April 2, 2013

We finished our work on Act V today. Everyone is very relieved to have the end of the play figured out, and they are feeling better about things in general. The work today went very smoothly, with lots of great ideas volunteered by a number of people, and the scene is working very well. Some of the participants feel that the entire group should work more on the script outside of our meeting time and prepare for things ahead of time. In light of this, we formed a game plan for the next few meetings to cover what’s left of the play. On Friday, we will work on Act III Scene ii, and then next week we will take the two days to figure out Act IV Scene i. Upon realizing that we are so close to having covered the entire play on its feet, more relief was expressed by a number of people. The group then decided that, after this phase, we should begin working through the play in chronological order, regardless of who is absent. Since this desire comes out of their passion for the project, comfort with and growing ownership of the material, I am completely okay with it.

One of the participants then stated that she’s fallen completely in love with Shakespeare, and that whenever she hears something about him on the news or in passing, she feels her ears perk up. She is probably the most intensely dedicated to the group, and it shows. She challenged the participant playing Stephano to a “remember-off” – they are having a friendly competition to see who can get all of her lines and blocking memorized first. She is taking this very seriously, and it is clearly having a positive effect on everyone else in the group.

March 26, 2013

We had a few additions to the group today, so we began with a welcome. We followed that up, after warm ups, with a game to “audition” them. This is a new idea from the group – to throw new participants right into an activity to make sure that they are willing to go out on a limb and take risks on stage. It seems to be working well so far. Continuing with scenes we haven’t worked, we launched into Act V, which is one long scene that ends the play. The participant playing Prospero is beginning to really fall in to her monologues, but she is still hesitant to go all the way with the emotion. She began to express doubts that she will go as far as she should or wants to, when our veteran interrupted, but not rudely, saying, “Stop. Don’t speak things into existence.” She encouraged the other woman to resist being negative or doubtful about her eventual performance, to focus on the process, and that she will do a great job if she does that. Everyone else seconded that feeling.

We discussed some specifics as we worked the scene. The participant playing Ariel is showing an ever-deepening understanding of her character, and got nearly everything she needed to know about her objectives in the scene from the text. We talked at length about why Prospero says so little to Alonso, as opposed to Antonio and Sebastian. The group talked about Prospero relating to Alonso as a father who may have lost a child, as someone whose daughter has just married his son, and then we got to what is likely the crux of it: that Alonso repents his actions, and that’s really what Prospero wanted in the first place.

One of the new participants gave some really excellent constructive criticism to the woman playing Prospero. She said that she couldn’t tell, just from the way the woman was standing and speaking, whether the character was strong or not. This is a great note because we know that not everyone in the audience will understand all of the language, so physicality is very important. The woman playing Prospero was very glad to get the feedback, and will keep it in mind as she continues to work.

March 22, 2013

We began today by figuring out which scenes we haven’t worked together and deciding to focus our energy on those to ease things as we get closer to the memorization deadline. We decided to work Act II Scene ii today, since we have recently lost our Stephano and Caliban. A participant who joined on Tuesday volunteered to step into the role of Stephano, and, after I encouraged two women who’ve been in the group for quite awhile and find memorization easy to consider taking on larger roles, they each volunteered to stand in for Caliban and Trinculo (who was absent).

We worked on the scene for quite awhile. All three women dove right in, being very goofy and having a lot of fun. The new participant was immediately comfortable on stage, reading Shakespeare, and is very excited to play the part. The participant who, up until now, played Sebastian, enjoyed Caliban and told us that she was willing to take on the role for the good of the team, if the group “elected” her to do so. The rest of the women resoundingly voiced their support for this decision.

The women felt that today was a very good day, and that they were really “feeling it.” It was really encouraging for everyone that these three were so willing to jump into a scene that none of them had read aloud before, and that they did so well with it.

March 15, 2013

After welcoming a new participant and warming up, we played an improv game that involves singing. While some of the women were reticent to participate, others jumped in and gave it a try, and everyone was very enthusiastic about the work they did. What really impressed me was that most of the women willing to try this game were newer participants, one of whom was the one who joined the group today. This says a lot about their desire to try something different and to go out on a limb. I could tell that it made the others, who are weary of people joining the group and then leaving, feel better about these particular participants. We took some time to divide up into groups to work on the pieces they’ve been memorizing. After about fifteen minutes, we reconvened to go through each scene and see how everyone did.

