Monday, 28 October 2013

Codsall Dramatic Society Presents Puss in Boots

I can never resist going on about my adventures in Amateur Theatre, so here's the next offering from Codsall Dramatic Society!

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of our plays for Children we’re adding a new play to our repertoire Puss in Boots!

With the usual mixture of fun, interaction and laughter watch as a furry fairy with attitude helps a lowly Miller’s son meet the beautiful Princess and battle the evil ogre. Share in all their adventures and meet the bumbling twin sisters, the glamorous Fairy Godmother and the mysterious Baron. Come along to boo at the baddies, sing, dance and cheer on our hero. Let the magic unfold.

Performances at Codsall Village Hall on Thursdays and Fridays 28th, 29th November and 5th, 6th December at 7.30pm, Saturdays 30th November and 7th December at 2.30pm and 6.30pm. Tickets are only £4.50; adults come at children’s price, ticket price includes a drink and biscuit for children during the interval. Free entry into our colouring competition for all children, with prizes! (Aimed at children aged 3-11)


Tickets will be available soon from Knit & Stitch, The Square, Codsall. Alan Rigby Jewellers, Birches Bridge and Learning Ladder Toy Shop, Anders Square, Perton, or you can order online at www.codsalldramaticsociety.co.uk. For parties of 6 or more please telephone 07792784908 or order online.

Friday, 11 October 2013

Challenging Your Pre-conceptions - Playing Someone You Hate in Amateur Theatre

Time...

I've taken time to reflect on last weeks post, and noticed it to be pretty aggressive. You see, it's hard to see the wood for the trees when you're so jaded from a particular part, as I was at the time...

Rest and Xbox, that's what I needed...

Having taken the time to pause and think about it, as much as I couldn't stand Mike as a character, I should be grateful for the opportunity. You see, as valid as the points I raised last time were, it's these sort of trials that make you a better actor.

I'd like to balance last weeks post this week with a new post about the benefits of playing this sort of character.


Improving your acting

As I said last week, playing characters like this is very challenging. You've got to work hard to get the motivations right, or the characters comes across as stock.

But surely this can only make you a better actor? Treat acting like a muscle, if you let it become stagnant, you'll never get better. If you constantly test it, stretch it, then you will get better at it. For all my complaining, this is the best way to improve as an actor. Testing yourself, pushing yourself to improve. it's how the best become the best. So instead of moaning, we should embrace this challenge and see it head on.

Being someone else

Lets face it, at the end of the day, acting is escapism. We act to be someone else. To imagine ourselves in someone elses shoes. And in order to do that we have to vary our characters. It can be very easy to become type cast, to be seen as the same person every time. So it's surely a benefit to play lots of different characters. To become someone else, to act in different ways to how you normally would, that is the natural. And this leads me nicely onto my last point...

It's fun!

How this point slipped past me the first time is beyond me, but here it is. I'll go slightly away from Mike here, to talk about one of my favourite characters, King Rat from Dick Whittington

This guy was an amoral, rude and aggressive schemer. Yet I had so much fun playing the character, doing things I would never do. 

Sitting back and seeing this, while Mike wasn't a lot of fun, he did often in "The Memory Of Water" sit back and wind the other characters up. Which now I look back on it, was kind of fun. His attitude to woman couldn't really be further from mine, but when you look at it from the point of view of comedy, there is a lot to recommend the part. It was fun to rile the other characters intentionally. Not something I try to do, but entertaining for the play.

Summing up

Amateur theatre is difficult at times. Playing challenging characters is one of the many challenges it throws up. Yet I can't deny it's fun. A lot of fun...

I'm off on holiday till 23rd October now. For more amateur theatre news, check out Codsall Dramatic Society on Facebook and Twitter, @CodsallDramSoc.

Friday, 4 October 2013

Playing Someone You Hate In Amateur Theatre


Sorry I've been away...

It's been a busy couple of weeks. Those of you who read this blog will know that I've been involved in Codsall Dramatic Society's latest production, "The Memory Of Water". 

Now this has been very draining, for reasons that I haven't made clear, because it would have been a bit of a spoiler. The reason it was more draining than usual is because I couldn't stand him!

Look at this guy! Eugh!

The character was that of Mike, a man who's been two timing his wife for the last 5 years.

I'll just let that sink in for a second. This man has been cheating on his wife for 5 years! With the same woman! But his wife's ill so thats ok. Wait, NO IT'S NOT! That's worse! I seriously could not stand this man. His every line had an agenda, it was sickening to even think the lines, never mind speak them!

Now, this is an inevitability. At some point, you will have to play a character that you don't like. That doesn't mean I have to like it! So I'm going to rage for a little bit on how much I hate playing characters like this. Then maybe next week when I've calmed down, I'll be able to see some silver lining on this thunder cloud...

Getting into their head


Managing to get into the head of someone you despise is very difficult. Now thankfully with Mike, he seemed to have some personality. It's just that it wasn't a personality I'd ever want to be associated with. He is aggressive when he doesn't get his own way, resolute in not budging an inch, and more and more throughout the play comes across as spineless. Now I'm not saying that he has no redeeming features, it's just that they were buried under layer after layer of issues. Getting into the mind of a character like this is grueling. It's nigh on impossible. No one would ever like to imagine themselves like this. Some characters are simple. Those that you don't like are among the hardest to play. It's physically and emotionally draining.

The Lingering After Effects








Mike as a character stuck with me. Challenging as he was, in order to make him believable, I had to bury myself in the character. I had no choice, there's only certain ways you can do this. This makes you hate even yourself. I looked in the mirror, and he looked back, with his smug, womanising grin. I couldn't stand it. So what did I do? I shaved. I got a hair cut, I vowed not to wear that suit jacket until the look of it no longer reminded him of me. That is the lasting effect. It makes you doubt yourself. By getting into the character, you start to associate yourself with him. Sure, in a few weeks, I might look like him again, but by then I hope I'll have moved on and forgotten. 

Grrrrrr...

I might have calmed down in a bit. I think maybe I'll go and have a drink, a hot bath, and maybe next week, I'll be able to come back to this in a different light.

Chris is an active member of Codsall Dramatic Society. Follow us on Facebook or Twitter, @CodsallDramSoc.