Dropping In
June 7th, 2009 by jessica
I started rehearsals for The Winter's Tale with a very different kind of read-through and one which I now believe was key to the clarity of the spoken word. I, of course, stole the idea from someone else.
The person who developed it is an Australian director called Lindy Davies, whose website is here: http://www.lindydavies.com/Lindy_Davies/Home_Page.html
Here's she is on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5ToK1hyJVQ. She's really fantastic, and a true believer in the power of the actor.
The process or approach is described by Harriet Walter in her brilliant book, and this is where I first encountered it. I highly recommend it to all directors (and probably actors too): http://www.amazon.co.uk/Other-Peoples-Shoes-Thoughts-Acting/dp/1854597515.
Lindy calls this read-through, or rather process, dropping-in. I only used the very first part of a much longer process that spans the entire rehearsal period, and I hope she doesn't mind that I've printed it here. I highly recommend you get either Walter's book or do more research on Davies approach before doing it.
Basically, instead of each actor having their own script which they read from, the text is projected onto the wall, and no one has their own script at this stage of rehearsals. The actors sit so they can read this, and also make eye contact with every other actor (so in a semi-circle is best). The rest is best explained using the rules I wrote out based on what Walter writes:
RULES FOR DROPPING IN
1) Sit quietly breathing, listen and watch while the other actor is speaking
2) When it comes to your turn to speak, catch the text with the corner of your eye, digest the sentence
3) Think about what it means to you in light of what you have heard and thought so far
4) Remember to breathe deeply
5) Let the thought drop in with the breathe. A memory, vision, impression
6) Wait to the impulse, the reason to speak, then speak
7) Remember to breathe
It takes a loooong time, and all actors have to agree to not get bored, and stay active. But the benefits are huge.
The effects of doing a read-through in this way are extraordinary:
- the actors immediately start to work with what I call 'the space in between' - where life exists. It means they concentrate on the relationship, and themselves as a social creation, on why they are saying those particular words to that particular person. They become incredibly generous without trying.
- As a result of this immediate interaction with others, a character begins to emerge right from the start. Baggage, prejudices, likes, dislikes, loves all begin to appear. Basically subtext is mapped out as the read-through progresses.
- I was concerned this wouldn't work for Shakespeare, but allowing the actors to take all the time they needed meant that difficult parts of the text were quickly understood and immediately related to something tangible whether that was a memory or vision.
- it also meant the actors didn't spend any time enjoying the sound of their own voice speaking Shakespeare (sorry actors but you do do that, and don't try and pretend you don't). Because everything was said to someone specific, sentences were said in the right amount of time and long speeches didn't become vehicles to show off individual skill.
- Each actors really develops and owns what they're feeling. Nothing can be faked.
I really wish I'd done a short extract of this in auditions as it really brings out actors who are more interested in how they say their lines and those who are not only generous, but who really understand where the life of the play is. It's that space in between where everything happens, and where drama really lies.
Remote Goat :: The Winter’s Tale Review
May 21st, 2009 by Roland Smith
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"Well staged and superbly acted" by Deborah Klayman for remotegoat on 13/05/09 |
End of the tale…
May 12th, 2009 by jessica
I'm starting this blog a little late in the day, but it's been such a manic few months juggling a baby, stab wounds, and a massive Shakespeare production (3.5hrs with cuts, oops), this is the first time I've had a break to think...
Well what a learning experience this has been. A couple of critics suggested The Winter's Tale was not the right Shakespeare play for such a young company on a fringe time scale. In part I agree. I totally ran out of time to really explore any of the scenes. However, this wasn't disastrous, and the preparation we did at the beginning of rehearsals and some very good casting (I'm in complete agreement with Sam Mendes when he says that 80% of your work is done in choosing the right actors) meant the actors really knew what they were doing.
Over the next few days I'm going to share what I've learned, what really worked well in terms of rehearsal exercises, what didn't, and how I think I will approach the next text I work on...
Final week of the Winter’s Tale
April 25th, 2009 by admin
We have come to the final week of our succesful run, and if you haven't come to see it, now is the time to book.
Here are some of the reivews of the show:
Evening Standard
The Winter's Tale is the Evening Standard's HOT TICKET
"theatredelicatessen deserve praise for their impressive production of what is one of Shakespeare's trickier plays"
lowdown.standard.co.uk
What's on Stage ****
"This is a lively and innovative ensemble production which provides a fresh take on one of Shakespeare's less performed comedies"
www.whatsonstage.com
The Stage
"this is lively and brilliantly-conceived theatre that will keep you entertained throughout"
www.thestage.co.uk
Evening Standard ‘Hot Ticket’
April 24th, 2009 by admin
theatredelicatessen's production of William Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale is the Evening Standard's Hot Ticket of the week!
Hear the podcast:
More info about theatredelicatessen's The Winter's Tale