The first group to go had worked on part of Act I Scene ii. They took on a very large portion of the scene with varying levels of success. The woman playing Ferdinand only had memorized a little bit. She readily asserted that this was because she hadn’t put much effort into it, and she knows she needs to do better in the future, but she isn’t worried about getting her part memorized. The participant who is playing Prospero memorized about two thirds of the scene, but got hung up at the end because the blocking there hasn’t been solidified. The group agreed that she could work out blocking herself to help her learn her lines, propose it to the others, and we would decide together whether or not it works. The woman playing Miranda had all of her lines completely memorized, but delivered them with no feeling whatsoever. This was cause, however, for amusement and reassurance rather than a reason for anyone to attack her – acting often goes out the window when lines are first memorized, and she knows that she needs to keep working on the lines so that she can play her character truthfully while saying them.

The next group had taken on a few pages of Act II Scene i. The participant playing Gonzalo, who has been in the group for over a year, said she found herself nearly going on autopilot and saying her lines from the last session. Although memorization is challenging for her, she did a great job, and everyone praised her for it. A very new participant who is concerned about her ability to memorize took on Francisco’s few lines and still found that she only remembered the first couple. She said she thought perhaps this was due to the method she was using, and the others advised her on other methods based on what they have done. She is not giving up! She will try other ways to memorize. Another recent addition had taken on Adrian’s lines, and she is comfortable learning his part, but doesn’t want anything larger. The woman playing Antonio only had a couple of lines in the scene, but feels good about memorization in general. She is getting more comfortable with the text. The other two participants, playing Alonso and Sebastian, found memorization to be very easy, and even to be an expression of their dedication to the group. The ease with which they have memorized their lines has made things easier for everyone else and will continue to do so.

The Master also worked her lines, which she has more or less memorized, with the help of another new participant. This new participant is eager to take on her own part, and she is going to look at the goddesses later in the play. The woman playing Trinculo ran through her first speech, and she did all right, but she knows she needs to put more effort in.

All in all, the group felt that this experiment in memorization and deadlines worked well for them, even those who did not know their lines perfectly. Everyone now has a better idea of how much they need to work on their lines in order to meet the “real” off-book deadline of April 15. No one regretted having tried this out.

March 5, 2013

We began today by discussing how well things went last time and how we can continue to have positive experiences like that. After our warm up, we played another new improv game that involved giving clues, much like in Party Quirks. Everyone had a lot of fun and got steadily better and better at the game the more we played it. They are gaining a lot of confidence with this sort of thing. Especially exciting was the participation of two new participants. Everyone gets very excited when new members jump in like that.

One of the women then said that she felt like it was time for everyone to challenge themselves a bit more. She had the idea to put every character’s name on a scrap of paper, then pull papers at random to determine scenes that would need to be memorized within a week. Some of the women liked this idea, but others were hesitant. One said that she didn’t object to giving everyone a push, but it might be better to take on a little less at first – she, for one, has a slight learning disability that makes memorization a slow process for her. It’s something she knows she can do, but the pressure to memorize an entire scene in a week would probably make her stress out to the point where she couldn’t memorize anything.

We decided to change the initial plan a bit to make it less stressful for everyone while still providing a challenge. The decision was that everyone needs to memorize something by next Friday. As a group, they then decided how to team up on portions of the script so that, for the most part, they are not working alone. The only person working on a monologue is the participant playing Ariel – the rest are working on portions of scenes. One of our new participants who is not sure she can memorize anything, period, is working on a very small part in one of the scenes as an experiment. I’m really glad she’s willing to go out on a limb – she might surprise herself. Our other new participant is also giving a try to a part that she thinks might end up being too big of a commitment for her, but, again, I’m just glad she’s diving in with a positive attitude.

It will be interesting to see how this experiment works out. I’m very enthusiastic about giving it a try, especially since the idea came from one of the participants and not from me – the more ownership they take of the process, and not just the performance, the better the experience will be for them. And pushing themselves to memorize even a little bit this far ahead of the deadline they set will give them a good idea of how much time it will take them to memorize all of their lines.