Showing posts with label play. Show all posts
Showing posts with label play. Show all posts

Friday, February 06, 2009

Sam Shepard's Ages of the Moon coming to the Abbey Theatre

David from Dublin's Abbey Theatre was in touch to let me know about the new Sam Shepard play, Ages of the Moon which has its world premiere in March.

Written especially for leads Seán McGinley and Oscar-nominated Stephen Rea, this is:

"a gruffly poignant and darkly funny play. Byron and Ames are old friends, re-united by mutual desperation. Over whiskey on a hot summer’s night, they sit, reflect and bicker until fifty years of love, friendship and rivalry are put to the test at the barrel of a gun."
Sam Shepard is a Pulizer prize-winning US writer, director and actor. His 2007 play, Kicking A Dead Horse premiered in the Abbey. It was written by Shepard for Stephen Rea, and then went on to tour to New York and London. Ages of the Moon follows the Abbey's other sell-out productions of Shepard's Fool for Love (2008) and True West (2006)

Fiach Mac Congail, Jimmy Fay, Sean McGinley and Stephen Rea were interviewed in a short video about the play:



The play opens Tuesday 3 March, with previews February 24 to 28 and March 2 and it runs to April 4. Booking is now open on Dublin 01 87 87 222 or via AbbeyTheatre.ie

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

How many miles to Basra: interview with Colin Teevan



A stage empty but for ten chairs. Actors walk out, taking their seats. No costumes, no props, just scripts and water. The audience is here for a play reading of Colin Teevan's play "How Many Miles to Basra?", one of the Abbey Theatre's series of talks and readings in their Bearing Witness season, a celebration of 60 years of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

The play, about "Four soldiers take a chance to redeem themselves after an accidental killing, while their journalist companion learns that the nature of truth is always distorted by the media" deals with the Iraq war and the uneven relationship between the media, politicians and the armed forces. At times comedic, at others poignant and disturbing, we are treated in two acts to a provoking look at the reality of today.



Can ten actors do a play with such important undertones and aspirations justice through just a reading? Yes, yes they can. Director Conall Morrison and his cast took the audience from the offices of BBC radio to Iraq and back again through convincing passion, accents, emotions and a storyline that resonates with all of us. It's hardly surprising, given the prevalent question - did the British government lie about Iraq? Was the weapons dossier sexed up? What was it like in Iraq for the soldiers there?

Through the eyes of Freddie, Stewart, Geordie and Dangermouse, four soldiers based in Iraq, completely bored by their station, the answer is "boring". We're introduced to them through reporter Ursula Gunn, there to find a story, a woman racked with guilt over her brother's death in a RUC shooting years before. When action happens, it happens in a big way, disturbing the routine of all involved and creating a situation none of them could envisage and a reality the audience cannot ignore.









"That's not how it happened" "What are we doing here?" "Why does this Iraqi have so much money? Why shouldn't an Iraqi have 400 dollars?" "I don't feel anything for him, I hate him". "That's what we're doing here, trying to liberate them from living like this. It's what we're here to do, leave the country a better place" "The war is over, according to my editor" "Tell your editor I would gladly swap houses with him. "I wish the world would stop trying to help Iraqis" "To remove this monster Saddam who you made to keep us in our place, you have bombed us, destroyed us. You have reduced this country to rags, then you call us ragheads".

The script is harsh and unforgiving, brutal in its assault on the lies perpetrated, constantly seeking the truth of the situation and inviting us to do the same.

I sat with playwright Colin Teevan after the performance to find out more about him and this play. Colin, from Dublin, is a playwright and translator, whose work has been produced by theatres including the National Theatre, London, the Young Vic, the National Theatre of Scotland, The Abbey Theatre and off Broadway. He has lectured widely in Britain, Europe and the US on theatre and writing for the stage and is currently Lecturer in Creative Writing at the University of London.


(Please excuse the sound and lighting - still practising on the N95!)

