Team Fragment, always.

The day we had worked so hard for had arrived, and we were all so excited. Tech day came and went, and was extremely successful, however with my part being unable to be put to full use it gave me a chance to focus on the proxemics and the choreography of the show.

joe on stage5350

 

Tech day (Odonnell, 2017).

props show day

 

Props galore! (Nixon, 2017).

 

This was very useful as this way I could take on the role of an audience member when I didn’t have dialogue and give movement directions accordingly to others on stage, particularly with the more structured scenes. After having a ‘props day’ at mine and Emily’s house Sunday to finalise some of the more handmade props for our show including the cakes, we all left on a high and ready to show our performance to the people of Lincoln and beyond!

IMG_2066 hannah

The creation of George on props day (Nixon, 2017).

Show day came, and in true style I consumed 3 bananas in the morning, as apparently its supposed to stop you from being sick. With our performance being entirely post dramatic, it has a huge element of self-awareness via the audience and the actors. The world of the show does not exist, as the stage becomes part of reality. This is the common thread we had throughout our show, and was highlighted through each fragmented scene. During the show of Exit This Way, we gained laughs in places we didn’t expect, which was incredibly heart-warming and made me feel like all our blood sweat and tears were worth it. The comedic approach we took was popular, and the DIY theatre influence we used throughout our piece was very well received. Yes, a few minor hitches happened, but if I’m honest they added to the comedic effect and whilst on stage we collectively realised this and played on it.

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                Game show featuring cake (Odonnell, 2017).                                                                                    Unenthusiastic Ella (Odonnell, 2017).

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Ella on her bike (Odonnell, 2017).

 

To continue this show on tour past the depths of Lincoln University, we would need to seriously consider our staging and props. The amount of props we have would be unmanageable to take on tour. However, with the vast majority of these being homemade and and having a DIY feel, these could be easily remade in a day and throw away to and from each place. We would need to gain funding from Arts Council, and in order to do so, their policy regarding sustainability would result in us needing to do this to achieve funding.

Even though the Banana technique did not work, and I was in the most pain I think I’ve ever been in, I’d do it all again in a heartbreak for these 9 talented, incredible individuals. Fragment Theatre Company has given me the best memories of my final module at Lincoln University, and for that I will be forever thankful. This is only the beginning. ‘What a crazy few months. There’s been laughter, arguments, tears, fun, water fights at 2pm, food, alcohol, a missing pip, props, injuries and bloody hard work but what we’ve achieved will never been forgotten. I am so honoured to have shared the stage with such amazing people and to have been guided through by an outstanding production team. I love you all, always’ (Jarrold, 2017).

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                                                     Fragment can celebrate too (Chattaway, 2017).                             Cake for likes (Nixon, 2017).

groupthe beginning of Fragment (Rowan 2017).

FRAGMENTFlyer

Fragment poster (Nixon, 2017).

 

Work cited:

Artscouncil.org.uk. (2017). Our mission and strategy | Arts Council England. [online] Available at: http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/about-us/our-mission-and-strategy [Accessed 29 May 2017].

Chattaway, A. (2017) Fragment can celebrate too.

Jarrold, R. (2017).

Nixon, E. (2017) Cake for likes.

Nixon, E. (2017). Props galore!

Nixon, E. (2017) The creation of George on props day.

Nixon, E. (2017) Fragment poster.

Odonnell, S. (2017). Game show featuring cake.

Odonnell, S. (2017). Ella on her bike.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Tech day.

Odonnell, S. (2017). Unenthusiastic Ella.

Rowan, B. (2017). The beginning of Fragment.

My role as props manager

Throughout the process I have been undertaking my role as props manager.

This has included sourcing and purchasing props, helping with the aesthetic choices of these, as well as arranging a props day. From reasonably early on in the process it became apparent that it was going to be a very props heavy show, something that made my job harder but also much more interesting.

As soon as the script was finalised I quickly took to sourcing the props. I initially found out what elements we already had between us, in order to save budget, before then moving on to sources such as Ebay, Amazon and Poundland. Luckily, despite the sheer amount of props we needed these were affordable, due largely to the makeshift element of our show. This meant that props could be handmade or purchased from cheaper locations.

