Monday, May 4, 2015

Peanut Gallery #1: Tabling: The Podcast “Macbeth” Introduction, Act 1, 2, &3

“I have no spur
To prick the sides of my intent, but onlyVaulting ambition, which o'erleaps itselfAnd falls on the other.” – Macbeth Macbeth. I.vii
*Disclaimer: I do not own the rights to Tabling: The Podcast or any of the intellectual property therein. Please cite them accordingly when using their material and be aware this review may contain spoilers. All endorsements are freely given.*


Tabling: The Podcast is the audio study guide every student has never known they wanted for studying the classics of the stage. This new show was started by The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts (LAMDA) graduates Nicholas Koy Santillo, with co-producers Ariana Karp, Brittany Chandler, and Emily Ota. Tabling seeks to fill in the gaps where traditional study guides or footnotes fall short and “give a glimpse into the work of the Performing Arts”. The show is structured like a traditional round table discussion with a twist. From their official facebook page, they explain in their short description:

Tabling is a podcast where we do "Table work," which is the work done in a theatrical production before the actors get up on their feet for rehearsals.

Short and sweet and to the point. For those uninitiated, traditional table work comprises of reading the play and discussing a wide variety of subjects connected to the show. This ranges from character arcs, textual analysis, greater social themes, to authorial intent, repeating motifs, and production choices etc. It’s where actors, directors, and designers begin to bring their individual visions together to create the world of the play. It’s exciting; it’s passionate; it’s very wonderfully nerdy in the most positive use of that word.  

Tabling: The Podcast takes this theatrical table work structure and applies it to their weekly Monday shows. For each play discussed a core group of four theatrical artists are elected to read and discuss the material. One of which acts as a “director” for the play, so they lead the discussion for all episodes of discussion including the introduction. Their readings of the plays are in separate podcasts from the discussion episodes, for easy reference, but both are found on their website.

For “Macbeth”, Ariana Karp leads the discussion as the director. Ariana is a woman of many accomplishments including multiple Off-Broadway shows and, as I am convinced, more classical theatre than Sir Ian Mckellan, Sir John Barton, and Sir Patrick Stewart combined. You can currently watch her work in Stairwell Theatre’s production of As You Like It this May.

Joining over the course of “Macbeth” are a multi-talented team including executive producer Nicholas Koy Santillo (the originator of the idea behind Tabling), fellow co-producers Emily Ota and Brittany Chandler, and guest star Samantha Blinn. All are LAMDA 2014 graduates and working theatre artists in the industry, particularly based in New York and London. Check out Emily Ota who just joined the Conservatory Company at the Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival in upstate New York this summer. In addition Brittany and Samantha will be seen in FringeNYC - The New York International Fringe Festival in a remount of their heart pounding London production of Lope de Vega’s classic Fuente Ovejuna originally directed by critically acclaimed international director Will Oldroyd.

Basically, you can’t swing a cat in this recording studio without hitting an incredibly brilliant and well credentialed classical theatre artist. Also known as, my favorite kind of people.

So far each discussion episode averages to be a little over an hour each and consist of debating the structure of the play and then narrows the focus to each of the individual acts and scenes. The creative team works chronologically to address each event in the play and bring fresh insight to the 400 year old play. With a diverse set of perspectives the play is given new life from a textual basis and illuminated by personal experience.

My favorite discussions so far in their broadcast revolve around the controversial character of Lady Macbeth and her relationship to the universe of the play, in particular to her husband. Without spoiling some of the discussion, a key point is made in the introduction episode about how much in love the titular characters are supposed to be and how that colors the rest of the play. Age of actors who portray the couple are also discussed, a point of contention within the theatre community as a traditional age has been attached to these roles. A point on which I have several loud opinions and will elaborate in a different post, for if I were to start now we’d never end the review.

Other highlights include a lively dialogue about the witches and their function within the play, personal anecdotes about moments from favorite productions seen or worked on by the team, and connections drawn between the play and its historical context both at the time of writing and in modern productions.