Reading and acting in How Many Miles to Basra? were Roisín Coyle, Fiona Bell, John Cronin, Anthony Brophy, Ronan Leahy, Barry John O' Connor, Raad Rawi, Christopher Simpson, Janice Byrne and Ali White.

The Bearing Witness series continues this week with talks and readings address how Irish people bear witness to international events through art, debate, and politics.

Wednesday 17 and Friday 19 December sees two more readings. Returns by Joshua Casteel tells of Torture, guilt and post traumatic stress are explored through the memories of James and his companions, who have returned from Iraq only to find they cannot escape their past. Zero Hour by Tea Alagic is a biographical piece of how the playwright is just another student – until the cracks in her society are exposed by civil war. Zero Hour parallels her journey into adulthood with the transition of Bosnia from war to peace.

All readings take place at the Peacock Theatre at 2pm. Tickets €4/€2 concession each, and booking is on 01 87 87 222. The Abbey Website is here, and you can become a fan on Facebook here.

Sunday, June 08, 2008

Exploring the Antarctic with Aidan Dooley

The stage is illuminated only by soft ambient lighting. As people take their seats, accompanied by the howl of a fierce northern wind over the speakers, they all take a glance at the assorted parts of the set - a covering spread out, on which lays a stool, a bag, a pipe, a blanket and, more tellingly, a ladder and sled.

It darkens, the wind sound falls with the murmur of the audience as a character comes into view carrying a lantern. He sits on the stool and leans over to grab his pipe. He sits, surveys the audience and in a broad Kerry accent greets us with "God fare you, you're looking well".

Tom Crean, Antarctic Explorer is on stage.



Tom Crean (1877 – 1938) the intrepid Antarctic explorer and for a long time one of Ireland’s unsung heroes served with both Scott and Shackleton and survived three famous expeditions: Discovery, (1901 – 1904); Terra Nova (1910 – 1913); and Endurance (1914 - 1916).

Despite adventures including an amazing 36 mile, solitary rescue trek to base camp during one expedition, described by Antarctic historians as “the finest feat of individual heroism from the entire age of exploration”, Crean returned to his native Kerry an extremely modest man.

There is no evidence of Crean giving any interviews to the press. Wikipedia says this may have been "because Kerry had long been a centre for Irish nationalism, and it would have been inappropriate for an Irishman to speak of his achievements on British polar expeditions."



Crean slipped into relative anonymity on his return, managing a small public house in Annascaul. The play gives this quote:

"Sure it's my own fault. I never kept a diary. No diary, no record. Sure haven't I more things to be doing at 30 degrees under than keeping a fecking diary?"
Aidan Dooley thinks it's a mixture of the two, and this one man play, written and performed by him articulates this. While the written word was important - indeed that's how Shackleton and Scott both remained in people's memories, through memoirs and articles - Aidan thinks Crean may have been content to stay below the notice of both authorities and "rebels" and instead regale the town's children with tales of his exploits.



Sitting in the theatre, that's exactly where I feel I am. Sitting in a circle at the feet of this man in Co Kerry as he brings me and everyone around me with him through the Antarctic, from leaving his father's farm and lying about his age to get into the Navy to returning home to his wife some 25 years later.

It is an epic journey over mountains of ice, traversing miles of harsh Antarctic terrain, across 800 miles of the South Atlantic in a 21 foot lifeboat and the rescue of comrades and we are there every step of the way, brought by one man and his words.

These words evoke strong images, the story telling technique one that is conspicuously absent ordinarily in bringing history to life. This is more than a story about some historical figure. Tom Crean becomes a person you'd want to know.
‘By the end, you almost believed you’d been there too, so perfectly does Dooley conjure the jaw dropping battles against the elements and perilous hazards of the frozen south. It’s enough to make your hair stand on end.’
The Daily Telegraph
I sat with Aidan after his show's recent run in the Olympia Theatre to learn a bit more.


"The show evolves every time I do it. I don't have this script written down - I'll try it differently all the time. Small things, something unique - a different line or phrase. I'll see how the audience reacts - sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. If it doesn't work, it comes out."
So our conversation begins. We're in Maureen's bar, surrounded by pictures of the many celebrities and personalities who have been through these doors and as Aidan relaxes after the last night of a successful run, he shares his own story with me.