This makeshift aspect to the show links into the post dramatic element of the show. Post dramatic theatre is ‘when the progression of a story with its internal logic no longer forms the centre, when composition is no longer experienced as an organising quality but as an artificially imposed ‘manufacture’ (Lehmann, 26). This links into the aesthetics and hence props of the show as they need to look ‘artificially manufatured’. In other words we can’t invest in the props as they are not ‘real’ in the logical sense, and both cast and audience are aware of this. This in no way means a lack of effort into their creation, but more that they don’t need to look naturalistic.

On the 6th of May, myself and our stage manager Lucy had a meeting to begin the props list. We firstly made sure we ticked off everything we already possessed to determine those aspects still needed, before making an organised list. This proved to be slightly challenging as the props needed changing throughout the rehearsal process as ideas and stylistic choices changed.


 

Props day

Closer to the show date I organised a props day, as we needed to utilise all of our skills to make the props for the childhood and writing scenes. I therefore did multiple trips to Homebase and collected as much cardboard as I could carry to make these props with. However, on the day itself it soon became apparent that we would need even more! Our assistant director Brodie therefore kindly offered to drive down to collect more supplies. After many hours, cutting, painting and resulting mess, the props were complete allowing me to return home and finally complete the props list.

 

IMG_2066 hannah                         IMG_2067 ben                IMG_2068

 

Creation of the ‘hideous beast’ (Strickland, 2017)      Painting the Solar System (Strickland, 2017)       Amidst the mess (Strickland, 2017)


 

 Show day

On the day of the performance my job was to pre-set the props to where they needed to be located as well as to complete the final checks before the show. This was however very challenging due to the sheer number of props and preset locations! But with everyone helping to check that his or her props were in the right places alongside myself, the props were eventually pre-set successfully.

props show day

Show day props (Workman, 2017)

Citations

Strickland, P. (2017) Creation of the ‘hideous beast’.

Strickland, P. (2017) Painting the solar system.

Strickland, P. (2017) Amidst the mess.

Workman, L. (2017) Show day props.

Fragment Theatre Company Forever

I had so much fun performing in Exit This Way as I had never performed in a postdramatic or meta-physical show before. Postdramatic theatre “focuses on the deconstruction of a dramatic character … [it] also examines new work in its relation to the breakdown of dramatic conventions” (Lehmann, 2010, 1). Our show was postdramatic as we did not have investable characters. When I became Rosie the audience visually witnessed the change of me being Emily and then becoming Rosie by putting on a coat. The audience could not believe I was Rosie as I had just been myself seconds before. Our show was based on blurring the lines between process and product. In the performance we constantly broke the fourth wall as to highlight that escapism is something you can only do for short sections of time. This could be witnessed when I as Emily told Laura’s fairy-tale. It began as a lovely story with beautiful imagery and viscerally stunning but ended abruptly when Hannah and I broke away from the imagery to give the harsh reality.

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Once Upon a Time (Odonnell, 2017)

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Laura in her Castle (Odonnell, 2017)

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They took her far far away (Odonnell, 2017)

My favourite scene to perform in was the fantasy section. Show night was the first night I did not laugh the whole way through it. I was having the best time on that stage. When devising and rehearsing that scene I was slightly worried that the audience wouldn’t get our sense of humour. Oh how I was wrong! Hearing the laughs from the audience added a new dimension to the performance due to the fact that the comedy was amplified by the energy.

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When a Damsel is in Distress (Odonnell, 2017)

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                                  I can’t see (Odonnell, 2017)

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    Woah! It’s Cheryl the Alien (Odonnell, 2017)

What made our performance successful was the connection the company had together on stage. Our show was by no means perfect and had its mistakes but it didn’t matter. It added to the comedy but also I knew that the other members of Fragment on stage with me had my back. Although we weren’t an improvisation group we could improvise on the spot to cover for a fellow actor when an issue arrived. This made our performance live and real in the moment.

The future of Fragment Theatre Company is feasible but would need some changes. To be able to tour around England we would need to downscale our set as it would be too expensive to hire and transport scaffolding from venue to venue. This would not be a problem as we can adapt more towards the DIY theatre aesthetic which can already be seen within the props for our show. I would also choose to market our show with a new poster which promoted us a comedy.

IMG_2068

Props Day (Jarrold, 2017)

IMG_2066 hannah

          The making of George (Jarrold, 2017)

IMG_2067 ben

Ben working hard! (Jarrold, 2017)

  Working in Fragment Theatre Company has been an absolute pleasure. I have worked with nine talented people and learnt so much about myself and theatre from them. Now to look forward to the future. This is not goodbye Fragment Theatre Company but a see you later!

