Session Three: Week 27

Tuesday  

We found out today that we have lost three of our members, one due to schedule conflicts and two others due to their being on sanction (this means that they are unable to attend the group, have too many unexcused absences, and can no longer participate). So we hunkered down as a group to discuss our options. After much discussion, we decided that it is too late in the game to continue adding people – especially since we never know whether folks will stick around and commit or not. The path of least resistance at this point is to rely on the ensemble we have, most of whom have been with the group since October. This includes the facilitators – so it looks like the three of us who can be at every performance will be taking on a role or two each.

While the goal of the program is for the inmates to take ownership of the group, the material, and their performance, I feel that we are still within the bounds of the goals we set by plugging in facilitators at this point. The women who are still with the group have been working diligently on the parts to which they committed months ago; lines are beginning to be memorized, and their understandings of their characters deepen with each rehearsal. For them to be penalized by others’ lack of commitment – to have to abandon these characters now to pick up the slack elsewhere, or to add to their loads with verbose characters like Mercutio and Friar Laurence – will engender stress, not empowerment. And we facilitators, by committing fully to the parts, becoming more integrated in the ensemble, and providing an environment in which the women can continue toward their own personal goals, can stay in keeping with Shakespeare in Prison’s objectives even as we step onto the stage ourselves.

All that decided, we dove into the “party scene,” which the women had been working on individually for the past week. It is mostly off book and has shown a LOT of growth. The woman playing Capulet, who has had a difficult time accessing the character’s aggression and “manliness”, became much more forceful and boisterous. She was still uncomfortable delivering her opening monologue on the stage, so we moved her into the house, where she can directly address the audience. This is much more interesting for her, and the speech took off. She noted that she had an easier time railing against Tybalt with Matt reading the role, as the woman who plays that character is still finding her way into the character. We discussed the give and take between actors; that the more she gives Tybalt, the more Tybalt will give her.

The woman playing Lady Capulet mentioned that she wasn’t sure what to do in this scene; she has found her way over to the Capulet/Tybalt argument, which feels right, but she’s not sure where to go once they both exit. Lady Capulet’s loyalties, she feels, are divided between her lover and her abusive husband. We ran the scene twice more to give her an opportunity to explore both ways playing the scene. I encouraged her to take a moment or two to make her decision. When we ran it the first time, she sadly exited after Capulet, and this ended up being what felt right to her. She feels that Lady Capulet is just too cowed by the abuse to do anything else – it’s not what the character actually wants, but she’s too afraid of the repercussions to follow her heart. This informs the rest of the play for her as well.

The group seemed empowered by our decision to be self-reliant, and by the enormous growth in the scene we worked tonight. I am encouraged that, even with all of the frustrations, no one yet has said, “Maybe we should cancel the performance.” They set a goal, and they are determined to meet it.

Thursday

Written by Sarah

We began the rehearsal with a warm up and a discussion of the paint needed for the sets.  Our Capulet pointed out that if we get the primary colors and white we can make any colors we need.  The cast was also very excited to share that there will be a balcony built for the show.

We then got down to work rehearsing.  We got so much done.  The cast members have been soaking up their roles and working hard on objectives.  It shows in their work, which is deepening and strengthening each week!

We began working on the Capulet/Montague face-off in Act I.  Staging the scene and making sure that everyone knew what they wanted and needed in their characters.  The cast built on the facilitator's suggested blocking to find the humor and the danger in the scene.

We worked on the Apothecary/Romeo scene, putting Romeo back in, as she had to miss the last rehearsal when we worked it.  The actors found strong objectives and the cast provided great encouragement and direction to them.

We then moved on to the top of the party scene when Capulet welcomes guests through to the argument with between Capulet and Tybalt.  In this scene Tybalt discovered the power of stillness.  When she stopped trying to be on the move and allowed Tybalt to stay in one spot, she discovered the power she could emanate with just Shakespeare's language.  Capulet had so much to react to and work with, with Tybalt's new-found quiet strength, and the sparks flew between the two.

Finally we worked on the Romeo and Juliet bedroom scene (the lark and nightingale scene).  This was an extraordinary experience, and our Capulet took the helm as director and mined the scene for all its humor.  She asked Romeo to be DOING something physically throughout the scene (taking shoes off, getting back in bed, etc...) There was a smooth and exciting collaborative spirit in the room that allowed everyone to do their best work.

The cast has really embraced the use of objectives and tactics, and I promised to do a great objectives and tactics exercise at the top of rehearsal this week.  We closed knowing we had made strong progress and worked very well together.

