Monday, June 14, 2010

Thursday, June 10, 2010

DAY 17 JUNE 10th


Yesterday and last night were very productive and I feel relatively calm about our reading. I think we are in pretty good shape. We took time separately during the day and then came together at night to look over the script and work on our clown turn. Meg's good buddy Nickey came over to offer an outside eye to our clown work. It's funny, I think I figured because we did a similar turn together 3 years ago, we could just jump right into it. God, no wonder it felt frantic and all over the place! So we worked it out beat by beat, looking at all the wonderful details we could bring to it. It was like everything was at either impulse .5 or 6 and nothing really in between. Now we have a whole lot more to play around with, and a much tighter turn.
As for today, I sent Meg the draft of the scene I was working on and she's writing now too. So once we get together later this afternoon we should be just about ready to hand in our draft. HOLY CRAP!

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

DAY 16 JUNE 9th



It's been a bit of an emotional roller coaster this week, but there is light at the end of the tunnel! Our draft has to be sent to Amy Lynn by tomorrow afternoon...YIKES! I think we are in amazing standing, considering how little time we've had to throw this thing together. I find it difficult to not stress over the fact that we will be reading a draft. I guess I'm more of a perfectionist than I let on. I just need to trust that what we do have is great. It is just a very vulnerable place to be- to show something that has a lot of promise, but that is unfinished. I guess all we can do at this point is polish what we can and have fun. It is a play! I want to play!

Saturday, June 5, 2010

DAY 11 RECAP ON DAY 12


Holy moly, day 12!! We are taking a much needed day off today.

But YESTERDAY. What a day! We tried to do work and did a bit...but realized we were pretty wiped out. So we took it easy with trashy TV before our meeting with our dramaturge Amy Lynn Strilchuk and designer Jed Tomlinson.

I'm not going to lie, I had not only never met either of them before, I've also never had a dramaturgical meeting before, so I really had no idea what to expect. It was incredibly helpful. They both gave us really solid input. For me, the read helped to illuminate where in the script I felt really comfortable and where I got lost, which is a great thing to discover. We also generated a ton of possible ideas/themes/metaphors to play around with. To be honest, there were points in the meeting where I began to feel incredibly overwhelmed by how much work we still need to do and how little time we have left before the read for Ignite. Thank God for Amy Lynn reminding us that we are not seeking to have a polished script by next Saturday, but instead are opening up our sketchbooks to an audience to show our process, to show where we are. She encouraged us to show what ever we like- if we need to omit scenes, do it. If we want to read things out of order, fine. If we have things that we are unsure of where they fit, but we like them, that's great too. So that encouragement and advice not only relieves the pressure, it also permits us to continue at the pace we have been working at without feeling a mad dash for a finish line. I hope to remember this when the stress of knowing we will be reading for a larger audience kicks in next week!

Thursday, June 3, 2010

DAY 10 JUNE 3rd




Today felt not only productive but also educational. I wish I could summarize, or write word for word the advice that Meg's amazing twin Jen gave her regarding working in groups. Meg, you can fully elaborate on this if you like.

What I got out of the conversation was this: know your strengths and trust your partner.

As much as we all want to contribute to everything in collective work, we can't. Wait, rephrase: everyone can contribute, but everyone can't DO everything. It is best to identify what your strengths are and work accordingly. It was so effective today to reassess our roles, our tasks and our strengths. Because at the end of the day, we want to create a beautiful story. To help propel this plan, and this piece of art forward, we need to capitalize and benefit from each others strengths.

It's funny when you realize you are older, or more mature. If we would have done this project years ago when we first came up with the idea, I don't know if I would have been able to clearly identify and embrace my strengths.

So, after an incredibly helpful talk, we relaxed over a coffee, then approached the work afresh. Afresh? Anew? C'est quoi l'expression? ANYWAYS. Meg printed out all our scenes and we read them. We have a skeleton! A really weird surreal skeletal story!