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 Fragment Theatre Company (Odonnell, 2017)

Works Cited:

Jarrold, R. (2017) Ben working hard!

Jarrold, R. (2017) Props day.

Jarrold, R. (2017) The making of George.

Lehmann, H. (2010). Postdramatic theatre. 1st edition. London: Routledge.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Fragment Theatre Company Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) I can’t see! Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Laura in her castle! Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Once upon a time. Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) They took her far far away. Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) When a damsel is in distress. Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Woah! It’s Cheryl the alien. Lincoln: SO Photography.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Postdramatic Theatre

In her introduction to Hans Lehmann’s Postdramatic Theatre, Karen Jὓrs –Munby states that Postdramaticism is not about forgetting the dramatic history that preceded it but rather about “subjecting the traditional relationship of theatre to drama to deconstruction” (Lehmann, 2006, 4). In this deconstruction, the preconceived notion that the text is the most important thing and everything else is secondary is challenged along with the Aristotelian dramatic structure. The script and text becomes secondary to the visuals and the creative process and there is a sense of self-awareness from both the actors and the audience that they are partaking/watching a performance.

Within Exit This Way, we adopted this Postdramatic style through adopting a collaborative devising process early on and creating the material as a cast. This is where my role as facilitator came in. Having completed devising material with the cast, I would then take this material to the writers and together we would refine and sort through this material into creating some form of script so that the actors could learn their lines. Below are two examples of when this facilitating was necessary.

diary

 

Example of Diary Entry for Creation of Charlie’s Character (Turner, 2017)

  • Fairy tale – placed a Dictaphone in the middle of the room and asked the cast to, one by one, create a story about a little princess whilst using the theme of debt to mold the story line. This recording was then taken by the creative and edited into the final fairy tale which was seen in the show. The ‘script’ came secondary to the devising process, whereas with a conventional play the script comes first and everything follows that.
  • Diary entries – Asked the cast to go away by themselves and write a diary entry as Charlie (eventually became Alice) about things that are happening in her life that might mean she needs to escape. Originally this escape was through a agony aunt persona but this transformed through the process into escaping through novels. The writers then took this material which assisted in them creating character profiles for Charlie/Alice.

I feel like in my role as director I could have placed more faith in my cast to deliver material earlier on in the process. Eventually, as detailed above, we were able to generate some interesting material but this could have been achieved earlier had I placed that faith in the cast to commit.

The Postdramatic element was further explored through the distinction between character and actor. Elinor Fuchs summarizes this with her notion of Death of a Character in which the audience do not invest in the characters as they would in a naturalistic performance. We cemented this through wearing our fragment tops during the sections of the performance when the actors were on stage as themselves. Having the actors sat as themselves throughout the show was a technique that I learnt from Alexander Kelly frequently used by Forced Entertainment which he calls ‘off/on’ in which the audience can see the actors throughout the show so that when the actors become the characters, they were very aware the characters were not ‘real’. We did this in plain sight of the audience with a minimal costume change so that the character was not one that was invested in. The characters wearing their production role tops was an additional reminder to the audience that the cast at the back were themselves not characters.

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Three of the cast members in their Fragment tops (Odonnell, 2017)

One instance in the show where the audience could easily becoming engrossed in the story and the world was the fairy tale shadow section. I made sure however that there was an instant snap out of this ‘world’ by the style which the fairy tale narrators said their lines. They went from reading the actual fairy tale in a whimsical, childlike voice to snapping into a direct address with the audience during their lines “This is usually the point in a fairy tale when something magical would happen…” (Fragment Theatre Company, 2017) along with the sheet dropping, thus breaking the audience out of the investment in the character/scene.

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Section of the Fairy Tale Shadow Work (Odonnell, 2017)

Rather than showing a polished final product I wanted to highlight the importance of the process in Postdramatic theatre. I thought this could be possible allowing the audience to see the creation of one of our characters in a similar way to how she was created during the process. The character of Laura was created by doing a mind map on a whiteboard +with branches of Laura’s hates, loves, relationships and other obscure information. One by one the cast members added to the various branches until the map was complete (See image below).

