learnt during the process and ultimately enables you to find new things. 

I've also worked out some new Laban efforts for the scene 'stab the shewolf'. Woyzeck is completely crazed by this point and therefore this should be influencing his physic. Exploring the scenes with the different efforts has certainly secured a new realm of range in my performance. It's interesting also just to see how an effort effects the objective and therefore action that you are playing. How is 'to patronise' different as a slash to a dab. 
The past few weeks I haven't commented on my uncertainty about my scenes with Andres. Exploring them with different efforts has definitely made us find new things in them.

Once receiving the notes from our first run in the new theatre, I feel as if the opening few scenes had instantly improved. Finding new ways of saying the lines and playing my actions has been vital to explore Mike Alfred's 'different every night' techniques. 

Running the scene with the captain, a close shave, was very interesting with LABAN efforts involved. I found that there's was a lot of 'to float', to 'push', at one point 'to punch' and sometimes even 'to slice'. I love the fact that this was found as its given a dimension to our relationship within the scene and out, that we had yet to found. I think there's a massive amount of underline tensions between these characters that needs to be felt. 

MIKE ALFREDS REFLECTION

Mike Alfred's techniques have made playing the character very interesting. The idea of being different every night definitely allows the moment to feel more in the moment and real. It's about being completely in search for the truth, and the truth is probably different every night, purely based on a different day, a different body.
I love exploring character through objectives and actioning, as I'm naturally someone who works from imagery of the character. I feel like the written work allows you to ironically be completely free on stage. The work before, the more I do, the more free and confident in my choices I feel.
This process also allows the risk element I feel that makes something explosive and new every night.

ACTIONING

I have actioned and applied objectives to every single scene and line that I have within the play. I have also managed to apply LABAN efforts in to the piece, monologues that are slightly harder to action.
(Script handed in/ALL IN SCRIPT).