 

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Session Three: Week 26

Tuesday  

Written by Molly

After getting through the gate a little late, I walked in to find the women playing Juliet, Romeo, Capulet, Lady Capulet and the Nurse rehearsing Act III, scene V -- from memory! This complicated scene begins with pillow talk between Romeo and Juliet (famously including the “it was the lark” and “it was the nightingale” banter) and ends with Juliet being admonished and threatened by her parents and abandoned by the Nurse. It was clear that each of them had spent a lot of time over the past week committing their lines to memory. Their dedication and commitment were impressive and they probably only need to spend a little bit more time on that scene before they are entirely off-book.

In memorizing this scene, the women hoped to show the other participants in the group what the play might look like when it is more polished. Unfortunately, attendance was a little low on this Tuesday, so hopefully they will be able to show their fellow actors their accomplishment in the future and it will serve as a motivating factor. The women realized that being off book allowed for greater potential for movement and dramatic choices. They seemed eager and somewhat antsy to have this scene completely memorized, without calling for lines, so they could really intensify blocking choices and amp up their acting.

These five actors are making interesting dramatic choices and it is a joy to see how they are developing each of their characters. For instance, there are many ways that the actor playing Lady Capulet could play this scene – as an obedient wife blindly supporting her husband, as a cold woman whose only wish for her daughter is to find a good match. The woman playing Lady Capulet is both thirsty for revenge against Romeo and somewhat of a battered wife, fearful of what her volatile husband might do. It is fascinating to see how these women are identifying with their characters and how they are transforming them into multidimensional, complex people as they take the stage.

For next time, they decided on their own to try to memorize the party scene from Act I, scene V. It is really impressive how motivated they seem to be, which portends well for the actual performances. The play is really coming along!

Thursday

Although attendance was again light today, those of us who were present were very productive!

We began by noting that the role of Apothecary was still vacant, and one of the newer members of the group, who is already committed to Lady Montague and Page, decided she would give it a try, since we’ve edited the scene quite a bit, and it isn’t a large number of lines. We used the door to the right of the stage as the Apothecary’s front door, and we worked with each character’s objectives and tactics. Perhaps the Apothecary is a woman with starving children to feed (we know from the text that this character is very poor). The actress playing this part experimented with her reaction to the amount of money Romeo offers, inserting the phrase, “Oh my god…” Sarah encouraged her to work with that phrase for now, but eventually to put all of that emotion into Shakespeare’s words instead.

We moved on to Act IV Scene II, which is brief and deceptively simple. We found that it is not, in fact, simple at all, as we continued to work with objectives and tactics. Juliet needs Capulet to believe her – this is her primary objective. But what about Capulet? We asked the woman playing this part if he is surprised by Juliet’s coming around. She decided that he is not – he is used to getting his way, and he’s proud of her for seeing the light.

We then went through and cut a whole bunch of lines that are not working for the women and are not necessary to the plot. The more comfortable and confident they become, the more ownership they take, and that includes being confident enough to know what the play needs and what can probably go.

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Session Three: Week 25

Tuesday  

As people arrived today, one of the women shared that she’s been saying her lines wherever she happens to be, as they occur to her, and that usually people know what she’s talking about. She’s been really excited and amused by that!

We spent most of our time working on Act III Scene V today, in which Romeo leaves Juliet, Lady Capulet tells her that she must marry Paris, Capulet loses it, and both Lady Capulet and the Nurse abandon her. We have already worked the first part of the scene with the young lovers, but we took the opportunity to clarify a couple of things in the lines (and to cut some of the lines!).

We talked a bit about Lady Capulet in this scene – when she reasons with Juliet about her crying, is she really talking about herself to a certain extent? There is also a fairly abrupt shift between talk of revenge against Romeo and the coming marriage. The woman playing Lady Capulet took a moment here to take a deep breath, and we all laughed. She thought maybe she had done something wrong – but the reason we laughed was that it was so real! It was a great moment for her.

We got into the brutality of the scene – Capulet must really be terrifying for these women to abandon Juliet so quickly. We worked on some staging that will allow the woman playing Capulet to intimidate and frighten the others without actually striking them, and we worked out where Lady Capulet and the Nurse first try to intervene and then back off.

We left with this group having the goal of memorizing this scene within one week so that we can cement staging that is difficult to pull off while holding scripts. It will also provide a nice challenge and a short term goal.

Thursday

Today we got to work right away on the end of Act III Scene I, the “fight scene.” The woman playing Benvolio, who is rather new to the group, had questions about his motivations here: is he snitching? Setting the record straight? Something else?