Tabling: The Podcast is in it’s infancy as a podcast, but has the appeal to speak to a wide audience of theatre professionals, scholars, and those who enjoy intellectual discussion. I for one am excited to listen to the rest of their “Macbeth” episodes (Act IV was just released today and Act V will be released soon) and whatever plays they choose to tackle next. 

Check out the links below:

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Relaunch (Part Duex...err Tois... I think)

(Insert awkward rambling about relaunching the blog here)



Now that that's out of the way, on to the fun!

I'm hoping with this relaunch we can see the blog update 3 times a week (ambitious I know). In those updates I'm hoping to start different talking points to keep the blog relevant and give me things to talk about. So far I have:

Speak the Speech: These sections will be where I take a famous speech or character from the classical repertoire (Shakespeare, Webster, Moliere, and for argument's sake Chekhov etc.) and break it down in various ways that would be helpful for the performer. Completely nerdy I know but I love it and textual work and I want to share. 

20 Questions (or Is it an Art, a Craft, or a Business?): This will be where I get to talk about the weirdness that is the entertainment business. Headshots, scripts, auditions, callbacks, grad school... It's all up for discussion. I'll pull from my own personal experience as well as the community.

Sitcom Situations: Those beautiful brief shining moments of comedy in my life as it speeds towards what I'm convinced is a Shakespearean Tragedy. This time, it's personal...

Peanut Gallery: Reviews about the things that interest me. Shows, books, movies, ideas, cultural phenomenon etc. Hopefully hilarious, definitely honest. 

Performance Potpourri: Anything else I'm working on that doesn't fall into these neat categories. Ranging from filming Batman to writing a scifi series, it all ends up here. 

Here's the fun part of how I envision this going forward, this is going to be a multimedia blog. There will be videos, articles, podcasts, guest appearances, pictures, jumbo trons, sky writing... 



... Ok maybe not the last two, but you get my point. So buckle up everyone, Something Shakespearean is back!

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

From beneath the Tower




“O brave new world with such people in it!” – Miranda The Tempest

Personal observations I have had in the 48 hours since commencing my biggest adventure yet:

  1. Don’t fly economy internationally unless your grandest wish is to feel like a sardine.
  2. When a flight offers free booze there will be people who abuse the privilege.
  3. Having you’re phone enabled to call internationally and actually having a signal while there are two entirely different things.
  4. Jet lag is amazingly easy to get over if you just don’t sleep on the plane ride over.
  5. 5 locks to get from the street to the inside of your flat is normal here.
  6. I cannot operate those said locks while jetlagged despite my past occupation of being part time locksmith.
  7. You couldn’t pay me enough to drive through these streets.
  8. London resembles a last minute art project, building wise. Everything’s sort of hodgepodged together with hopes that the teacher is paying more attention to the grand idea then the details.
  9. People actually use the term knackered here. One day I hope someone will tell me something and it won’t have to pass through three different filters for me to get their actual meaning.
  10. The fashion here ranges from posh designer labels to hobo chic with the average Londoner looking like they dressed in the dark. Most are successful, but the ones that aren’t are really fascinating.
  11. The tube is actually fairly easy to navigate OR getting lost on the subway so much in New York is finally working in my favor.
  12. Original Victorian hard wood floors are cold in the morning.
  13. The cemetery on the way to school looks like the one out of a Muppet Christmas Carol. I half expected Michael Caine to be wandering around with Gonzo and Rizzo.
  14. Hasn’t rained a drop since I’ve landed.
  15. No matter where you go in the world, there will always be a starbucks.
.

.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

I'd rather be flying a TARDIS



“Leap and the net will appear” – Robin Williams The Crazy Ones


Jet setting is hard work, y’all. I’m writing this while sitting in the San Francisco Airport about an hour an a half before boarding my 12 hour flight to London, England where I will have a cab waiting to whisk me away to my wonderful new flat and I will meet a unicorn on the way who will introduce me to Robert Downey Jr. (Who would just so happen to be in London at the time) and we would have amazing adventures (Me, Rob, and the unicorn) and it will be epic….

Ok, so I may or may not be exaggerating the adventure that is my life…. I have to go through customs first after all. And we all know customs won’t let you take delusions of grandeur over international borders. 