I wanted the audience to gain an insight into this creation process rather than showing them the complete character, this also in turn added to the distinction between the actor and the character that she was about to ‘play’. The ‘creation of Laura’ on stage consisted of four of the actors at microphones stating the various facts about Laura, creating a make shift aesthetic and allowing the audience to see into the process of how the character was made.

laura-character-creating _MG_4827

Creation of Laura Mind Map (Turner, 2017) which was portrayed in the show through cast members at the mic (Odonnell, 2017)

Works Cited:

Lehmann, H,T. (2006) Postdramatic Theatre. Oxon, Routledge.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Three of the Cast Members in their Fragment Tops. Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Section of the Fairy Tale Shadow Work. Lincoln: SO Photography.

Odonnell, S. (2017) Cast Members at the Mic. Lincoln: SO Photography.

Turner, J. (2017) Example of Diary Entry for the Creation of Charlie’s Character.

Turner, J. (2017) Creation of Laura Mind Map.

‘Started From The Bottom Now We’re Here’ (Drake, 2013).

Tech Day

Today was the day we have all been waiting for… TECH DAY!! Today was the day I was given the pleasure to watch my designs change from a bunch of words and pictures on a mood bored, to actually lighting up the stage. I had my script and all ten mood boards with me, so I was able to show the technician exactly what I wanted, and thanks to an extremely organised Stage Manager (Lucy Workman), I was given the exact ques on when the lights should change from wash to wash; This off course made my life and the technicians a whole lot easier (Shout Out to Lucy Workman).

I have to admit, thanks to our lighting technician Alex, programming the lights was not as challenging as what I expected. The show Exit This Way, was based in a Gameshow, and my aim was to create an exciting, colourful and overdramatic lighting show, to cushion the seriousness within the text. It is always interesting hearing a sinister story in a family friendly atmosphere. The Gameshow mood bored can be found on https://fragmenttc.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/technical/ under Lighting Mood Board – Design 3 – Gameshow Design, the same place mentioned in previous posts.

(Gameshow Lighting Show from Rowan, 2017)

The video attached, is a video of the Gameshow Lighting Show, transitioning into the Clinical White Wash, which is discussed on the same link as the Gameshow mood bored above, but under Lighting Mood Board – Design 5 – Food Scene. During the programming on the Gameshow Lighting Show, we experimented with the different colours involved and the speed of the lighting, as during the show there is 3 different lighting shows: The Gameshow Lighting Show, The Nightclub Lighting Show and the Drag Queen Lighting Show (Lighting Mood Board – Design 6 Drag Design). In the show, each looked similar in regards to all three being extremely colourful and dramatic, however, each possessed a unique colour swash. The Gameshow Lighting Show is a mixture of: Red, Yellow, Pink, Green, Orange, Purple and Blue, whereas The Nightclub Lighting Show was a mixture of White, Blue and Green, and The Drag Queen Lighting Show was a crossover of Pink, Purple and White.

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(Drag Show Grace Kelly from Odonnell, 2017)

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(Drag Show Love for Brodie from Odonnell, 2017)

Help me I’m Poor

          If we were given the opportunity to develop Exit This Way and become a professional Theatre Company outside of education, we would need to apply for funding from the well-known Arts Council England; “Arts Council England champions, develops and invests in artistic and cultural experiences to enrich people’s lives” (GOV.uk, 2017). With the funding from Arts Council England, in regards to lighting, we would be able to hire out a portable disco ball, which is used in the Writing Section – Space Scene. Funding from Arts Council England would also support the transportation of lights between different venues, as if we were to reach a venue which did not support the technical needs we would want for our show, for example the disco ball, we would need to purchase and bring our own, in order for our show to continue from venue to venue.

Works Cited:

Drake. (2013) Started From The Bottom. [CD track] 2 mins. 53 secs.  Nothing Was the Same. OVO: Canada.

GOV.uk. (2017) Arts Council England [online] Available from https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/arts-council-england.

Jueves. (2013) Floor Spotlights.

Odonnell. (2017) Drag Show Grace Kelly.

Odonnell. (2017) Drag Show Love for Brodie.

Rowan, B. (2017) Lighting Mood Board – Design 3 – Gameshow Design [online] Available from https://fragmenttc.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/technical/ [Accessed 28 May 2017].

Rowan, B. (2017) Mood Board – Design 5 – Food Scene [online] Available from https://fragmenttc.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/technical/ [Accessed 28 May 2017].

Rowan, B. (2017) Lighting Mood Board – Design 6 Drag Design [online] Available from https://fragmenttc.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/technical/ [Accessed 28 May 2017].

Rowan, B. (2017) Gameshow Lighting Show.