Aidan is from Galway. He trained at the Guilford School of Acting and works as a freelance actor, writer and director in London. He lives in Rochester with his wife Miriam and two children Liam and Nancy.

The show originated from a fifteen minute Living History performance on Tom Crean created for London’s National Maritime Museum’s Antarctic Exhibition ‘South’ in 2001.



Following the publication of the book ‘Unsung Hero’ by Michael Smith the show was developed over a two year period with several small tryout performances in Ireland, including a performance in front of Crean’s remaining family at the Tom Crean Society’s memorial in Annascaul.

On performing the show over and over:
"No two shows are the same. As I said, each show has different lines. No ad lib works the second time. It's about working things into each performance.

When I walk out on stage it becomes an imaginary place and I walk into that. The experience depends totally on the performance area and the people I'm performing to. There are different reactions and experiences all the time."


On the Antarctic:
I've never been. I don't read about it any more. The more I read about it, the more I want to put into the show. As the show has evolved I've realised it's more about what you take out than you put in.

Choosing the lines, the stories, the phrases is all part of it. How the audience reacts - it all dictates how Tom will be portrayed. It's really his story and I feel privileged to be the one telling it.
On researching the show:
"He was a fascinating character - both in how he was on the journeys and how he behaved when he came home. I imagine him happy just talking to the local children, showing them the bits of equipment, describing the adventures. That's how I tell the tale. It's not a set piece of drama, it's a gather around story."
Indeed that seems to play out during the play as he addresses the audience at times saying "Are ye out there at all. Is there anyone there?" The audience are an important part of the production as it's their reaction that dictates the mood, tone and progression of the story.



The best audience reaction:
"The one that springs to mind is Castlebar, Mayo a couple of years ago. There's a part in the play where Tom is calling down a glacier crevasse to gauge its depth - it's a long call of "Helllloooooooooo" and from the audience came the echo "Hellloooooooooooo".

I was laughing so much with the audience I had to stop the performance, turn and tell them of all the places I'd been, this was the first time that had ever happened."
The play premiered in August 2003 at the New York International Fringe Festival. Between 2004 and 2006 the show toured across Ireland and the USA including a Fringe First Award at the 2006 Edinburgh Fringe First Festival. It's also been to Adelaide, Florida, Malta, Dubai, New York, Geneva, and London's West End this year where it was awarded the Time Out Critics Choice. It's been in Dublin's Olympia and is now coming to the Gaiety Theatre.



If it hadn't been for plays like this, the story of this gentle courageous man would never have reached as many audiences. There's no hyperbole, no dramatics - the story follows its own truth and affects the audience in a way personal to each and every person there.
‘An unparalleled portrayal. It isn’t the destination; it is the journey. Mr Dooley’s effort so vividly embodies that maxim you almost believe it.’
New York Times
We finish our chat discussing his involvement with the Play On Words theatre group in the UK, of which he's a director and founding member. Bringing Shakespeare to schools and summer camps, Aidan delights in this fifteen year old group making the plays accessible to young people. It has also diversified to incorporate performances on science and history, with Tudor, Victorian and WW2 shows for primary school students.

Aidan also has a new blog on his his website. He'd really like it if you went over to say hello. Find out more on Tom Crean on the official website here.

Tom Crean: Antarctic Explorer is running in Dublin's Gaiety Theatre from Thursday 12 to Saturday 21 June. Tickets start at €21 and are available from Ticketmaster.

I'm going again. If you haven't been I'd highly, highly recommend it. :)

(Indeed it's the whole experience - the play, the story, the chat with Aidan that cements my own thoughts on blogging as storytelling - why this medium is now the way we not only share what's going on, but our passions for it, why we're interested and why we communicate our stories. As great as the internet is, it's unlikely to replace the power of a show like this, but can complement it and bring our readers on the journey with us.)