We had a great opportunity to work on this, since our Prince was present as well. Her greatest challenge is nervousness which makes her smile at inappropriate moments on stage. With her working toward the Prince’s anger at what has happened and desire to be just, and Benvolio working toward telling a story that would be honest and still not get him in hot water, we made a lot of progress. Everyone needs to work on slowing down their deliveries, but the scene is more or less working.

We then spent some time learning basic fencing with our foam swords. This was a lot of fun, with some of the women being more natural at it than others. Still, the vibe was one of encouragement, and we’ll keep working at it.

Following this, we worked on the opening scene of the play. The women are having a difficult time accessing the “tough guy” attitudes of the characters, and we will have to keep building on what we did today, which merely began to crack it.

The women mentioned that, while they are working on memorizing their lines, they wish they had more time together to work. We are looking into the possibility of adding one meeting per week through the end of the session – this would also enable us to make up lost time from when the weather prevented us from getting to the facility this winter.

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Session Three: Week 24

Tuesday  

Written by Matthew

We covered three scenes of Act IV today, working quickly through dialogue and Juliet’s soliloquy.

There was a significant delay getting in. When I walked into the space, the women were just finishing warmups, and were ready to go.

Juliet and Lady Capulet wanted very badly to check some numbers off our list of unrehearsed scenes. We realized last week that we had not rehearsed most of Act IV, so that seemed a logical place to start. Beginning with Act IV, scene ii, we ran through the night of Juliet’s apparent death. The scenes almost run together, as she seemingly acquiesces to her father’s wishes, contemplates her future, and drinks the potion that puts her to sleep.

We spent a lot of time working on the tone for Juliet’s soliloquy, in which she worries about the consequences of taking the potion. The speech begins with concrete fears—will she know where she is? Will she be alone?—and ends with fantastical fears of her relatives rising like zombies from the grave to tear at her body. Juliet initially wanted to cut the speech down, but realized after inspecting the lines that it really needed to be full-length.

The morning after Juliet takes the potion, the nurse and her parents find her. The hardest thing for the women to do was to specify their reactions to the sight. Instead of reflexively wailing and running about, the women in the audience encouraged our characters to develop a reaction specific to their persona. Lady Capulet withdraws. Capulet worries about the public consequences. The nurse runs to find medical supplies and blankets and pillows—anything to help.

Though our work today was short, we tackled a large section of text, and took a step closer to completing our first-round rehearsals of the play.

Thursday

Written by Sarah

We began the rehearsal with a further discussion of costumes props and set design.  The first decision was that our backdrop would be painted black with gold lettering.  We decided the words on the backdrop will come from our "word storm".  So we word-stormed...  The ensemble called out words which Romeo and I wrote on the chalk board.  The words and phrases included lines from the play, and themes and ideas that resonate for them.  Some words and phrases from our word storm...

Courage

Rebellion

Saucy Boy

Love

Passion

Tragedy

Happiness

Family

Peace

Death

Holy Matrimony

Sweet Sorrow

Loyalty

Anger

Evil

Blood

Marriage

Strife

Romance

Enemies

Rage

Beauty

Misguided

Star Crossed Lovers

Feud

Fight

Defiance

Discouraged

Unity

Young Love

Religion

Friends

Wedding

Secrets

Trust

Pain

Destiny

Verona

Betrayal

Romeo

Juliet

Death

Mutiny

Minister

Montague

Capulet

One moment can change a life

Love at first sight

Banished

Til Death do us part

Senseless

Love sick

Two houses both alike…

After our word storm we returned to costume ideas.  It was decided that the Montagues’ color will be green, the Capulets’ purple, and all others will be gold. Our Juliet also volunteered to create a props list and be in charge of props.

After adding some costume elements to the wish list we warmed up our voices and bodies and our sense of ensemble and play. We did stretches, tongue twisters, and Theater games.

Then we got down to script work.  Being without our Friar Lawrence, the ensemble has cast a new actress in the role.  We worked on Act II Scene IV with Romeo and our new Friar.  We also worked briefly on the wedding scene with Romeo, Juliet, and the Friar.  The ensemble had strong ideas of how the scenes should play (being used to the actress who had been in the role).  They gave a lot of direction but were also wonderfully supportive of the new actress and quite sincerely encouraged her to "make the role her own.”

This week we worked hard on OBJECTIVES.  The ensemble worked together to figure out what people wanted from each other in the scene.  When the actors started playing their objectives (in other words - worked to get what they want) we all noted how beautifully the scene grew.  The whole ensemble is thrilled with where the scene is now and so proud of the actors for the hard work they did.  They were effusive in their praise for their cast members.  As we reflected at the end of rehearsal, I asked the cast to commit to deciding on their objectives for their roles in each scene they play.

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