From Page to Stage Short & Sweet Theatre

My friendship with writer Judith Cowley grew during the rehearsal period, what with skype and mobile phone conversations, we discovered that we agreed on so much relating to script development and with the input from actors Sheena and Mike, the text came alive for us more or less in the way I’d first imagined it.

Mike Howell & Sheena Irving Photo by Shouik Nandi
Mike Howell & Sheena Irving Photo by Shouik Nandi

There were nuances which the actors discovered without my help and underneath the layers there were more delights to discover.  We explored the emotional journeys of the two bereft characters June and Bevan moment by moment throughout rehearsals.  They’ve lost their son Cody through addiction to sniffing spray cans and their relationship is in tatters.  Bevan visits with an important objective, but he’d also like to move back in, even if it’s only in the Sleep-out.  Bad idea, that’s where Cody slept and died watched by his dog.

Photo by Shouik Nandi
Photo by Shouik Nandi

The dog is the only connection Bevan has to his son, so he want’s desperately to get him out of The Pound, but June hasn’t the money and has had enough.  They reminisce, enjoying the happy times but it soon comes down to reflection of their failure as parents.  June struggles to keep in control, only just managing to send Bevan away to sort himself out before breaking down to deal with her own grief.

 

Photo by Shouik Nandi
Photo by Shouik Nandi

It might have been a risky thing to put in front of an audience, expecting them to love it, but they did, and you could hear them listening.  Four plays from week one were chosen to go through to the final Sunday gala performance, two from the Judges and two from the audience choice. To my great surprise, we made it on an audience vote.  It just goes to show that audiences can be discerning and recognise quality writing.  The other audience choice was the hilarious Threatened Panda Fights Back.  The poster boy for the WWF refuses to mate, until confronted by a pair of reconstituted Dodos about to lay eggs.

 

Photo by Shouik Nandi
Photo by Shouik Nandi

We had a week off, though I continued to travel to Auckland to see theatre and swim.  I’d entered the Taupo Masters Swimming Brown Trout meet which meant catching the early car ferry and driving to Taupo for a 1pm start.  I stayed the night in a motel, swam an 800m freestyle race in record time (for me) then drove back to Auckland in time for a 1pm rehearsal of In the Pound at the theatre.  The judges judged the plays (6 from week 2) at the 3pm performance with me watching from the lighting box.  At 7pm, we had the final show followed by the prizes.

Photo by Shouik Nandi
Photo by Shouik Nandi

Sadly we didn’t win anything but we did explore white heterosexual working class social realism – currently under represented.  Judith Cowley came up to Auckland for the second time and loved that the play had grown so much since the opening night.  Thanks to my theatre friends, Liz, Richard, Raymond and Johnny and Elizabeth, who gave us such positive feedback.

The team: Mike Howell, Sheena Irving, Judith Cowley, Christopher Preston
The team: Mike Howell, Sheena Irving, Judith Cowley, Christopher Preston

 

Festival-email-promoWhat now?  Well, I’m already into the Waiheke Playwrights Festival, directing The Other Flag and my play The Four Horsemen is in the programme.  Just to show that I am into diversity, The Other Flag is about Maori issues and Four Horsemen in about a gay relationship.

The Winter Theatre Season

Theatre-going in the summer can be a bit of a chore, eschewing the long hours of daylight better spent working in the garden or cooling of in the waters of Rocky Bay and Palm Beach.  It takes something very special to lure me onto the ferry from Waiheke to New Zealand for a summer evening and after the show, there’s that rush down to the ferry to catch the 10.15pm if you are lucky or the last sailing at 11.45.

As I still don’t have a television here and the garden is more or less under control (swimming in the sea … in the winter?) I’ve set about investigating New Zealand theatre.  Auckland seems to be thriving these days and in particular, Auckland Theatre Company seems to be shunting out a continuous stream of product.