Then, because Meg's strength is writing, she went to work (feel free to elaborate Meg) and I stayed in the living room to do some character development, which is where my strengths lie. We were both feeling that Jim the landlord needs more. So I explored Jim as I would explore a mask. I found a gesture, a sound and a rhythm for him, then began to walk around in his world. I took him through all the steps of discovering his experience and innocence. Once I was satisfied with this exploration, I wrote out everything I saw and felt. I put it all on a big sheet of newsprint, then brought it into the kitchen to Meg. Now she was a ton of ideas to draw from when looking at all the scenes with Jim. I did the same for two other characters. Now that we have the action of the play down, this will help us create a deeper world. By working in this way I am using my skills to their fullest, and so is she. This is now our way of blending Pochinko clown with play writing. My ideas are generated from clown exploration and Meg is using them to inspire her writing.

I am excited to see what happens tomorrow!

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

DAY 9 JUNE 2nd


I need a break from writing, so figured I'd do a recap of today's events!
We started with a great walk along the river...which one I have no idea, but it was lovely. The sun is finally out, so we took advantage to get our blood and ideas flowing.

It was clear that we needed some solo work space time, so before parting we delegated tasks. In the process of doing so, I brought up a point in the script that I was having trouble with. And here began a (somewhat)tense (but great) conversation that led to an amazing solution. Or ideas for a solution.

So we are trying to incorporate Pochinko methods into a script, a script that is not conventionally 'clown'. Although one could argue that nothing is conventional when it come to clown...that being said, we are not creating a piece to be performed in red nose. The red nose being the clown's final mask. But are there other ways to interpret what a mask is? If it's not the nose, could it be a prop or costume piece? Slowly each character that we are creating through our six clown masks and through discussion and God poems each have a distinctive gesture, sound, prop, etc. Are these their masks and can these masks be passed between either of us without losing the character?

A pretty exciting convo to have, raising questions that will be addressed once the script is put together and we begin to see what is really working, what still needs a bit of love, and how to put the whole thing on it's feet. Meg gave the metaphor of 'sewing it all together'.

But I'm jumping ahead of myself, because before we can start adding all those layers, we'd like to have all the components of the script written. That being said, time for me to get back to work!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

The green gob of inspiration!

This green goo made my day! I was so happy to discover frozen edmame at SUPERSTORE yesterday and picked up a package. I also threw in a bunch of fresh mint because I was dreaming of this weird minty mushed edamame that they sell at one of the fish and chip joints in Victoria (Beth and I's old haunting ground.) Today we had set ourselves a few hours to pound out some scenes at the keys but instead of working on the show I ploughed through my cook books looking for a minty pea recipe that I could tamper with. I ended up just screwing around with putting different things in the blender. Bethy asked what I was doing and I said i was making mushy edamame...she starting saying mushy edamame in a strange voice and soon a new character for the show had been borm. "Muschi Edamame, Mayor of Vancouver. Born of the famed Edamame family responsible for the creation and design of the 2010 Olympic mascot "Quatchi." So really the moral is...you should always play with your food! P.S The Recipe turned out too! A very fresh vancouver flavor! Just what I would serve if I lived in a crisp condo with Blonde hardwood and loads of natural light over looking False Creek.
Edamame
Fresh Mint
Salt and Pepper
Bit of Balsamic
Blend and laugh until Muschi!

Inspiration comes from the strangest places

Research

DAY 8 JUNE 1st


Meg is at her desk writing about Mushi Edamamae, the mayor of Vancouver, and his wife Tammi Tempura. We discovered these two characters by messing around in the kitchen. I was laughing so hard I almost peed. I need to take a break, but have a good start on the Chinatown Miss Honey Bun Beauty Pageant. It's been a great day.

We started it off with a big walk to get fresh air and our bodies moving. When we got back, we went to our masks to get into the right frame of mind. I find that I can move through them quite quickly, but listen to each one individually, so with certain masks I stay a bit longer, and some make me so excited that I jump into writing ideas right away. Like the feeling I get is enough. I think when that happens though I need to stay with it a little longer to see where it takes me.

I struggled with feeling Phyllis through one of my masks, but found a way today for her to feel it's emotions. With another mask, I discovered a great gesture for her when she smokes her Popeye cigarettes. So weather it's something huge and deep, or just a simple gesture, the mask exploration every day is providing a ton of material to play around with.

Our creation laboratory



Our masks!