 
Really though I’m sitting here, desperately charging all of my electronics in hopes they won’t die on the flight, trying to let it sink in. I have been an emotional lightening rod since Wednesday. I got weepy at the thought that I drove 1-84 for the last time in a long while today. I HATE I-84 and its teeth gritting, foam at corner of mouth inducing traffic, and yet there I was in the front seat with tears falling down my face. 

My life has been full of serious “goodbye”, “see you later”, “go knock ‘em dead”’s for about two weeks now and it’s coming home to roosts. I’ve cried more in the last two weeks then the last 4 years and that’s saying something because I graduated from undergrad only a year ago.

On the other hand, I’m so incredibly excited. I have a hard time keeping still as my body so desperately aches to be there already! I’ve been waiting since February to go and do and dare. Now that I get to… Now that I am, I find myself tripping over my own two feet, which shouldn’t be surprising if you know me. 

 
It brings me back to one of the first lessons I learned in view pointing as an actor. For those not in the know viewpoints (In a really unfair brief summary) is about learning and building movement performances as an ensemble that requires complete openness to environmental and interpersonal cues. The hardest part of a viewpoint exercise is… the beginning. Because how do you make an ensemble piece if one person starts it? Eventually our professor told us to stop thinking and to “go before you’re ready”. 

Now I know he was quoting his mentors, but that’s really the life lesson I’m taking with me right now. This next year for me is about being open to lessons. Lessons I’ll love. Lessons I’ll hate. I have no idea what I’m in for this year besides what I’ve read. 

Am I scared? Undoubtedly.

Am I in for the ride of a life time? Absolutely.

Am I going to hate it so much at times I will want to quit? Goes without saying, really.

Will that stop me? I’d like to see them try.

I’m going before I’m ready. I’m jumping on the count of 3… Ok... 1…2…

 
…3…

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Don't let the venn diagram get you down


When you are content to be simply yourself and don't compare or compete, everybody will respect you.” - Lao Tzu 



The biggest pratfall to fall into as an actor is in comparing yourself with your peers. It is the surefire trap I walk into again and again, and the industry is set up so these little mines are everywhere. From who you train with to who you meet in the audition room to people you probably will never meet or work with in your life. The temptation to compare your life path that those that surround you is so overwhelming that you could be doing it even unconsciously. 

Example: I watched the Oscars about a week ago, like most other young women without a date on a Sunday night. 


I have never wanted I man purely for his looks but if the shoe fits...

I watched Jennifer Lawrence win her Oscar for her performance in Silver Linings Playbook, and only on her second nomination. She is 22. The exact same age as me. In fact she is ONLY a month older than me. 


I’ll let that sink in for a minute. I could very easily throw a hissy fit about how life is unfair and how I could give just as engaging or fun a performance as her if given the chance (Hint: I did). But here’s the thing, Jennifer Lawrence and I are on completely different career paths. I mean, would I like to win an Oscar? Yeah! But do I have the film experience she has? Not yet. 

On the other hand would you ever catch Jennifer spouting Shakespeare both onstage and in vineyards and such? More than likely not. Would she like to give it a try? I can’t honestly say… But I would pay good money to see her give it a try. 


Welcome to my world...

The point? I’ve used Jennifer as an unfair example, but the point remains the same. There are times when I get really sad and depressed when I try to compare myself to those around me. Those that I went through my sequence with. Those whom I’ve met though my various auditions. Even people who are NOT actors, like at all. I’m talking people I see at the grocery store. THE DEEP FUNK CAN GO THAT PETTY PEOPLE!
To combat this though, some very important people have kept my head on straight. They have pointed me back to the work that I am focusing on and the things I can control. I will be a major part of a production this summer, I get to work with some amazing people in multiple companies, I am cape diem-ing the heck out of every opportunity that comes at me. Will the Oscar dream ever come true… I honestly don’t know. But I do know that when that audition or performance chance comes a knocking I will already be mid pounce.

 
Oh, and just to clarify, I adore Jennifer Lawrence. I think anyone that can be that funny/grounded AND have the talent to back it up it my kind of person. So Jen have your people call my people, and let’s do lunch. 

Cheers!

Tamara