Rupert: Photo Michael Smith
Rupert: Photo Michael Smith

Rupert by Australian writer David Williamson was a rush through the life and business acquisitions of monster Rupert Murdoch.  Not well written and I felt no empathy for the central character even though Stuart Devine tried to make him cuddly.  The cast acted their socks off, having to work too hard to make the show work for me.  Lysistrata by Aristophanes, adapted and directed by Michael Hurst, was by contrast, joyous and outrageous.  This is the unlikely story of Greek women going on sexual strike to force their men to stop going to war.  The women are all glamorous and sexy while the men, poor things are plain, over weight, or decrepit.  One of them is in a wheel chair and smoking.  Once stripped down to their non-designer white underpants and displaying painful erections it all becomes totally farcical.  I remember having such fun in an Edinburgh Fringe Festival production many years ago.

Heroes: Photo Michael Smith
Heroes: Photo Michael Smith

 Last week I took myself off to see the ATC production of Heroes by French writer, Gerald Sibleyras (translated by Tom Stoppard).  What bliss to see three of New Zealand’s senior actors George Henare, Ken Blackburn and Ray Henwood having such fun with these damaged World War One veterans in a rest-home.  This is West End standard theatre, not cutting edge or confrontational, but gentle humour that sends you away with a warm feeling, ideal for a winter evening.  That was Wednesday and the 6pm performance allowed me to get the 10.15 ferry home.

Grt American ScreamThursday took me out to New Lynn and Te Pou Theatre to see my friend Johnny Givins’ return to the stage as GranPapa in The Great American Scream by Maori writer, Albert Belz.  Set in New Jersey on Halloween evening1938 when Orson Wells’ radio production War of the Worlds created pandemonium in the population.  This seemingly wholesome American family are sent into panic mode and, believing that they will all die, begin to reveal their shameful secrets.  The play reveals the power of the media and fear of deviating from the accepted norm.  Chatting with Johnny afterwards, it dawned on me that Albert has written a ’well made play’ with every character harbouring secrets – a little touch of Tennessee Williams and well worth the journey.  Best of all I made the 10.15 ferry again.

Bill Massey's Tourists
Bill Massey’s Tourists

No ferry ride was required on Friday as this was the only date I could see Jan Bolwell’s one person show Bill Massey’s Tourists at the Artworks Theatre, Oneroa.  Her publicity leaflet featured a generous quote from my old theatre director, Raymond Hawthorne, so I quizzed him about it and got a whole-hearted endorsement.  Jan had booked her show into the Artworks Theatre, Oneroa for three performances so it was lucky that I could only attend on the first night as the other two were cancelled due to lack of bookings.  Playing both granddaughter and grandfather, Jan told a moving story of a young girl prizing out a story of the First World War.  Of course, he was reluctant to say much, but Jan has filled in the details from meticulous research.  She’s touring around the country with this show, so I wish her well.

No Holds BardRichard Howard suggested I join him to see Michael Hurst’s one man show, No Holds Bard at the Tiny Theatre at Garnet Station, Westmere.  Hurst and a team of writers have put together a gripping and hilarious evening.  An Actor, playing Hamlet returns to his flat to end it all.  His personal life is in tatters and, on the brink of madness, inhabits not only the Dane, but Macbeth, Lear and Othello.  It kind of helps if you know these plays, but not essential as Hurst is a consummate performer.  His fight between Hamlet and Macbeth is astonishingly athletic and funny – lovely to see this up close in a full house of thirty people.

The EventsBack to the big space in Q Theatre to see Silo Theatre’s production of The Events by Scottish playwright David Greig.   Tandi Wright plays a liberal, lesbian priest who has survived a horrific attack on her local choir by a disaffected young man.  Her journey to understand and forgive him culminates in a face to face meeting in a prison.  Beulah Koale not only plays the young man, but all the other characters, including Claire’s partner.  Each performance welcomes a different local choir onto the stage.  The choristers have not seen the play previously, so their reactions to the events are spontaneous.  There’s plenty to think about in this 80 minute piece.  As an added bonus, the 7pm show got me onto the 8.45 ferry without too much running down the hill.

The Events2